On Wed, Nov 02, 2022 at 03:09:50PM -0400, Krzysztof Kozlowski wrote: > On 31/10/2022 14:02, Manivannan Sadhasivam wrote: > > The maximum gear supported by the UFS device can be specified using the > > "max-device-gear" property. This allows the UFS controller to configure the > > TX/RX gear before starting communication with the UFS device. > > This is confusing. The UFS PHY provides gear capability, so what is the > "device" here? The attached memory? How could it report something else > than phy? > This is the norm with any storage protocol, right? Both host and device (memory) can support different speeds and the OEM can choose to put any combinations (even though it might not be very efficient). For instance, PHY (G4) -> Device (G3) >From the host perspective we know what the PHY can support but that's not the same with the device until probing it. And probing requires using a minimum supported gear. For sure we can use something like G2/G3 and reinit later but as I learnt, that approach was rejected by the community when submitted by Qualcomm earlier. > The last sentence also suggests that you statically encode gear to avoid > runtime negotiation. > Yes, the OEM should know what the max gear speed they want to run, so getting this info from DT makes sense. Thanks, Mani > Best regards, > Krzysztof > -- மணிவண்ணன் சதாசிவம்