On 1.09.2023 17:08, Doug Anderson wrote: > Hi, > > On Fri, Sep 1, 2023 at 7:54 AM Luca Weiss <luca.weiss@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> >>>>> So maybe the right fix here is to just change your dts to specify one >>>>> memory region? >>>> >>>> I got feedback from Konrad that this here would be the preferred >>>> approach compared to having a different dts for ChromeOS vs non-ChromeOS >>>> devices. I don't feel strongly to either, for me it's also okay to >>>> remove the extra memory regions and only have the main one used on >>>> regular qcom devices. >>>> >>>> Let me know what you think. >>> >>> I don't hate the idea of leaving the extra memory regions in the dts. >>> They do describe the hardware, after all, even if the main OS can't >>> actually access those memory regions. ...though the same could also be >>> said about the clock you've removed. Said another way: if you want to >>> fully describe the hardware then the dts should have the extra memory >>> regions and the clock. If you are OK w/ just describing the hardware >>> in the way that the OS has access to then the dts should not have the >>> extra memory regions and not have the clock. Does that sound right? >> >> Not sure which of those memory regions are actually accessible on this >> board, but honestly I don't even want to try accessing it. Blowing fuses >> is not my wish there ;) >> >> On downstream the node is just described like the following: >> >> qfprom: qfprom@780000 { >> compatible = "qcom,qfprom"; >> reg = <0x780000 0x7000>; >> ... >> }; >> >> So we have 0x780000 - 0x786fff here. >> >> In sc7280.dtsi we have the following: >> >> qfprom: efuse@784000 { >> compatible = "qcom,sc7280-qfprom", "qcom,qfprom"; >> reg = <0 0x00784000 0 0xa20>, >> <0 0x00780000 0 0xa20>, >> <0 0x00782000 0 0x120>, >> <0 0x00786000 0 0x1fff>; >> ... >> }; >> >> So I guess this: >> * 0x780000 - 0x780a1f >> * 0x782000 - 0x78211f >> * 0x784000 - 0x784a1f >> * 0x786000 - 0x787ffe >> >> So at least the last memory region seems to be partially out of range >> according to downstream. > > From the other discussion, it sounds as if you _can_ leave the clock > in the device tree and then use "clk_get_optional" here. IMO then, the > right answer is to use "clk_get_optional" but then also modify the > check below so that instead of: > > /* Only enable writing if we have SoC data. */ > if (priv->soc_data) > econfig.reg_write = qfprom_reg_write; > > It is: > > /* Only enable writing if we have SoC data and a valid clock */ > if (priv->soc_data && priv->secclk) > econfig.reg_write = qfprom_reg_write; > > > Does that work for you? > > >> So after reading all of this I tried running this commmand on the phone >> and the phone reboots into 900e mode. >> >> $ cat /sys/devices/platform/soc@0/784000.efuse/qfprom0/nvmem >> >> I guess normally this should work? So if I interpret this correctly, the >> Linux driver thinks it can access more than it can/should. But also >> should probably try this command on another chipset to see if it works >> on any really? > > Presumably your firmware needs a different "sc7280_qfprom_keepout". If > that's true then I guess you'll have to undergo negotiations with the > DT bindings folks and the nvmem maintainer to figure out how to > specify that your firmware protects different things than the ChromeOS > firmware? Luca, if you feel like wasting some time, you can probably bruteforce this. I assume this keepout thing could be expanded in a generic way and made into a dt property. Other than that, I think it'd be fine to skip that for now, as it sounds like it's functional so long as you don't intentionally access forbidden regs. Konrad