Adrain, On Mon, Sep 14, 2020 at 09:36:02AM +0300, Adrian Hunter wrote: > On 14/09/20 8:45 am, AKASHI Takahiro wrote: > > Adrian, > > > > On Fri, Aug 21, 2020 at 05:11:18PM +0300, Adrian Hunter wrote: > >> On 10/07/20 2:11 pm, Ben Chuang wrote: > >>> From: AKASHI Takahiro <takahiro.akashi@xxxxxxxxxx> > >>> > >>> VDD2 is used for powering UHS-II interface. > >>> Modify sdhci_set_power_and_bus_voltage(), sdhci_set_power_noreg() > >>> and sdhci_set_power_noreg() to handle VDD2. > >> > >> vdd2 is always 1.8 V and I suspect there may never be support for anything > >> else, so we should start with 1.8 V only. > > > > What do you mean here? > > You don't want to add an extra argument, vdd2, to sdhci_set_power(). > > Correct? > > Yes > > > > >> Also can we create uhs2_set_power_reg() and uhs2_set_power_noreg() and use > >> the existing ->set_power() callback > > > > Again what do you expect here? > > > > Do you want to see any platform-specific mmc driver who supports UHS-II > > to implement its own call back like: > > Not exactly. I expect there to be a common implementation in sdhci-uhs2.c > called sdhci_uhs2_set_power() for example, that drivers can use by setting > their .set_power = sdhci_uhs2_set_power. If they need platform-specific > code as well then their platform-specific code can call > sdhci_uhs2_set_power() if desired. > > > > > void sdhci_foo_set_power(struct sdhci_host *host, unsigned char mode, > > unsigned short vdd) > > { > > sdhci_set_power(host, mode,vdd); > > > > /* in case that sdhci_uhs2 module is not inserted */ > > if (!(mmc->caps & MMC_CAP_UHS2)) > > return; > > > > /* vdd2 specific operation */ > > if (IS_ERR_OR_NULL(host->mmc->supply.vmmc2)) > > sdhci_uhs2_set_power_noreg(host, mode); > > else > > sdhci_uhs2_set_power_reg(host, mode); > > > > /* maybe more platform-specific initialization */ > > } > > > > struct sdhci_ops sdhci_foo_ops = { > > .set_power = sdhci_foo_set_power, > > ... > > } What do you think about this logic in general? (If necessary, read it replacing "foo" to "uhs2".) What I'm concerned about is SDHCI_POWER_CONTROL register. Vdd and vdd2 are controlled with corresponding bits in this register. It seems to be "natural" to me that vdd and vdd2 are enabled in a single function rather than putting them in separate ones. In particular, in the case of sdhci_set_power_noreg(), there exist a couple of "quirks" around writing the bits to SDHCI_POWER_CONTROL register. I don't know how we should handle them if we have a separate function, say, sdhci_uhs2_set_power_noreg(). Do you want to see a copy of the same logic in sdhci_uhs2_set_power_noreg()? -Takahiro Akashi > > > > Is this what you mean? > > (I'm not quite sure yet that sdhci_ush2_set_power_noreg() can be split off > > from sdhci_set_power_noreg().) > > > > -Takahiro Akashi