On Tue, May 20, 2014 at 09:30:33PM +0200, Boris BREZILLON wrote: > AFAICT nothing, but the same goes for the ECC requirements, and we've > recently added DT bindings to define these requirements. > I'm not telling we should drop these ECC requirements bindings (actually > I'm using them :-)), but what's different with the timings requirements ? ECC requirements are almost always something that has to be matched to the bootloader (since the bootloader typicaly reads the NAND to boot), so it is sensible to put that in the DT The timings are a property of the chip, and if they can be detected they should be. IMHO, the main purpose of a DT property would be to lower the speed if, for some reason, the board cannot support the device's full speed. > Indeed, I based it on the ONFI NAND timings mode model, but AFAIK > (tell me if I'm wrong), it should work because most of the timings > are min requirements. This means, even if you provide slower > signals transitions, the NAND will work as expected. IIRC for ONFI a device must always work in the mode 0 timings, without requiring a command? Jason -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-doc" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html