[PATCHv3] mtd: gpio-nand: add device tree bindings
Scott Wood
scottwood at freescale.com
Tue Aug 2 06:12:09 EST 2011
On Mon, 1 Aug 2011 20:33:16 +0100
Jamie Iles <jamie at jamieiles.com> wrote:
> OK, fair points. I'm not sure what to say about endianness though.
> Host byte order accesses are used in the driver so can I just specify
> this? We could add a property later to support endianess swapping, but
> I don't want to add too much that I can't test.
If the assumption is host endian, that's fine, just document it.
It looks like the code uses a little-endian accessor (readw) in a couple
places. The instance in gpio_nand_readbuf16() should never be reached
since the NAND layer should never do an unaligned buffer read, but the one
in gpio_nand_verifybuf16() could cause problems.
The implementation in nand_base.c uses readw(), but at least it uses it
consistently between read_buf16(), write_buf16(), and verify_buf16().
readsw()/writesw() do not appear to do byte swapping, at least on powerpc,
while readw() does.
Even so, the generic implementation could read data that is byte-reversed
from what another implementation wrote, or vice versa. I wonder if there
are any big-endian platforms with 16-bit NAND that use the generic buffer
functions -- doesn't look like it from a quick glance.
> > What if some other binding wants to add additional reg resources, while
> > still being backwards compatible with this binding? Might be better to
> > move the sync into its own property -- something like "gpio-nand-io-sync =
> > <1>" indicating that it's in reg resource #1. And maybe it should require
> > some PXA-specific compatible if io-sync is needed. Even if another chip
> > requires some sort of sync hack, would it necessarily work the same?
>
> Hmm, I'm not convinced there - the sync is to protect against bus
> ordering, and a read from the right region does that. I'm working on
> another ARM platform (not PXA) that needs this sync so sure it's not PXA
> specific.
OK, though if you think this will be common enough to include in the
generic binding, is it only going to appear on ARM chips?
What about using a "gpio-nand-io-sync" property instead of assuming that if
there's a second reg resource, it must be this?
> The alternative is to not have this specified in the binding and have
> the platform attach the resource.
That doesn't sound ideal.
> On my platform for example I need to
> read from the GPIO controller registers and I can't find a way to
> express this when using ranges...
I think on that platform you should not specify gpio-control-nand in the
compatible. Have the driver or platform code match on a specific
compatible, and then do whatever is appropriate internally to Linux to make
it work.
Or perhaps the io sync address should just be a physical address, not a reg
that gets translated.
-Scott
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