On 2/22/22 16:27, Michael Walle wrote: > EXTERNAL EMAIL: Do not click links or open attachments unless you know the content is safe > > Am 2022-02-22 15:23, schrieb Tudor.Ambarus@xxxxxxxxxxxxx: >> On 2/22/22 16:13, Michael Walle wrote: >>> EXTERNAL EMAIL: Do not click links or open attachments unless you know >>> the content is safe >>> >>> Am 2022-02-22 14:54, schrieb Tudor.Ambarus@xxxxxxxxxxxxx: >>>> On 2/21/22 09:44, Michael Walle wrote: >>>>> EXTERNAL EMAIL: Do not click links or open attachments unless you >>>>> know >>>>> the content is safe >>>>> >>>>> Am 2022-02-18 15:58, schrieb Tudor Ambarus: >>>>>> Fortunately there are controllers >>>>>> that can swap back the bytes at runtime, fixing the endiannesses. >>>>>> Provide >>>>>> a way for the upper layers to specify the byte order in DTR mode. >>>>> >>>>> Are there any patches for the atmel-quadspi yet? What happens if >>>> >>>> not public, but will publish them these days. >>>> >>>>> the controller doesn't support it? Will there be a software >>>>> fallback? >>>> >>>> no need for a fallback, the controller can ignore >>>> op->data.dtr_bswap16 >>>> if >>>> it can't swap bytes. >>> >>> I don't understand. If the controller doesn't swap the 16bit values, >>> you will read the wrong content, no? >>> >> >> In linux no, because macronix swaps bytes on a 2 byte boundary both on >> reads and on page program. The problem is when you mix 8D-8D-8D mode >> and >> 1-1-1 mode along the boot stages. Let's assume you write all boot >> binaries >> in 1-1-1 mode. When reaching u-boot if you enable 8D-8D-8D mode, when >> u-boot >> will try to get the kernel it will fail, as the flash swaps the bytes >> compared >> to what was written with 1-1-1 mode. You write D0 D1 D2 D3 in 1-1-1 >> mode and >> when reaching u-boot you will read D1 D0 D3 D2 and it will mess the >> kernel image. > > But you have to consider also 3rd parties, like an external programmer > or Why? If you use the same mode when reading and writing, everything is fine. I'm not sure what's your suggestion here. > another OS. So, there has to be *one correct* way of writing/reading > these > bytes. >