On 10/27/24 4:12 AM, Jonathan Cameron wrote: > On Sat, 26 Oct 2024 19:01:53 -0500 > David Lechner <dlechner@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >> On 10/26/24 11:00 AM, Jonathan Cameron wrote: >>> On Wed, 23 Oct 2024 15:59:22 -0500 >>> David Lechner <dlechner@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >>> ... >>> >>>> static int ad4695_probe(struct spi_device *spi) >>>> { >>>> struct device *dev = &spi->dev; >>>> struct ad4695_state *st; >>>> struct iio_dev *indio_dev; >>>> - struct gpio_desc *cnv_gpio; >>>> bool use_internal_ldo_supply; >>>> bool use_internal_ref_buffer; >>>> int ret; >>>> >>>> - cnv_gpio = devm_gpiod_get_optional(dev, "cnv", GPIOD_OUT_LOW); >>>> - if (IS_ERR(cnv_gpio)) >>>> - return dev_err_probe(dev, PTR_ERR(cnv_gpio), >>>> - "Failed to get CNV GPIO\n"); >>>> - >>>> - /* Driver currently requires CNV pin to be connected to SPI CS */ >>>> - if (cnv_gpio) >>>> - return dev_err_probe(dev, -ENODEV, >>>> - "CNV GPIO is not supported\n"); >>>> - >>>> indio_dev = devm_iio_device_alloc(dev, sizeof(*st)); >>>> if (!indio_dev) >>>> return -ENOMEM; >>>> @@ -1002,8 +1374,13 @@ static int ad4695_probe(struct spi_device *spi) >>>> return -EINVAL; >>>> >>>> /* Registers cannot be read at the max allowable speed */ >>>> + st->spi_max_speed_hz = spi->max_speed_hz; >>>> spi->max_speed_hz = AD4695_REG_ACCESS_SCLK_HZ; >>>> >>>> + ret = devm_add_action_or_reset(dev, ad4695_restore_spi_max_speed_hz, st); >>> >>> Why do you need to put it back in devm? What happens after this but without >>> a driver restart that uses that faster rate? >>> >> I should have added a comment here as this was a weird bug to trace. >> >> The core SPI framework sets the initial value of spi->max_speed_hz >> to the minimum of the controller max rate and the max rate specified >> by the devicetree. >> >> The SPI device lives beyond this driver, so if we bind the driver >> and set spi->max_speed_hz to something other than what the SPI core >> set it, then the next time we bind the driver, we don't get the >> the max rate from the SPI core, but rather we changed it to when >> the driver unbound. >> >> So on the second bind, the max rate would be the slow register >> read rate instead of the actual max allowable rate. >> >> So we need to reset spi->max_speed_hz to what it was originally >> on driver unbind so that everything works as expected on the >> next bind. >> >> (Or we call this a SPI core bug and fix it there instead). > Definitely a question to ask. Directly accessing spi_max_speed_hz may > be the fundamental issue as I don't think the driver is generally > expected to touch that in a dynamic fashion. Should we be instead setting it > per transfer for the ones that need it controlled? > > Jonathan > The problem is that we are using regmap and that doesn't have a way to specify the max frequency for register reads that is different from other uses of the SPI bus (i.e. reading sample data). So we could fix it in the generic SPI regmap (not exactly trivial) or we could write our own regmap read/write callbacks in this driver that properly sets the per-transfer max speed.