Hi, Vignesh, On Tuesday, May 12, 2020 12:49:07 PM EEST Vignesh Raghavendra wrote: > EXTERNAL EMAIL: Do not click links or open attachments unless you know the > content is safe > On 12/05/20 11:46 am, Tudor.Ambarus@xxxxxxxxxxxxx wrote: > > Hi, Boris, Pratyush, > > > > I stripped case 2/, we'll not treat it for now. > > > > On Monday, May 11, 2020 12:27:12 PM EEST Boris Brezillon wrote: > >> EXTERNAL EMAIL: Do not click links or open attachments unless you know > >> the > >> content is safe > >> > >> On Mon, 11 May 2020 09:00:35 +0000 > >> > >> <Tudor.Ambarus@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >>> Hi, Pratyush, Boris, > >>> > >>> On Friday, April 24, 2020 9:43:54 PM EEST Pratyush Yadav wrote: > >>>> This series adds support for octal DTR flashes in the spi-nor > >>>> framework, > >>> > >>> I'm still learning about this, but I can give you my 2 cents as of now, > >>> to > >>> open the discussion. Enabling 2-2-2, 4-4-4, and 8-8-8 modes is dangerous > >>> because the flash may not recover from unexpected resets. Entering one > >>> of > >>> these modes can be: > >>> 1/ volatile selectable, the device return to the 1-1-1 protocol after > >>> the > >>> next power-on. I guess this is conditioned by the optional RESET pin, > >>> but > >>> I'll have to check. Also the flash can return to the 1-1-1 mode using > >>> the > >>> software reset or through writing to its Configuration Register, without > >>> power-on or power- off. > >> > >> My understanding is that there's no standard software reset procedure > >> that guarantees no conflict with existing 1S commands, so even the > >> software reset approach doesn't work here. > > > > The software reset procedure can't protect you from unexpected resets, but > > the hardware with its optional reset pin can. Pratyush to confirm. > > > > cut > > > >>> Not recovering from unexpected resets is unacceptable. One should always > >>> prefer option 1/ and condition the entering in 2-2-2, 4-4-4 and 8-8-8 > >>> with > >>> the presence of the optional RESET pin. > >> > >> Totally agree with you on that one, but we know what happens in > >> practice... > > > > What I proposed is to condition the entering in the state-full modes with > > the presence of the optional RESET pin. We would introduce an optional > > device tree property for the RESET pin. If hardware doesn't implement the > > optional RESET# signal, then we will not enter in the state-full modes. > > Are you asking for dedicated SW controllable reset line or just an > indication from DT that OSPI reset line is connected to board level > soft/hard reset lines? I don't see a need for the reset line to be SW controllable, a simple indication from the device tree should be enough. > > Mandating SW controllable RESET line is bit of a stretch IMO... Board > design may not allow wasting dedicated pin due to lack of GPIOs perhaps.. > > For eg.: TI EVM has OSPI reset line connected to board level reset out. > This ensures any soft/warm/hard CPU reset will trigger OSPI Flash reset, > but there is no SW control that allows OSPI flash alone to be reset. > Isn't such a reset mechanism sufficient? > I think it is, yes. Cheers, ta ______________________________________________________ Linux MTD discussion mailing list http://lists.infradead.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-mtd/