While running tests on an i.MX8M Mini connected to a TI ADS1015 ADC, we found that the ADC would stop responding to i2c requests because it would timeout after the bus was idle for 25ms. This timeout could be traced back to the rescheduling events in the i2c-imx driver. The problem is that if the system is under heavy load, the schedule call and the wait_event_timeout may be rescheduled too late to reach the 25ms timeout. The same problem may occur with other SMBus devices. Therefore, this patchset removes the scheduling calls for non-DMA mode by handling the interrupt events directly in the ISR instead of scheduling a task to handle the events. This patch will introduce some bigger changes because the logic for handling events in the ISR had to be rewritten. Therefore we have tested the following combinations: - i.MX8M Mini with dma - i.MX8M Mini without dma - i.MX8M Plus with dma - i.MX8M Plus without dma - i.MX7D with dma - i.MX7D without dma - i.MX7D atomic mode Because we do not have any devices that use the SMBus block transfer mode, we were not able to test it. The ideas are based on the RFC: https://lore.kernel.org/all/20240531142437.74831-1-eichest@xxxxxxxxx/ However, the handling of events in the ISR is new, because further testing showed that it was not enough to simply remove the schedule call. Changes since v2: - Add Acked-by tags from Oleksij - Renamed i2c_imx_start_read to i2c_imx_prepare_read - I did not add a Fixes tag because the issues from Flavio have a different root cause and are not fixed by this patchset Changes since v1: - Add Reviewed-by tags from Frank - Add new patch to use readb_relaxed and writeb_relaxed (Frank) - Update commit message for patch 1 with some clarifications (Frank) Stefan Eichenberger (4): i2c: imx: only poll for bus busy in multi master mode i2c: imx: separate atomic, dma and non-dma use case i2c: imx: use readb_relaxed and writeb_relaxed i2c: imx: prevent rescheduling in non dma mode drivers/i2c/busses/i2c-imx.c | 357 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++----- 1 file changed, 305 insertions(+), 52 deletions(-) -- 2.43.0