On Thursday 29 March 2012, Rafal Prylowski wrote: > +static u16 ep93xx_pata_read(struct ep93xx_pata_data *drv_data, > + void *addr_io, > + const struct ata_timing *t) > +{ > + unsigned long addr = (unsigned long) addr_io & 0x1f; > + void __iomem *base = drv_data->ide_base; > + u16 ret; > + > + writel(IDECtrl_DIOWn | IDECtrl_DIORn | addr, base + IDECtrl); > + ndelay(t->setup); > + writel(IDECtrl_DIOWn | addr, base + IDECtrl); The pointer arithmetic that you do here on addr_io looks really evil. Basically your registers are indirect and cannot be accessed through pointer dereference. Maybe you should not be trying to do that then and not use the ata_port->ioaddr structure. > + ndelay(t->act8b); I'm not too familar with ata drivers, but I don't think you're supposed to have delays in the code for the timings, rather than programming the timings into the controller registers. Are you sure this is the right thing here? > + if (drv_data->iordy) { > + /* min. 1s timeout (at cpu cycle = 5ns) */ > + unsigned int timeout = 200000; > + while (!ep93xx_pata_check_iordy(base) && --timeout) > + cpu_relax(); > + } This is not a reliable way to implement a timeout. Instead, you should use time_before() to check if hte timeout has expired. > +static void ep93xx_pata_setup_port(struct ata_ioports *ioaddr) > +{ > + /* > + * the device IDE register to be accessed is selected through > + * IDECTRL register's specific bitfields 'DA', 'CS1n' and 'CS0n': > + * b4 b3 b2 b1 b0 > + * A2 A1 A0 CS1n CS0n > + * the values filled in this structure allows the value to be directly > + * ORed to the IDECTRL register, hence giving directly the A[2:0] and > + * CS1n/CS0n values for each IDE register. > + * The values correspond to the transformation: > + * ((real IDE address) << 2) | CS1n value << 1 | CS0n value > + */ > + ioaddr->cmd_addr = (void __iomem *) 0 + 2; /* CS1 */ > + > + ioaddr->data_addr = (void __iomem *) (ATA_REG_DATA << 2) + 2; > + ioaddr->error_addr = (void __iomem *) (ATA_REG_ERR << 2) + 2; > + ioaddr->feature_addr = (void __iomem *) (ATA_REG_FEATURE << 2) + 2; > + ioaddr->nsect_addr = (void __iomem *) (ATA_REG_NSECT << 2) + 2; > + ioaddr->lbal_addr = (void __iomem *) (ATA_REG_LBAL << 2) + 2; > + ioaddr->lbam_addr = (void __iomem *) (ATA_REG_LBAM << 2) + 2; > + ioaddr->lbah_addr = (void __iomem *) (ATA_REG_LBAH << 2) + 2; > + ioaddr->device_addr = (void __iomem *) (ATA_REG_DEVICE << 2) + 2; > + ioaddr->status_addr = (void __iomem *) (ATA_REG_STATUS << 2) + 2; > + ioaddr->command_addr = (void __iomem *) (ATA_REG_CMD << 2) + 2; > + > + ioaddr->altstatus_addr = (void __iomem *) (0x06 << 2) + 1; /* CS0 */ > + ioaddr->ctl_addr = (void __iomem *) (0x06 << 2) + 1; /* CS0 */ > +} As mentioned above, this seems to make no sense. > =================================================================== > --- linux-2.6.orig/drivers/ata/Kconfig > +++ linux-2.6/drivers/ata/Kconfig > @@ -416,6 +416,15 @@ config PATA_EFAR > > If unsure, say N. > > +config PATA_EP93XX > + tristate "Cirrus Logic EP93xx PATA support" > + depends on ARCH_EP93XX > + help > + This option enables support for the PATA controller in > + the Cirrus Logic EP9312 and EP9315 ARM CPU. > + > + If unsure, say N. > + > config PATA_HPT366 > tristate "HPT 366/368 PATA support" > depends on PCI And I think this should be consequently be sorted below nonstandard ports, instead of the SFF list. Arnd -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-ide" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html