On Mon, 21 Oct 2019 16:40:57 +0800 masonccyang@xxxxxxxxxxx wrote: > Hi Boris, > > > > > > > > > Then fill-in these two hooks from the manufacturer code, > without > > > the > > > > > > > postponed init. > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > But in the final of nand_scan_tail(), mtd->_lock/_unlock will be > > > > > > filled by NULL, right ? > > > > > > > > > > The NAND core should set mtd->_lock/_unlock() to NAND specific > hooks > > > so > > > > > that the MTD layer is abstracted and and drivers do not see it. > Then, > > > > > in the NAND helper, either there is no specific hook defined by a > > > > > manufacturer driver and you return -ENOTSUPP, or you execute the > > > > > defined hook. > > > > > > > > okay, patch specific manufacturer _lock/_unlock driver > > > > in nand_manufacturer_init(); > > > > > > > > and in the final of nand_scan_tail() > > > > if (!mtd->_lock) > > > > mtd->_lock = NULL; > > > > if (!mtd->_unlock) > > > > mtd->_unlock = NULL; > > > > > > > > > I'm still considering of post_init() in nand_scan_tail() for > > > MTD layer default call-back function replacement because > > > there would be more call-back functions need it. > > > i.e., > > > MTD->_lock/_unlokc > > > MTD->_suspend/_resume > > > > Again, that's something that needs to be abstracted so that both the > > NAND manufacturer driver and the NAND controller driver can take > > appropriate actions on suspend/resume operations. > > > > > NTD->_point/_unpoint > > > > ->_point/_unpoint() are irrelevant for a NAND chip. > > > > > ... > > > > > > > > > actually, my patch series are including MTD->_locl/_unlock and > > > MTD->_suspend/_resume. how do you think ? > > > > Miquel was suggesting to add nand_chip->{lock,unlock,is_locked}() > > methods that would be implemented by the NAND manufacturer drivers, and > > have generic wrappers implemented in nand_base.c: > > > > static int nand_lock(struct mtd_info *mtd, loff_t ofs, uint64_t len) > > { > > struct nand_chip *chip = mtd_to_nand(mtd); > > > > if (!chip->lock) > > return -ENOTSUPP; > > > > return chip->lock(chip, ofs, len); > > } > > > > ... > > > > If you do that, you won't need this post_init() hook. > > got it, but ... > user space program flash_lock/flash_unlock are calling > mtd_lock() & mtd_unlock(). > i.e., > int mtd_lock(struct mtd_info *mtd, loff_t ofs, uint64_t len) > { > if (!mtd->_lock) > return -EOPNOTSUPP; > if (ofs < 0 || ofs >= mtd->size || len > mtd->size - ofs) > return -EINVAL; > if (!len) > return 0; > return mtd->_lock(mtd, ofs, len); > } > Assign mtd lock/unlock/is_locked hooks to the generic wrappers in nand_scan_tail(): mtd->_lock = nand_lock; mtd->_unlock = nand_unlock; mtd->_is_locked = nand_is_locked; Seriously, we've almost implemented the thing for you with all the details we've given. At some point you have to look more closely at how things are done/designed in the NAND framework if you want to contribute core changes. I'm fine giving hints but we're far beyond that point here. ______________________________________________________ Linux MTD discussion mailing list http://lists.infradead.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-mtd/