On Sun, 3 Nov 2019 20:03:21 +0800 Chuanhong Guo <gch981213@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > Hi! > > On Tue, Oct 29, 2019 at 12:41 AM Miquel Raynal > <miquel.raynal@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > Hello, > > > > Chuanhong Guo <gch981213@xxxxxxxxx> wrote on Wed, 16 Oct 2019 09:38:24 > > +0800: > > > > > GD5FxGQ4xA didn't follow the SPI spec to keep MISO low while slave is > > > reading, and instead MISO is kept high. As a result, the first byte > > > of id becomes 0xFF. > > > Since the first byte isn't supposed to be checked at all, this patch > > > just removed that check. > > > > > > While at it, redo the comment above to better explain what's happening. > > > > > > Fixes: cfd93d7c908e ("mtd: spinand: Add support for GigaDevice GD5F1GQ4UFxxG") > > > Signed-off-by: Chuanhong Guo <gch981213@xxxxxxxxx> > > > CC: Jeff Kletsky <git-commits@xxxxxxxxxxxx> > > > --- > > > RFC: > > > I doubt whether this patch is a proper fix for the underlying problem: > > > The actual problem is that we have two different implementation of read id > > > command: One replies immediately after master sending 0x9f and the other > > > need to send 0x9f and an offset byte (found in winbond and early GD flashes.) > > Correction: Only early GigaDevice nand chips uses this implementation. > Winbond chips uses a dummy byte instead of an address byte so there's > no problem for Winbond chips. > > > > Current code only works if SPI master is properly implemented (i.e. keep MOSI > > > low while reading.) > > > > I am not entirely against the fix, but this is a SPI host controller > > issue, right? Can you try to fix the controller driver instead? > > I think this is a spi nand framework issue. GigaDevice uses an unusual > READ ID implementation, and as a result, both host controller and chip > are reading during the first byte after 0x9f command: chip is reading > the address/offset byte and host is expecting the first ID byte. > Here lies two problems: > 1. According to the sequence diagram in their datasheet, MISO pin is > in High-Z state during the 0x9f command and the offset byte, and host > could read anything during this time instead of a fixed 0x0 or 0xff > byte, so the check of first byte should be removed. This is what this > patch is doing. > 2. If there's a buggy SPI host controller that didn't keep MOSI low > during reading operation, the chip will get 0xff as ID offset, causing > the read vendor/device ID to be swapped. I never met such a controller > so far, but if there is one, it will be a silicon bug that can't be > fixed by software. To fix this one, we'll have to make a second > read-id implementation in spi nand framework. I realize how fragile this ID-based detection is when manufacturers decide to not follow the standard READID semantic (one 0x9f command byte followed by 1 or more input cycles encoding the ID). Let's imagine you have a valid manuf ID byte in ID[0], and the device ID (ID[1]) matches the Winbond or Gigadevice manufacturer ID, and ID[3] (extended Device ID byte?) matches a valid Winbond/Gigadevice device ID. If you skip the check on ID[0] you might erroneously detect a Winbond or Gigadevice NAND, while it's actually something else. Note that I don't really have a solution to make this detection more robust. > > The second problem only exist in theory, so my preference is to apply > this patch and fix only the first problem for now. I think we should fix that problem now. Maybe by doing a 3 steps detection: 1/ READID + ID[] 2/ READID + DUMMY + ID[] 3/ READID + ADDR + ID[] At each step we would check if the returned ID matches a valid NAND, and if it does, stop there. ______________________________________________________ Linux MTD discussion mailing list http://lists.infradead.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-mtd/