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Diffstat (limited to 'docs/ap-ec-comm.md')
-rw-r--r-- | docs/ap-ec-comm.md | 14 |
1 files changed, 7 insertions, 7 deletions
diff --git a/docs/ap-ec-comm.md b/docs/ap-ec-comm.md index 0fc31b6822..27d5349ca4 100644 --- a/docs/ap-ec-comm.md +++ b/docs/ap-ec-comm.md @@ -112,15 +112,15 @@ the filler byte. ### SPI The SPI bus is similar to I<sup>2</sup>C, but with two major exceptions. First, -there's a minimum speed on the SPI bus. If slave devices don't respond quickly -enough, the master will assume they're broken and give up. Second, every -transaction is bidirectional. When bits are being clocked from master to slave -on the MOSI line, the master will simultaneously read bits in the other -direction on the MISO line. +there's a minimum speed on the SPI bus. If peripheral devices don't respond +quickly enough, the controller will assume they're broken and give up. Second, +every transaction is bidirectional. When bits are being clocked from controller +to peripheral on the MOSI line, the controller will simultaneously read bits in +the other direction on the MISO line. Hardware devices can usually handle this, and often some hardware-based flow -control used to "stretch" the transaction by a bit or byte if the slave device -needs a little extra time to respond to the master's demands. +control used to "stretch" the transaction by a bit or byte if the peripheral +device needs a little extra time to respond to the controller's demands. When exchanging messages with the EC on the SPI bus, the EC's host commands are communicated using our own software flow-control scheme, because most of the |