32. Inter-integrated circuit interface (I2C)
32.1 I2C introduction
The I2C peripheral handles the interface between the device and the serial I 2 C (inter-integrated circuit) bus. It provides multicontroller capability, and controls all I 2 C-bus-specific sequencing, protocol, arbitration and timing. It supports Standard-mode (Sm), Fast-mode (Fm) and Fast-mode Plus (Fm+).
The I2C peripheral is also SMBus (system management bus) and PMBus ® (power management bus) compatible.
It can use DMA to reduce the CPU load.
32.2 I2C main features
- • I
2
C-bus specification rev03 compatibility:
- – Target and controller modes
- – Multicontroller capability
- – Standard-mode (up to 100 kHz)
- – Fast-mode (up to 400 kHz)
- – Fast-mode Plus (up to 1 MHz)
- – 7-bit and 10-bit addressing mode
- – Multiple 7-bit target addresses (2 addresses, 1 with configurable mask)
- – All 7-bit-addresses acknowledge mode
- – General call
- – Programmable setup and hold times
- – Easy-to-use event management
- – Clock stretching (optional)
- • 1-byte buffer with DMA capability
- • Programmable analog and digital noise filters
- • SMBus specification rev 3.0 compatibility
(a)
:
- – Hardware PEC (packet error checking) generation and verification with ACK control
- – Command and data acknowledge control
- – Address resolution protocol (ARP) support
- – Host and device support
- – SMBus alert
- – Timeouts and idle condition detection
- • PMBus rev 1.3 standard compatibility
- • Independent clock
a. To check the compliance of the GPIOs selected for SMBus with the specified logical levels, refer to the product datasheet.
- • Wake-up from Stop mode on address match
For information on I2C instantiation, refer to Section 32.3: I2C implementation .
32.3 I2C implementation
This section provides an implementation overview with respect to the I2C instantiation.
Table 211. I2C implementation
| I2C features (1) | I2C1 (2) | I2C2 (2) | I2C3 |
|---|---|---|---|
| 7-bit addressing mode | X | X | X |
| 10-bit addressing mode | X | X | X |
| Standard-mode (up to 100 kbit/s) | X | X | X |
| Fast-mode (up to 400 kbit/s) | X | X | X |
| Fast-mode Plus with 20 mA output drive I/Os (up to 1 Mbit/s) | X | X | X |
| Independent clock | X | X | X |
| Wake-up from Stop mode | X (3) | X (3) | X (4) |
| SMBus/PMBus | X | X | X |
- 1. X = supported.
- 2. The register content is lost in Stop 2 mode.
- 3. Wake-up supported from Stop 0 and Stop 1 modes.
- 4. Wake-up supported from Stop 0, Stop 1 and Stop 2 modes.
32.4 I2C functional description
In addition to receiving and transmitting data, the peripheral converts them from serial to parallel format and vice versa. The interrupts are enabled or disabled by software. The peripheral is connected to the I 2 C-bus through a data pin (SDA) and a clock pin (SCL). It supports Standard-mode (up to 100 kHz), Fast-mode (up to 400 kHz), and Fast-mode Plus (up to 1 MHz) I 2 C-bus.
The peripheral can also be connected to an SMBus, through the data pin (SDA), the clock pin (SCL), and an optional SMBus alert pin (SMBA).
The independent clock function allows the I2C communication speed to be independent of the PCLK1 frequency.
For I2C I/Os supporting 20 mA output current drive for Fast-mode Plus operation, the driving capability is enabled through control bits in the system configuration block(SYSCFG).
32.4.1 I2C block diagram
Figure 262. Block diagram

The block diagram illustrates the internal architecture of the I2C interface. On the left, external signals i2c_ker_ck and PCLK are inputs. i2c_ker_ck connects to the I2CCLK input of the internal logic. PCLK connects to the Registers block. The Registers block is connected to an APB bus . The internal logic is divided into several functional blocks: Data control (containing Shift register and SMBUS PEC generation/check ), Clock control (containing Controller clock generation , Target clock stretching , and SMBus timeout check ), Wake-up on address match , and SMBus alert control/status . The Data control and Clock control blocks are connected to Digital noise filter blocks, which in turn connect to Analog noise filter blocks. These analog filters connect to GPIO logic blocks that drive the external pins I2C_SDA and I2C_SCL . The SMBus alert control/status block connects to the I2C_SMBA pin. The Registers block is also connected to the APB bus .
MSV46198V4
32.4.2 I2C pins and internal signals
Table 212. I2C input/output pins
| Pin name | Signal type | Description |
|---|---|---|
| I2C_SDA | Bidirectional | I 2 C-bus data |
| I2C_SCL | Bidirectional | I 2 C-bus clock |
| I2C_SMBA | Bidirectional | SMBus alert |
Table 213. I2C internal input/output signals
| Internal signal name | Signal type | Description |
|---|---|---|
| i2c_ker_ck | Input | I2C kernel clock, also named I2CCLK in this document |
| i2c_pclk | Input | I2C APB clock |
| i2c_it | Output | I2C interrupts, refer to Table 226 for the list of interrupt sources |
| i2c_rx_dma | Output | I2C receive data DMA request (I2C_RX) |
| i2c_tx_dma | Output | I2C transmit data DMA request (I2C_TX) |
32.4.3 I2C clock requirements
The I2C kernel is clocked by I2CCLK.
The I2CCLK period \( t_{I2CCLK} \) must respect the following conditions:
where \( t_{LOW} \) is the SCL low time, \( t_{HIGH} \) is the SCL high time, and \( t_{filters} \) is the sum of the analog and digital filter delays (when enabled).
The digital filter delay is \( DNF[3:0] \times t_{I2CCLK} \) .
The PCLK1 clock period \( t_{PCLK} \) must respect the condition \( t_{PCLK} < 4/3 t_{SCL} \) , where \( t_{SCL} \) is the SCL period.
Caution: When the I2C kernel is clocked by PCLK1, this clock must respect the conditions for \( t_{I2CCLK} \) .
32.4.4 I2C mode selection
The peripheral can operate as:
- • Target transmitter
- • Target receiver
- • Controller transmitter
- • Controller receiver
By default, the peripheral operates in target mode. It automatically switches from target to controller mode upon generating START condition, and from controller to target mode upon arbitration loss or upon generating STOP condition. This allows the use of the I2C peripheral in a multicontroller I 2 C-bus environment.
Communication flow
In controller mode, the I2C peripheral initiates a data transfer and generates the clock signal. Serial data transfers always begin with a START condition and end with a STOP condition. Both START and STOP conditions are generated in controller mode by software.
In target mode, the peripheral recognizes its own 7-bit or 10-bit address, and the general call address. The general call address detection can be enabled or disabled by software. The reserved SMBus addresses can also be enabled by software.
Data and addresses are transferred as 8-bit bytes, MSB first. The address is contained in the first byte (7-bit addressing) or in the first two bytes (10-bit addressing) following the START condition. The address is always transmitted in controller mode.
The following figure shows the transmission of a single byte. The controller generates nine SCL pulses. The transmitter sends the eight data bits to the receiver with the SCL pulses 1 to 8. Then the receiver sends the acknowledge bit to the transmitter with the ninth SCL pulse.
Figure 263. I 2 C-bus protocol

The acknowledge can be enabled or disabled by software. The own addresses of the I2C peripheral can be selected by software.
32.4.5 I2C initialization
Enabling and disabling the peripheral
Before enabling the I2C peripheral, configure and enable its clock through the RCC, and initialize its control registers.
The I2C peripheral can then be enabled by setting the PE bit of the I2C_CR1 register.
Disabling the I2C peripheral by clearing the PE bit resets the I2C peripheral. Refer to Section 32.4.6 for more details.
Noise filters
Before enabling the I2C peripheral by setting the PE bit of the I2C_CR1 register, the user must configure the analog and/or digital noise filters, as required.
The analog noise filter on the SDA and SCL inputs complies with the I 2 C-bus specification which requires, in Fast-mode and Fast-mode Plus, the suppression of spikes shorter than 50 ns. Enabled by default, it can be disabled by setting the ANFOFF bit.
The digital filter is controlled through the DNF[3:0] bitfield of the I2C_CR1 register. When it is enabled, the internal SCL and SDA signals only take the level of their corresponding I 2 C-bus line when remaining stable for more than DNF[3:0] periods of I2CCLK. This allows suppressing spikes shorter than the filtering capacity period programmable from one to fifteen I2CCLK periods.
The following table compares the two filters.
Table 214. Comparison of analog and digital filters| Item | Analog filter | Digital filter |
|---|---|---|
| Filtering capacity (1) | ≥ 50 ns | One to fifteen I2CCLK periods |
| Benefits | Available in Stop mode |
|
| Drawbacks | Filtering capacity variation with temperature, voltage, and silicon process | Wake-up from Stop mode on address match not supported when the digital filter is enabled |
1. Maximum duration of spikes that the filter can suppress
Caution: The filter configuration cannot be changed when the I2C peripheral is enabled.
I2C timings
To ensure correct data hold and setup times, the corresponding timings must be configured through the PRESC[3:0], SCLDEL[3:0], and SDADEL[3:0] bitfields of the I2C_TIMINGR register.
The STM32CubeMX tool calculates and provides the I2C_TIMINGR content in the I2C configuration window.
Figure 264. Setup and hold timings

DATA HOLD TIME
SCL falling edge internal
detection
\( t_{SYNC1} \) | SDADEL: SCL stretched low by the I2C
SCL
SDA
SDA output delay
\( t_{HD;DAT} \)
Data hold time: in case of transmission, the data is sent on SDA output after the SDADEL delay, if it is already available in I2C_TXDR.
DATA SETUP TIME
SCLDEL
SCL stretched low by the I2C
SCL
SDA
\( t_{SU;STA} \)
Data setup time: in case of transmission, the SCLDEL counter starts when the data is sent on SDA output.
MSV40108V1
When the SCL falling edge is internally detected, the delay \( t_{SDADEL} \) (impacting the hold time \( t_{HD;DAT} \) ) is inserted before sending SDA output:
The total SDA output delay is:
The \( t_{SYNC1} \) duration depends upon:
- • SCL falling slope
- • input delay \( t_{AF(min)} < t_{AF} < t_{AF(max)} \) introduced by the analog filter (if enabled)
- • input delay \( t_{DNF} = DNF \times t_{I2CCLK} \) introduced by the digital filter (if enabled)
- • delay due to SCL synchronization to I2CCLK clock (two to three I2CCLK periods)
To bridge the undefined region of the SCL falling edge, the user must set SDADEL[3:0] so as to fulfill the following condition:
Note: \( t_{AF(min)} \) and \( t_{AF(max)} \) are only part of the condition when the analog filter is enabled. Refer to the device datasheet for \( t_{AF} \) values.
The \( t_{HD;DAT} \) time can at maximum be 3.45 µs for Standard-mode, 0.9 µs for Fast-mode, and 0.45 µs for Fast-mode Plus. It must be lower than the maximum of \( t_{VD;DAT} \) by a transition time. This maximum must only be met if the device does not stretch the LOW period ( \( t_{LOW} \) ) of the SCL signal. When it stretches SCL, the data must be valid by the set-up time before it releases the clock.
The SDA rising edge is usually the worst case. The previous condition then becomes:
Note: This condition can be violated when NOSTRETCH = 0, because the device stretches SCL low to guarantee the set-up time, according to the SCLDEL[3:0] value.
After \( t_{SDADEL} \) , or after sending SDA output when the target had to stretch the clock because the data was not yet written in I2C_TXDR register, the SCL line is kept at low level during the setup time. This setup time is \( t_{SCLDEL} = (SCLDEL + 1) \times t_{PRESC} \) , where \( t_{PRESC} = (PRESC + 1) \times t_{I2CCLK} \) . \( t_{SCLDEL} \) impacts the setup time \( t_{SU;DAT} \) .
To bridge the undefined region of the SDA transition (rising edge usually worst case), the user must program SCLDEL[3:0] so as to fulfill the following condition:
Refer to the following table for \( t_f \) , \( t_r \) , \( t_{HD;DAT} \) , \( t_{VD;DAT} \) , and \( t_{SU;DAT} \) standard values.
Use the SDA and SCL real transition time values measured in the application to widen the scope of allowed SDADEL[3:0] and SCLDEL[3:0] values. Use the maximum SDA and SCL transition time values defined in the standard to make the device work reliably regardless of the application.
Note: At every clock pulse, after SCL falling edge detection, I2C operating as controller or target stretches SCL low during at least \( [(SDADEL + SCLDEL + 1) \times (PRESC + 1) + 1] \times t_{I2CCLK} \) , in both transmission and reception modes. In transmission mode, if the data is not yet written in I2C_TXDR when SDA delay elapses, the I2C peripheral keeps stretching SCL low until the next data is written. Then new data MSB is sent on SDA output, and SCLDEL counter starts, continuing stretching SCL low to guarantee the data setup time.
When the NOSTRETCH bit is set in target mode, the SCL is not stretched. The SDADEL[3:0] must then be programmed so that it ensures a sufficient setup time.
Table 215. I 2 C-bus and SMBus specification data setup and hold times
| Symbol | Parameter | Standard-mode (Sm) | Fast-mode (Fm) | Fast-mode Plus (Fm+) | SMBus | Unit | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Min | Max | Min | Max | Min | Max | Min | Max | |||
| \( t_{HD;DAT} \) | Data hold time | 0 | - | 0 | - | 0 | - | 0.3 | - | µs |
| \( t_{VD;DAT} \) | Data valid time | - | 3.45 | - | 0.9 | - | 0.45 | - | - | |
| \( t_{SU;DAT} \) | Data setup time | 250 | - | 100 | - | 50 | - | 250 | - | ns |
| \( t_r \) | Rise time of both SDA and SCL signals | - | 1000 | - | 300 | - | 120 | - | 1000 | |
| \( t_f \) | Fall time of both SDA and SCL signals | - | 300 | - | 300 | - | 120 | - | 300 | |
Additionally, in controller mode, the SCL clock high and low levels must be configured by programming the PRESC[3:0], SCLH[7:0], and SCLL[7:0] bitfields of the I2C_TIMINGR register.
When the SCL falling edge is internally detected, the I2C peripheral releasing the SCL output after the delay \( t_{SCLL} = (SCLL + 1) \times t_{PRESC} \) , where \( t_{PRESC} = (PRESC + 1) \times t_{I2CCLK} \) . The \( t_{SCLL} \) delay impacts the SCL low time \( t_{LOW} \) .
When the SCL rising edge is internally detected, the I2C peripheral forces the SCL output to low level after the delay \( t_{SCLH} = (SCLH + 1) \times t_{PRESC} \) , where \( t_{PRESC} = (PRESC + 1) \times t_{I2CCLK} \) . The \( t_{SCLH} \) impacts the SCL high time \( t_{HIGH} \) .
Refer to I2C controller initialization for more details.
Caution: Changing the timing configuration and the NOSTRETCH configuration is not allowed when the I2C peripheral is enabled. Like the timing settings, the target NOSTRETCH settings must also be done before enabling the peripheral. Refer to I2C target initialization for more details.
Figure 265. I2C initialization flow

graph TD;
A([Initial settings]) --> B[Clear PE bit in I2C_CR1];
B --> C[Configure ANFOFF and DNF[3:0] in I2C_CR1];
C --> D["Configure PRESC[3:0], SDADEL[3:0], SCLDEL[3:0], SCLH[7:0], and SCLL[7:0] in I2C_TIMINGR"];
D --> E[Configure NOSTRETCH in I2C_CR1];
E --> F[Set PE bit in I2C_CR1];
F --> G([End]);
The flowchart illustrates the I2C initialization sequence. It begins with 'Initial settings' in an oval, followed by a rectangular box 'Clear PE bit in I2C_CR1'. This is followed by 'Configure ANFOFF and DNF[3:0] in I2C_CR1', then 'Configure PRESC[3:0], SDADEL[3:0], SCLDEL[3:0], SCLH[7:0], and SCLL[7:0] in I2C_TIMINGR', and 'Configure NOSTRETCH in I2C_CR1'. The next step is 'Set PE bit in I2C_CR1', and finally 'End' in an oval. The diagram is labeled MS19847V3 in the bottom right corner.
32.4.6 I2C reset
The reset of the I2C peripheral is performed by clearing the PE bit of the I2C_CR1 register. It has the effect of releasing the SCL and SDA lines. Internal state machines are reset and the communication control bits and the status bits revert to their reset values. This reset does not impact the configuration registers.
The impacted register bits are:
- 1. I2C_CR2 register: START, STOP, PECBYTE, and NACK
- 2. I2C_ISR register: BUSY, TXE, TXIS, RXNE, ADDR, NACKF, TCR, TC, STOPF, BERR, ARLO, PECERR, TIMEOUT, ALERT, and OVR
PE must be kept low during at least three APB clock cycles to perform the I2C reset. To ensure this, perform the following software sequence:
- 1. Write PE = 0
- 2. Check PE = 0
- 3. Write PE = 1
32.4.7 I2C data transfer
The data transfer is managed through transmit and receive data registers and a shift register.
Reception
The SDA input fills the shift register. After the eighth SCL pulse (when the complete data byte is received), the shift register is copied into the I2C_RXDR register if it is empty (RXNE = 0). If RXNE = 1, which means that the previous received data byte has not yet been read, the SCL line is stretched low until I2C_RXDR is read. The stretch occurs between the eighth and the ninth SCL pulse (before the acknowledge pulse).
Figure 266. Data reception

The diagram illustrates the timing for I2C data reception. It shows four horizontal timelines: SCL (Serial Clock Line), Shift register, RXNE (Receive Not Empty flag), and I2C_RXDR (Receive Data Register). The SCL line shows a series of pulses. The Shift register contains data bytes: 'xx', 'data1', 'xx', 'data2', 'xx'. The RXNE line is high when the shift register is full and low when it is empty. The I2C_RXDR line shows the data bytes being copied from the shift register: 'data0', 'data1', 'data2'. Two 'ACK pulse' labels are shown above the SCL line, indicating the acknowledgment pulses sent by the receiver. The RXNE line is shown going high after the eighth SCL pulse (when 'data1' is received) and going low when the data is read from I2C_RXDR (labeled 'rd data0' and 'rd data1'). The SCL line is stretched low between the eighth and ninth SCL pulses, as indicated by a blue line and the legend 'SCL stretch'. The diagram is labeled MS19848V1 in the bottom right corner.
Transmission
If the I2C_TXDR register is not empty (TXE = 0), its content is copied into the shift register after the ninth SCL pulse (the acknowledge pulse). Then the shift register content is shifted out on the SDA line. If TXE = 1, which means that no data is written yet in I2C_TXDR, the SCL line is stretched low until I2C_TXDR is written. The stretch starts after the ninth SCL pulse.
Figure 267. Data transmission

The diagram illustrates the timing of data transmission in an I2C master mode. The top signal is the SCL (Serial Clock) line, which is a periodic square wave. The second signal is the Shift register, which is a horizontal bar divided into segments. The third signal is the TXE (Transmit Empty) flag, which is a digital signal. The bottom signal is the I2C_TXDR (Transmit Data Register), which is a horizontal bar divided into segments. The diagram shows the following sequence of events:
- The SCL line is high. The Shift register contains 'xx' (unknown data).
- The SCL line goes low. The TXE flag is high.
- The SCL line goes high. An 'ACK pulse' is indicated on the SCL line.
- The TXE flag goes low. This indicates that data can be written to the I2C_TXDR register.
- The I2C_TXDR register is written with 'data1' (labeled 'wr data1').
- The TXE flag goes high again.
- The SCL line goes low. The Shift register now contains 'data1'.
- The SCL line goes high. Another 'ACK pulse' is indicated on the SCL line.
- The TXE flag goes low again.
- The I2C_TXDR register is written with 'data2' (labeled 'wr data2').
- The TXE flag goes high again.
- The SCL line goes low. The Shift register now contains 'data2'.
- The SCL line goes high. The Shift register contains 'xx' again.
MS19849V1
Hardware transfer management
The I2C features an embedded byte counter to manage byte transfer and to close the communication in various modes, such as:
- – NACK, STOP and ReSTART generation in controller mode
- – ACK control in target receiver mode
- – PEC generation/checking
In controller mode, the byte counter is always used. By default, it is disabled in target mode. It can be enabled by software, by setting the SBC (target byte control) bit of the I2C_CR1 register.
The number of bytes to transfer is programmed in the NBBYTES[7:0] bitfield of the I2C_CR2 register. If this number is greater than 255, or if a receiver wants to control the acknowledge value of a received data byte, the reload mode must be selected, by setting the RELOAD bit of the I2C_CR2 register. In this mode, the TCR flag is set when the number of bytes programmed in NBBYTES[7:0] is transferred (when the associated counter reaches zero), and an interrupt is generated if TCIE is set. SCL is stretched as long as the TCR flag is set. TCR is cleared by software when NBBYTES[7:0] is written to a non-zero value.
When NBBYTES[7:0] is reloaded with the last number of bytes to transfer, the RELOAD bit must be cleared.
When RELOAD = 0 in controller mode, the counter can be used in two modes:
- • Automatic end (AUTOEND = 1 in the I2C_CR2 register). In this mode, the controller automatically sends a STOP condition once the number of bytes programmed in the NBYPES[7:0] bitfield is transferred.
- • Software end (AUTOEND = 0 in the I2C_CR2 register). In this mode, a software action is expected once the number of bytes programmed in the NBYPES[7:0] bitfield is transferred; the TC flag is set and an interrupt is generated if the TCIE bit is set. The SCL signal is stretched as long as the TC flag is set. The TC flag is cleared by software when the START or STOP bit of the I2C_CR2 register is set. This mode must be used when the controller wants to send a RESTART condition.
Caution: The AUTOEND bit has no effect when the RELOAD bit is set.
Table 216. I2C configuration
| Function | SBC bit | RELOAD bit | AUTOEND bit |
|---|---|---|---|
| Controller Tx/Rx NBYPES + STOP | X | 0 | 1 |
| Controller Tx/Rx + NBYPES + RESTART | X | 0 | 0 |
| Target Tx/Rx, all received bytes ACKed | 0 | X | X |
| Target Rx with ACK control | 1 | 1 | X |
32.4.8 I2C target mode
I2C target initialization
To work in target mode, the user must enable at least one target address. The I2C_OAR1 and I2C_OAR2 registers are available to program the target own addresses OA1 and OA2, respectively.
OA1 can be configured either in 7-bit (default) or in 10-bit addressing mode, by setting the OA1MODE bit of the I2C_OAR1 register.
OA1 is enabled by setting the OA1EN bit of the I2C_OAR1 register.
If an additional target addresses are required, the second target address OA2 can be configured. Up to seven OA2 LSBs can be masked, by configuring the OA2MSK[2:0] bitfield of the I2C_OAR2 register. Therefore, for OA2MSK[2:0] configured from 1 to 6, only OA2[7:2], OA2[7:3], OA2[7:4], OA2[7:5], OA2[7:6], or OA2[7] are compared with the received address. When OA2MSK[2:0] is other than 0, the address comparator for OA2 excludes the I2C reserved addresses (0000 XXX and 1111 XXX) and they are not acknowledged. If OA2MSK[2:0] = 7, all received 7-bit addresses are acknowledged (except reserved addresses). OA2 is always a 7-bit address.
When enabled through the specific bit, the reserved addresses can be acknowledged if they are programmed in the I2C_OAR1 or I2C_OAR2 register with OA2MSK[2:0] = 0.
OA2 is enabled by setting the OA2EN bit of the I2C_OAR2 register.
The general call address is enabled by setting the GCEN bit of the I2C_CR1 register.
When the I2C peripheral is selected by one of its enabled addresses, the ADDR interrupt status flag is set, and an interrupt is generated if the ADDRIE bit is set.
By default, the target uses its clock stretching capability, which means that it stretches the SCL signal at low level when required, to perform software actions. If the controller does not
support clock stretching, I2C must be configured with NOSTRETCH = 1 in the I2C_CR1 register.
After receiving an ADDR interrupt, if several addresses are enabled, the user must read the ADDCODE[6:0] bitfield of the I2C_ISR register to check which address matched. The DIR flag must also be checked to know the transfer direction.
Target with clock stretching
As long as the NOSTRETCH bit of the I2C_CR1 register is zero (default), the I2C peripheral operating as an I 2 C-bus target stretches the SCL signal in the following situations:
- • The ADDR flag is set and the received address matches with one of the enabled target addresses.
The stretch is released when the software clears the ADDR flag by setting the ADDRCF bit. - • In transmission, the previous data transmission is completed and no new data is written in I2C_TXDR register, or the first data byte is not written when the ADDR flag is cleared (TXE = 1).
The stretch is released when the data is written to the I2C_TXDR register. - • In reception, the I2C_RXDR register is not read yet and a new data reception is completed.
The stretch is released when I2C_RXDR is read. - • In target byte control mode (SBC bit set) with reload (RELOAD bit set), the last data byte transfer is finished (TCR bit set).
The stretch is released when the TCR is cleared by writing a non-zero value in the NBBYTES[7:0] bitfield. - • After SCL falling edge detection.
The stretch is released after \( [(SDADEL + SCLDEL + 1) \times (PRESC + 1) + 1] \times t_{I2CCLK} \) period.
Target without clock stretching
As long as the NOSTRETCH bit of the I2C_CR1 register is set, the I2C peripheral operating as an I 2 C-bus target does not stretch the SCL signal.
The SCL clock is not stretched while the ADDR flag is set.
In transmission, the data must be written in the I2C_TXDR register before the first SCL pulse corresponding to its transfer occurs. If not, an underrun occurs, the OVR flag is set in the I2C_ISR register and an interrupt is generated if the ERRIE bit of the I2C_CR1 register is set. The OVR flag is also set when the first data transmission starts and the STOPF bit is still set (has not been cleared). Therefore, if the user clears the STOPF flag of the previous transfer only after writing the first data to be transmitted in the next transfer, it ensures that the OVR status is provided, even for the first data to be transmitted.
In reception, the data must be read from the I2C_RXDR register before the ninth SCL pulse (ACK pulse) of the next data byte occurs. If not, an overrun occurs, the OVR flag is set in the I2C_ISR register, and an interrupt is generated if the ERRIE bit of the I2C_CR1 register is set.
Target byte control mode
To allow byte ACK control in target reception mode, the target byte control mode must be enabled, by setting the SBC bit of the I2C_CR1 register. This is required to comply with SMBus standards.
The reload mode must be selected to allow byte ACK control in target reception mode (RELOAD = 1). To get control of each byte, NBBYTES[7:0] must be initialized to 0x1 in the ADDR interrupt subroutine, and reloaded to 0x1 after each received byte. When the byte is received, the TCR bit is set, stretching the SCL signal low between the eighth and the ninth SCL pulse. The user can read the data from the I2C_RXDR register, and then decide to acknowledge it or not by configuring the ACK bit of the I2C_CR2 register. The SCL stretch is released by programming NBBYTES to a non-zero value: the acknowledge or not-acknowledge is sent and the next byte can be received.
NBYTES[7:0] can be loaded with a value greater than 0x1. Receiving then continues until the corresponding number of bytes are received.
Note: The SBC bit must be configured when the I2C peripheral is disabled, when the target is not addressed, or when ADDR = 1.
The RELOAD bit value can be changed when ADDR = 1, or when TCR = 1.
Caution: The target byte control mode is not compatible with NOSTRETCH mode. Setting SBC when NOSTRETCH = 1 is not allowed.
Figure 268. Target initialization flow

graph TD; A([Target initialization]) --> B[Initial settings]; B --> C[Clear OA1EN and OA2EN in I2C_OAR1/I2C_OAR2]; C --> D["Configure OA1[9:0], OA1MODE, OA1EN, OA2[6:0], OA2MSK[2:0], OA2EN, and GCEN"]; D --> E["Optional: Configure SBC in I2C_CR1<sup>(1)</sup>"]; E --> F[Enable interrupts and/or DMA in I2C_CR1]; F --> G([End]);
The flowchart illustrates the target initialization process. It begins with an oval labeled 'Target initialization', which points down to a rectangle 'Initial settings'. This is followed by a sequence of rectangles: 'Clear OA1EN and OA2EN in I2C_OAR1/I2C_OAR2', 'Configure OA1[9:0], OA1MODE, OA1EN, OA2[6:0], OA2MSK[2:0], OA2EN, and GCEN', 'Optional: Configure SBC in I2C_CR1 (1) ', and 'Enable interrupts and/or DMA in I2C_CR1'. The process concludes with an oval labeled 'End'. A small note 'MSv19850V4' is visible in the bottom right corner of the diagram area.
- 1. SBC must be set to support SMBus features.
Target transmitter
A transmit interrupt status (TXIS) flag is generated when the I2C_TXDR register becomes empty. An interrupt is generated if the TXIE bit of the I2C_CR1 register is set.
The TXIS flag is cleared when the I2C_TXDR register is written with the next data byte to transmit.
When NACK is received, the NACKF flag is set in the I2C_ISR register and an interrupt is generated if the NACKIE bit of the I2C_CR1 register is set. The target automatically releases the SCL and SDA lines to let the controller perform a STOP or a RESTART condition. The TXIS bit is not set when a NACK is received.
When STOP is received and the STOPIE bit of the I2C_CR1 register is set, the STOPF flag of the I2C_ISR register is set and an interrupt is generated. In most applications, the SBC bit is usually programmed to 0. In this case, if TXE = 0 when the target address is received (ADDR = 1), the user can choose either to send the content of the I2C_TXDR register as the first data byte, or to flush the I2C_TXDR register, by setting the TXE bit in order to program a new data byte.
In target byte control mode (SBC = 1), the number of bytes to transmit must be programmed in NBBYTES[7:0] in the address match interrupt subroutine (ADDR = 1). In this case, the number of TXIS events during the transfer corresponds to the value programmed in NBBYTES[7:0].
Caution: When NOSTRETCH = 1, the SCL clock is not stretched while the ADDR flag is set, so the user cannot flush the I2C_TXDR register content in the ADDR subroutine to program the first data byte. The first data byte to send must be previously programmed in the I2C_TXDR register:
- • This data can be the one written in the last TXIS event of the previous transmission message.
- • If this data byte is not the one to send, the I2C_TXDR register can be flushed, by setting the TXE bit, to program a new data byte. The STOPF bit must be cleared only after these actions. This guarantees that they are executed before the first data transmission starts, following the address acknowledge.
If STOPF is still set when the first data transmission starts, an underrun error is generated (the OVR flag is set).
If a TXIS event (transmit interrupt or transmit DMA request) is required, the user must set the TXIS bit in addition to the TXE bit, to generate the event.
Figure 269. Transfer sequence flow for I2C target transmitter, NOSTRETCH = 0

graph TD
Start([Target transmission]) --> Init[Target initialization]
Init --> ADDR{I2C_ISR.ADDR = 1?}
ADDR -- No --> ADDR
ADDR -- Yes --> Read[Read ADDCODE and DIR in I2C_ISR<br>Optional: Set I2C_ISR.TXE = 1<br>Set I2C_ICR.ADDRCF]
Read --> TXIS{I2C_ISR.TXIS = 1?}
TXIS -- No --> TXIS
TXIS -- Yes --> Write[Write I2C_TXDR.TXDATA]
Write --> TXIS
MSv19851V3
Figure 270. Transfer sequence flow for I2C target transmitter, NOSTRETCH = 1

graph TD; Start([Target transmission]) --> Init[Target initialization]; Init --> LoopStart(( )); LoopStart --> TXIS{I2C_ISR.TXIS = 1?}; TXIS -- Yes --> Write[Write I2C_TXDR.TXDATA]; Write --> LoopStart; TXIS -- No --> STOPF{I2C_ISR.STOPF = 1?}; STOPF -- Yes --> Optional[Optional: Set I2C_ISR.TXE = 1 and I2C_ISR.TXIS=1]; Optional --> STOPCF[Set I2C_ICR.STOPCF]; STOPCF --> LoopStart;MSV19852V3
Figure 271. Transfer bus diagrams for I2C target transmitter (mandatory events only)

Example I2C target transmitter 3 bytes with 1st data flushed, NOSTRETCH=0:
legend:
- transmission (white box)
- reception (yellow box)
- SCL stretch (blue line)
EV1: ADDR ISR: check ADDCODE and DIR, set TXE, set ADDRCF
EV2: TXIS ISR: wr data1
EV3: TXIS ISR: wr data2
EV4: TXIS ISR: wr data3
EV5: TXIS ISR: wr data4 (not sent)
Example I2C target transmitter 3 bytes without 1st data flush, NOSTRETCH=0:
legend :
- transmission (white box)
- reception (yellow box)
- SCL stretch (blue line)
EV1: ADDR ISR: check ADDCODE and DIR, set ADDRCF
EV2: TXIS ISR: wr data2
EV3: TXIS ISR: wr data3
EV4: TXIS ISR: wr data4 (not sent)
Example I2C target transmitter 3 bytes, NOSTRETCH=1:
legend:
- transmission (white box)
- reception (yellow box)
- SCL stretch (blue line)
EV1: wr data1
EV2: TXIS ISR: wr data2
EV3: TXIS ISR: wr data3
EV4: TXIS ISR: wr data4 (not sent)
EV5: STOPF ISR: (optional: set TXE and TXIS), set STOPCF
MSv19853V3
Target receiver
The RXNE bit of the I2C_ISR register is set when the I2C_RXDR is full, which generates an interrupt if the RXIE bit of the I2C_CR1 register is set. RXNE is cleared when I2C_RXDR is read.
When STOP condition is received and the STOPIE bit of the I2C_CR1 register is set, the STOPF flag in the I2C_ISR register is set and an interrupt is generated.
Figure 272. Transfer sequence flow for I2C target receiver, NOSTRETCH = 0

graph TD; A([Target reception]) --> B[Target initialization]; B --> C{I2C_ISR.ADDR = 1?}; C -- No --> B; C -- Yes --> D[Read ADDCODE and DIR in I2C_ISR<br/>Set I2C_ICR.ADDRCF]; D --> E{I2C_ISR.RXNE = 1?}; E -- No --> D; E -- Yes --> F[Read I2C_RXDR.RXDATA]; F --> E;MSV19855V4
Figure 273. Transfer sequence flow for I2C target receiver, NOSTRETCH = 1

graph TD
Start([Target reception]) --> Init[Target initialization]
Init --> RXNE{I2C_ISR.RXNE = 1?}
RXNE -- Yes --> Read[Read I2C_RXDR.RXDATA]
Read --> RXNE
RXNE -- No --> STOPF{I2C_ISR.STOPF = 1?}
STOPF -- Yes --> Stop[Set I2C_ICR.STOPCF]
STOPF -- No --> RXNE
MSv19856V3
Figure 274. Transfer bus diagrams for I2C target receiver (mandatory events only)

Example I2C target receiver 3 bytes, NOSTRETCH = 0:
Legend:
[ ] Transmission
[Y] Reception
--- SCL stretch
RXNE ________________|--|____|--|____|--|
EV1: ADDR ISR: check ADDCODE and DIR, set ADDRCF
EV2: RXNE ISR: rd data1
EV3: RXNE ISR: rd data2
EV4: RXNE ISR: rd data3
Example I2C target receiver 3 bytes, NOSTRETCH = 1:
Legend:
[ ] Transmission
[Y] Reception
--- SCL stretch
RXNE ________________|--|____|--|____|--|
EV1: RXNE ISR: rd data1
EV2: RXNE ISR: rd data2
EV3: RXNE ISR: rd data3
MSv19857V5
32.4.9 I2C controller mode
I2C controller initialization
Before enabling the peripheral, the I2C controller clock must be configured, by setting the SCLH and SCLL bits in the I2C_TIMINGR register.
The STM32CubeMX tool calculates and provides the I2C_TIMINGR content in the I2C Configuration window.
A clock synchronization mechanism is implemented in order to support multicontroller environment and target clock stretching.
In order to allow clock synchronization:
- • The low level of the clock is counted using the SCLL counter, starting from the SCL low level internal detection.
- • The high level of the clock is counted using the SCLH counter, starting from the SCL high level internal detection.
I2C detects its own SCL low level after a \( t_{\text{SYNC1}} \) delay depending on the SCL falling edge, SCL input noise filters (analog and digital), and SCL synchronization to the I2CxCLK clock. I2C releases SCL to high level once the SCLL counter reaches the value programmed in the SCLL[7:0] bitfield of the I2C_TIMINGR register.
I2C detects its own SCL high level after a \( t_{\text{SYNC2}} \) delay depending on the SCL rising edge, SCL input noise filters (analog and digital), and SCL synchronization to the I2CxCLK clock. I2C ties SCL to low level once the SCLH counter reaches the value programmed in the SCLH[7:0] bitfield of the I2C_TIMINGR register.
Consequently the controller clock period is:
The duration of \( t_{\text{SYNC1}} \) depends upon:
- • SCL falling slope
- • input delay induced by the analog filter (when enabled)
- • input delay induced by the digital filter (when enabled): \( \text{DNF}[3:0] \times t_{\text{I2CCLK}} \)
- • delay due to SCL synchronization with the I2CCLK clock (two to three I2CCLK periods)
The duration of \( t_{\text{SYNC2}} \) depends upon:
- • SCL rising slope
- • input delay induced by the analog filter (when enabled)
- • input delay induced by the digital filter (when enabled): \( \text{DNF}[3:0] \times t_{\text{I2CCLK}} \)
- • delay due to SCL synchronization with the I2CCLK clock (two to three I2CCLK periods)
Figure 275. Controller clock generation

SCL controller clock generation
SCL controller clock synchronization
MSv19858V2
Caution: For compliance with the I 2 C-bus or SMBus specification, the controller clock must respect the timings in the following table.
Table 217. I 2 C-bus and SMBus specification clock timings
| Symbol | Parameter | Standard-mode (Sm) | Fast-mode (Fm) | Fast-mode Plus (Fm+) | SMBus | Unit | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Min | Max | Min | Max | Min | Max | Min | Max | |||
| f SCL | SCL clock frequency | - | 100 | - | 400 | - | 1000 | - | 100 | kHz |
| t HD:STA | Hold time (repeated) START condition | 4.0 | - | 0.6 | - | 0.26 | - | 4.0 | - | µs |
| t SU:STA | Set-up time for a repeated START condition | 4.7 | - | 0.6 | - | 0.26 | - | 4.7 | - | |
| t SU:STO | Set-up time for STOP condition | 4.0 | - | 0.6 | - | 0.26 | - | 4.0 | - | |
| t BUF | Bus free time between a STOP and START condition | 4.7 | - | 1.3 | - | 0.5 | - | 4.7 | - | |
| t LOW | Low period of the SCL clock | 4.7 | - | 1.3 | - | 0.5 | - | 4.7 | - | |
| t HIGH | High period of the SCL clock | 4.0 | - | 0.6 | - | 0.26 | - | 4.0 | 50 | |
| t r | Rise time of both SDA and SCL signals | - | 1000 | - | 300 | - | 120 | - | 1000 | ns |
| t f | Fall time of both SDA and SCL signals | - | 300 | - | 300 | - | 120 | - | 300 | |
Note: The SCLL[7:0] bitfield also determines the t BUF and t SU:STA timings and SCLH[7:0] the t HD:STA and t SU:STO timings.
Refer to Section 32.4.10 for examples of I2C_TIMINGR settings versus the I2CCLK frequency.
Controller communication initialization (address phase)
To initiate the communication with a target to address, set the following bitfields of the I2C_CR2 register:
- • ADD10: addressing mode (7-bit or 10-bit)
- • SADD[9:0]: target address to send
- • RD_WRN: transfer direction
- • HEAD10R: in case of 10-bit address read, this bit determines whether the header only (for direction change) or the complete address sequence is sent.
- • NBYTES[7:0]: the number of bytes to transfer; if equal to or greater than 255 bytes, the bitfield must initially be set to 0xFF.
Note: Changing these bitfields is not allowed as long as the START bit is set.
Before launching the communication, make sure that the I 2 C-bus is idle. This can be checked using the bus idle detection function or by verifying that the IDR bits of the GPIOs selected as SDA and SCL are set. Any low-level incident on the I 2 C-bus lines that coincides with the START condition asserted by the I2C peripheral may cause its deadlock if not filtered out by the input filters. If such incidents cannot be prevented, design the software so that it restores the normal operation of the I2C peripheral in case of a deadlock, by toggling the PE bit of the I2C_CR1 register.
To launch the communication, set the START bit of the I2C_CR2 register. The controller then automatically sends a START condition followed by the target address, either immediately if the BUSY flag is low, or \( t_{BUF} \) time after the BUSY flag transits from high to low state. The BUSY flag is set upon sending the START condition.
In case of an arbitration loss, the controller automatically switches back to target mode and can acknowledge its own address if it is addressed as a target.
Note: The START bit is reset by hardware when the target address is sent on the bus, whatever the received acknowledge value. The START bit is also reset by hardware upon arbitration loss.
In 10-bit addressing mode, the controller automatically keeps resending the target address in a loop until the first address byte (first seven address bits) is acknowledged by the target. Setting the ADDRCF bit makes I2C quit that loop.
If the I2C peripheral is addressed as a target (ADDR = 1) while the START bit is set, the I2C peripheral switches to target mode and the START bit is cleared.
Note: The same procedure is applied for a repeated START condition. In this case, BUSY = 1.
Figure 276. Controller initialization flow

graph TD
A([Controller initialization]) --> B[Initial settings]
B --> C[Enable interrupts and/or DMA in I2C_CR1]
C --> D([End])
MSv19859V3
Initialization of a controller receiver addressing a 10-bit address target
If the target address is in 10-bit format, the user can choose to send the complete read sequence, by clearing the HEAD10R bit of the I2C_CR2 register. In this case, the controller automatically sends the following complete sequence after the START bit is set:
(RE)START + Target address 10-bit header Write + Target address second byte + (RE)START + Target address 10-bit header Read.
Figure 277. 10-bit address read access with HEAD10R = 0

| 1 1 1 1 0 X X | 0 | 1 1 1 1 0 X X | 1 | |||||||||||||||
| S | Target address 1st 7 bits | \( R/\overline{W} \) | A1 | Target address 2nd byte | A2 | Sr | Target address 1st 7 bits | \( R/\overline{W} \) | A3 | DATA | A | DATA | \( \overline{A} \) | P | ||||
| Write | Read | |||||||||||||||||
MSv41066V2
If the controller addresses a 10-bit address target, transmits data to this target and then reads data from the same target, a controller transmission flow must be done first. Then a repeated START is set with the 10-bit target address configured with HEAD10R = 1. In this case, the controller sends this sequence:
RESTART + Target address 10-bit header Read.
Figure 278. 10-bit address read access with HEAD10R = 1

Controller transmitter
In the case of a write transfer, the TXIS flag is set after each byte transmission, after the ninth SCL pulse when an ACK is received.
A TXIS event generates an interrupt if the TXIE bit of the I2C_CR1 register is set. The flag is cleared when the I2C_TXDR register is written with the next data byte to transmit.
The number of TXIS events during the transfer corresponds to the value programmed in NBBYTES[7:0]. If the total number of data bytes to transmit is greater than 255, the reload mode must be selected by setting the RELOAD bit in the I2C_CR2 register. In this case, when the NBBYTES[7:0] number of data bytes is transferred, the TCR flag is set and the SCL line is stretched low until NBBYTES[7:0] is written with a non-zero value.
When RELOAD = 0 and the number of data bytes defined in NBBYTES[7:0] is transferred:
- • In automatic end mode (AUTOEND = 1), a STOP condition is automatically sent.
- • In software end mode (AUTOEND = 0), the TC flag is set and the SCL line is stretched low, to perform software actions:
- – A RESTART condition can be requested by setting the START bit of the I2C_CR2 register with the proper target address configuration and the number of bytes to transfer. Setting the START bit clears the TC flag and sends the START condition on the bus.
- – A STOP condition can be requested by setting the STOP bit of the I2C_CR2 register. This clears the TC flag and sends a STOP condition on the bus.
When a NACK is received, the TXIS flag is not set and a STOP condition is automatically sent. The NACKF flag of the I2C_ISR register is set. An interrupt is generated if the NACKIE bit is set.
Figure 279. Transfer sequence flow for I2C controller transmitter, N ≤ 255 bytes

graph TD; Start([Controller transmission]) --> Init[Controller initialization]; Init --> Setup["NBYTES = N<br/>AUTOEND = 0 for RESTART; 1 for STOP<br/>Configure target address<br/>Set I2C_CR2.START"]; Setup --> LoopStart(( )); LoopStart --> NACKF{"I2C_ISR.NACKF = 1?"}; NACKF -- Yes --> End1([End]); NACKF -- No --> TXIS{"I2C_ISR.TXIS = 1?"}; TXIS -- No --> LoopStart; TXIS -- Yes --> Write[Write I2C_TXDR]; Write --> NBYTES{"NBYTES transmitted?"}; NBYTES -- No --> LoopStart; NBYTES -- Yes --> TC{"I2C_ISR.TC = 1?"}; TC -- Yes --> Setup2["Set I2C_CR2.START with<br/>target address NBYTES<br/>..."]; TC -- No --> End2([End]); Setup2 --> End2;MSV19860V3
Figure 280. Transfer sequence flow for I2C controller transmitter, N > 255 bytes

graph TD; Start([Controller transmission]) --> Init[Controller initialization]; Init --> Config["NBYTES = 0xFF; N=N-255<br>RELOAD = 1<br>Configure target address<br>Set I2C_CR2.START"]; Config --> LoopStart(( )); LoopStart --> Nackf{I2C_ISR.NACKF = 1?}; Nackf -- Yes --> End1([End]); Nackf -- No --> Txis{I2C_ISR.TXIS = 1?}; Txis -- No --> LoopStart; Txis -- Yes --> Write[Write I2C_TXDR]; Write --> Transmitted{NBYTES transmitted?}; Transmitted -- No --> LoopStart; Transmitted -- Yes --> Tc{I2C_ISR.TC = 1?}; Tc -- Yes --> SetStart["Set I2C_CR2.START<br>with target address<br>NBYTES ..."]; Tc -- No --> Tcr{I2C_ISR.TCR = 1?}; SetStart -.-> Tcr; Tcr -- Yes --> End2([End]); Tcr -- No --> ConfigBlock["IF N< 256<br>NBYTES = N; N = 0; RELOAD = 0<br>AUTOEND = 0 for RESTART; 1 for STOP<br>ELSE<br>NBYTES = 0xFF; N = N-255<br>RELOAD = 1"]; ConfigBlock --> LoopStart;The flowchart illustrates the transfer sequence for an I2C controller transmitter when the number of bytes to transmit (N) is greater than 255. It begins with 'Controller transmission' leading to 'Controller initialization'. The initialization block sets NBYTES to 0xFF, N to N-255, RELOAD to 1, configures the target address, and sets the I2C_CR2.START bit. The main loop starts with a decision 'I2C_ISR.NACKF = 1?'. If 'Yes', the process ends. If 'No', it proceeds to 'I2C_ISR.TXIS = 1?'. If 'No', it loops back to the start. If 'Yes', it proceeds to 'Write I2C_TXDR'. After writing, it checks 'NBYTES transmitted?'. If 'No', it loops back to the start. If 'Yes', it checks 'I2C_ISR.TC = 1?'. If 'Yes', it proceeds to 'Set I2C_CR2.START with target address NBYTES ...', which then leads to 'I2C_ISR.TCR = 1?'. If 'Yes', it ends. If 'No', it proceeds to a configuration block: 'IF N< 256, NBYTES = N; N = 0; RELOAD = 0; AUTOEND = 0 for RESTART; 1 for STOP ELSE NBYTES = 0xFF; N = N-255; RELOAD = 1', which then loops back to the start.
MSV19861V4
Figure 281. Transfer bus diagrams for I2C controller transmitter (mandatory events only)

Example I2C controller transmitter 2 bytes, automatic end mode (STOP)
transmission
reception
— SCL stretch
INIT: program target address, program NBYTES = 2, AUTOEND = 1, set START
EV1: TXIS ISR: wr data1
EV2: TXIS ISR: wr data2
Example I2C controller transmitter 2 bytes, software end mode (RESTART)
transmission
reception
— SCL stretch
INIT: program target address, program NBYTES = 2, AUTOEND = 0, set START
EV1: TXIS ISR: wr data1
EV2: TXIS ISR: wr data2
EV3: TC ISR: program target address, program NBYTES = N, set START
MSV19862V3
Controller receiver
In the case of a read transfer, the RXNE flag is set after each byte reception, after the eighth SCL pulse. An RXNE event generates an interrupt if the RXIE bit of the I2C_CR1 register is set. The flag is cleared when I2C_RXDR is read.
If the total number of data bytes to receive is greater than 255, select the reload mode, by setting the RELOAD bit of the I2C_CR2 register. In this case, when the NBBYTES[7:0] number of data bytes is transferred, the TCR flag is set and the SCL line is stretched low until NBBYTES[7:0] is written with a non-zero value.
When RELOAD = 0 and the number of data bytes defined in NBBYTES[7:0] is transferred:
- • In automatic end mode (AUTOEND = 1), a NACK and a STOP are automatically sent after the last received byte.
- • In software end mode (AUTOEND = 0), a NACK is automatically sent after the last received byte. The TC flag is set and the SCL line is stretched low in order to allow software actions:
- – A RESTART condition can be requested by setting the START bit of the I2C_CR2 register, with the proper target address configuration and the number of bytes to transfer. Setting the START bit clears the TC flag and sends the START condition and the target address on the bus.
- – A STOP condition can be requested by setting the STOP bit of the I2C_CR2 register. This clears the TC flag and sends a STOP condition on the bus.
Figure 282. Transfer sequence flow for I2C controller receiver, N ≤ 255 bytes

graph TD; A([Controller reception]) --> B[Controller initialization]; B --> C["NBYTES = N<br/>AUTOEND = 0 for RESTART; 1 for STOP<br/>Configure target address<br/>Set I2C_CR2.START"]; C --> D{I2C_ISR.RXNE = 1?}; D -- No --> C; D -- Yes --> E[Read I2C_RXDR]; E --> F{NBYTES received?}; F -- No --> C; F -- Yes --> G{I2C_ISR.TC = 1?}; G -- Yes --> H["Set I2C_CR2.START with<br/>target address NBYTES<br/>..."]; G -- No --> I([End]); H -.-> J[...];MSV19863V3
Figure 283. Transfer sequence flow for I2C controller receiver, N > 255 bytes

graph TD; Start([Controller reception]) --> Init[Controller initialization]; Init --> Config["NBYTES = 0xFF; N=N-255<br>RELOAD = 1<br>Configure target address<br>Set I2C_CR2.START"]; Config --> RXNE{I2C_ISR.RXNE = 1?}; RXNE -- No --> End([End]); RXNE -- Yes --> Read[Read I2C_RXDR]; Read --> NBytesRec{NBYTES received?}; NBytesRec -- No --> End; NBytesRec -- Yes --> TC{I2C_ISR.TC = 1?}; TC -- Yes --> SetStart["Set I2C_CR2.START with<br>target address NBYTES<br>..."]; TC -- No --> TCR{I2C_ISR.TCR = 1?}; TCR -- Yes --> IFN["IF N< 256<br>NBYTES = N; N=0;RELOAD=0<br>AUTOEND=0 for RESTART; 1 for STOP<br>ELSE<br>NBYTES =0xFF;N=N-255<br>RELOAD=1"]; TCR -- No --> End; SetStart -.-> End; IFN -.-> End;The flowchart illustrates the transfer sequence for an I2C controller receiver when the number of bytes to receive (N) is greater than 255. It begins with 'Controller reception', followed by 'Controller initialization'. The next step is a configuration block: 'NBYTES = 0xFF; N=N-255', 'RELOAD = 1', 'Configure target address', and 'Set I2C_CR2.START'. A loop begins with a decision 'I2C_ISR.RXNE = 1?'. If 'No', the process ends. If 'Yes', it proceeds to 'Read I2C_RXDR'. Another decision 'NBYTES received?' follows. If 'No', the process ends. If 'Yes', it proceeds to 'I2C_ISR.TC = 1?'. If 'Yes', it goes to 'Set I2C_CR2.START with target address NBYTES ...'. If 'No', it proceeds to 'I2C_ISR.TCR = 1?'. If 'Yes', it enters a conditional block: 'IF N< 256' (then 'NBYTES = N; N=0;RELOAD=0', 'AUTOEND=0 for RESTART; 1 for STOP') 'ELSE' (then 'NBYTES =0xFF;N=N-255', 'RELOAD=1'). Both the 'Set I2C_CR2.START' block and the conditional block lead to the 'End' state.
MSv19864V3
Figure 284. Transfer bus diagrams for I2C controller receiver (mandatory events only)

Example I2C controller receiver 2 bytes, automatic end mode (STOP)
INIT: program target address, program NBYTES = 2, AUTOEND=1, set START
EV1: RXNE ISR: rd data1
EV2: RXNE ISR: rd data2
Example I2C controller receiver 2 bytes, software end mode (RESTART)
INIT: program target address, program NBYTES = 2, AUTOEND=0, set START
EV1: RXNE ISR: rd data1
EV2: RXNE ISR: read data2
EV3: TC ISR: program target address, program NBYTES = N, set START
MSv19865V2
32.4.10 I2C_TIMINGR register configuration examples
The following tables provide examples of how to program the I2C_TIMINGR register to obtain timings compliant with the I 2 C-bus specification. To get more accurate configuration values, use the STM32CubeMX tool ( I2C Configuration window).
Table 218. Timing settings for \( f_{I2CCLK} \) of 8 MHz
| Parameter | Standard-mode (Sm) | Fast-mode (Fm) | Fast-mode Plus (Fm+) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 10 kHz | 100 kHz | 400 kHz | 500 kHz | |
| PRESC[3:0] | 0x1 | 0x1 | 0x0 | 0x0 |
| SCLL[7:0] | 0xC7 | 0x13 | 0x9 | 0x6 |
| \( t_{SCLL} \) | 200 x 250 ns = 50 µs | 20 x 250 ns = 5.0 µs | 10 x 125 ns = 1250 ns | 7 x 125 ns = 875 ns |
| SCLH[7:0] | 0xC3 | 0xF | 0x3 | 0x3 |
| \( t_{SCLH} \) | 196 x 250 ns = 49 µs | 16 x 250 ns = 4.0 µs | 4 x 125 ns = 500 ns | 4 x 125 ns = 500 ns |
| \( t_{SCL}^{(1)} \) | ~100 µs (2) | ~10 µs (2) | ~2.5 µs (3) | ~2.0 µs (4) |
| SDADEL[3:0] | 0x2 | 0x2 | 0x1 | 0x0 |
| \( t_{SDADEL} \) | 2 x 250 ns = 500 ns | 2 x 250 ns = 500 ns | 1 x 125 ns = 125 ns | 0 ns |
| SCLDEL[3:0] | 0x4 | 0x4 | 0x3 | 0x1 |
| \( t_{SCLDEL} \) | 5 x 250 ns = 1250 ns | 5 x 250 ns = 1250 ns | 4 x 125 ns = 500 ns | 2 x 125 ns = 250 ns |
- 1. \( t_{SCL} \) is greater than \( t_{SCLL} + t_{SCLH} \) due to SCL internal detection delay. Values provided for \( t_{SCL} \) are examples only.
- 2. \( t_{SYNC1} + t_{SYNC2} \) minimum value is \( 4 \times f_{I2CCLK} = 500 \) ns. Example with \( t_{SYNC1} + t_{SYNC2} = 1000 \) ns.
- 3. \( t_{SYNC1} + t_{SYNC2} \) minimum value is \( 4 \times f_{I2CCLK} = 500 \) ns. Example with \( t_{SYNC1} + t_{SYNC2} = 750 \) ns.
- 4. \( t_{SYNC1} + t_{SYNC2} \) minimum value is \( 4 \times f_{I2CCLK} = 500 \) ns. Example with \( t_{SYNC1} + t_{SYNC2} = 655 \) ns.
Table 219. Timing settings for \( f_{I2CCLK} \) of 16 MHz
| Parameter | Standard-mode (Sm) | Fast-mode (Fm) | Fast-mode Plus (Fm+) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 10 kHz | 100 kHz | 400 kHz | 1000 kHz | |
| PRESC[3:0] | 0x3 | 0x3 | 0x1 | 0x0 |
| SCLL[7:0] | 0xC7 | 0x13 | 0x9 | 0x4 |
| \( t_{SCLL} \) | 200 x 250 ns = 50 µs | 20 x 250 ns = 5.0 µs | 10 x 125 ns = 1250 ns | 5 x 62.5 ns = 312.5 ns |
| SCLH[7:0] | 0xC3 | 0xF | 0x3 | 0x2 |
| \( t_{SCLH} \) | 196 x 250 ns = 49 µs | 16 x 250 ns = 4.0 µs | 4 x 125 ns = 500 ns | 3 x 62.5 ns = 187.5 ns |
| \( t_{SCL}^{(1)} \) | ~100 µs (2) | ~10 µs (2) | ~2.5 µs (3) | ~1.0 µs (4) |
| SDADEL[3:0] | 0x2 | 0x2 | 0x2 | 0x0 |
| \( t_{SDADEL} \) | 2 x 250 ns = 500 ns | 2 x 250 ns = 500 ns | 2 x 125 ns = 250 ns | 0 ns |
| SCLDEL[3:0] | 0x4 | 0x4 | 0x3 | 0x2 |
| \( t_{SCLDEL} \) | 5 x 250 ns = 1250 ns | 5 x 250 ns = 1250 ns | 4 x 125 ns = 500 ns | 3 x 62.5 ns = 187.5 ns |
- 1. \( t_{SCL} \) is greater than \( t_{SCLL} + t_{SCLH} \) due to SCL internal detection delay. Values provided for \( t_{SCL} \) are examples only.
- 2. \( t_{SYNC1} + t_{SYNC2} \) minimum value is \( 4 \times f_{I2CCLK} = 250 \) ns. Example with \( t_{SYNC1} + t_{SYNC2} = 1000 \) ns.
- 3. \( t_{SYNC1} + t_{SYNC2} \) minimum value is \( 4 \times f_{I2CCLK} = 250 \) ns. Example with \( t_{SYNC1} + t_{SYNC2} = 750 \) ns.
- 4. \( t_{SYNC1} + t_{SYNC2} \) minimum value is \( 4 \times f_{I2CCLK} = 250 \) ns. Example with \( t_{SYNC1} + t_{SYNC2} = 500 \) ns.
32.4.11 SMBus specific features
Introduction
The system management bus (SMBus) is a two-wire interface through which various devices can communicate with each other and with the rest of the system. It is based on operation principles of the I 2 C-bus. The SMBus provides a control bus for system and power management related tasks.
The I2C peripheral is compatible with the SMBus specification ( http://smbus.org ).
The system management bus specification refers to three types of devices:
- • Target is a device that receives or responds to a command.
- • Controller is a device that issues commands, generates clocks, and terminates the transfer.
- • Host is a specialized controller that provides the main interface to the system CPU. A host must be a controller-target and must support the SMBus host notify protocol. Only one host is allowed in a system.
The I2C peripheral can be configured as a controller or a target device, and also as a host.
Bus protocols
There are eleven possible command protocols for any given device. The device can use any or all of them to communicate. These are: Quick Command , Send Byte , Receive Byte , Write Byte , Write Word , Read Byte , Read Word , Process Call , Block Read , Block Write , and Block Write-Block Read Process Call . The protocols must be implemented by the user software.
For more details on these protocols, refer to the SMBus specification ( http://smbus.org ).
STM32CubeMX implements an SMBus stack thanks to X-CUBE-SMBUS, a downloadable software pack that allows basic SMBus configuration per I2C instance.
Address resolution protocol (ARP)
SMBus target address conflicts can be resolved by dynamically assigning a new unique address to each target device. To provide a mechanism to isolate each device for the purpose of address assignment, each device must implement a unique 128-bit device identifier (UDID). In the I2C peripheral, it is implemented by software.
The I2C peripheral supports the Address resolution protocol (ARP). The SMBus device default address (0b1100 001) is enabled by setting the SMBDEN bit of the I2C_CR1 register. The ARP commands must be implemented by the user software.
Arbitration is also performed in target mode for ARP support.
For more details on the SMBus address resolution protocol, refer to the SMBus specification ( http://smbus.org ).
Received command and data acknowledge control
An SMBus receiver must be able to NACK each received command or data. In order to allow the ACK control in target mode, the target byte control mode must be enabled, by setting the SBC bit of the I2C_CR1 register. Refer to Target byte control mode for more details.
Host notify protocol
To enable the host notify protocol, set the SMBHEN bit of the I2C_CR1 register. The I2C peripheral then acknowledges the SMBus host address (0b0001 000).
When this protocol is used, the device acts as a controller and the host as a target.
SMBus alert
The I2C peripheral supports the SMBALERT# optional signal through the SMBA pin. With the SMBALERT# signal, an SMBus target device can signal to the SMBus host that it wants to talk. The host processes the interrupt and simultaneously accesses all SMBALERT# devices through the alert response address (0b0001 100). Only the device/devices which pulled SMBALERT# low acknowledges/acknowledge the alert response address.
When the I2C peripheral is configured as an SMBus target device (SMBHEN = 0), the SMBA pin is pulled low by setting the ALERTEN bit of the I2C_CR1 register. The alert response address is enabled at the same time.
When the I2C peripheral is configured as an SMBus host (SMBHEN = 1), the ALERT flag of the I2C_ISR register is set when a falling edge is detected on the SMBA pin and ALERTEN = 1. An interrupt is generated if the ERRIE bit of the I2C_CR1 register is set. When ALERTEN = 0, the alert line is considered high even if the external SMBA pin is low.
Note: If the SMBus alert pin is not required, keep the ALERTEN bit cleared. The SMBA pin can then be used as a standard GPIO.
Packet error checking
A packet error checking mechanism introduced in the SMBus specification improves reliability and communication robustness. The packet error checking is implemented by appending a packet error code (PEC) at the end of each message transfer. The PEC is calculated by using the \( C(x) = x^8 + x^2 + x + 1 \) CRC-8 polynomial on all the message bytes (including addresses and read/write bits).
The I2C peripheral embeds a hardware PEC calculator and allows a not acknowledge to be sent automatically when the received byte does not match the hardware calculated PEC.
Timeouts
To comply with the SMBus timeout specifications, the I2C peripheral embeds hardware timers.
Table 220. SMBus timeout specifications
| Symbol | Parameter | Limits | Unit | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Min | Max | |||
| \( t_{\text{TIMEOUT}} \) | Detect clock low timeout | 25 | 35 | ms |
| \( t_{\text{LOW:SEXT}}^{(1)} \) | Cumulative clock low extend time (target device) | - | 25 | |
| \( t_{\text{LOW:MEXT}}^{(2)} \) | Cumulative clock low extend time (controller device) | - | 10 | |
- \( t_{\text{LOW:SEXT}} \) is the cumulative time a given target device is allowed to extend the clock cycles in one message from the initial START to the STOP. It is possible that another target device or the controller also extends the clock causing the combined clock low extend time to be greater than \( t_{\text{LOW:SEXT}} \) . The value provided applies to a single target device connected to a full-target controller.
- 2. \( t_{LOW:MEXT} \) is the cumulative time a controller device is allowed to extend its clock cycles within each byte of a message as defined from START-to-ACK, ACK-to-ACK, or ACK-to-STOP. It is possible that a target device or another controller also extends the clock, causing the combined clock low time to be greater than \( t_{LOW:MEXT} \) on a given byte. The value provided applies to a single target device connected to a full-target controller.
Figure 285. Timeout intervals for \( t_{LOW:SEXT} \) , \( t_{LOW:MEXT} \)

Bus idle detection
A controller can assume that the bus is free if it detects that the clock and data signals have been high for \( t_{IDLE} > t_{HIGH(max)} \) (refer to the table in Section 32.4.9 ).
This timing parameter covers the condition where a controller is dynamically added to the bus, and may not have detected a state transition on the SMBCLK or SMBDAT lines. In this case, the controller must wait long enough to ensure that a transfer is not currently in progress. The I2C peripheral supports a hardware bus idle detection.
32.4.12 SMBus initialization
In addition to the I2C initialization for the I2C-bus, the use of the peripheral for the SMBus communication requires some extra initialization steps.
Received command and data acknowledge control (target mode)
An SMBus receiver must be able to NACK each received command or data. To allow ACK control in target mode, the target byte control mode must be enabled, by setting the SBC bit of the I2C_CR1 register. Refer to Target byte control mode for more details.
Specific addresses (target mode)
The specific SMBus addresses must be enabled if required. Refer to Bus idle detection for more details.
The SMBus device default address (0b1100 001) is enabled by setting the SMBDEN bit of the I2C_CR1 register.
The SMBus host address (0b0001 000) is enabled by setting the SMBHEN bit of the I2C_CR1 register.
The alert response address (0b0001100) is enabled by setting the ALERTEN bit of the I2C_CR1 register.
Packet error checking
PEC calculation is enabled by setting the PECEN bit of the I2C_CR1 register. Then the PEC transfer is managed with the help of the hardware byte counter associated with the NBYTES[7:0] bitfield of the I2C_CR2 register. The PECEN bit must be configured before enabling the I2C.
The PEC transfer is managed with the hardware byte counter, so the SBC bit must be set when interfacing the SMBus in target mode. The PEC is transferred after transferring NBYTES[7:0] - 1 data bytes, if the PECBYTE bit is set and the RELOAD bit is cleared. If RELOAD is set, PECBYTE has no effect.
Caution: Changing the PECEN configuration is not allowed when the I2C peripheral is enabled.
Table 221. SMBus with PEC configuration
| Mode | SBC bit | RELOAD bit | AUTOEND bit | PECBYTE bit |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Controller Tx/Rx NBYTES + PEC+ STOP | X | 0 | 1 | 1 |
| Controller Tx/Rx NBYTES + PEC + ReSTART | X | 0 | 0 | 1 |
| Target Tx/Rx with PEC | 1 | 0 | X | 1 |
Timeout detection
The timeout detection is enabled by setting the TIMOUTEN and TEXTEN bits of the I2C_TIMEOUTR register. The timers must be programmed in such a way that they detect a timeout before the maximum time given in the SMBus specification.
\( t_{TIMEOUT} \) check
To check the \( t_{TIMEOUT} \) parameter, load the 12-bit TIMEOUTA[11:0] bitfield with the timer reload value. Keep the TIDLE bit at 0 to detect the SCL low level timeout.
Then set the TIMOUTEN bit of the I2C_TIMEOUTR register, to enable the timer.
If SCL is tied low for longer than the \( (TIMEOUTA + 1) \times 2048 \times t_{I2CCLK} \) period, the TIMEOUT flag of the I2C_ISR register is set.
Refer to Table 222 .
Caution: Changing the TIMEOUTA[11:0] bitfield and the TIDLE bit values is not allowed when the TIMOUTEN bit is set.
\( t_{LOW:SEXT} \) and \( t_{LOW:MEXT} \) check
A 12-bit timer associated with the TIMEOUTB[11:0] bitfield allows checking \( t_{LOW:SEXT} \) for the I2C peripheral operating as a target, or \( t_{LOW:MEXT} \) when it operates as a controller. As the standard only specifies a maximum, the user can choose the same value for both. The timer is then enabled by setting the TEXTEN bit in the I2C_TIMEOUTR register.
If the SMBus peripheral performs a cumulative SCL stretch for longer than the \( (\text{TIMEOUTB} + 1) \times 2048 \times t_{\text{I2CCLK}} \) period, and within the timeout interval described in Bus idle detection section, the TIMEOUT flag of the I2C_ISR register is set.
Refer to Table 223 .
Caution: Changing the TIMEOUTB[11:0] bitfield value is not allowed when the TEXTEN bit is set.
Bus idle detection
To check the \( t_{\text{IDLE}} \) period, the TIMEOUTA[11:0] bitfield associated with 12-bit timer must be loaded with the timer reload value. Keep the TIDLE bit at 1 to detect both SCL and SDA high level timeout. Then set the TIMOUTEN bit of the I2C_TIMEOUTR register to enable the timer.
If both the SCL and SDA lines remain high for longer than the \( (\text{TIMEOUTA} + 1) \times 4 \times t_{\text{I2CCLK}} \) period, the TIMEOUT flag of the I2C_ISR register is set.
Refer to Table 224 .
Caution: Changing the TIMEOUTA[11:0] bitfield and the TIDLE bit values is not allowed when the TIMOUTEN bit is set.
32.4.13 SMBus I2C_TIMEOUTR register configuration examples
The following tables provide examples of settings to reach desired \( t_{\text{TIMEOUT}} \) , \( t_{\text{LOW:SEXT}} \) , \( t_{\text{LOW:MEXT}} \) , and \( t_{\text{IDLE}} \) timings at different \( f_{\text{I2CCLK}} \) frequencies.
Table 222. TIMEOUTA[11:0] for maximum \( t_{\text{TIMEOUT}} \) of 25 ms
| \( f_{\text{I2CCLK}} \) | TIMEOUTA[11:0] | TIDLE | TIMEOUTEN | \( t_{\text{TIMEOUT}} \) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 8 MHz | 0x61 | 0 | 1 | \( 98 \times 2048 \times 125 \text{ ns} = 25 \text{ ms} \) |
| 16 MHz | 0xC3 | 0 | 1 | \( 196 \times 2048 \times 62.5 \text{ ns} = 25 \text{ ms} \) |
Table 223. TIMEOUTB[11:0] for maximum \( t_{\text{LOW:SEXT}} \) and \( t_{\text{LOW:MEXT}} \) of 8 ms
| \( f_{\text{I2CCLK}} \) | TIMEOUTB[11:0] | TEXTEN | \(
t_{\text{LOW:SEXT}}
\) \( t_{\text{LOW:MEXT}} \) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 8 MHz | 0x1F | 1 | \( 32 \times 2048 \times 125 \text{ ns} = 8 \text{ ms} \) |
| 16 MHz | 0x3F | 1 | \( 64 \times 2048 \times 62.5 \text{ ns} = 8 \text{ ms} \) |
Table 224. TIMEOUTA[11:0] for maximum \( t_{\text{IDLE}} \) of 50 \( \mu\text{s} \)
| \( f_{\text{I2CCLK}} \) | TIMEOUTA[11:0] | TIDLE | TIMEOUTEN | \( t_{\text{IDLE}} \) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 8 MHz | 0x63 | 1 | 1 | \( 100 \times 4 \times 125 \text{ ns} = 50 \mu\text{s} \) |
| 16 MHz | 0xC7 | 1 | 1 | \( 200 \times 4 \times 62.5 \text{ ns} = 50 \mu\text{s} \) |
32.4.14 SMBus target mode
In addition to I2C target transfer management (refer to Section 32.4.8: I2C target mode ), this section provides extra software flowcharts to support SMBus.
SMBus target transmitter
When using the I2C peripheral in SMBus mode, set the SBC bit to enable the PEC transmission at the end of the programmed number of data bytes. When the PECBYTE bit is set, the number of bytes programmed in NBBYTES[7:0] includes the PEC transmission. In that case, the total number of TXIS interrupts is NBBYTES[7:0] - 1, and the content of the I2C_PECR register is automatically transmitted if the controller requests an extra byte after the transfer of the NBBYTES[7:0] - 1 data bytes.
Caution: The PECBYTE bit has no effect when the RELOAD bit is set.
Figure 286. Transfer sequence flow for SMBus target transmitter N bytes + PEC

graph TD; Start([SMBus target transmission]) --> Init[Target initialization]; Init --> Addr{I2C_ISR.ADDR = 1?}; Addr -- No --> Init; Addr -- Yes --> Read[Read ADDCODE and DIR in I2C_ISR<br/>I2C_CR2.NBYTES = N + 1<br/>PECBYTE = 1<br/>Set I2C_ICR.ADDRCF]; Read --> TxIs{I2C_ISR.TXIS = 1?}; TxIs -- No --> Read; TxIs -- Yes --> Write[Write I2C_TXDR.TXDATA]; Write --> Read;The flowchart illustrates the transfer sequence for an SMBus target transmitter. It begins with 'SMBus target transmission' (oval), leading to 'Target initialization' (rectangle). A decision diamond 'I2C_ISR.ADDR = 1?' follows. If 'No', it loops back to 'Target initialization'. If 'Yes', it proceeds to a rectangle: 'Read ADDCODE and DIR in I2C_ISR', 'I2C_CR2.NBYTES = N + 1', 'PECBYTE = 1', and 'Set I2C_ICR.ADDRCF'. A vertical double-headed arrow labeled 'SCL stretched' is positioned to the right of this block. The next decision diamond is 'I2C_ISR.TXIS = 1?'. If 'No', it loops back to the 'Read' block. If 'Yes', it proceeds to 'Write I2C_TXDR.TXDATA' (rectangle), which then loops back to the 'Read' block. The identifier 'MSV19867V3' is in the bottom right corner.
Figure 287. Transfer bus diagram for SMBus target transmitter (SBC = 1)

Example SMBus target transmitter 2 bytes + PEC
legend:
- transmission
- reception
- SCL stretch
NBYTES 3
EV1: ADDR ISR: check ADDCODE, program NBYTES = 3, set PECBYTE, set ADDRCF
EV2: TXIS ISR: wr data1
EV3: TXIS ISR: wr data2
MSv19869V3
SMBus target receiver
When using the I2C peripheral in SMBus mode, set the SBC bit to enable the PEC checking at the end of the programmed number of data bytes. To allow the ACK control of each byte, the reload mode must be selected (RELOAD = 1). Refer to Target byte control mode for more details.
To check the PEC byte, the RELOAD bit must be cleared and the PECBYTE bit must be set. In this case, after the receipt of NBYTES[7:0] - 1 data bytes, the next received byte is compared with the internal I2C_PECR register content. A NACK is automatically generated if the comparison does not match, and an ACK is automatically generated if the comparison matches, whatever the ACK bit value. Once the PEC byte is received, it is copied into the I2C_RXDR register like any other data, and the RXNE flag is set.
Upon a PEC mismatch, the PECERR flag is set and an interrupt is generated if the ERRIE bit of the I2C_CR1 register is set.
If no ACK software control is required, the user can set the PECBYTE bit and, in the same write operation, load NBYTES[7:0] with the number of bytes to receive in a continuous flow. After the receipt of NBYTES[7:0] - 1 bytes, the next received byte is checked as being the PEC.
Caution: The PECBYTE bit has no effect when the RELOAD bit is set.
Figure 288. Transfer sequence flow for SMBus target receiver N bytes + PEC

graph TD; Start([SMBus target reception]) --> Init[Target initialization]; Init --> ADDR{I2C_ISR.ADDR = 1?}; ADDR -- No --> Init; ADDR -- Yes --> Read1[Read ADDCODE and DIR in I2C_ISR<br>I2C_CR2.NBYTES = 1, RELOAD = 1<br>PECBYTE = 1<br>Set I2C_ICR.ADDRCF]; Read1 --> RXNE_TCR{I2C_ISR.RXNE = 1?<br>I2C_ISR.TCR = 1?}; RXNE_TCR -- No --> ADDR; RXNE_TCR -- Yes --> Read2[Read I2C_RXDR.RXDATA<br>Program I2C_CR2.NACK = 0<br>I2C_CR2.NBYTES = 1<br>N = N - 1]; Read2 --> N1{N = 1?}; N1 -- No --> RXNE_TCR; N1 -- Yes --> Read3[Read I2C_RXDR.RXDATA<br>Program RELOAD = 0<br>NACK = 0 and NBYTES = 1]; Read3 --> RXNE{I2C_ISR.RXNE = 1?}; RXNE -- No --> ADDR; RXNE -- Yes --> Read4[Read I2C_RXDR.RXDATA]; Read4 --> End([End]);SCL stretched
MSV19868V3
Figure 289. Bus transfer diagrams for SMBus target receiver (SBC = 1)

Example SMBus target receiver 2 bytes + PEC
legend:
transmission
reception
—
SCL stretch
NBYTES 3
EV1: ADDR ISR: check ADDCODE and DIR, program NBYTES = 3, PECBYTE = 1, RELOAD = 0, set ADDRCF
EV2: RXNE ISR: rd data1
EV3: RXNE ISR: rd data2
EV4: RXNE ISR: rd PEC
Example SMBus target receiver 2 bytes + PEC, with ACK control (RELOAD = 1/0)
legend :
transmission
reception
—
SCL stretch
NBYTES 1
EV1: ADDR ISR: check ADDCODE and DIR, program NBYTES = 1, PECBYTE = 1, RELOAD = 1, set ADDRCF
EV2: RXNE-TCR ISR: rd data1, program NACK=0 and NBYTES = 1
EV3: RXNE-TCR ISR: rd data2, program NACK=0, NBYTES = 1 and RELOAD = 0
EV4: RXNE-TCR ISR: rd PEC
MSv19870V3
32.4.15 SMBus controller mode
In addition to I2C controller transfer management (refer to Section 32.4.9: I2C controller mode ), this section provides extra software flowcharts to support SMBus.
SMBus controller transmitter
When the SMBus controller wants to transmit the PEC, the PECBYTE bit must be set and the number of bytes must be loaded in the NBYTES[7:0] bitfield, before setting the START bit. In this case, the total number of TXIS interrupts is NBYTES[7:0] - 1. So if the PECBYTE bit is set when NBYTES[7:0] = 0x1, the content of the I2C_PECR register is automatically transmitted.
If the SMBus controller wants to send a STOP condition after the PEC, the automatic end mode must be selected (AUTOEND = 1). In this case, the STOP condition automatically follows the PEC transmission.
When the SMBus controller wants to send a RESTART condition after the PEC, the software mode must be selected (AUTOEND = 0). In this case, once NBYTES[7:0] - 1 are transmitted, the I2C_PECR register content is transmitted. The TC flag is set after the PEC transmission, stretching the SCL line low. The RESTART condition must be programmed in the TC interrupt subroutine.
Caution: The PECBYTE bit has no effect when the RELOAD bit is set.
Figure 290. Bus transfer diagrams for SMBus controller transmitter

Example SMBus controller transmitter 2 bytes + PEC, automatic end mode (STOP)
The diagram shows a sequence of I2C bus events: Start (S), Address, Acknowledge (A), data1, A, data2, A, PEC, A, and Stop (P). - Transmission (white boxes): S, Address, data1, data2, PEC, P. - Reception (green boxes): A (after Address, data1, data2, and PEC). - Signals: TXE (Transmission Empty) pulses low during data1 and data2 transmission. NBYTES is set to 3. - Events: - INIT: program target address, program NBYTES = 3, AUTOEND=1, set PECBYTE, set START - EV1: TXIS ISR: wr data1 - EV2: TXIS ISR: wr data2 - Legend: White box = transmission, Green box = reception, Blue line = SCL stretch.
Example SMBus controller transmitter 2 bytes + PEC, software end mode (RESTART)
The diagram shows a sequence: Start (S), Address, A, data1, A, data2, A, PEC, A, followed by an SCL stretch and then a Restart (Rstart) Address. - Transmission (white boxes): S, Address, data1, data2, PEC, Rstart Address. - Reception (green boxes): A (after Address, data1, data2, PEC, and Rstart Address). - Signals: NBYTES is initially 3, then changes to N after the TC event. - Events: - INIT: program target address, program NBYTES = 3, AUTOEND=0, set PECBYTE, set START - EV1: TXIS ISR: wr data1 - EV2: TXIS ISR: wr data2 - EV3: TC ISR: program target address, program NBYTES = N, set START - Legend: White box = transmission, Green box = reception, Blue line = SCL stretch.
MSv19871V3
SMBus controller receiver
When the SMBus controller wants to receive, at the end of the transfer, the PEC followed by a STOP condition, the automatic end mode can be selected (AUTOEND = 1). The PECBYTE bit must be set and the target address programmed before setting the START bit. In this case, after the receipt of NBBYTES[7:0] - 1 data bytes, the next received byte is automatically checked versus the I2C_PECR register content. A NACK response is given to the PEC byte, followed by a STOP condition.
When the SMBus controller receiver wants to receive, at the end of the transfer, the PEC byte followed by a RESTART condition, the software mode must be selected (AUTOEND = 0). The PECBYTE bit must be set and the target address programmed before setting the START bit. In this case, after the receipt of NBBYTES[7:0] - 1 data bytes, the next received byte is automatically checked versus the I2C_PECR register content. The TC flag is set after the PEC byte reception, stretching the SCL line low. The RESTART condition can be programmed in the TC interrupt subroutine.
Caution: The PECBYTE bit has no effect when the RELOAD bit is set.
Figure 291. Bus transfer diagrams for SMBus controller receiver

Example SMBus controller receiver 2 bytes + PEC, automatic end mode (STOP)
INIT: program target address, program NBYTES = 3, AUTOEND=1, set PECBYTE, set START
EV1: RXNE ISR: rd data1
EV2: RXNE ISR: rd data2
EV3: RXNE ISR: rd PEC
Example SMBus controller receiver 2 bytes + PEC, software end mode (RESTART)
INIT: program target address, program NBYTES = 3, AUTOEND = 0, set PECBYTE, set START
EV1: RXNE ISR: rd data1
EV2: RXNE ISR: rd data2
EV3: RXNE ISR: read PEC
EV4: TC ISR: program target address, program NBYTES = N, set START
MSv19872V3
32.4.16 Wake-up from Stop mode on address match
The I2C peripheral is able to wake up the device from Stop mode (APB clock is off), when the device is addressed. All addressing modes are supported.
The wake-up from Stop mode is enabled by setting the WUPEN bit of the I2C_CR1 register. The HSI16 oscillator must be selected as the clock source for I2CCLK to allow the wake-up from Stop mode.
In Stop mode, the HSI16 oscillator is stopped. Upon detecting START condition, the I2C interface starts the HSI16 oscillator and stretches SCL low until the oscillator wakes up.
HSI16 is then used for the address reception.
If the received address matches the device own address, I2C stretches SCL low until the device wakes up. The stretch is released when the ADDR flag is cleared by software. Then the transfer goes on normally.
If the address does not match, the HSI16 oscillator is stopped again and the device does not wake up.
Note: When the system clock is used as I2C clock, or when WUPEN = 0, the HSI16 oscillator does not start upon receiving START condition.
Only an ADDR interrupt can wake the device up. Therefore, do not enter Stop mode when I2C is performing a transfer, either as a controller or as an addressed target after the ADDR flag is set. This can be managed by clearing the SLEEPDEEP bit in the ADDR interrupt routine and setting it again only after the STOPF flag is set.
Caution: The digital filter is not compatible with the wake-up from Stop mode feature. Before entering Stop mode with the WUPEN bit set, deactivate the digital filter, by writing zero to the DNF[3:0] bitfield.
Caution: The feature is only available when the HSI16 oscillator is selected as the I2C clock.
Caution: Clock stretching must be enabled (NOSTRETCH = 0) to ensure proper operation of the wake-up from Stop mode feature.
Caution: If the wake-up from Stop mode is disabled (WUPEN = 0), the I2C peripheral must be disabled before entering Stop mode (PE = 0).
32.4.17 Error conditions
The following errors are the conditions that can cause the communication to fail.
Bus error (BERR)
A bus error is detected when a START or a STOP condition is detected and is not located after a multiple of nine SCL clock pulses. START or STOP condition is detected when an SDA edge occurs while SCL is high.
The bus error flag is set only if the I2C peripheral is involved in the transfer as controller or addressed target (that is, not during the address phase in target mode).
In case of a misplaced START or RESTART detection in target mode, the I2C peripheral enters address recognition state like for a correct START condition.
When a bus error is detected, the BERR flag of the I2C_ISR register is set, and an interrupt is generated if the ERRIE bit of the I2C_CR1 register is set.
Arbitration loss (ARLO)
An arbitration loss is detected when a high level is sent on the SDA line, but a low level is sampled on the SCL rising edge.
In controller mode, arbitration loss is detected during the address phase, data phase and data acknowledge phase. In this case, the SDA and SCL lines are released, the START control bit is cleared by hardware and the controller switches automatically to target mode.
In target mode, arbitration loss is detected during data phase and data acknowledge phase. In this case, the transfer is stopped and the SCL and SDA lines are released.
When an arbitration loss is detected, the ARLO flag of the I2C_ISR register is set and an interrupt is generated if the ERRIE bit of the I2C_CR1 register is set.
Overrun/underrun error (OVR)
An overrun or underrun error is detected in target mode when NOSTRETCH = 1 and:
- • In reception when a new byte is received and the RXDR register has not been read yet. The new received byte is lost, and a NACK is automatically sent as a response to the new byte.
- • In transmission:
- – When STOPF = 1 and the first data byte must be sent. The content of the I2C_TXDR register is sent if TXE = 0, 0xFF if not.
- – When a new byte must be sent and the I2C_TXDR register has not been written yet, 0xFF is sent.
When an overrun or underrun error is detected, the OVR flag of the I2C_ISR register is set and an interrupt is generated if the ERRIE bit of the I2C_CR1 register is set.
Packet error checking error (PECERR)
A PEC error is detected when the received PEC byte does not match the I2C_PECR register content. A NACK is automatically sent after the wrong PEC reception.
When a PEC error is detected, the PECERR flag of the I2C_ISR register is set and an interrupt is generated if the ERRIE bit of the I2C_CR1 register is set.
Timeout error (TIMEOUT)
A timeout error occurs for any of these conditions:
- • TIDLE = 0 and SCL remains low for the time defined in the TIMEOUTA[11:0] bitfield: this is used to detect an SMBus timeout.
- • TIDLE = 1 and both SDA and SCL remains high for the time defined in the TIMEOUTA[11:0] bitfield: this is used to detect a bus idle condition.
- • Controller cumulative clock low extend time reaches the time defined in the TIMEOUTB[11:0] bitfield (SMBus \( t_{LOW:MEXT} \) parameter).
- • Target cumulative clock low extend time reaches the time defined in the TIMEOUTB[11:0] bitfield (SMBus \( t_{LOW:SEXT} \) parameter).
When a timeout violation is detected in controller mode, a STOP condition is automatically sent.
When a timeout violation is detected in target mode, the SDA and SCL lines are automatically released.
When a timeout error is detected, the TIMEOUT flag is set in the I2C_ISR register and an interrupt is generated if the ERRIE bit of the I2C_CR1 register is set.
Alert (ALERT)
The ALERT flag is set when the I2C peripheral is configured as a host (SMBHEN = 1), the SMBALERT# signal detection is enabled (ALERTEN = 1), and a falling edge is detected on the SMBA pin. An interrupt is generated if the ERRIE bit of the I2C_CR1 register is set.
32.5 I2C in low-power modes
Table 225. Effect of low-power modes to I2C
| Mode | Description |
|---|---|
| Sleep | No effect. I2C interrupts cause the device to exit the Sleep mode. |
| Stop (1) | The contents of I2C registers are kept
(2)
. – WUPEN = 1 and I2C is clocked by an internal oscillator (HSI16). The address recognition is functional. The I2C address match condition causes the device to exit the Stop mode. – WUPEN = 0: I2C must be disabled before entering Stop mode. |
| Standby | The I2C peripheral is powered down. It must be reinitialized after exiting Standby mode. |
- 1. Refer to Section 32.3: I2C implementation for information about the Stop modes supported by each instance. If the wake-up from a specific stop mode is not supported, the instance must be disabled before entering that specific Stop mode.
- 2. In Stop 2 mode, only I2C3 register content is kept. The I2C1 and I2C2 instances are powered down and must be reinitialized after exiting Stop 2 mode.
32.6 I2C interrupts
The following table gives the list of I2C interrupt requests.
Table 226. I2C interrupt requests
| Interrupt acronym | Interrupt event | Event flag | Enable control bit | Interrupt clear method | Exit Sleep mode | Exit Stop 0, Stop 1, Stop 2 modes | Exit Standby, Shutdown modes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| I2C_EV | Receive buffer not empty | RXNE | RXIE | Read I2C_RXDR register | Yes | No | No |
| Transmit buffer interrupt status | TXIS | TXIE | Write I2C_TXDR register | ||||
| STOP detection interrupt flag | STOPF | STOPIE | Write STOPCF = 1 | ||||
| Transfer complete reload | TCR | TCIE | Write I2C_CR2 with NBYTES[7:0] ≠ 0 | ||||
| Transfer complete | TC | Write START = 1 or STOP = 1 | |||||
| Address matched | ADDR | ADDRIE | Write ADDRCF = 1 | Yes (1) | |||
| NACK reception | NACKF | NACKIE | Write NACKCF = 1 | No | |||
| I2C_ERR | Bus error | BERR | ERRIE | Write BERRCF = 1 | Yes | No | No |
| Arbitration loss | ARLO | Write ARLOCF = 1 | |||||
| Overrun/underrun | OVR | Write OVRCF = 1 |
Table 226. I2C interrupt requests (continued)
| Interrupt acronym | Interrupt event | Event flag | Enable control bit | Interrupt clear method | Exit Sleep mode | Exit Stop 0, Stop 1, Stop 2 modes | Exit Standby, Shutdown modes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| I2C_ERR | PEC error | PECERR | ERRIE | Write PECERRCF = 1 | Yes | No | No |
| Timeout/ t LOW error | TIMEOUT | Write TIMEOUTCF = 1 | |||||
| SMBus alert | ALERT | Write ALERTCF = 1 |
1. The ADDR match event can wake up the device from Stop mode only if the I2C instance supports the wake-up from Stop mode feature. Refer to Section 32.3: I2C implementation .
32.7 I2C DMA requests
32.7.1 Transmission using DMA
DMA (direct memory access) can be enabled for transmission by setting the TXDMAEN bit of the I2C_CR1 register. Data is loaded from an SRAM area configured through the DMA peripheral (see Section 11: Direct memory access controller (DMA) ) to the I2C_TXDR register whenever the TXIS bit is set.
Only the data are transferred with DMA.
In controller mode, the initialization, the target address, direction, number of bytes and START bit are programmed by software (the transmitted target address cannot be transferred with DMA). When all data are transferred using DMA, DMA must be initialized before setting the START bit. The end of transfer is managed with the NBYPES counter. Refer to Controller transmitter .
In target mode:
- • With NOSTRETCH = 0, when all data are transferred using DMA, DMA must be initialized before the address match event, or in ADDR interrupt subroutine, before clearing ADDR.
- • With NOSTRETCH = 1, the DMA must be initialized before the address match event.
The PEC transfer is managed with the counter associated to the NBYPES[7:0] bitfield. Refer to SMBus target transmitter and SMBus controller transmitter .
Note: If DMA is used for transmission, it is not required to set the TXIE bit.
32.7.2 Reception using DMA
DMA (direct memory access) can be enabled for reception by setting the RXDMAEN bit of the I2C_CR1 register. Data is loaded from the I2C_RXDR register to an SRAM area configured through the DMA peripheral (refer to Section 11: Direct memory access controller (DMA) ) whenever the RXNE bit is set. Only the data (including PEC) are transferred with DMA.
In controller mode, the initialization, the target address, direction, number of bytes and START bit are programmed by software. When all data are transferred using DMA, DMA
must be initialized before setting the START bit. The end of transfer is managed with the NBYTES counter.
In target mode with NOSTRETCH = 0, when all data are transferred using DMA, DMA must be initialized before the address match event, or in the ADDR interrupt subroutine, before clearing the ADDR flag.
The PEC transfer is managed with the counter associated to the NBYTES[7:0] bitfield. Refer to SMBus target receiver and SMBus controller receiver .
Note: If DMA is used for reception, it is not required to set the RXIE bit.
32.8 I2C debug modes
When the device enters debug mode (core halted), the SMBus timeout either continues working normally or stops, depending on the DBG_I2Cx_STOP bits in the DBG block.
32.9 I2C registers
Refer to Section 1.2 for the list of abbreviations used in register descriptions.
The registers are accessed by words (32-bit).
32.9.1 I2C control register 1 (I2C_CR1)
Address offset: 0x00
Reset value: 0x0000 0000
Access: no wait states, except if a write access occurs while a write access is ongoing. In this case, wait states are inserted in the second write access, until the previous one is completed. The latency of the second write access can be up to \( 2 \times PCLK1 + 6 \times I2CCLK \) .
| 31 | 30 | 29 | 28 | 27 | 26 | 25 | 24 | 23 | 22 | 21 | 20 | 19 | 18 | 17 | 16 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | PECEN | ALERT EN | SMBD EN | SMBH EN | GCEN | WUPE N | NOSTR ETCH | SBC |
| rw | rw | rw | rw | rw | rw | rw | rw | ||||||||
| 15 | 14 | 13 | 12 | 11 | 10 | 9 | 8 | 7 | 6 | 5 | 4 | 3 | 2 | 1 | 0 |
| RXDM AEN | TXDMA EN | Res. | ANF OFF | DNF[3:0] | ERRIE | TCIE | STOP IE | NACKI E | ADDRI E | RXIE | TXIE | PE | |||
| rw | rw | rw | rw | rw | rw | rw | rw | rw | rw | rw | rw | rw | rw | rw | |
Bits 31:24 Reserved, must be kept at reset value.
Bit 23 PECEN : PEC enable
0: PEC calculation disabled
1: PEC calculation enabled
Bit 22 ALERTEN : SMBus alert enable0: The SMBALERT# signal on SMBA pin is not supported in host mode (SMBHEN = 1). In device mode (SMBHEN = 0), the SMBA pin is released and the alert response address header is disabled (0001100x followed by NACK).
1: The SMBALERT# signal on SMBA pin is supported in host mode (SMBHEN = 1). In device mode (SMBHEN = 0), the SMBA pin is driven low and the alert response address header is enabled (0001100x followed by ACK).
Note: When ALERTEN = 0, the SMBA pin can be used as a standard GPIO.
Bit 21 SMBDEN : SMBus device default address enable0: Device default address disabled. Address 0b1100001x is NACKed.
1: Device default address enabled. Address 0b1100001x is ACKed.
Bit 20 SMBHEN : SMBus host address enable0: Host address disabled. Address 0b0001000x is NACKed.
1: Host address enabled. Address 0b0001000x is ACKed.
Bit 19 GCEN : General call enable0: General call disabled. Address 0b00000000 is NACKed.
1: General call enabled. Address 0b00000000 is ACKed.
Bit 18 WUPEN : Wake-up from Stop mode enable0: Wake-up from Stop mode disabled.
1: Wake-up from Stop mode enabled.
Note: WUPEN can be set only when DNF[3:0] = 0000.
Bit 17 NOSTRETCH : Clock stretching disableThis bit is used to disable clock stretching in target mode. It must be kept cleared in controller mode.
0: Clock stretching enabled
1: Clock stretching disabled
Note: This bit can be programmed only when the I2C peripheral is disabled (PE = 0).
Bit 16 SBC : Target byte controlThis bit is used to enable hardware byte control in target mode.
0: Target byte control disabled
1: Target byte control enabled
Bit 15 RXDMAEN : DMA reception requests enable0: DMA mode disabled for reception
1: DMA mode enabled for reception
Bit 14 TXDMAEN : DMA transmission requests enable0: DMA mode disabled for transmission
1: DMA mode enabled for transmission
Bit 13 Reserved, must be kept at reset value.
Bit 12 ANFOFF : Analog noise filter OFF0: Analog noise filter enabled
1: Analog noise filter disabled
Note: This bit can be programmed only when the I2C peripheral is disabled (PE = 0).
Bits 11:8 DNF[3:0] : Digital noise filterThese bits are used to configure the digital noise filter on SDA and SCL input. The digital filter, filters spikes with a length of up to \( DNF[3:0] * t_{I2CCLK} \)
0000: Digital filter disabled
0001: Digital filter enabled and filtering capability up to one \( t_{I2CCLK} \)
...
1111: digital filter enabled and filtering capability up to fifteen \( t_{I2CCLK} \)
Note: If the analog filter is enabled, the digital filter is added to it. This filter can be programmed only when the I2C peripheral is disabled (PE = 0).
Bit 7 ERRIE : Error interrupts enable0: Error detection interrupts disabled
1: Error detection interrupts enabled
Note: Any of these errors generates an interrupt:
- - arbitration loss (ARLO)
- - bus error detection (BERR)
- - overrun/underrun (OVR)
- - timeout detection (TIMEOUT)
- - PEC error detection (PECERR)
- - alert pin event detection (ALERT)
0: Transfer complete interrupt disabled
1: Transfer complete interrupt enabled
Note: Any of these events generates an interrupt:
- Transfer complete (TC)
- Transfer complete reload (TCR)
0: STOP detection (STOPF) interrupt disabled
1: STOP detection (STOPF) interrupt enabled
Bit 4 NACKIE : Not acknowledge received interrupt enable0: Not acknowledge (NACKF) received interrupts disabled
1: Not acknowledge (NACKF) received interrupts enabled
Bit 3 ADDRIE : Address match interrupt enable (target only)0: Address match (ADDR) interrupts disabled
1: Address match (ADDR) interrupts enabled
Bit 2 RXIE : RX interrupt enable0: Receive (RXNE) interrupt disabled
1: Receive (RXNE) interrupt enabled
Bit 1 TXIE : TX interrupt enable0: Transmit (TXIS) interrupt disabled
1: Transmit (TXIS) interrupt enabled
Bit 0 PE : Peripheral enable0: Peripheral disabled
1: Peripheral enabled
Note: When PE = 0, the I2C SCL and SDA lines are released. Internal state machines and status bits are put back to their reset value. When cleared, PE must be kept low for at least three APB clock cycles.
32.9.2 I2C control register 2 (I2C_CR2)
Address offset: 0x04
Reset value: 0x0000 0000
Access: no wait states, except if a write access occurs while a write access is ongoing. In this case, wait states are inserted in the second write access until the previous one is completed. The latency of the second write access can be up to \( 2 \times PCLK1 + 6 \times I2CCLK \) .
| 31 | 30 | 29 | 28 | 27 | 26 | 25 | 24 | 23 | 22 | 21 | 20 | 19 | 18 | 17 | 16 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | PECBYTE | AUTOEND | RELOAD | NBYTES[7:0] | |||||||
| rs | rw | rw | rw | rw | rw | rw | rw | rw | rw | rw | |||||
| 15 | 14 | 13 | 12 | 11 | 10 | 9 | 8 | 7 | 6 | 5 | 4 | 3 | 2 | 1 | 0 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NACK | STOP | START | HEAD10R | ADD10 | RD_WRN | SADD[9:0] | |||||||||
| rs | rs | rs | rw | rw | rw | rw | rw | rw | rw | rw | rw | rw | rw | rw | rw |
Bits 31:27 Reserved, must be kept at reset value.
Bit 26 PECBYTE : Packet error checking byte
This bit is set by software, and cleared by hardware when the PEC is transferred, or when a STOP condition or an Address matched is received, also when PE = 0.
0: No PEC transfer
1: PEC transmission/reception is requested
Note: Writing 0 to this bit has no effect.
This bit has no effect when RELOAD is set, and in target mode when SBC = 0.
Bit 25 AUTOEND : Automatic end mode (controller mode)
This bit is set and cleared by software.
0: software end mode: TC flag is set when NBBYTES data are transferred, stretching SCL low.
1: Automatic end mode: a STOP condition is automatically sent when NBBYTES data are transferred.
Note: This bit has no effect in target mode or when the RELOAD bit is set.
Bit 24 RELOAD : NBBYTES reload mode
This bit is set and cleared by software.
0: The transfer is completed after the NBBYTES data transfer (STOP or RESTART follows).
1: The transfer is not completed after the NBBYTES data transfer (NBBYTES is reloaded). TCR flag is set when NBBYTES data are transferred, stretching SCL low.
Bits 23:16 NBYTES[7:0] : Number of bytes
The number of bytes to be transmitted/received is programmed there. This field is don't care in target mode with SBC = 0.
Note: Changing these bits when the START bit is set is not allowed.
Bit 15 NACK: NACK generation (target mode)The bit is set by software, cleared by hardware when the NACK is sent, or when a STOP condition or an Address matched is received, or when PE = 0.
0: an ACK is sent after current received byte.
1: a NACK is sent after current received byte.
Note: Writing 0 to this bit has no effect.
This bit is used only in target mode: in controller receiver mode, NACK is automatically generated after last byte preceding STOP or RESTART condition, whatever the NACK bit value.
When an overrun occurs in target receiver NOSTRETCH mode, a NACK is automatically generated, whatever the NACK bit value.
When hardware PEC checking is enabled (PECBYTE = 1), the PEC acknowledge value does not depend on the NACK value.
Bit 14 STOP: STOP condition generationThis bit only pertains to controller mode. It is set by software and cleared by hardware when a STOP condition is detected or when PE = 0.
0: No STOP generation
1: STOP generation after current byte transfer
Note: Writing 0 to this bit has no effect.
Bit 13 START: START condition generationThis bit is set by software. It is cleared by hardware after the START condition followed by the address sequence is sent, by an arbitration loss, by an address matched in target mode, by a timeout error detection, or when PE = 0.
0: No START generation
1: RESTART/START generation:
If the I2C is already in controller mode with AUTOEND = 0, setting this bit generates a repeated START condition when RELOAD = 0, after the end of the NBYTES transfer.
Otherwise, setting this bit generates a START condition once the bus is free.
Note: Writing 0 to this bit has no effect.
The START bit can be set even if the bus is BUSY or I2C is in target mode.
This bit has no effect when RELOAD is set.
Bit 12 HEAD10R: 10-bit address header only read direction (controller receiver mode)0: The controller sends the complete 10-bit target address read sequence: START + 2 bytes 10-bit address in write direction + RESTART + first seven bits of the 10-bit address in read direction.
1: The controller sends only the first seven bits of the 10-bit address, followed by read direction.
Note: Changing this bit when the START bit is set is not allowed.
Bit 11 ADD10: 10-bit addressing mode (controller mode)0: The controller operates in 7-bit addressing mode
1: The controller operates in 10-bit addressing mode
Note: Changing this bit when the START bit is set is not allowed.
Bit 10 RD_WRN: Transfer direction (controller mode)0: Controller requests a write transfer
1: Controller requests a read transfer
Note: Changing this bit when the START bit is set is not allowed.
Bits 9:0 SADD[9:0] : Target address (controller mode)
Condition: In 7-bit addressing mode (ADD10 = 0):
SADD[7:1] must be written with the 7-bit target address to be sent. Bits SADD[9], SADD[8] and SADD[0] are don't care.
Condition: In 10-bit addressing mode (ADD10 = 1):
SADD[9:0] must be written with the 10-bit target address to be sent.
Note: Changing these bits when the START bit is set is not allowed.
32.9.3 I2C own address 1 register (I2C_OAR1)
Address offset: 0x08
Reset value: 0x0000 0000
Access: no wait states, except if a write access occurs while a write access is ongoing. In this case, wait states are inserted in the second write access until the previous one is completed. The latency of the second write access can be up to \( 2 \times PCLK1 + 6 \times I2CCLK \) .
| 31 | 30 | 29 | 28 | 27 | 26 | 25 | 24 | 23 | 22 | 21 | 20 | 19 | 18 | 17 | 16 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. |
| 15 | 14 | 13 | 12 | 11 | 10 | 9 | 8 | 7 | 6 | 5 | 4 | 3 | 2 | 1 | 0 |
| OA1EN | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | OA1MODE | OA1[9:0] | |||||||||
| rw | rw | rw | rw | rw | rw | rw | rw | rw | rw | rw | rw | ||||
Bits 31:16 Reserved, must be kept at reset value.
Bit 15 OA1EN : Own address 1 enable
0: Own address 1 disabled. The received target address OA1 is NACKed.
1: Own address 1 enabled. The received target address OA1 is ACKed.
Bits 14:11 Reserved, must be kept at reset value.
Bit 10 OA1MODE : Own address 1 10-bit mode
0: Own address 1 is a 7-bit address.
1: Own address 1 is a 10-bit address.
Note: This bit can be written only when OA1EN = 0.
Bits 9:0 OA1[9:0] : Interface own target address
7-bit addressing mode: OA1[7:1] contains the 7-bit own target address. Bits OA1[9], OA1[8] and OA1[0] are don't care.
10-bit addressing mode: OA1[9:0] contains the 10-bit own target address.
Note: These bits can be written only when OA1EN = 0.
32.9.4 I2C own address 2 register (I2C_OAR2)
Address offset: 0x0C
Reset value: 0x0000 0000
Access: no wait states, except if a write access occurs while a write access is ongoing. In this case, wait states are inserted in the second write access, until the previous one is completed. The latency of the second write access can be up to \( 2 \times PCLK1 + 6 \times I2CCLK \) .
| 31 | 30 | 29 | 28 | 27 | 26 | 25 | 24 | 23 | 22 | 21 | 20 | 19 | 18 | 17 | 16 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. |
| 15 | 14 | 13 | 12 | 11 | 10 | 9 | 8 | 7 | 6 | 5 | 4 | 3 | 2 | 1 | 0 |
| OA2EN | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | OA2MSK[2:0] | OA2[7:1] | Res. | ||||||||
| rw | rw | rw | rw | rw | rw | rw | rw | rw | rw | rw | |||||
Bits 31:16 Reserved, must be kept at reset value.
Bit 15 OA2EN : Own address 2 enable
0: Own address 2 disabled. The received target address OA2 is NACKed.
1: Own address 2 enabled. The received target address OA2 is ACKed.
Bits 14:11 Reserved, must be kept at reset value.
Bits 10:8 OA2MSK[2:0] : Own address 2 masks
000: No mask
001: OA2[1] is masked and don't care. Only OA2[7:2] are compared.
010: OA2[2:1] are masked and don't care. Only OA2[7:3] are compared.
011: OA2[3:1] are masked and don't care. Only OA2[7:4] are compared.
100: OA2[4:1] are masked and don't care. Only OA2[7:5] are compared.
101: OA2[5:1] are masked and don't care. Only OA2[7:6] are compared.
110: OA2[6:1] are masked and don't care. Only OA2[7] is compared.
111: OA2[7:1] are masked and don't care. No comparison is done, and all (except reserved) 7-bit received addresses are acknowledged.
Note: These bits can be written only when OA2EN = 0.
As soon as OA2MSK ≠ 0, the reserved I2C addresses (0b0000xxx and 0b1111xxx) are not acknowledged, even if the comparison matches.
Bits 7:1 OA2[7:1] : Interface address
7-bit addressing mode: 7-bit address
Note: These bits can be written only when OA2EN = 0.
Bit 0 Reserved, must be kept at reset value.
32.9.5 I2C timing register (I2C_TIMINGR)
Address offset: 0x10
Reset value: 0x0000 0000
Access: no wait states
| 31 | 30 | 29 | 28 | 27 | 26 | 25 | 24 | 23 | 22 | 21 | 20 | 19 | 18 | 17 | 16 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PRESC[3:0] | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | SCLDEL[3:0] | SDADEL[3:0] | |||||||||
| rw | rw | rw | rw | rw | rw | rw | rw | rw | rw | rw | rw | ||||
| 15 | 14 | 13 | 12 | 11 | 10 | 9 | 8 | 7 | 6 | 5 | 4 | 3 | 2 | 1 | 0 |
| SCLH[7:0] | SCLL[7:0] | ||||||||||||||
| rw | rw | rw | rw | rw | rw | rw | rw | rw | rw | rw | rw | rw | rw | rw | rw |
Bits 31:28 PRESC[3:0] : Timing prescaler
This field is used to prescale I2CCLK to generate the clock period
\(
t_{\text{PRESC}}
\)
used for data setup and hold counters (refer to section
I2C timings
), and for SCL high and low level counters (refer to section
I2C controller initialization
).
\(
t_{\text{PRESC}} = (\text{PRESC} + 1) \times t_{\text{I2CCLK}}
\)
Bits 27:24 Reserved, must be kept at reset value.
Bits 23:20 SCLDEL[3:0] : Data setup time
This field is used to generate a delay \( t_{\text{SCLDEL}} = (\text{SCLDEL} + 1) \times t_{\text{PRESC}} \) between SDA edge and SCL rising edge. In controller and in target modes with NOSTRETCH = 0, the SCL line is stretched low during \( t_{\text{SCLDEL}} \) .
Note: \( t_{\text{SCLDEL}} \) is used to generate \( t_{\text{SU:DAT}} \) timing.
Bits 19:16 SDADEL[3:0] : Data hold time
This field is used to generate the delay
\(
t_{\text{SDADEL}}
\)
between SCL falling edge and SDA edge. In controller and in target modes with NOSTRETCH = 0, the SCL line is stretched low during
\(
t_{\text{SDADEL}}
\)
.
\(
t_{\text{SDADEL}} = \text{SDADEL} \times t_{\text{PRESC}}
\)
Note: \( t_{\text{SDADEL}} \) is used to generate \( t_{\text{HD:DAT}} \) timing.
Bits 15:8 SCLH[7:0] : SCL high period (controller mode)
This field is used to generate the SCL high period in controller mode.
\(
t_{\text{SCLH}} = (\text{SCLH} + 1) \times t_{\text{PRESC}}
\)
Note: \( t_{\text{SCLH}} \) is also used to generate \( t_{\text{SU:STO}} \) and \( t_{\text{HD:STA}} \) timing.
Bits 7:0 SCLL[7:0] : SCL low period (controller mode)
This field is used to generate the SCL low period in controller mode.
\(
t_{\text{SCLL}} = (\text{SCLL} + 1) \times t_{\text{PRESC}}
\)
Note: \( t_{\text{SCLL}} \) is also used to generate \( t_{\text{BUF}} \) and \( t_{\text{SU:STA}} \) timings.
Note: This register must be configured when the I2C peripheral is disabled (PE = 0).
Note: The STM32CubeMX tool calculates and provides the I2C_TIMINGR content in the I2C Configuration window.
32.9.6 I2C timeout register (I2C_TIMEOUTR)
Address offset: 0x14
Reset value: 0x0000 0000
Access: no wait states, except if a write access occurs while a write access is ongoing. In this case, wait states are inserted in the second write access until the previous one is completed. The latency of the second write access can be up to \( 2 \times \text{PCLK1} + 6 \times \text{I2CCLK} \) .
| 31 | 30 | 29 | 28 | 27 | 26 | 25 | 24 | 23 | 22 | 21 | 20 | 19 | 18 | 17 | 16 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| TEXTEN | Res. | Res. | Res. | TIMEOUTB[11:0] | |||||||||||
| rw | rw | rw | rw | rw | rw | rw | rw | rw | rw | rw | rw | rw | |||
| 15 | 14 | 13 | 12 | 11 | 10 | 9 | 8 | 7 | 6 | 5 | 4 | 3 | 2 | 1 | 0 |
| TIMOUTEN | Res. | Res. | TIDLE | TIMEOUTA[11:0] | |||||||||||
| rw | rw | rw | rw | rw | rw | rw | rw | rw | rw | rw | rw | rw | rw | ||
Bit 31 TEXTEN : Extended clock timeout enable
0: Extended clock timeout detection is disabled
1: Extended clock timeout detection is enabled. When a cumulative SCL stretch for more than \( t_{LOW:EXT} \) is done by the I2C interface, a timeout error is detected (TIMEOUT = 1).
Bits 30:28 Reserved, must be kept at reset value.
Bits 27:16 TIMEOUTB[11:0] : Bus timeout B
This field is used to configure the cumulative clock extension timeout:
- – Controller mode: the controller cumulative clock low extend time ( \( t_{LOW:MEXT} \) ) is detected
- – Target mode: the target cumulative clock low extend time ( \( t_{LOW:SEXT} \) ) is detected
Note: These bits can be written only when TEXTEN = 0.
Bit 15 TIMOUTEN : Clock timeout enable
0: SCL timeout detection is disabled
1: SCL timeout detection is enabled. When SCL is low for more than \( t_{TIMEOUT} \) (TIDLE = 0) or high for more than \( t_{IDLE} \) (TIDLE = 1), a timeout error is detected (TIMEOUT = 1).
Bits 14:13 Reserved, must be kept at reset value.
Bit 12 TIDLE : Idle clock timeout detection
0: TIMEOUTA is used to detect SCL low timeout
1: TIMEOUTA is used to detect both SCL and SDA high timeout (bus idle condition)
Note: This bit can be written only when TIMOUTEN = 0.
Bits 11:0 TIMEOUTA[11:0] : Bus timeout A
This field is used to configure:
The SCL low timeout condition \( t_{TIMEOUT} \) when TIDLE = 0
The bus idle condition (both SCL and SDA high) when TIDLE = 1
Note: These bits can be written only when TIMOUTEN = 0.
32.9.7 I2C interrupt and status register (I2C_ISR)
Address offset: 0x18
Reset value: 0x0000 0001
Access: no wait states
| 31 | 30 | 29 | 28 | 27 | 26 | 25 | 24 | 23 | 22 | 21 | 20 | 19 | 18 | 17 | 16 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | ADDCODE[6:0] | DIR | ||||||
| r | r | r | r | r | r | r | r | ||||||||
| 15 | 14 | 13 | 12 | 11 | 10 | 9 | 8 | 7 | 6 | 5 | 4 | 3 | 2 | 1 | 0 |
| BUSY | Res. | ALERT | TIMEOUT | PECERR | OVR | ARLO | BERR | TCR | TC | STOPF | NACKF | ADDR | RXNE | TXIS | TXE |
| r | r | r | r | r | r | r | r | r | r | r | r | r | rs | rs | |
Bits 31:24 Reserved, must be kept at reset value.
Bits 23:17 ADDCODE[6:0] : Address match code (target mode)
These bits are updated with the received address when an address match event occurs (ADDR = 1). In the case of a 10-bit address, ADDCODE provides the 10-bit header followed by the two MSBs of the address.
Bit 16 DIR : Transfer direction (target mode)
This flag is updated when an address match event occurs (ADDR = 1).
0: Write transfer, target enters receiver mode.
1: Read transfer, target enters transmitter mode.
Bit 15 BUSY : Bus busy
This flag indicates that a communication is in progress on the bus. It is set by hardware when a START condition is detected, and cleared by hardware when a STOP condition is detected, or when PE = 0.
Bit 14 Reserved, must be kept at reset value.
Bit 13 ALERT : SMBus alert
This flag is set by hardware when SMBHEN = 1 (SMBus host configuration), ALERTEN = 1 and an SMBALERT# event (falling edge) is detected on SMBA pin. It is cleared by software by setting the ALERTCF bit.
Note: This bit is cleared by hardware when PE = 0.
Bit 12 TIMEOUT : Timeout or \( t_{LOW} \) detection flag
This flag is set by hardware when a timeout or extended clock timeout occurred. It is cleared by software by setting the TIMEOUTCF bit.
Note: This bit is cleared by hardware when PE = 0.
Bit 11 PECERR : PEC error in reception
This flag is set by hardware when the received PEC does not match with the PEC register content. A NACK is automatically sent after the wrong PEC reception. It is cleared by software by setting the PECCF bit.
Note: This bit is cleared by hardware when PE = 0.
Bit 10 OVR : Overrun/underrun (target mode)
This flag is set by hardware in target mode with NOSTRETCH = 1, when an overrun/underrun error occurs. It is cleared by software by setting the OVRCF bit.
Note: This bit is cleared by hardware when PE = 0.
Bit 9 ARLO : Arbitration lost
This flag is set by hardware in case of arbitration loss. It is cleared by software by setting the ARLOCF bit.
Note: This bit is cleared by hardware when PE = 0.
Bit 8 BERR : Bus error
This flag is set by hardware when a misplaced START or STOP condition is detected whereas the peripheral is involved in the transfer. The flag is not set during the address phase in target mode. It is cleared by software by setting the BERRCF bit.
Note: This bit is cleared by hardware when PE = 0.
Bit 7 TCR : Transfer complete reload
This flag is set by hardware when RELOAD = 1 and NBBYTES data have been transferred. It is cleared by software when NBBYTES is written to a non-zero value.
Note: This bit is cleared by hardware when PE = 0.
This flag is only for controller mode, or for target mode when the SBC bit is set.
Bit 6 TC : Transfer complete (controller mode)This flag is set by hardware when RELOAD = 0, AUTOEND = 0 and NBBYTES data have been transferred. It is cleared by software when START bit or STOP bit is set.
Note: This bit is cleared by hardware when PE = 0.
Bit 5 STOPF : STOP detection flagThis flag is set by hardware when a STOP condition is detected on the bus and the peripheral is involved in this transfer:
- – as a controller, provided that the STOP condition is generated by the peripheral.
- – as a target, provided that the peripheral has been addressed previously during this transfer.
It is cleared by software by setting the STOPCF bit.
Note: This bit is cleared by hardware when PE = 0.
Bit 4 NACKF : Not acknowledge received flagThis flag is set by hardware when a NACK is received after a byte transmission. It is cleared by software by setting the NACKCF bit.
Note: This bit is cleared by hardware when PE = 0.
Bit 3 ADDR : Address matched (target mode)This bit is set by hardware as soon as the received target address matched with one of the enabled target addresses. It is cleared by software by setting ADDRCF bit.
Note: This bit is cleared by hardware when PE = 0.
Bit 2 RXNE : Receive data register not empty (receivers)This bit is set by hardware when the received data is copied into the I2C_RXDR register, and is ready to be read. It is cleared when I2C_RXDR is read.
Note: This bit is cleared by hardware when PE = 0.
Bit 1 TXIS : Transmit interrupt status (transmitters)This bit is set by hardware when the I2C_TXDR register is empty and the data to be transmitted must be written in the I2C_TXDR register. It is cleared when the next data to be sent is written in the I2C_TXDR register.
This bit can be written to 1 by software only when NOSTRETCH = 1, to generate a TXIS event (interrupt if TXIE = 1 or DMA request if TXDMAEN = 1).
Note: This bit is cleared by hardware when PE = 0.
Bit 0 TXE : Transmit data register empty (transmitters)This bit is set by hardware when the I2C_TXDR register is empty. It is cleared when the next data to be sent is written in the I2C_TXDR register.
This bit can be written to 1 by software in order to flush the transmit data register I2C_TXDR.
Note: This bit is set by hardware when PE = 0.
32.9.8 I2C interrupt clear register (I2C_ICR)
Address offset: 0x1C
Reset value: 0x0000 0000
Access: no wait states
| 31 | 30 | 29 | 28 | 27 | 26 | 25 | 24 | 23 | 22 | 21 | 20 | 19 | 18 | 17 | 16 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. |
| 15 | 14 | 13 | 12 | 11 | 10 | 9 | 8 | 7 | 6 | 5 | 4 | 3 | 2 | 1 | 0 |
| Res. | Res. | ALERT CF | TIMOU TCF | PECCF | OVR CF | ARLO C | BERR CF | Res. | Res. | STOP CF | NACK CF | ADDR CF | Res. | Res. | Res. |
| w | w | w | w | w | w | w | w | w |
Bits 31:14 Reserved, must be kept at reset value.
Bit 13 ALERTCF : Alert flag clear
Writing 1 to this bit clears the ALERT flag in the I2C_ISR register.
Bit 12 TIMOUTCF : Timeout detection flag clear
Writing 1 to this bit clears the TIMEOUT flag in the I2C_ISR register.
Bit 11 PECCF : PEC error flag clear
Writing 1 to this bit clears the PECERR flag in the I2C_ISR register.
Bit 10 OVR : Overrun/underrun flag clear
Writing 1 to this bit clears the OVR flag in the I2C_ISR register.
Bit 9 ARLOCF : Arbitration lost flag clear
Writing 1 to this bit clears the ARLO flag in the I2C_ISR register.
Bit 8 BERRCF : Bus error flag clear
Writing 1 to this bit clears the BERRF flag in the I2C_ISR register.
Bits 7:6 Reserved, must be kept at reset value.
Bit 5 STOPCF : STOP detection flag clear
Writing 1 to this bit clears the STOPF flag in the I2C_ISR register.
Bit 4 NACKCF : Not acknowledge flag clear
Writing 1 to this bit clears the NACKF flag in I2C_ISR register.
Bit 3 ADDRCF : Address matched flag clear
Writing 1 to this bit clears the ADDR flag in the I2C_ISR register. Writing 1 to this bit also clears the START bit in the I2C_CR2 register.
Bits 2:0 Reserved, must be kept at reset value.
32.9.9 I2C PEC register (I2C_PECR)
Address offset: 0x20
Reset value: 0x0000 0000
Access: no wait states
| 31 | 30 | 29 | 28 | 27 | 26 | 25 | 24 | 23 | 22 | 21 | 20 | 19 | 18 | 17 | 16 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. |
| 15 | 14 | 13 | 12 | 11 | 10 | 9 | 8 | 7 | 6 | 5 | 4 | 3 | 2 | 1 | 0 |
| Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | PEC[7:0] | |||||||
| r | r | r | r | r | r | r | r | ||||||||
Bits 31:8 Reserved, must be kept at reset value.
Bits 7:0 PEC[7:0] : Packet error checking register
This field contains the internal PEC when PECEN=1.
The PEC is cleared by hardware when PE = 0.
32.9.10 I2C receive data register (I2C_RXDR)
Address offset: 0x24
Reset value: 0x0000 0000
Access: no wait states
| 31 | 30 | 29 | 28 | 27 | 26 | 25 | 24 | 23 | 22 | 21 | 20 | 19 | 18 | 17 | 16 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. |
| 15 | 14 | 13 | 12 | 11 | 10 | 9 | 8 | 7 | 6 | 5 | 4 | 3 | 2 | 1 | 0 |
| Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | RXDATA[7:0] | |||||||
| r | r | r | r | r | r | r | r | ||||||||
Bits 31:8 Reserved, must be kept at reset value.
Bits 7:0 RXDATA[7:0] : 8-bit receive data
Data byte received from the I 2 C-bus.
32.9.11 I2C transmit data register (I2C_TXDR)
Address offset: 0x28
Reset value: 0x0000 0000
Access: no wait states
| 31 | 30 | 29 | 28 | 27 | 26 | 25 | 24 | 23 | 22 | 21 | 20 | 19 | 18 | 17 | 16 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. |
| 15 | 14 | 13 | 12 | 11 | 10 | 9 | 8 | 7 | 6 | 5 | 4 | 3 | 2 | 1 | 0 |
| Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | TXDATA[7:0] | |||||||
| rw | rw | rw | rw | rw | rw | rw | rw | ||||||||
Bits 31:8 Reserved, must be kept at reset value.
Bits 7:0 TXDATA[7:0] : 8-bit transmit data
Data byte to be transmitted to the I 2 C-bus
Note: These bits can be written only when TXE = 1.
32.9.12 I2C register map
The table below provides the I2C register map and the reset values.
Table 227. I2C register map and reset values
| Offset | Register name | 31 | 30 | 29 | 28 | 27 | 26 | 25 | 24 | 23 | 22 | 21 | 20 | 19 | 18 | 17 | 16 | 15 | 14 | 13 | 12 | 11 | 10 | 9 | 8 | 7 | 6 | 5 | 4 | 3 | 2 | 1 | 0 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0x00 | I2C_CR1 | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | PECEN | ALERTEN | SMBDEN | SMBHEN | GCEN | WUPEN | NOSTRETCH | SBC | RXDMAEN | TXDMAEN | Res. | ANOFF | DNF[3:0] | ERRIE | TCIE | STOPIE | NACKIE | ADDRIE | RXIE | TXIE | PE | ||||
| Reset value | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | |||||||||||
| 0x04 | I2C_CR2 | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | PECBYTE | AUTOEND | RELOAD | NBYTES[7:0] | NACK | STOP | START | HEAD10R | ADD10 | RD_WRN | SADD[9:0] | |||||||||||||||||
| Reset value | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | ||||||||
| 0x08 | I2C_OAR1 | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | OA1EN | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | OA1MODE | OA1[9:0] | ||||||||||
| Reset value | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | |||||||||||||||||||||||
| 0x0C | I2C_OAR2 | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | OA2EN | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | OA2MSK[2:0] | OA2[7:1] | Res. | |||||||||
| Reset value | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | |||||||||||||||||||||||
| 0x10 | I2C_TIMINGR | PRESC[3:0] | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | SCLDEL[3:0] | SDADEL[3:0] | SCLH[7:0] | SCLL[7:0] | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Reset value | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | |||||||
| 0x14 | I2C_TIMEOUTR | TEXTEN | Res. | Res. | Res. | TIMEOUTB[11:0] | TIMOUTEN | Res. | Res. | TIDLE | TIMEOUTA[11:0] | |||||||||||||||||||||||
| Reset value | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | |||||||||
| 0x18 | I2C_ISR | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | ADDCODE[6:0] | DIR | BUSY | Res. | ALERT | TIMEOUT | PECERR | OVR | ARLO | BERR | TCR | TC | STOPF | NACKF | ADDR | RXNE | TXIS | TXE | |||||||
| Reset value | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | ||||||||||||||||||||
| 0x1C | I2C_ICR | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | ALERTCF | TIMOUTCF | PECFCF | OVRFCF | ARLOCF | BERRCF | Res. | Res. | STOPCF | NACKCF | ADDRCF | Res. | Res. | Res. | |
| Reset value | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 0x20 | I2C_PECR | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | PEC[7:0] | ||||||||||
| Reset value | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 0x24 | I2C_RXDR | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | RXDATA[7:0] | ||||||||||
| Reset value | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 0x28 | I2C_TXDR | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | Res. | TXDATA[7:0] | ||||||||||
| Reset value | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Refer to Section 2.4: Memory organization for the register boundary addresses.