On 26/02/19 11:46 PM, Sergei Shtylyov wrote: > On 02/19/2019 09:36 AM, Vignesh R (by way of Boris Brezillon <bbrezillon@xxxxxxxxxx>) wrote: > >> Cypress HyperBus is Low Signal Count, High Performance Double Data Rate Bus >> interface between a host system master and one or more slave interfaces. >> HyperBus is used to connect microprocessor, microcontroller, or ASIC >> devices with random access NOR flash memory(called HyperFlash) or >> self refresh DRAM(called HyperRAM). >> >> Its a 8-bit data bus (DQ[7:0]) with Read-Write Data Strobe (RWDS) >> signal and either Single-ended clock(3.0V parts) or Differential clock >> (1.8V parts). It uses ChipSelect lines to select b/w multiple slaves. >> At bus level, it follows a separate protocol described in HyperBus >> specification[1]. >> >> HyperFlash follows CFI AMD/Fujitsu Extended Command Set (0x0002) similar >> to that of existing parallel NORs. Since Hyperbus is x8 DDR bus, >> its equivalent to x16 parallel NOR flash wrt bits per clk. But Hyperbus >> operates at >166MHz frequencies. >> HyperRAM provides direct random read/write access to flash memory >> array. >> >> But, Hyperbus memory controllers seem to abstract implementation details >> and expose a simple MMIO interface to access connected flash. >> >> Add support for registering HyperFlash devices with MTD framework. MTD >> maps framework along with CFI chip support framework are used to support >> communicate with flash. >> >> Framework is modelled along the lines of spi-nor framework. HyperBus >> memory controller(HBMC) drivers call hb_register_device() to register a >> single HyperFlash device. HyperFlash core parses MMIO access >> information from DT, sets up the map_info struct, probes CFI flash and >> registers it with MTD framework. >> >> Some HBMC masters need calibration/training sequence[3] to be carried >> out, in order for DLL inside the controller to lock, by reading a known >> string/pattern. This is done by repeatedly reading CFI Query >> Identification String. Calibration needs to be done before try to detect >> flash as part of CFI flash probe. >> >> HyperRAM is not supported atm. >> >> HyperBus specification can be found at[1] >> HyperFlash datasheet can be found at[2] >> >> [1] https://www.cypress.com/file/213356/download >> [2] https://www.cypress.com/file/213346/download >> [3] http://www.ti.com/lit/ug/spruid7b/spruid7b.pdf >> Table 12-5741. HyperFlash Access Sequence >> >> Signed-off-by: Vignesh R <vigneshr@xxxxxx> > [...] >> diff --git a/include/linux/mtd/hyperbus.h b/include/linux/mtd/hyperbus.h >> new file mode 100644 >> index 000000000000..0aa11458c424 >> --- /dev/null >> +++ b/include/linux/mtd/hyperbus.h >> @@ -0,0 +1,73 @@ >> +/* SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 >> + * >> + * Copyright (C) 2019 Texas Instruments Incorporated - http://www.ti.com/ >> + */ >> + >> +#ifndef __LINUX_MTD_HYPERBUS_H__ >> +#define __LINUX_MTD_HYPERBUS_H__ >> + >> +#include <linux/mtd/map.h> >> + >> +enum hb_memtype { >> + HYPERFLASH, >> + HYPERRAM, >> +}; >> + >> +/** >> + * struct hb_device - struct representing Hyperbus slave device >> + * @map: map_info struct for accessing MMIO Hyperbus flash memory >> + * @dev: device pointer of Hyperbus Controller > > I think we need a separate structure for the HyperBus controller, not just > for the slave devices... > >> + * @np: pointer to Hyperbus slave device node >> + * @mtd: pointer to MTD struct >> + * @ops: pointer to custom Hyperbus ops >> + * @memtype: type of memory device: Hyperflash or HyperRAM >> + * @needs_calib: flag to indicate whether calibration sequence is needed >> + * @registered: flag to indicate whether device is registered with MTD core >> + */ >> + >> +struct hb_device { >> + struct map_info map; >> + struct device *dev; >> + struct device_node *np; >> + struct mtd_info *mtd; >> + struct hb_ops *ops; >> + enum hb_memtype memtype; >> + bool needs_calib; >> + bool registered; >> +}; >> + >> +/** >> + * struct hb_ops - struct representing custom Hyperbus operations >> + * @read16: read 16 bit of data, usually from register/ID-CFI space >> + * @write16: write 16 bit of data, usually to register/ID-CFI space >> + * copy_from: copy data from flash memory >> + * copy_to: copy data to flash_memory >> + */ >> + >> +struct hb_ops { >> + u16 (*read16)(struct hb_device *hbdev, unsigned long addr); >> + void (*write16)(struct hb_device *hbdev, unsigned long addr, u16 val); >> + >> + void (*copy_from)(struct hb_device *hbdev, void *to, >> + unsigned long from, ssize_t len); >> + void (*copy_to)(struct hb_device *dev, unsigned long to, >> + const void *from, ssize_t len); > > ... else these methods won't fly if you need to "massage" the controller > registers inside them... > If accessing controller register is the only need, wouldn't a private data pointer within struct hb_device be sufficient to hold pointer to controller specific struct? struct hb_device { ... void *priv; /* points to controller's private data */ }; Or do you see a need for separate structure for the HyperBus controller? >> +}; > [...] > > MBR, Sergei > -- Regards Vignesh ______________________________________________________ Linux MTD discussion mailing list http://lists.infradead.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-mtd/