Previous PHY code waited a fixed amount of time for the DLL to lock at power on time. Unfortunately, the time for the DLL to lock is actually a bit more dynamic and can be longer if the card clock is slower. Instead of waiting a fixed 30 us, let's now dynamically wait until the lock bit gets set. We'll wait up to 10 ms which should be OK even if the card clock is at the super slow 100 kHz. On its own, this change makes the PHY power on code a little more robust. Before this change the PHY was relying on the eMMC code to make sure the PHY was only powered on when the card clock was set to at least 50 MHz before, though this reliance wasn't documented anywhere. This change will be even more useful in future changes where we actually need to be able to wait for a DLL lock at slower clock speeds. Signed-off-by: Douglas Anderson <dianders@xxxxxxxxxxxx> Acked-by: Kishon Vijay Abraham I <kishon@xxxxxx> Reviewed-by: Shawn Lin <shawn.lin@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> Tested-by: Heiko Stuebner <heiko@xxxxxxxxx> --- Changes in v3: - Add collected tags Changes in v2: - Indicate that 5.1 ms is calculated (Shawn). drivers/phy/phy-rockchip-emmc.c | 28 ++++++++++++++++++++-------- 1 file changed, 20 insertions(+), 8 deletions(-) diff --git a/drivers/phy/phy-rockchip-emmc.c b/drivers/phy/phy-rockchip-emmc.c index a69f53630e67..2d059c046978 100644 --- a/drivers/phy/phy-rockchip-emmc.c +++ b/drivers/phy/phy-rockchip-emmc.c @@ -85,6 +85,7 @@ static int rockchip_emmc_phy_power(struct rockchip_emmc_phy *rk_phy, { unsigned int caldone; unsigned int dllrdy; + unsigned long timeout; /* * Keep phyctrl_pdb and phyctrl_endll low to allow @@ -137,15 +138,26 @@ static int rockchip_emmc_phy_power(struct rockchip_emmc_phy *rk_phy, PHYCTRL_ENDLL_MASK, PHYCTRL_ENDLL_SHIFT)); /* - * After enable analog DLL circuits, we need an extra 10.2us - * for dll to be ready for work. But according to testing, we - * find some chips need more than 25us. + * After enabling analog DLL circuits docs say that we need 10.2 us if + * our source clock is at 50 MHz and that lock time scales linearly + * with clock speed. If we are powering on the PHY and the card clock + * is super slow (like 100 kHZ) this could take as long as 5.1 ms as + * per the math: 10.2 us * (50000000 Hz / 100000 Hz) => 5.1 ms + * Hopefully we won't be running at 100 kHz, but we should still make + * sure we wait long enough. */ - udelay(30); - regmap_read(rk_phy->reg_base, - rk_phy->reg_offset + GRF_EMMCPHY_STATUS, - &dllrdy); - dllrdy = (dllrdy >> PHYCTRL_DLLRDY_SHIFT) & PHYCTRL_DLLRDY_MASK; + timeout = jiffies + msecs_to_jiffies(10); + do { + udelay(1); + + regmap_read(rk_phy->reg_base, + rk_phy->reg_offset + GRF_EMMCPHY_STATUS, + &dllrdy); + dllrdy = (dllrdy >> PHYCTRL_DLLRDY_SHIFT) & PHYCTRL_DLLRDY_MASK; + if (dllrdy == PHYCTRL_DLLRDY_DONE) + break; + } while (!time_after(jiffies, timeout)); + if (dllrdy != PHYCTRL_DLLRDY_DONE) { pr_err("rockchip_emmc_phy_power: dllrdy timeout.\n"); return -ETIMEDOUT; -- 2.8.0.rc3.226.g39d4020 -- 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