| .. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 |
| |
| ============ |
| I3C protocol |
| ============ |
| |
| Disclaimer |
| ========== |
| |
| This chapter will focus on aspects that matter to software developers. For |
| everything hardware related (like how things are transmitted on the bus, how |
| collisions are prevented, ...) please have a look at the I3C specification. |
| |
| This document is just a brief introduction to the I3C protocol and the concepts |
| it brings to the table. If you need more information, please refer to the MIPI |
| I3C specification (can be downloaded here |
| https://resources.mipi.org/mipi-i3c-v1-download). |
| |
| Introduction |
| ============ |
| |
| The I3C (pronounced 'eye-three-see') is a MIPI standardized protocol designed |
| to overcome I2C limitations (limited speed, external signals needed for |
| interrupts, no automatic detection of the devices connected to the bus, ...) |
| while remaining power-efficient. |
| |
| I3C Bus |
| ======= |
| |
| An I3C bus is made of several I3C devices and possibly some I2C devices as |
| well, but let's focus on I3C devices for now. |
| |
| An I3C device on the I3C bus can have one of the following roles: |
| |
| * Master: the device is driving the bus. It's the one in charge of initiating |
| transactions or deciding who is allowed to talk on the bus (slave generated |
| events are possible in I3C, see below). |
| * Slave: the device acts as a slave, and is not able to send frames to another |
| slave on the bus. The device can still send events to the master on |
| its own initiative if the master allowed it. |
| |
| I3C is a multi-master protocol, so there might be several masters on a bus, |
| though only one device can act as a master at a given time. In order to gain |
| bus ownership, a master has to follow a specific procedure. |
| |
| Each device on the I3C bus has to be assigned a dynamic address to be able to |
| communicate. Until this is done, the device should only respond to a limited |
| set of commands. If it has a static address (also called legacy I2C address), |
| the device can reply to I2C transfers. |
| |
| In addition to these per-device addresses, the protocol defines a broadcast |
| address in order to address all devices on the bus. |
| |
| Once a dynamic address has been assigned to a device, this address will be used |
| for any direct communication with the device. Note that even after being |
| assigned a dynamic address, the device should still process broadcast messages. |
| |
| I3C Device discovery |
| ==================== |
| |
| The I3C protocol defines a mechanism to automatically discover devices present |
| on the bus, their capabilities and the functionalities they provide. In this |
| regard I3C is closer to a discoverable bus like USB than it is to I2C or SPI. |
| |
| The discovery mechanism is called DAA (Dynamic Address Assignment), because it |
| not only discovers devices but also assigns them a dynamic address. |
| |
| During DAA, each I3C device reports 3 important things: |
| |
| * BCR: Bus Characteristic Register. This 8-bit register describes the device bus |
| related capabilities |
| * DCR: Device Characteristic Register. This 8-bit register describes the |
| functionalities provided by the device |
| * Provisional ID: A 48-bit unique identifier. On a given bus there should be no |
| Provisional ID collision, otherwise the discovery mechanism may fail. |
| |
| I3C slave events |
| ================ |
| |
| The I3C protocol allows slaves to generate events on their own, and thus allows |
| them to take temporary control of the bus. |
| |
| This mechanism is called IBI for In Band Interrupts, and as stated in the name, |
| it allows devices to generate interrupts without requiring an external signal. |
| |
| During DAA, each device on the bus has been assigned an address, and this |
| address will serve as a priority identifier to determine who wins if 2 different |
| devices are generating an interrupt at the same moment on the bus (the lower the |
| dynamic address the higher the priority). |
| |
| Masters are allowed to inhibit interrupts if they want to. This inhibition |
| request can be broadcast (applies to all devices) or sent to a specific |
| device. |
| |
| I3C Hot-Join |
| ============ |
| |
| The Hot-Join mechanism is similar to USB hotplug. This mechanism allows |
| slaves to join the bus after it has been initialized by the master. |
| |
| This covers the following use cases: |
| |
| * the device is not powered when the bus is probed |
| * the device is hotplugged on the bus through an extension board |
| |
| This mechanism is relying on slave events to inform the master that a new |
| device joined the bus and is waiting for a dynamic address. |
| |
| The master is then free to address the request as it wishes: ignore it or |
| assign a dynamic address to the slave. |
| |
| I3C transfer types |
| ================== |
| |
| If you omit SMBus (which is just a standardization on how to access registers |
| exposed by I2C devices), I2C has only one transfer type. |
| |
| I3C defines 3 different classes of transfer in addition to I2C transfers which |
| are here for backward compatibility with I2C devices. |
| |
| I3C CCC commands |
| ---------------- |
| |
| CCC (Common Command Code) commands are meant to be used for anything that is |
| related to bus management and all features that are common to a set of devices. |
| |
| CCC commands contain an 8-bit CCC ID describing the command that is executed. |
| The MSB of this ID specifies whether this is a broadcast command (bit7 = 0) or a |
| unicast one (bit7 = 1). |
| |
| The command ID can be followed by a payload. Depending on the command, this |
| payload is either sent by the master sending the command (write CCC command), |
| or sent by the slave receiving the command (read CCC command). Of course, read |
| accesses only apply to unicast commands. |
| Note that, when sending a CCC command to a specific device, the device address |
| is passed in the first byte of the payload. |
| |
| The payload length is not explicitly passed on the bus, and should be extracted |
| from the CCC ID. |
| |
| Note that vendors can use a dedicated range of CCC IDs for their own commands |
| (0x61-0x7f and 0xe0-0xef). |
| |
| I3C Private SDR transfers |
| ------------------------- |
| |
| Private SDR (Single Data Rate) transfers should be used for anything that is |
| device specific and does not require high transfer speed. |
| |
| It is the equivalent of I2C transfers but in the I3C world. Each transfer is |
| passed the device address (dynamic address assigned during DAA), a payload |
| and a direction. |
| |
| The only difference with I2C is that the transfer is much faster (typical clock |
| frequency is 12.5MHz). |
| |
| I3C HDR commands |
| ---------------- |
| |
| HDR commands should be used for anything that is device specific and requires |
| high transfer speed. |
| |
| The first thing attached to an HDR command is the HDR mode. There are currently |
| 3 different modes defined by the I3C specification (refer to the specification |
| for more details): |
| |
| * HDR-DDR: Double Data Rate mode |
| * HDR-TSP: Ternary Symbol Pure. Only usable on busses with no I2C devices |
| * HDR-TSL: Ternary Symbol Legacy. Usable on busses with I2C devices |
| |
| When sending an HDR command, the whole bus has to enter HDR mode, which is done |
| using a broadcast CCC command. |
| Once the bus has entered a specific HDR mode, the master sends the HDR command. |
| An HDR command is made of: |
| |
| * one 16-bits command word in big endian |
| * N 16-bits data words in big endian |
| |
| Those words may be wrapped with specific preambles/post-ambles which depend on |
| the chosen HDR mode and are detailed here (see the specification for more |
| details). |
| |
| The 16-bits command word is made of: |
| |
| * bit[15]: direction bit, read is 1, write is 0 |
| * bit[14:8]: command code. Identifies the command being executed, the amount of |
| data words and their meaning |
| * bit[7:1]: I3C address of the device this command is addressed to |
| * bit[0]: reserved/parity-bit |
| |
| Backward compatibility with I2C devices |
| ======================================= |
| |
| The I3C protocol has been designed to be backward compatible with I2C devices. |
| This backward compatibility allows one to connect a mix of I2C and I3C devices |
| on the same bus, though, in order to be really efficient, I2C devices should |
| be equipped with 50 ns spike filters. |
| |
| I2C devices can't be discovered like I3C ones and have to be statically |
| declared. In order to let the master know what these devices are capable of |
| (both in terms of bus related limitations and functionalities), the software |
| has to provide some information, which is done through the LVR (Legacy I2C |
| Virtual Register). |