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8272E–AVR–04/2013
ATmega164A/PA/324A/PA/644A/PA/1284/P
Bits 1:0 – SPR1, SPR0: SPI Clock Rate Select 1 and 0
These two bits control the SCK rate of the device configured as a Master. SPR1 and SPR0 have
no effect on the Slave. The relationship between SCK and the Oscillator Clock frequency f
osc is
shown in the following table:
18.5.2
SPSR – SPI Status Register
Bit 7 – SPIF: SPI Interrupt Flag
When a serial transfer is complete, the SPIF Flag is set. An interrupt is generated if SPIE in
SPCR is set and global interrupts are enabled. If SS is an input and is driven low when the SPI is
in Master mode, this will also set the SPIF Flag. SPIF is cleared by hardware when executing the
corresponding interrupt handling vector. Alternatively, the SPIF bit is cleared by first reading the
SPI Status Register with SPIF set, then accessing the SPI Data Register (SPDR).
Bit 6 – WCOL: Write COLlision Flag
The WCOL bit is set if the SPI Data Register (SPDR) is written during a data transfer. The
WCOL bit (and the SPIF bit) are cleared by first reading the SPI Status Register with WCOL set,
and then accessing the SPI Data Register.
Bit 5:1 – Reserved
These bits are reserved and will always read as zero.
Bit 0 – SPI2X: Double SPI Speed Bit
When this bit is written logic one the SPI speed (SCK Frequency) will be doubled when the SPI
is in Master mode (see
Table 18-5). This means that the minimum SCK period will be two CPU
clock periods. When the SPI is configured as Slave, the SPI is only guaranteed to work at f
osc/4
or lower.
The SPI interface on the Atmel ATmega164A/164PA/324A/324PA/644A/644PA/1284/1284P is
also used for program memory and EEPROM downloading or uploading. See
page 313 for
serial programming and verification.
Table 18-5.
Relationship between SCK and the oscillator frequency.
SPI2X
SPR1
SPR0
SCK Frequency
00
0
f
osc/4
00
1
f
osc/16
01
0
f
osc/64
01
1
f
osc/128
10
0
f
osc/2
10
1
f
osc/8
11
0
f
osc/32
11
1
f
osc/64
Bit
76543210
SPIF
WCOL
–
SPI2X
SPSR
Read/Write
RRRRRRR
R/W
Initial Value
00000000