2015-11-22 20:45 GMT+01:00 Maxime Ripard <maxime.ripard@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>: >> Julien, Rob: thanks for your comments! Ok, I will make the following changes: >> >> - remove "sun4i,spi-wdelay" from the sun4i binding and add the >> property to the spi-bus.txt binding instead >> - remove the comment about the additional 3 cycles from the documentation >> - modfy the spi-sun4i driver to take care of the minimum 3 cycle period >> >> Does that sound right? >> >> And maybe I could also use a more descriptive name for the property, >> maybe "spi-word-wait-cycles"? > > I don't think it should be in a clock-rate dependant unit. Using micro > or nano-seconds would be more appropriate I guess. Thanks Maxime, using a time based value instead of cycles sounds like a much better approach. However... I'm starting to think that the proposed inter-word wait time DT property is just an ugly workaround. Let me explain my use-case: I'm developing a driver for a sensor that requires a minimum wait time between words. The wait time depends on the mode the sensor is set to: 37.5us in slow mode, 12.5us in fast mode. I initially used spidev to test the sensor from userspace. And for that use case, the "spi-wdelay" property that I proposed works well. But now I am writing the proper protocol driver and suddenly the explicit wait time setting seems just wrong. Ideally, the protocol driver would just expose a DT property that allows to choose between "slow" and "fast" mode. I think that the correct approach would be to extend the SPI controller API to allow protocol drivers to set an inter-word delay. That would keep the magic numbers inside my protocol driver and out of the devicetree. And an additional ioctl call could set that inter-word delay from spidev, allowing userspace to set this value as well if needed. Mark: would you be open to such a change to the SPI controller API? I could use the already available spi_transfer.delay_usecs for this, but I would require that I wrap each word in a single transfer, which adds significant processing overhead to the communication with the sensor. Cheers, Marcus -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-spi" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html