On 12.06.2018 17:24, Jens Axboe wrote: > On 6/12/18 3:17 AM, Stefan Agner wrote: >> [also added Jens Axboe] >> >> On 12.06.2018 10:27, Boris Brezillon wrote: >>> On Tue, 12 Jun 2018 10:06:42 +0200 >>> Stefan Agner <stefan@xxxxxxxx> wrote: >>> >>>> On 12.06.2018 02:03, Dmitry Osipenko wrote: >>>>> On Monday, 11 June 2018 23:52:22 MSK Stefan Agner wrote: >>>>>> Add support for the NAND flash controller found on NVIDIA >>>>>> Tegra 2 SoCs. This implementation does not make use of the >>>>>> command queue feature. Regular operations/data transfers are >>>>>> done in PIO mode. Page read/writes with hardware ECC make >>>>>> use of the DMA for data transfer. >>>>>> >>>>>> Signed-off-by: Lucas Stach <dev@xxxxxxxxxx> >>>>>> Signed-off-by: Stefan Agner <stefan@xxxxxxxx> >>>>>> --- >>>>>> MAINTAINERS | 7 + >>>>>> drivers/mtd/nand/raw/Kconfig | 6 + >>>>>> drivers/mtd/nand/raw/Makefile | 1 + >>>>>> drivers/mtd/nand/raw/tegra_nand.c | 1248 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ >>>>>> 4 files changed, 1262 insertions(+) >>>>>> create mode 100644 drivers/mtd/nand/raw/tegra_nand.c >>>>>> >>>> [snip] >>>>>> +static int tegra_nand_cmd(struct nand_chip *chip, >>>>>> + const struct nand_subop *subop) >>>>>> +{ >>>>>> + const struct nand_op_instr *instr; >>>>>> + const struct nand_op_instr *instr_data_in = NULL; >>>>>> + struct tegra_nand_controller *ctrl = to_tegra_ctrl(chip->controller); >>>>>> + unsigned int op_id, size = 0, offset = 0; >>>>>> + bool first_cmd = true; >>>>>> + u32 reg, cmd = 0; >>>>>> + int ret; >>>>>> + >>>>>> + for (op_id = 0; op_id < subop->ninstrs; op_id++) { >>>>>> + unsigned int naddrs, i; >>>>>> + const u8 *addrs; >>>>>> + u32 addr1 = 0, addr2 = 0; >>>>>> + >>>>>> + instr = &subop->instrs[op_id]; >>>>>> + >>>>>> + switch (instr->type) { >>>>>> + case NAND_OP_CMD_INSTR: >>>>>> + if (first_cmd) { >>>>>> + cmd |= COMMAND_CLE; >>>>>> + writel_relaxed(instr->ctx.cmd.opcode, >>>>>> + ctrl->regs + CMD_REG1); >>>>>> + } else { >>>>>> + cmd |= COMMAND_SEC_CMD; >>>>>> + writel_relaxed(instr->ctx.cmd.opcode, >>>>>> + ctrl->regs + CMD_REG2); >>>>>> + } >>>>>> + first_cmd = false; >>>>>> + break; >>>>>> + case NAND_OP_ADDR_INSTR: >>>>>> + offset = nand_subop_get_addr_start_off(subop, op_id); >>>>>> + naddrs = nand_subop_get_num_addr_cyc(subop, op_id); >>>>>> + addrs = &instr->ctx.addr.addrs[offset]; >>>>>> + >>>>>> + cmd |= COMMAND_ALE | COMMAND_ALE_SIZE(naddrs); >>>>>> + for (i = 0; i < min_t(unsigned int, 4, naddrs); i++) >>>>>> + addr1 |= *addrs++ << (BITS_PER_BYTE * i); >>>>>> + naddrs -= i; >>>>>> + for (i = 0; i < min_t(unsigned int, 4, naddrs); i++) >>>>>> + addr2 |= *addrs++ << (BITS_PER_BYTE * i); >>>>>> + writel_relaxed(addr1, ctrl->regs + ADDR_REG1); >>>>>> + writel_relaxed(addr2, ctrl->regs + ADDR_REG2); >>>>>> + break; >>>>>> + >>>>>> + case NAND_OP_DATA_IN_INSTR: >>>>>> + size = nand_subop_get_data_len(subop, op_id); >>>>>> + offset = nand_subop_get_data_start_off(subop, op_id); >>>>>> + >>>>>> + cmd |= COMMAND_TRANS_SIZE(size) | COMMAND_PIO | >>>>>> + COMMAND_RX | COMMAND_A_VALID; >>>>>> + >>>>>> + instr_data_in = instr; >>>>>> + break; >>>>>> + >>>>>> + case NAND_OP_DATA_OUT_INSTR: >>>>>> + size = nand_subop_get_data_len(subop, op_id); >>>>>> + offset = nand_subop_get_data_start_off(subop, op_id); >>>>>> + >>>>>> + cmd |= COMMAND_TRANS_SIZE(size) | COMMAND_PIO | >>>>>> + COMMAND_TX | COMMAND_A_VALID; >>>>>> + >>>>>> + memcpy(®, instr->ctx.data.buf.out + offset, size); >>>>>> + writel_relaxed(reg, ctrl->regs + RESP); >>>>>> + >>>>>> + break; >>>>>> + case NAND_OP_WAITRDY_INSTR: >>>>>> + cmd |= COMMAND_RBSY_CHK; >>>>>> + break; >>>>>> + >>>>>> + } >>>>>> + } >>>>>> + >>>>>> + cmd |= COMMAND_GO | COMMAND_CE(ctrl->cur_cs); >>>>>> + writel_relaxed(cmd, ctrl->regs + COMMAND); >>>>>> + ret = wait_for_completion_io_timeout(&ctrl->command_complete, >>>>>> + msecs_to_jiffies(500)); >>>>> >>>>> It's not obvious to me whether _io_ variant is appropriate to use here, would >>>>> be nice if somebody could clarify that. Maybe block/ already does the IO >>>>> accounting itself and hence the IO time would be counted twice in that case. >>>> >>>> Good that you bring this up. >>>> >>>> I don't think that there is any higher layer which could take care of >>>> accounting. Usually, with raw nand there is no block layer involved >>>> anyway. >>>> >>>> In a quick test it seems that only when using wait_for_completion_io I/O >>>> is properly accounted in the "wait" section of top. >>>> >>>> So far only a single driver (omap2) used the _io variant, but I think it >>>> is the right thing to do! After all, it is I/O... >>>> >>>> Boris or any other MTD maintainer, any comment on this? >>> >>> Given this definition of io_schedule_timeout() [1] (which is used when >>> you call wait_for_completion_io_timeout()), I'd say it's not useful to >>> use the _io_ version, simply because MTD devs are not exposed as blk >>> devices, and thus don't need the blk_schedule_flush_plug() that is done >>> is io_schedule_prepare(). But that also means MTD I/Os are not >>> accounted as I/Os :-(. >> >> Documentation of wait_for_completion_io says: >> "The caller is accounted as waiting for IO (which traditionally means >> blkio only)." >> >> Which sounds as if it using _io is only an accounting thing... > > Yes, you should only use it for waiting for IO off a system call > read path. So block IO, or file system IO. Don't use it for internal > IO that isn't related to that. I guess that would be the case here, since MTD page read/writes are typically file system IOs (e.g. UBIFS). The problem is just that is not block related at all since it uses the MTD subsystem... And it seems that the _io variants besides accounting, also take a role in the block subsystems device plugging mechanism. What is unclear to me if using the _io variant from the MTD subsystem potentially disturbs the plugging mechanism... -- Stefan -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe devicetree" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html