2024-11-21 03:17 PM
I am having issues with my slave responding to my master. I am trying to lessen complexity by only using RXP on the slave, without TXP. The slave (Nucleo-H743ZI) responds one byte late.
On the CS interrupt I send 0 for the first byte and enable RXP.
*((__IO uint8_t *)&hspi1.Instance->TXDR) = 0;
__HAL_SPI_ENABLE_IT(&hspi1, SPI_IT_RXP);
__HAL_SPI_ENABLE(&hspi1);
I then receive a byte and set the next transmit byte. I use FPint so the master does not send data when it is low (used for later implementation).
void spiISRSTM(SPI_HandleTypeDef *hspi) {
//Receive if ready
if (hspi->Instance->SR & SPI_FLAG_RXP) {
HAL_GPIO_WritePin(nFPINT_GPIO_Port, nFPINT_Pin, GPIO_PIN_RESET);
rxBuffer = (*(__IO uint8_t *)&hspi->Instance->RXDR);
(*(__IO uint8_t *)&hspi->Instance->TXDR) = 1;
HAL_GPIO_WritePin(nFPINT_GPIO_Port, nFPINT_Pin, GPIO_PIN_SET);
}
__HAL_SPI_CLEAR_UDRFLAG(hspi);
__HAL_SPI_CLEAR_OVRFLAG(hspi);
__HAL_SPI_CLEAR_EOTFLAG(hspi);
__HAL_SPI_CLEAR_FREFLAG(hspi);
}
The MISO line for this setup is:
0011 1111
I would expect:
0111 1111
Any Ideas what is causing this?
2024-11-22 02:26 AM
Hello @EthanMankins
Could you try activating DXP interrupt and checking on DXP flag instead of RXP?
2024-11-22 08:42 AM
Hi @Saket_Om
I have tried this and it does not make difference to the timing.
2024-11-22 02:42 PM
I have found I get an UDR Interrupt error on the second byte, not sue how this happens because the transmit is set right after each read, and the master does not send a new byte until FPInt is raised. No other bytes are UDR