On Thu, Jul 02, 2020 at 01:37:13AM +0300, Serge Semin wrote: > On Wed, Jul 01, 2020 at 02:13:36PM -0700, Daniel Winkler wrote: > > > > This change regresses the QCA6174A-3 bluetooth chip, preventing > > firmware from being properly loaded. Without this change, the > > chip works as intended. > > > > The device is the Kukui Chromebook using the Mediatek chipset > > and the 8250_mtk uart. Initial controller baudrate is 115200 > > and operating speed is 3000000. Our entire suite of bluetooth > > tests now fail on this platform due to an apparent failure to > > sync its firmware on initialization. > > Ok. It's mediatek 8250 driver, which is responsible for the failure. > Then we'll have two options: > > 1) Add a new capability like UART_CAP_NO16DIV and take it into account > in the serial8250_get_baud_rate() method. > > I don't have a documentation for the Mediatek UART port, but it seems to me > that that controller calculates the baud rate differently from the standard > 8250 port. A standard 8250 port does that by the next formulae: > baud = uartclk / (16 * divisor). > While it seems to me that the Mediatek port uses the formulae like: > baud = uartclk / divisor. (Please, correct me if I'm wrong) > If so, then we could introduce a new capability like UART_CAP_NO16DIV. The > 8250_mtk driver will add it to the 8250-port capabilities field. The > serial8250_get_baud_rate() method should be altered in a way so one would check > whether the UART_CAP_NO16DIV flag is set and if it is then the > uart_get_baud_rate() function will be called without uartclk normalized by the > factor of 16. > > 2) Manually call serial8250_do_set_divisor() in the custom set_termios() > callback. > > Just add the uart_update_timeout() and serial8250_do_set_divisor() methods > invocation into the mtk8250_set_termios() function, which the original commit > 81bb549fdf14 ("serial: 8250_mtk: support big baud rate") author should have > done in the first place. Sounds like a sane fix, thanks for looking into this. greg k-h