Hi, On Mon, Sep 21, 2020 at 2:27 PM Douglas Anderson <dianders@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > When the chip select line is controlled by the QUP, changing CS is a > time consuming operation. We have to send a command over to the geni > and wait for it to Ack us every time we want to change (both making it > high and low). To send this command we have to make a choice in > software when we want to control the chip select, we have to either: > A) Wait for the Ack via interrupt which slows down all SPI transfers > (and incurrs extra processing associated with interrupts). > B) Sit in a loop and poll, waiting for the Ack. > > Neither A) nor B) is a great option. > > We can avoid all of this by realizing that, at least on some boards, > there is no advantage of considering this line to be a geni line. > While it's true that geni _can_ control the line, it's also true that > the line can be a GPIO and there is no downside of viewing it that > way. Setting a GPIO is a simple MMIO operation. > > This patch provides definitions so a board can easily select the GPIO > mode. > > NOTE: apparently, it's possible to run the geni in "GSI" mode. In GSI > the SPI port is allowed to be controlled by more than one user (like > firmware and Linux) and also the port can operate sequences of > operations in one go. In GSI mode it _would_ be invalid to look at > the chip select as a GPIO because that would prevent other users from > using it. In theory GSI mode would also avoid some overhead by > allowing us to sequence the chip select better. However, I'll argue > GSI is not relevant for all boards (and certainly not any boards > supported by mainline today). Why? > - Apparently to run a SPI chip in GSI mode you need to initialize it > (in the bootloader) with a different firmware and then it will > always run in GSI mode. Since there is no support for GSI mode in > the current Linux driver, it must be that existing boards don't have > firmware that's doing that. Note that the kernel device tree > describes hardware but also firmware, so it is legitimate to make > the assumption that we don't have GSI firmware in a given dts file. > - Some boards with sc7180 have SPI connected to the Chrome OS EC or > security chip (Cr50). The protocols for talking to cros_ec and cr50 > are extremely complex. Both drivers in Linux fully lock the bus > across several distinct SPI transfers. While I am not an expert on > GSI mode it feels highly unlikely to me that we'd ever be able to > enable GSI mode for these devices. > > From a testing perspective, running "flashrom -p ec -r /tmp/foo.bin" > in a loop after this patch shows almost no reduction in time, but the > number of interrupts per command goes from 32357 down to 30611 (about > a 5% reduction). > > Signed-off-by: Douglas Anderson <dianders@xxxxxxxxxxxx> > Reviewed-by: Stephen Boyd <swboyd@xxxxxxxxxxxx> > --- > > Changes in v3: > - Add a blank line between pinmux and pinconf. > > Changes in v2: > - Now just add the pinctrl; let a board use it. > > arch/arm64/boot/dts/qcom/sc7180.dtsi | 104 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++ > 1 file changed, 104 insertions(+) Friendly ping that this patch and the next one in the series are reviewed and ready to land now that -rc1 is out. ;-) -Doug