On 24/02/2021 20:27, Laurent Pinchart wrote: > Hi Jacopo, > > On Mon, Feb 22, 2021 at 04:06:43PM +0100, Jacopo Mondi wrote: >> On Mon, Feb 22, 2021 at 03:05:03AM +0200, Laurent Pinchart wrote: >>> Hi Jacopo, >>> >>> Reviewed-by: Laurent Pinchart <laurent.pinchart@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> >>> >>> On Wed, Feb 17, 2021 at 01:01:26PM +0000, Kieran Bingham wrote: >>>> On 16/02/2021 17:41, Jacopo Mondi wrote: >>>>> During the camera module initialization the image sensor PID is read to >>>>> verify it can correctly be identified. The current implementation is >>>>> rather confused and uses a loop implemented with a label and a goto. >>>>> >>>>> Replace it with a more compact for() loop. >>>>> >>>>> No functional changes intended. >>>> >>>> I think there is a functional change in here, but I almost like it. >>>> >>>> Before, if the read was successful, it would check to see if the >>>> OV10635_PID == OV10635_VERSION, and if not it would print that the read >>>> was successful but a mismatch. >>>> >>>> Now - it will retry again instead, and if at the end of the retries it >>>> still fails then it's a failure. >>>> >>>> This means we perhaps don't get told if the device id is not correct in >>>> the same way, but it also means that if the VERSION was not correct >>>> because of a read error (which I believe i've seen occur), it will retry. So - to be clear here, I meant a 'read error', as in perhaps a one-bit-flip or something else, not an error detected and propogated by the I2C controllers. I.e. ... something happening on the bus that gives a different result but the 'read' was successful.... it's just that it returns a different value than expected. Given our noisy bus, not certain bus speeds, etc etc, I believe this can happen. >>> >>> I was going to ask about that, whether we can have a successful I2C read >>> operation that would return incorrect data. If we do, aren't we screwed >>> ? If there's a non-negligible probability that reads will return >>> incorrect data without any way to know about it (for other registers >>> than the version register of course), then I would consider that writes >>> could fail the same way, and that would mean an unusable device, >>> wouldn't it ? >>> >>> If, on the other hand, read failures can always (or nearly always, >>> ignoring space neutrinos and similar niceties) be detected, then I think >>> we should avoid the functional change. >>> >>>> Because there is a functional change you might want to update the >>>> commit, but I still think this is a good change overall. >> >> I'm not sure I got your concerns to be honest :/ >> yes before the code flow was like >> >> ret = ov10635_read(); >> if (ret < 0) { >> >> } >> >> if (ret != PID) { >> And so here you might have had a 'successful' read of the wrong value, which means that ret > 0 but != PID. >> } >> >> But the condition ret != PID implied ret < 0 so I don't really get >> what changes, apart from the fact that in the previous version we >> could have had two different error messages for the same issue, and yes, >> I saw ID mistmatch happening but the value of knowing the i2c read >> didn't fail but the read data was garbage (usually it's 0x01 when it >> fails iirc) is, well, questionable. > > That's worrying :-S May we should add a warning message when the read > succeeds but the ID doesn't match, to at least have a way to track the > issue, and see if other changes get rid of this problem ? > Ok, now I'm confused, that's what I was talking about! Before we did do this, and now we don't. Ergo - functional change. >> I'm sorry I didn't fully get this comment. > > You're right, I had missed that the current code retried in case of a > version number mismatch. There's no functional change. I still think there's a functional change, but I'm not all too worried about it. As I said before, I think it's worth the retry in that event, which didn't happen before, so my tag still holds. > Reviewed-by: Laurent Pinchart <laurent.pinchart@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> > >>>> Reviewed-by: Kieran Bingham <kieran.bingham+renesas@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> >>>> >>>>> Signed-off-by: Jacopo Mondi <jacopo+renesas@xxxxxxxxxx> >>>>> --- >>>>> drivers/media/i2c/rdacm20.c | 27 ++++++++++----------------- >>>>> 1 file changed, 10 insertions(+), 17 deletions(-) >>>>> >>>>> diff --git a/drivers/media/i2c/rdacm20.c b/drivers/media/i2c/rdacm20.c >>>>> index 4d9bac87cba8..6504ed0bd3bc 100644 >>>>> --- a/drivers/media/i2c/rdacm20.c >>>>> +++ b/drivers/media/i2c/rdacm20.c >>>>> @@ -59,6 +59,8 @@ >>>>> */ >>>>> #define OV10635_PIXEL_RATE (44000000) >>>>> >>>>> +#define OV10635_PID_TIMEOUT 3 >>>>> + >>>>> static const struct ov10635_reg { >>>>> u16 reg; >>>>> u8 val; >>>>> @@ -452,7 +454,7 @@ static const struct v4l2_subdev_ops rdacm20_subdev_ops = { >>>>> >>>>> static int rdacm20_initialize(struct rdacm20_device *dev) >>>>> { >>>>> - unsigned int retry = 3; >>>>> + unsigned int i; >>>>> int ret; >>>>> >>>>> /* Verify communication with the MAX9271: ping to wakeup. */ >>>>> @@ -501,23 +503,14 @@ static int rdacm20_initialize(struct rdacm20_device *dev) >>>>> return ret; >>>>> usleep_range(10000, 15000); >>>>> >>>>> -again: >>>>> - ret = ov10635_read16(dev, OV10635_PID); >>>>> - if (ret < 0) { >>>>> - if (retry--) >>>>> - goto again; >>>>> - >>>>> - dev_err(dev->dev, "OV10635 ID read failed (%d)\n", >>>>> - ret); >>>>> - return -ENXIO; >>>>> + for (i = 0; i < OV10635_PID_TIMEOUT; ++i) { >>>>> + ret = ov10635_read16(dev, OV10635_PID); >>>>> + if (ret == OV10635_VERSION) >>>>> + break; >>>>> + usleep_range(1000, 2000); >>>>> } >>>>> - >>>>> - if (ret != OV10635_VERSION) { >>>>> - if (retry--) >>>>> - goto again; >>>>> - >>>>> - dev_err(dev->dev, "OV10635 ID mismatch (0x%04x)\n", >>>>> - ret); >>>>> + if (i == OV10635_PID_TIMEOUT) { >>>>> + dev_err(dev->dev, "OV10635 ID read failed (%d)\n", ret); >>>>> return -ENXIO; >>>>> } >>>>> >