Re: [PATCH 0/6] i2c: send STOP after recovery; use it for i2c-rcar

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On 04.12.2017 13:36, Wolfram Sang wrote:
> When implementing bus recovery for the i2c-rcar driver, two problems were
> encountered: 1) When reading the SDA bit, not the SDA status was returned but
> the internal state of the "bus_is_busy" logic. 2) This logic needs a STOP to
> consider the bus free again. SCL/SDA high is not enough, and there is no other
> way known to reset the internal logic otherwise.
>
> The obvious solution to just send STOP after recovery makes sense for the
> generic case, too, IMO. If we made a device release SDA again, and are about
> start a new transfer using START, then we should terminate the previous state
> properly with STOP. This may help with some devices and shouldn't create any
> drawback AFAICS.
>
> For this, we need to introduce a 'set_sda' callback to the recovery
> infrastructure. Because of this and some other minor recovery core changes, I
> CCed a few people working on I2C bus recovery recently. The first five patches
> may be interesting for you, so your input is greatly appreciated. Also, testing
> the new features with GPIO based recovery would be awesome to have.
>
> This was tested on a Renesas Lager board (r8a7790/R-Car H2). My test procedure
> is documented here:
>
> https://elinux.org/Tests:I2C-bus-recovery
>
> A branch is available here:
>
> git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/wsa/linux.git renesas/topic/rcar-i2c-recovery
>
> Please let me know what you think.

I do not feel myself experienced I2C developer, so please be merciful if
I write stupid things :)

>From what I see the whole recovery infrastructure partially duplicates
i2c_bit_algo/i2c_algo_bit_data algorithm, and GPIO recovery duplicates
i2c-gpio driver.
Wouldn't be better to somehow reuse existing code? For example by adding
recovery callback in i2c_algorithm, and call i2c-gpio::recovery or
i2c_bit_algo::recovery from rcar-i2c-recovery (in this particular case).

I am not sure how much work it requires, and if it is worth it. Please
consider it as suggestion.

Regards
Andrzej




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