Re: [PATCH 2/4] spi: add new SPI_CS_WORD flag

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On Wed, Jul 18, 2018 at 11:47:30AM -0500, David Lechner wrote:
> On 7/18/18 10:04 AM, Mark Brown wrote:

> > This feels like it should have a soft implementation if it is going to
> > be truly usable, the vast majority of SPI controllers don't do this and

> This occurred to me as well. Another possibility, though, would be to leave
> it up to the client device drivers to support both cases, e.g.:

> 	if (master has SPI_CS_WORD support)
> 		setup message as single transfer
> 	else
> 		setup message as multiple one-word transfers

> This seems like that would be more efficient than having a generic
> implementation for masters that says:

That then requires every single user to open code this which immediately
suggests that there should be a helper which is going to look a lot like
any generic implementation.

> 	if (master does not have SPI_CS_WORD support)
> 		allocate enough transfers for each word of each
> 			each transfer of the message
> 		allocate and setup a new message for these transfers
> 		loop through the original transfers of the original
> 			message and copy them to the new transfers
> 		send the new message
> 		free allocated message and transfers

I'd imagine that the much bigger problem is that you end up with
enormous numbers of operations for any non-trivial transfers which is
going to happen anyway.  It's really only the copying bit that's at all
an overhead here.

> > I can only think of a few that have the hardware feature.  I'd also
> > expect to see some validation added to the core spi_setup() since at
> > present a client driver could set the mode option but then have it
> > ignored by the controller which would presumably break things, we
> > currently only have checks for specific modes and nothing that'd catch
> > an unknown flag like this.

> There is already a generic mode flags check in spi_setup() that will catch
> this and return an error if the device has the SPI_CS_WORD flag set and the
> controller does not. (I know this works because I ran into it during
> development.)

Ah, good - I'd forgotten it was there and didn't spot it when I went to
check.

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