On 24/09/21 2:45 pm, Bean Huo wrote: > On Fri, 2021-09-24 at 13:07 +0300, Adrian Hunter wrote: >> On 24/09/21 12:17 pm, Bean Huo wrote: >>> On Fri, 2021-09-24 at 08:29 +0300, Adrian Hunter wrote: >>>>> If the data transmission timeout value required by the device >>>>> exceeds >>>>> the maximum timeout value of the host HW timer, we still use >>>>> the HW >>>>> timer with the maximum timeout value of the HW timer. This >>>>> setting >>>>> is >>>>> suitable for most R/W situations. But sometimes, the device >>>>> will >>>>> complete >>>>> the R/W task within its required timeout value (greater than >>>>> the HW >>>>> timer). >>>>> In this case, the HW timer for data transmission will time out. >>>>> Currently, in this condition, we disable the HW timer and use >>>>> the >>>>> SW >>>>> timer only when the SDHCI_QUIRK2_DISABLE_HW_TIMEOUT quirk is >>>>> set by >>>>> the >>>>> host driver. The patch is to remove this if statement >>>>> restriction >>>>> and >>>>> allow data transmission to use the SW timer when the hardware >>>>> timer >>>>> cannot >>>>> meet the required timeout value. >>>> >>>> The reason it is a quirk is because it does not work for all >>>> hardware. >>>> >>>> For some controllers the timeout cannot really be disabled, only >>>> the >>>> >>>> interrupt is disabled, and then the controller never indicates >>>> completion >>>> >>>> if the timeout is exceeded. >>> >>> Hi Adrian, >>> Thanks for your review. >>> >>> Yes, you are right. But this quirk prevents disabling the hardware >>> timeoutIRQ. The purpose of this patch is to disable the hardware >>> timeout IRQ and >>> select the software timeout. >>> >>> void __sdhci_set_timeout(struct sdhci_host *host, struct >>> mmc_command >>> *cmd) >>> { >>> bool too_big = false; >>> u8 count = sdhci_calc_timeout(host, cmd, &too_big); >>> >>> if (too_big) { >>> sdhci_calc_sw_timeout(host, cmd); >>> sdhci_set_data_timeout_irq(host, false); // disable >>> IRQ >>> } else if (!(host->ier & SDHCI_INT_DATA_TIMEOUT)) { >>> sdhci_set_data_timeout_irq(host, true); >>> } >>> >>> sdhci_writeb(host, count, SDHCI_TIMEOUT_CONTROL); >>> } >>> >>> >>> The driver has detected that the hardware timer cannot meet the >>> timeout >>> requirements of the device, but we still use the hardware timer, >>> which will >>> allow potential timeout issuea . Rather than allowing a potential >>> problem to exist, why can’t software timing be used to avoid this >>> problem? >> >> Timeouts aren't that accurate. The maximum is assumed still to work. >> mmc->max_busy_timeout is used to tell the core what the maximum is. > >> > > > > mmc->max_busy_timeout is still a representation of Host HW timer > maximum timeout count, isn't it? Not necessarily. For SDHCI_QUIRK2_DISABLE_HW_TIMEOUT it would be set to zero to indicate no maximum.