Laptop User Manual
S3C2440A RISC MICROPROCESSOR IIC-BUS INTERFACE 
  20-3 
IIC-BUS INTERFACE 
 The S3C2440A IIC-bus interface has four operation modes: 
—  Master transmitter mode 
—  Master receive mode 
—  Slave transmitter mode 
—  Slave receive mode 
Functional relationships among these operating modes are described below. 
START AND STOP CONDITIONS 
When the IIC-bus interface is inactive, it is usually in Slave mode. In other words, the interface should be in Slave 
mode before detecting a Start condition on the SDA line (a Start condition can be initiated with a High-to-Low 
transition of the SDA line while the clock signal of SCL is High). When the interface state is changed to Master 
mode, a data transfer on the SDA line can be initiated and SCL signal generated. 
A Start condition can transfer a one-byte serial data over the SDA line, and a Stop condition can terminate the data 
transfer. A Stop condition is a Low-to-High transition of the SDA line while SCL is High. Start and Stop conditions 
are always generated by the master. The IIC-bus gets busy when a Start condition is generated. A Stop condition 
will make the IIC-bus free. 
When a master initiates a Start condition, it should send a slave address to notify the slave device. One byte of 
address field consists of a 7-bit address and a 1-bit transfer direction indicator (showing write or read).  
If bit 8 is 0, it indicates a write operation (transmit operation); if bit 8 is 1, it indicates a request for data read (receive 
operation). 
The master will complete the transfer operation by transmitting a Stop condition. If the master wants to continue the 
data transmission to the bus, it should generate another Start condition as well as a slave address. In this way, the 
read-write operation can be performed in various formats. 
SCL
SDA SDA
SCL
Start
Condition
Stop
Condition
Figure 20-2. Start and Stop Condition 










