On 08/28/2014 12:49 AM, Doug Anderson wrote: > Jaehoon, > > On Tue, Aug 26, 2014 at 9:47 PM, Jaehoon Chung <jh80.chung@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> Doug, >> >> On 08/27/2014 01:14 PM, Doug Anderson wrote: >>> Jaehoon, >>> >>> On Tue, Aug 26, 2014 at 8:48 PM, Jaehoon Chung <jh80.chung@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >>>> Hi, Doug, >>>> >>>> On 08/26/2014 12:25 AM, Doug Anderson wrote: >>>>> Jaehoon, >>>>> >>>>> On Mon, Aug 25, 2014 at 1:50 AM, Jaehoon Chung <jh80.chung@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >>>>>> On 08/25/2014 05:13 PM, Ulf Hansson wrote: >>>>>>> On 22 August 2014 20:27, Sonny Rao <sonnyrao@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >>>>>>>> On Fri, Aug 22, 2014 at 8:31 AM, Ulf Hansson <ulf.hansson@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >>>>>>>>> On 22 August 2014 15:47, Yuvaraj Kumar C D <yuvaraj.cd@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: >>>>>>>>>> Exynos 5250 and 5420 based boards uses built-in CD# line for card >>>>>>>>>> detection.But unfortunately CD# line is on the same voltage rails >>>>>>>>>> as of I/O voltage rails. When we cut off vqmmc,the consequent card >>>>>>>>>> detection will break in these boards. >>>>>> >>>>>> I didn't know that use CD# line for card detect. >>>>>> And if CD# voltage rails and I/O voltage rail are same voltage, it doesn't make sense. >>>>>> Which card is used with same voltages? (eMMC? SD? SDIO?) >>>>>> >>>>>> Well, I have checked Exynos5250 and 5420, but it looks like not same rails. >>>>> >>>>> I'm not sure I totally understood what you said. In my manual I have >>>>> a table titled "Table 2-1 Exynos 5420 Pin List". Look in this table >>>>> for XMMC2CDN and XMMC2DATA_0. Look to the right of the table and >>>>> you'll see the power domain. For both it shows VDDQ_MMC2. If that >>>>> doesn't mean that the two are in the same voltage domain then I don't >>>>> know what does. Can you point to any examples where they have >>>>> different voltage domains? >>>> I think you're mis-understanding for it. >>>> Right, It's described at exynos5420, but it's not connected. >>> >>> "It's not connected". What do you mean? If I were to guess I'd say >>> that on some particular board you're looking at they don't happen to >>> use the "CD" pin for card detect. If this is what you mean, it >>> doesn't help me. exynos5420-peach-pit does use the CD pin for card >>> detect. You can look at the DTS file and confirm it. >> >> I didn't know how exynos5420-peach-pit's circuit is configured. >> But i guess that almost all exynos5 boards are configured with the similar circuit. >> >> At Almost all Exynos5 board, CD-pin is used, but not included in Same power domain. >> (CD-pin is external card-detect pin. - like XEINT_# pin) >> You mentioned CD# and DATA# lines is used the same power domain, right? >> In Circuit (not exynos5420-peach-pit), DATA# line and CMD/CLK(vqmmc) is same power supply, and vdd is used other power supply. >> Not use the CD# pin, used the XEINT_# pin. >> So i think we don't need to consider the CD#. >> If exynos5420-peach-pit board is used the CD#-pin, then our discussion can be changed. > > Maybe on your board you have CD connected to a "gpx" line. ...but not > mine. The guys who designed our hardware followed the SMDK5420 > reference schematics which connect the SD card slot card detect to > "gpc2_2", which is the card detect pin. > > See "arch/arm/boot/dts/exynos5420-smdk5420.dts", specifically noting > the lack of a GPIO card detect and the inclusion of "sd2_cd" > > mmc@12220000 { > status = "okay"; > card-detect-delay = <200>; > samsung,dw-mshc-ciu-div = <3>; > samsung,dw-mshc-sdr-timing = <2 3>; > samsung,dw-mshc-ddr-timing = <1 2>; > pinctrl-names = "default"; > pinctrl-0 = <&sd2_clk &sd2_cmd &sd2_cd &sd2_bus4>; > bus-width = <4>; > cap-sd-highspeed; > }; > > See "arch/arm/boot/dts/exynos5420-peach-pit.dts" too: > > &mmc_2 { > status = "okay"; > num-slots = <1>; > cap-sd-highspeed; > card-detect-delay = <200>; > clock-frequency = <400000000>; > samsung,dw-mshc-ciu-div = <3>; > samsung,dw-mshc-sdr-timing = <2 3>; > samsung,dw-mshc-ddr-timing = <1 2>; > pinctrl-names = "default"; > pinctrl-0 = <&sd2_clk &sd2_cmd &sd2_cd &sd2_bus4>; > bus-width = <4>; > }; > > > Here, see this ASCII art that shows how some lines are hooked up on > peach-pit. You might need to paste this into something with a > fixed-width font. > > +-------------------- > | Exynos 5420 > | > | > P2.8V_LOUT4 ---------|- VDDQ_MMC2 (AK7) > | | > | | > +-+- 10K res -+----|- XMMC2CDN (AK6) > | | | > | | | > | | | > | Ext CD | > | | > +-- 10K res-+--+---|- XMMC2CMD (AK8) > | > | > Ext CMD > > You can see from the above that the external card detect signal (that > goes to the connector) named "Ext CD" is pulled up to the same voltage > as the external CMD signal (that also goes to the connector). This is > vqmmc. If we turn off vqmmc then the 10K resistor will (I think) act > as a pull down, or in the best case it will be floating. > > Said another way: we can't read card detect when vqmmc is off. If that's the case, it makes sense. But i wonder why designed like that. Anyway, then we need to consider that controls the vqmmc power for card-detection. But if polling system uses, it seems to detect the card. Polling is the method that sends the status command. At that time, we can notice whether card is insert/remove. Is it impossible? > >> Your commit message looks like all exynos5250/5420 board are used CD# line. > > The commit message should be clearer, agreed. I think I asked Yuvaraj > to make sure that the code only invoked this quirk on exynos and only > if a GPIO was not used for card detect. Yuvaraj: can you make it more > obvious that not all exynos5250/5420 boards need this, only those that > use the "official" card detect line? > > >>> ...or are you saying that the CD pin somehow changes voltage domains >>> when configured as a GPIO? I find that very hard to believe. What >>> voltage domain does it go to? If it goes to a 1.8V voltage domain >>> then that would be bad when vqmmc was 3.3V. If it goes to a 3.3V >>> voltage domain then that would be bad when vqmmc was 1.8V. Remember >>> that externally we've got a pull up to vqmmc. >> >> It is used with XEINT_# pin instead of CD# pin. >> As i mentioned above, if exynos5420-peach-pit is used CD# line and not used XEINT_# pin, >> my point is meaningless. :) >> >> Is exynos5420-peach-pit board used with CD#pin, not XEINT_# pin? > > Yes. It is using CD#. Do you remove your objections to this patch, > then (once the commit message is clearer)? Sure. And I will also effort to find it, if we can find the more generic approach. Best Regards, Jaehoon Chung > > -Doug > -- > To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-mmc" in > the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx > More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html > -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-samsung-soc" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html