Serial Peripheral Interface

Serial Peripheral Interface (SPI)
Type Serial communication bus
Production history
Designer Motorola
Designed Around early 1980s[note 1]
Manufacturer various
Daisy chain Depends on devices
Connector Unspecified
Electrical
Max. voltage Unspecified
Max. current Unspecified
Data
Width 1 bit (bidirectional)
Max. devices Multidrop limited by chip selects. Daisy chaining unlimited.
Protocol Full-duplex serial
Pinout
MOSI Master Out Slave In
MISO Master In Slave Out
SCLK Serial Clock
CS Chip Select (one or more)
(pins may have alternative names)

Serial Peripheral Interface (SPI) is a de facto standard (with many variants) for synchronous serial communication, used primarily in embedded systems for short-distance wired communication between integrated circuits.

SPI follows a master–slave architecture, [1] called main–sub herein, [note 2] [note 3] where one[note 4] main device orchestrates communication with one or more sub (peripheral) devices by driving the clock and chip select signals.

Motorola's original specification (from the early 1980s) uses four logic signals, aka lines or wires, to support full duplex communication. It is sometimes called a four-wire serial bus to contrast with three-wire variants which are half duplex, and with the two-wire I²C and 1-Wire serial buses.

Typical applications include interfacing microcontrollers with peripheral chips for Secure Digital cards, liquid crystal displays, analog-to-digital and digital-to-analog converters, flash and EEPROM memory, and various communication chips.

Although SPI is a synchronous serial interface,[2] it is different from Synchronous Serial Interface (SSI). SSI employs differential signaling and provides only a single simplex communication channel.


Cite error: There are <ref group=note> tags on this page, but the references will not show without a {{reflist|group=note}} template (see the help page).

  1. ^ Dhaker, Piyu (2018). "Introduction to SPI Interface". Analog Dialogue. Archived from the original on 2023-05-25. Retrieved 2023-07-21.
  2. ^ "What is Serial Synchronous Interface (SSI)?". Retrieved 2015-01-28.

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