On Fri, Jun 26, 2020 at 1:01 PM Douglas Anderson <dianders@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > The geni serial driver had a rule that we'd only use 1 byte per FIFO > word for the TX FIFO if we were being used for the serial console. > This is ugly and a bit of a pain. It's not too hard to fix, so fix > it. > > Signed-off-by: Douglas Anderson <dianders@xxxxxxxxxxxx> > --- > > drivers/tty/serial/qcom_geni_serial.c | 57 +++++++++++++++++---------- > 1 file changed, 37 insertions(+), 20 deletions(-) > > diff --git a/drivers/tty/serial/qcom_geni_serial.c b/drivers/tty/serial/qcom_geni_serial.c > index 4610e391e886..583d903321b5 100644 > --- a/drivers/tty/serial/qcom_geni_serial.c > +++ b/drivers/tty/serial/qcom_geni_serial.c > @@ -103,12 +103,18 @@ > #define DEFAULT_IO_MACRO_IO2_IO3_MASK GENMASK(15, 4) > #define IO_MACRO_IO2_IO3_SWAP 0x4640 > > +/* We always configure 4 bytes per FIFO word */ > +#define BYTES_PER_FIFO_WORD 4 > + > struct qcom_geni_private_data { > /* NOTE: earlycon port will have NULL here */ > struct uart_driver *drv; > > u32 poll_cached_bytes; > unsigned int poll_cached_bytes_cnt; > + > + u32 write_cached_bytes; > + unsigned int write_cached_bytes_cnt; > }; > > struct qcom_geni_serial_port { > @@ -121,8 +127,6 @@ struct qcom_geni_serial_port { > bool setup; > int (*handle_rx)(struct uart_port *uport, u32 bytes, bool drop); > unsigned int baud; > - unsigned int tx_bytes_pw; > - unsigned int rx_bytes_pw; > void *rx_fifo; > u32 loopback; > bool brk; > @@ -390,13 +394,25 @@ static void qcom_geni_serial_poll_put_char(struct uart_port *uport, > #ifdef CONFIG_SERIAL_QCOM_GENI_CONSOLE > static void qcom_geni_serial_wr_char(struct uart_port *uport, int ch) > { > - writel(ch, uport->membase + SE_GENI_TX_FIFOn); > + struct qcom_geni_private_data *private_data = uport->private_data; > + > + private_data->write_cached_bytes = > + (private_data->write_cached_bytes >> 8) | (ch << 24); > + private_data->write_cached_bytes_cnt++; > + > + if (private_data->write_cached_bytes_cnt == BYTES_PER_FIFO_WORD) { > + writel(private_data->write_cached_bytes, > + uport->membase + SE_GENI_TX_FIFOn); > + private_data->write_cached_bytes_cnt = 0; > + } > } > > static void > __qcom_geni_serial_console_write(struct uart_port *uport, const char *s, > unsigned int count) > { > + struct qcom_geni_private_data *private_data = uport->private_data; > + > int i; > u32 bytes_to_send = count; > > @@ -431,6 +447,15 @@ __qcom_geni_serial_console_write(struct uart_port *uport, const char *s, > SE_GENI_M_IRQ_CLEAR); > i += chars_to_write; > } > + > + if (private_data->write_cached_bytes_cnt) { > + private_data->write_cached_bytes >>= BITS_PER_BYTE * > + (BYTES_PER_FIFO_WORD - private_data->write_cached_bytes_cnt); > + writel(private_data->write_cached_bytes, > + uport->membase + SE_GENI_TX_FIFOn); > + private_data->write_cached_bytes_cnt = 0; > + } How does this not end up sending stray zeros? In other words, how does the hardware know which bytes of this word are valid?