On Wed, 04 Jan 2023 18:36:26 +0900, Hector Martin wrote: > Commits f6c911f3308c ("spi: dt-bindings: Introduce > spi-cs-setup-ns property") and 33a2fde5f77b ("spi: Introduce > spi-cs-setup-ns property") introduced a new property to represent the > CS setup delay in the device tree, but they have some issues: > > - The property is only parsed as a 16-bit integer number of nanoseconds, > which limits the maximum value to ~65us. This is not a reasonable > upper limit, as some devices might need a lot more. > - The property name is inconsistent with other delay properties, which > use a "*-delay-ns" naming scheme. > - Only the setup delay is introduced, but not the related hold and > inactive delay times. > > [...] Applied to https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/broonie/spi.git for-next Thanks! [1/5] spi: dt-bindings: Rename spi-cs-setup-ns to spi-cs-setup-delay-ns commit: 38892ea4cefbb6ed3a91e76d3af84a1f8077d2d4 [2/5] spi: Rename spi-cs-setup-ns property to spi-cs-setup-delay-ns commit: e0fe6a31cac84735939c29d1e05055d58325c6c0 [3/5] spi: Use a 32-bit DT property for spi-cs-setup-delay-ns (no commit info) [4/5] spi: dt-bindings: Add hold/inactive CS delay peripheral properties (no commit info) [5/5] spi: Parse hold/inactive CS delay values from the DT (no commit info) All being well this means that it will be integrated into the linux-next tree (usually sometime in the next 24 hours) and sent to Linus during the next merge window (or sooner if it is a bug fix), however if problems are discovered then the patch may be dropped or reverted. You may get further e-mails resulting from automated or manual testing and review of the tree, please engage with people reporting problems and send followup patches addressing any issues that are reported if needed. If any updates are required or you are submitting further changes they should be sent as incremental updates against current git, existing patches will not be replaced. Please add any relevant lists and maintainers to the CCs when replying to this mail. Thanks, Mark