On 2022/11/19 0:36, Mark Brown wrote:
On Fri, Nov 18, 2022 at 11:16:22PM +0900, Kunihiko Hayashi wrote:
On 2022/11/18 20:39, Mark Brown wrote:
On Fri, Nov 18, 2022 at 09:59:03AM +0900, Kunihiko Hayashi wrote:
+ socionext,cs-start-cycle:
+ socionext,cs-end-cycle:
+ socionext,cs-deassert-clk-cycle:
These are all generic SPI properties so we should add them
generically, on the device rather than the controller since this
is something that might vary per client device. There was also a
core function spi_set_cs_timing() which was in earlier versions
and is about to get reintroduced.
So I understand you mean that these properties should be defined like
spi-peripheral-props.yaml for the devices.
If yes, I'll drop these properties once and define our vendor-specific
"peripheral-props" in the next series.
Yes, sounds good.
Okay, I'll send simple one in v2.
+ $ref: /schemas/types.yaml#/definitions/uint32-array
+ items:
+ - description: the number of bytes to transfer
+ maximum: 4
+ - description: value to transfer
+ default: 0
+ - description: bit-width to transfer
+ enum: [0, 1, 2, 4, 8]
This is also something SPI device should set up, as far as I can
tell this should be set vis spi_mem_op.dummy.nbytes.
Yes, but the controller also supports dummy cycles, and can send
extra bytes before the dummy cycles.
Ah, so this is some additional thing on top of dummy cycles? I'd
not realised that. It probably wants to be added into spi-mem I
guess.
Yes, however, it's tough to handle with spi-mem and I don't have
any use case, so drop it.
+ socionext,data-swap-2byte:
+ description:
+ Indicates swap byte order per 2-bytes.
+ type: boolean
+ socionext,data-swap-4byte:
+ description:
+ Indicates swap byte order per 4-bytes.
+ type: boolean
Again these should be set by the device. I think these should be
set based on a combination of bits per word and if the host is in
big endian or little endian mode.
I see. This feature is complicated to use, so I'll not add it here.
That also works, someone can always add additional support later
when they have a concrete use case.
I understand.
Thank you,
---
Best Regards
Kunihiko Hayashi