UNI/O
The UNI/O bus is an [asynchronous Serial communications|serial communication|asynchronous] serial bus created by Microchip Technology for low speed communication in embedded systems. The bus uses a master/slave configuration, requiring one signal to pass data between devices. The first devices supporting the UNI/O bus were released in May 2008.
Interface
The UNI/O bus requires one logic signal:- SCIO — Serial Clock, Data Input/OutputEEPROM Family Datasheet">
Both master and slave devices use a tri-stateable, push-pull I/O pin to connect to SCIO, with the pin being placed in a high impedance state when not driving the bus. Because push-pull outputs are used, the output driver on slave devices is current-limited to prevent high system currents from occurring during bus collisions.
The idle state of the UNI/O bus is logic high. A pull-up resistor can be used to ensure the bus remains idle when no device is driving SCIO, but is not required for operation.
Data encoding
Bit encoding
Clock and data signals are combined and communicated on the bus through Manchester encoding. This means that each data bit is transmitted in a fixed amount of time.The UNI/O specification places certain rules on the bit period:
- It is determined by the master.
- * Slaves are required to synchronize with the master to recover the bit period during the [|start header].
- It can be within 10 μs and 100 μs.
- It is only required to be fixed within a single bus operation.
- A high-to-low transition signifies a 0.
- A low-to-high transition signifies a 1.
Data words
UNI/O uses 8-bit data words for communication. Bytes are transmitted msb first.Acknowledge sequence
To facilitate error detection, a 2-bit wide "acknowledge sequence" is appended to the end of every data byte transmitted. The first bit is called the "master acknowledge" and is always generated by the master. The second bit, called the "slave acknowledge", is always generated by the slave.The MAK bit is used in the following manner:
- The master transmits a 1 bit to indicate to the slave that the bus operation will be continued.
- The master transmits a 0 bit to indicate that the preceding byte was the last byte for that bus operation.
- Once a full device address has been transmitted, if the previous data byte and subsequent MAK bit were received correctly, the slave transmits a 1 bit.
- If an error occurs, the slave automatically shuts down and ignores further communication until a standby pulse is received. In this scenario, nothing will be transmitted during the SAK bit period. This missing transition can be detected by the master and is considered a NoSAK bit.
Command structure
Standby pulse
UNI/O defines a signal pulse, called the "standby pulse", that can be generated by the master to force slave devices into a reset state. To generate a standby pulse, the master must drive the bus to a logic high for a minimum of 600 μs.A standby pulse is required to be generated under certain conditions:
- Before initiating a command when selecting a new device
- After an error is detected
Start header
The start header is a special byte sequence defined by the UNI/O specification, and is used to initiate a new command. The start header consists of the following elements:- The master drives the bus low for a minimum of 5 μs.
- The master outputs a 0x55 data byte.
- * Slave devices measure the time necessary to receive the 0x55 byte by counting signal transitions. This time is then used by the slaves to determine the bit period and synchronize with the master.
- The master outputs a 1 for the MAK bit.
- The slave devices do not respond during the SAK bit following the start header. This is to avoid bus collisions which would occur of all slave devices tried to respond at the same time.
Device address
After the start header has been transmitted, the master must transmit a device address to select the desired slave device for the current operation. Once the device address has been sent, any slave device with an address different from that specified is required to shut down and ignore all further communication until a standby pulse is received.UNI/O allows for both 8-bit and 12-bit device addresses. 8-bit addressing offers better data throughput due to less command overhead, while 12-bit addressing allows for more slaves with a common family code to exist on a single bus. When a slave device is designed, the designer must choose which addressing scheme to use.
8-bit addressing
For 8-bit addressing, the entire device address is transmitted in a single byte. The most significant 4 bits indicate the "family code", which is defined by Microchip in the UNI/O bus specification. The least significant 4 bits indicate the device code. The device code allows multiple slave devices with a common family code to be used on the same bus. The device code can be fixed for a given slave or customizable by the user. Choosing a device code and how it can be customized are the responsibilities of the slave device designer.The current family codes for 8-bit devices, as of November 22, 2009, are as follows:
| Family Code | Description |
| ′0000′ | Reserved |
| ′0011′ | Display Controllers |
| ′0100′ | I/O port expanders |
| ′1000′ | Frequency/Quadrature/PWM encoders, real-time clocks |
| ′1001′ | Temperature sensors |
| ′1010′ | EEPROMs |
| ′1011′ | Encryption/Authentication Devices |
| ′1100′ | DC/DC Converters |
| ′1101′ | A/D converters |
| ′1111′ | 12-bit addressable devices |
12-bit addressing
For 12-bit addressing, the device address is sent in two bytes. The most significant 4 bits of the first byte, are set to ′1111′. The next 4 bits are the family code for the 12-bit address, and the second byte of the address is an 8-bit wide device code. The device code follows the same guidelines for definition as with 8-bit addressing.Because the specified slave device is not selected until both bytes of the device address have been received, a NoSAK will occur during the acknowledge sequence following the first device address byte.
The current family codes for 12-bit devices, as of November 22, 2009, are as follows:
| Family Code | Description |
| ′0000′ | Reserved |
| ′1111′ | Reserved |
Command byte
After the master has transmitted the device address and selected an individual slave, the master must transmit the 8-bit value for the specific command to be executed by the slave. The available commands are determined by the designer of each slave device, and will vary from slave to slave, e.g. a serial EEPROM will likely have different commands than a temperature sensor. The slave device designer will also determine if and how many data bytes are necessary for the execution of a command. If any data bytes are necessary, they are transmitted by either the master or the slave after the command byte.Communication will continue until either the master transmits a 0 during the acknowledge sequence, or an error occurs. Assuming no errors occur, this means that commands can continue indefinitely if the master chooses.