On 03-Jul-19 11:44 PM, Sergei Shtylyov wrote: > Hello! > > On 07/03/2019 07:41 AM, Vignesh Raghavendra 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 with respect to bits per clock >>>> cycle. 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 >>>> communicating with flash. >>>> >>>> Framework is modelled along the lines of spi-nor framework. HyperBus >>>> memory controller (HBMC) drivers calls hyperbus_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 trying to detect >>>> flash as part of CFI flash probe. >>>> >>>> HyperRAM is not supported at the moment. >>>> >>>> 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 Raghavendra <vigneshr@xxxxxx> >>> [...] >>> >>> I have at least created my HyperBus driver and unfortunately I'm having serious > > At last. :-) > So, I guess driver works for limited memory size? >>> issues with the design of the support core (see below)... >>> >>> [...] >>>> diff --git a/drivers/mtd/hyperbus/hyperbus-core.c b/drivers/mtd/hyperbus/hyperbus-core.c >>>> new file mode 100644 >>>> index 000000000000..63a9e64895bc >>>> --- /dev/null >>>> +++ b/drivers/mtd/hyperbus/hyperbus-core.c >>>> @@ -0,0 +1,154 @@ >>> [...] >>>> +int hyperbus_register_device(struct hyperbus_device *hbdev) >>>> +{ >>>> + const struct hyperbus_ops *ops; >>>> + struct hyperbus_ctlr *ctlr; >>>> + struct device_node *np; >>>> + struct map_info *map; >>>> + struct resource res; >>>> + struct device *dev; >>>> + int ret; >>>> + >>>> + if (!hbdev || !hbdev->np || !hbdev->ctlr || !hbdev->ctlr->dev) { >>>> + pr_err("hyperbus: please fill all the necessary fields!\n"); >>>> + return -EINVAL; >>>> + } >>>> + >>>> + np = hbdev->np; >>>> + ctlr = hbdev->ctlr; >>>> + if (!of_device_is_compatible(np, "cypress,hyperflash")) >>>> + return -ENODEV; >>>> + >>>> + hbdev->memtype = HYPERFLASH; >>>> + >>>> + ret = of_address_to_resource(np, 0, &res); >>> >>> Hm, I doubt that the HB devices are wholly mapped into memory space, that seems >>> like a property of the HB controller. In my case, the flash device in the DT has >>> only single-cell "reg" prop (equal to the chip select #). Then this function returns >>> -EINVAL and the registration fails. Also, in my case such mapping is R/O, not R/W. >>> >> >> You could declare R/O MMIO region in controla and set up a translation using ranges >> from slave's reg CS based reg mapping like: > > No, not all HB controllers work the same (simple) way as yours. In case of RPC-IF, > the direct read map is a 64 MiB window into a possibly larger flash chip, it has a > register supplying address bits 25:31... Okay, this limitation was not made clear earlier. I thought RPC-IF also supported MMIO accesses for all reads I will look into changes needed to support HB controllers that don't have MMIO interface next week. Regards Vignesh > >> + hbmc: hyperbus@47034000 { >> + compatible = "ti,am654-hbmc"; >> + reg = <0x0 0x47034000 0x0 0x100>, >> + <0x5 0x00000000 0x1 0x0000000>; >> + #address-cells = <2>; >> + #size-cells = <1>; >> + ranges = <0x0 0x0 0x5 0x00000000 0x4000000>, /* CS0 - 64MB */ >> + <0x1 0x0 0x5 0x04000000 0x4000000>; /* CS1 - 64MB */ >> + >> + /* Slave flash node */ >> + flash@0,0 { >> + compatible = "cypress,hyperflash", "cfi-flash"; >> + reg = <0x0 0x0 0x4000000>; >> + }; >> + }; >> >> If you use just CS# how would you handle CS to MMIO region mapping? >> Does both CS use the same MMIO base for reads? > > The RPC-IF HF mode only has a single CS signal. > I see... > [...] > > MBR, Sergei > Regards Vignesh ______________________________________________________ Linux MTD discussion mailing list http://lists.infradead.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-mtd/