Hi Boris, > -----Original Message----- > From: Boris Brezillon [mailto:boris.brezillon@xxxxxxxxxxx] > Sent: Monday, December 10, 2018 4:20 PM > To: Yogesh Narayan Gaur <yogeshnarayan.gaur@xxxxxxx> > Cc: Schrempf Frieder <frieder.schrempf@xxxxxxxxxx>; linux- > mtd@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx; marek.vasut@xxxxxxxxx; broonie@xxxxxxxxxx; linux- > spi@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx; devicetree@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx; robh@xxxxxxxxxx; > mark.rutland@xxxxxxx; shawnguo@xxxxxxxxxx; linux-arm- > kernel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx; computersforpeace@xxxxxxxxx; linux- > kernel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx > Subject: Re: [PATCH v5 1/5] spi: spi-mem: Add driver for NXP FlexSPI controller > > On Mon, 10 Dec 2018 10:43:56 +0000 > Yogesh Narayan Gaur <yogeshnarayan.gaur@xxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > > Thus, in LUT preparation we have assigned only the base address. > > > > Now if I have assigned ahb_buf_size to FSPI_FLSHXXCR0 register > > > > then for > > > read/write data beyond limit of ahb_buf_size offset I get data corruption. > > > > > > Why would you do that? We have the ->adjust_op_size() exactly for > > > this reason, so, if someone tries to do a spi_mem_op with > > > data.nbytes > ahb_buf_size you should return an error. > > > > > Let me explain my implementation with example. If I have to write data of size > 0x100 bytes at offset 0x1200 for CS1, I would program as below: > > In func nxp_fspi_select_mem(), would set value of controller address space > size, memmap_phy_size, to FSPI_FLSHA2CR0 and rest all FSPI_FLSHXXCR0 as 0. > > Value of memmap_phy_size is 0x10000000 i.e. 256 MB for my LX2160ARDB > target. > > Then in nxp_fspi_prepare_lut(), I would prepare LUT ADDR with address length > requirement 3/4 byte for NOR or 1/2/3/4 bytes for NAND flash. > > Also for LUT_NXP_WRITE would program data bytes as 0. > > > > Then inside func nxp_fspi_do_op(), set register FSPI_IPCR0 as the > > address offset i.e. 0x1200 and in register FSPI_IPCR1 program the data > > size to write i.e. 0x100 > > > > If, as suggested if I tries to mark value of register FSPI_FLSHA2CR0 equal to > ahb_buf_size (0x800), then access for address 0x1200 gives me wrong data. This > is because as per the controller specification access to flash connected at CS1 > can be performed under range of FSPI_ FLSHA1CR0 and FSPI_ FLSHA2CR0. > > Don't you have a way to set an offset to apply to the address accessed through > the AHB? And if you don't, how will it work if your mapping is smaller than the > flash size? Write operations are triggered using IP commands instead of AHB command. For Read AHB command is used and in this we are adding the offset when performing memcpy_fromIO operation memcpy_fromio(op->data.buf.in, (f->ahb_addr + op->addr.val), len); AHB/IP operations are independent of the way how CS got selected. CS selection depends, e.g. CS1 on the value of register FSPI_FLSHA1CR0 and FSPI_FLSHA2CR0. Mapping can never going to be smaller than the connected flash size as per discussion with the Board design team and if it's possible by user manually changes the non-soldered part then flash area beyond complete mapping is not accessible. On LX2160ARDB, with mapping of 256MB, for now we are having 4 flash devices connected with size as 64 MB. If user wants he can have only one single flash with flash size of 256MB. -- Regards Yogesh Gaur ______________________________________________________ Linux MTD discussion mailing list http://lists.infradead.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-mtd/