On 08/27/2018 01:24 PM, Alexander Amelkin wrote: > 27.08.2018 13:33, Marek Vasut wrote: >> On 08/20/2018 12:26 PM, Alexander Amelkin wrote: >>> Currently in spi-nor driver there is a line for mx66l51235l. >>> According to Macronix site, there is no such part number. The chip >>> detected as such is actually mx66l51235f. Hence, this commit renames >>> the chip. >> I wonder if this could pose a problem, since this might interfere with >> the DT being an ABI. But I guess fixing the name is OK. > Well, as far as I understand, in the DT you'll only have "compatible=jedec,spi-nor" for most cases. > Anyway, I did `grep -r mx66l41235 arch/*/boot/dts` and found nothing, so I guess it's safe to rename. The argument can go in the direction of out-of-tree DTs . I think it's OK to fix it too though. >>> According to the datasheet for mx66l51235f, "The device default is in >>> 24-bit address mode" (section 9-10). Having option SPI_NOR_4B_OPCODES >>> makes the code act as if the device was already in 4B mode and didn't >>> need the EN4B command. That prevents this chip from functioning on >>> systems where the boot loader left the chip in 3B mode (e.g. if the >>> chip wasn't used during the boot process). >>> >>> Hence, this commit removes the SPI_NOR_4B_OPCODES option for >>> mx66l51235f (added previously by commit d342b6a973af). >> Could it be there are two variants of the chip, one which supports the >> 4B opcodes and one which does not ? Wouldn't be the first time I saw >> this. If this chip supports the SFDP tables, you can check those. > I was unable to find another variant of the chip. There is only one specified in the datasheet: > http://www.macronix.com/Lists/Datasheet/Attachments/7401/MX66L51235F,%203V,%20512Mb,%20v1.1.pdf > and it says that the device supports both 3B and 4B modes, but defaults to 3B (24-bit) mode. So keep the 4B part in. Linux will just not reconfigure the device to 4B mode using register write, but will instead issue the 4B opcode directly, without any stateful change. > Most probably, Roman Yeryomin, the author of commit d342b6a973af, was fighting post-effects of u-boot or some other boot loader that set his chip to 4B mode before jumping to Linux kernel. It's the other way around, U-Boot keeps the flash in 3B mode. > It is hard to say for sure, though, as neither his patch itself, nor his post to the mailing list contained any rationale for the change. > > It is for sure though that for OpenPOWER systems using this chip as PNOR (BIOS flash in x86 terms), commit d342b6a973af broke host booting. I CCed him, so maybe he can clarify. But this is weird. If you reboot the system, isn't the SPI NOR power-cycled and reset into defined default state ? If not, your hardware is severely broken and you should fix your reset routing. -- Best regards, Marek Vasut ______________________________________________________ Linux MTD discussion mailing list http://lists.infradead.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-mtd/