On Wed, 7 Nov 2018 12:08:58 +0100 Christophe Kerello <christophe.kerello@xxxxxx> wrote: > >> + > >> +write_8bit: > >> + for (i = 0; i < len; i++) > >> + writeb_relaxed(p[i], io_addr_w); > > > > Is 8bit access really enforced by the byte accessor? In this case, how > > can you be sure 32-bit accesses are doing the right thing? Isn't there > > a bit somewhere in the config reg to configure the bus width? > > > > I have checked the framework after Miquèl comment sent on v1 => "If you > selected BOUNCE_BUFFER in the options, buf is supposedly > aligned, or am I missing something?". > > After checking the framework, my understanding was: > - In case of 8-bit access is requested, the framework provides no > guarantee on buf. To avoid any issue, I write byte per byte. > - In case of 8-bit access is not requested, it means that the > framework will try to write data in the page or in the oob. When writing > to oob, chip->oob_poi will be used and this buffer is aligned. When > writing to the page, as the driver enables NAND_USE_BOUNCE_BUFFER > option, buf is guarantee aligned. It's probably what happens right now, but there's no guarantee that all non-8-bit accesses will be provided a 32-bit aligned buffer. The only guarantee we provide is on buffer passed to the chip->ecc.read/write_xxx() hooks, and ->exec_op() can be used outside of the "page access" path. > > But, I agree that it would be safe to reconfigure the bus width in 8-bit > before writing byte per byte in case of a 16-bit NAND is used. Yes, and I also think you should not base your is-aligned check on the force_8bit value. Use IS_ALIGNED() instead. ______________________________________________________ Linux MTD discussion mailing list http://lists.infradead.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-mtd/