[PATCH 01/20] mtd: pxa3xx_nand: refuse the flash definition get from platform

Lei Wen adrian.wenl at gmail.com
Mon May 24 08:31:39 EDT 2010


Hi Marek,

On Mon, May 24, 2010 at 8:11 PM, Marek Vasut <marek.vasut at gmail.com> wrote:
> Dne Po 24. května 2010 13:53:46 Lei Wen napsal(a):
>> Hi Mike,
>>
>> On Mon, May 24, 2010 at 7:00 PM, Mike Rapoport <mike at compulab.co.il> wrote:
>> > Hi Lei,
>> >
>> > Lei Wen wrote:
>> >> Hi Mike,
>> >>
>> >> This patch set is applied to mtd-2.6 git. We submit the patch with a
>> >> package in attachment already.
>> >> http://permalink.gmane.org/gmane.linux.ports.arm.kernel/79818
>> >
>> > After applying the patch set I've reviewed the entire pxa3xx-nand as a
>> > whole and there are several major points I don't like:
>> > 1) Two chip selects support is not robust enough. You allocate a lot of
>> > resources for both chip selects, although not necessarily both have NAND
>> > chip connected
>>
>> I agree. I prepare to submit another patch set to fix it. Let more
>> resource go to pxa3xx_nand structure instead of pxa3xx_nand_info.
>>
>> > 2) I don't like hadrcoding of NAND parameters into the driver. You remove
>> > *deprecetad* CONFIG_MTD_NAND_PXA3xx_BUILTIN configuration option and
>> > instead you enforce use of built-in definitions. The driver in its
>> > current state is robust enough to allow platforms to define optimized
>> > NAND timings either in the bootloader or in the kernel. If you don't
>> > like that multiple platforms define the same flash chip create an
>> > enumeration of built-in types and let platforms to use this enumeration
>> > to select the NAND chip. But, anyway, there should be a fallback mode
>> > that will support NAND chips that are not defined in the driver,
>> > probably with suboptimal timings.
>>
>> Original driver also use hardcoding. And in bootloader, this timing
>> parameter is also hard coding.
>
> Not necessarily. If you use uboot on pxa3xx, it passes the bootrom-detected
> timing to the kernel.
>
>> We cannot deduce a parameter set only from the nand id, that is why we
>> need a table to preset it.
>> If one nand chip is not listed in that table, the chip id would still
>> be printed out, so that we can do something for that.
>> If we encourage people to continue on this, we would not able to
>> really "driver" that nand.
>>
>> As I said, different nand chip may have different requirement. And in
>> bootloader and kernel, may have different requirement
>> of timing parameter.
>
> In bootloader and kernel? Why would that be so?

The bootrom timing setting is not very satisfied. We have compared the
most optimized timing setting and what the timing setting is set in
bootrom. The read speed would be several times gap.(3x, or 4x). For
kernel is the place we want the most optimized performance, we may
adjust the timing according to our need.

Thanks,
Lei


>>
>> > 3) The functions prepare_command_pool and alloc_nand_resource seem
>> > overgrown too me. Consolidation of prepare_*_cmd into one huge function
>> > does not seem right. And mixing between resource allocation and mtd
>> > struct initialization does not seem right either.
>>
>> The reason why I consolidate those prepare_*_cmd into one is for if
>> separate into several functions, it would create many code
>> duplication.
>> And with one function, the code execution path would be always one
>> way. This would greatly promote the code quality, for the same code
>> path is run by many commands in the same time. If not by this, some
>> errors may not be discovered in the first time...
>>
>> Thanks,
>> Lei
>>
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>



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