On Wed, 20 May 2020 17:12:46 +0200 Miquel Raynal <miquel.raynal@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > Hi Boris, > > Boris Brezillon <boris.brezillon@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote on Wed, 20 May > 2020 16:50:22 +0200: > > > On Wed, 20 May 2020 14:42:31 +0000 > > Rickard X Andersson <Rickard.Andersson@xxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > > > > If I understand you correctly you want me to use onfi_find_equivalent_sdr_mode in order to find the corresponding onfi mode. Then you want me to use onfi_fill_data_interface and loop towards mode 0 checking which mode the controller accepts? I just thought it was a "messy" to duplicate this code in all vendor drivers. > > > > > Or do you mean that I should just use onfi_find_equivalent_sdr_mode to set ."timings.mode" and let nand_base to do the looping in case error is returned from th58nvg2s3hbai4_choose_data_interface (i.e specialized timings not accepted by the controller). > > > > > > > > Sorry for the misunderstanding. What I think you should try is: > > > > 1/ call onfi_find_equivalent_sdr_mode() to set the timings.mode field. > > > > 2/ call nand_controller_supports_data_interface() > > > > 3/ if the controller supports the timings, set > > > > chip->default_timing_mode accordingly and return 0. > > > > Why do we have to set the default_timing_mode field? Can't we just set > > timings.mode directly? > > > > > > 4/ if the controller does not support the timings, you may want to > > > > propose other standard timings to test by setting > > > > chip->default_timing_mode anyway but returning an error which means > > > > "best interface has not been found yet" so the rest of the > > > > choose_data_interface() helper will try the remaining ONFI modes > > > > automatically (fallbacks to 0 anyway). > > > > Again, I don't see why setting chip->default_timing_mode is needed here, > > and I'm not sure trying remaining ONFI modes is useful, I guess we can > > just fall back on mode 0 in that case. > > It is needed because of the logic in nand_reset() which does not apply > the data interface after a reset if this field is null. We should probably replace that check by a memcmp(): if (!memcmp(&chip->data_interface, saved_data_intf, sizeof(saved_data_intf))) return 0; And maybe we should allocate this struct instead of copying things around (have a "default/reset timings" object that's shared by all drivers and matches timing mode 0, and a "best timing" object that's allocated at init time). > > Otherwise I also wondered if falling back to regular ONFI mode was > useful. If this is not, we can just return after the call to > chip->ops.choose_data_interface(). Or maybe we could expose this logic as a helper: static int nand_choose_best_sdr_timings(struct nand_chip *, struct nand_sdr_timings *best_timings) { /* * 1/ pick the closest mode and assign best_timings->mode * using onfi_find_equivalent_sdr_mode() * 2/ call controller->setup_data_interface(check_only, best_timings); * 3/ pick timings of best_timings->mode - 1 if it fails and go back to * #2, return 0 otherwise. */ } This way the driver doesn't have to duplicate the logic, it only has to fill the best_timings struct accordingly, and the core can simply do: if (chip->ops.choose_data_interface) return chip->ops.choose_data_interface(); ______________________________________________________ Linux MTD discussion mailing list http://lists.infradead.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-mtd/