On Tue, 27 Apr 2010 19:15:02 +0900 Yusuke Goda <yusuke.goda.sx@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > MMCIF is MMC Host Interface in SuperH. > > ... > > +static void sh_mmcif_clock_control(struct sh_mmcif_host *host, unsigned int clk) > +{ > + int i; > + struct sh_mmcif_plat_data *p = host->pd->dev.platform_data; > + > + sh_mmcif_bitclr(host, MMCIF_CE_CLK_CTRL, CLK_ENABLE); > + sh_mmcif_bitclr(host, MMCIF_CE_CLK_CTRL, CLK_CLEAR); > + > + if (!clk) > + return; > + if (p->sup_pclk && clk == host->clk) { > + sh_mmcif_bitset(host, MMCIF_CE_CLK_CTRL, CLK_SUP_PCLK); > + } else { > + for (i = 1; (unsigned int)host->clk / (1 << i) >= clk; i++) > + ; I suspect this could be clarified. Perhaps i = ilog2(__roundup_pow_of_two(host->clk)); If that's wrong then include/linux/log2.h has various tools which can surely be used. If they're not appropriate then please feel free to propose additions. > + sh_mmcif_bitset(host, MMCIF_CE_CLK_CTRL, (i - 1) << 16); > + } > + sh_mmcif_bitset(host, MMCIF_CE_CLK_CTRL, CLK_ENABLE); > +} > + > > ... > > +static int sh_mmcif_error_manage(struct sh_mmcif_host *host) > +{ > + u32 state1, state2; > + int ret, timeout = 10000000; > + > + host->sd_error = 0; > + host->wait_int = 0; > + > + state1 = sh_mmcif_readl(host, MMCIF_CE_HOST_STS1); > + state2 = sh_mmcif_readl(host, MMCIF_CE_HOST_STS2); > + pr_debug("%s: ERR HOST_STS1 = %08x\n", \ > + DRIVER_NAME, sh_mmcif_readl(host, MMCIF_CE_HOST_STS1)); > + pr_debug("%s: ERR HOST_STS2 = %08x\n", \ > + DRIVER_NAME, sh_mmcif_readl(host, MMCIF_CE_HOST_STS2)); > + > + if (state1 & STS1_CMDSEQ) { > + pr_debug("%s: Forced end of command sequence\n", DRIVER_NAME); > + sh_mmcif_bitset(host, MMCIF_CE_CMD_CTRL, CMD_CTRL_BREAK); > + sh_mmcif_bitset(host, MMCIF_CE_CMD_CTRL, ~CMD_CTRL_BREAK); > + while (1) { > + timeout--; > + if (timeout < 0) { > + pr_err(DRIVER_NAME": Forceed end of " \ > + "command sequence timeout err\n"); > + return -EILSEQ; > + } > + if (!(sh_mmcif_readl(host, MMCIF_CE_HOST_STS1) > + & STS1_CMDSEQ)) > + break; > + mdelay(1); > + } > + sh_mmcif_sync_reset(host); > + return -EILSEQ; Good heavens, what is EILSEQ? <googles a bit> "An illegal multibyte sequence was found in the input. This usually means that you have the wrong charactor encoding, for instance the MicrosoftCorporation version of latin-1 (aka iso_8859_1(7)) (which has it's own stuff like "smart quotes" in the reserved bytes) instead of the real latin (or perhaps utf8(7))." Why on earth are driver writers using this in the kernel??? Imagine the confusion which ensues when this error code propagates all the way back to some poor user's console. They'll be scrabbling around with language encodings not even suspecting that their hardware is busted. People do this *a lot*. They go grubbing through errno.h and grab something which looks vaguely appropriate. But it's wrong. If your hardware is busted then return -EIO and emit a printk to tell the operator what broke. > + } > + > + if (state2 & STS2_CRC_ERR) > + ret = -EILSEQ; > + else if (state2 & STS2_TIMEOUT_ERR) > + ret = -ETIMEDOUT; > + else > + ret = -EILSEQ; > + return ret; > +} > > ... > -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-mmc" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html