[PATCH 1/1] mtd: spi-nor: add an alternative method to support memory >16MiB

Cyrille Pitchen cyrille.pitchen at atmel.com
Tue Mar 22 04:27:32 PDT 2016


Le 21/03/2016 18:55, Brian Norris a écrit :
> On Mon, Mar 21, 2016 at 06:16:32PM +0100, Cyrille Pitchen wrote:
>> Le 21/03/2016 18:01, Brian Norris a écrit :
>>> On Mon, Mar 21, 2016 at 11:33:49AM +0100, Cyrille Pitchen wrote:
>>>> diff --git a/drivers/mtd/spi-nor/Kconfig b/drivers/mtd/spi-nor/Kconfig
>>>> index d42c98e1f581..7fae36fc8526 100644
>>>> --- a/drivers/mtd/spi-nor/Kconfig
>>>> +++ b/drivers/mtd/spi-nor/Kconfig
>>>> @@ -29,6 +29,18 @@ config MTD_SPI_NOR_USE_4K_SECTORS
>>>>  	  Please note that some tools/drivers/filesystems may not work with
>>>>  	  4096 B erase size (e.g. UBIFS requires 15 KiB as a minimum).
>>>>  
>>>> +config MTD_SPI_NOR_USE_4B_OPCODES
>>>> +	bool "Use 4-byte address op codes"
>>>> +	default n
>>>> +	help
>>>> +	  This is an alternative to the "Enter/Exit 4-byte mode" commands and
>>>> +	  Base Address Register (BAR) updates to support flash size above 16MiB.
>>>> +	  Using dedicated 4-byte address op codes for (Fast) Read, Page Program
>>>> +	  and Sector Erase operations avoids changing the internal state of the
>>>> +	  SPI NOR memory. Hence if a CPU reset occurs, early bootloaders can
>>>> +	  still use regular 3-byte address op codes and read from the very first
>>>> +	  16MiB of the flash memory.
>>>> +
>>>
>>> Why does this need to be a Kconfig option? Can't it just as well be
>>> supported by keeping entries in the ID table, to show which flash
>>> support these opcodes and which don't? Kconfig is really a bad mechanism
>>> for trying to configure your flash.
>>
>> Well, the only reason why I've chosen a Kconfig option is to be as safe as
>> possible, if for some reason someone still wants to use the former
>> implementation. Honestly I don't know why one would do so but I'm cautious
>> so I also set "default n". This way no regression is introduced.
> 
> I think the main reason is that some manufacturers did not initially
> support both methods. So we couldn't just say "all Micron" or "all
> Macronix" should use these opcodes. Spansion was the only one to support
> them consistently. See [1] for reference.
> 
> And actually, your Kconfig option is not "cautious", because you have no
> guarantee that people will make intelligent choices here. So you're
> making a Kconfig that if someone accidentally turns it on, their flash
> might not work any more. That's much less safe than properly labelling
> which flash supports which feature.
> 
>> If you think it's better to use a dedicated flag like SECT_4K or
>> SPI_NOR_QUAD_READ in the spi_nor_ids[] table, I'm perfectly fine with it as
>> well.
> 
> I think that would be better. (Really, an opt-out would be the least
> work in the long-run I think, since IIRC there were only a few
> early-generation flash that were both large enough to need 4 byte
> addressing and didn't support the dedicated opcodes. But it'll be hard
> to track those down now I think, so opt-in probably is most practical.)
> 
>> Just let me know your choice then I'll update my patch accordingly if needed.
> 
> Brian
> 
> [1]
> commit 87c9511fba2bd069a35e1312587a29e112fc0cd6
> Author: Brian Norris <computersforpeace at gmail.com>
> Date:   Thu Apr 11 01:34:57 2013 -0700
> 
>     mtd: m25p80: utilize dedicated 4-byte addressing commands
> 

Indeed, your commit message is very interesting since it points out some issue
I already face: for my test I'm currently using a Macronix MX25L25673G
(JEDEC ID C22019). This memory *does* support the dedicated 4byte address op
codes.

Then if I look at the datasheet for the Macronix MX25L25635E, this older memory
shares the exact same JEDEC ID, C22019 but *doesn't* support the 4byte address
op codes.

None of these two memory types use ext id: the JEDEC ID is only 3byte long.
Anyway, in QPI mode, the QPIID command (0xAF), which replaces the regular
Read ID command (0x9f) only sends 3 bytes too.

The memory table inside the spi-nor framework is indexed by JEDEC ID (+ ext id)
but we've just pointed out a case where it is not possible to create two
different entries in this table, one for the 35E without the "4byte" flag, the
other for 73G with the "4byte" flag.

So there is no mean for the software to discover at runtime what are the actual
capabilities of the memory. Hence I think we should introduce a DT property
which would clearly tell the spi-nor framework that we want to use the
dedicated 4byte address op codes instead of entering the 4byte address mode
(still the default behaviour since older memories only support this mode).

So what about a new DT named "m25p,4byte-opcodes" so the naming is consistent
with the existing "m25p,fast-read"?

For DT guys, I just sum the initial issue up: entering the 4byte address mode
as currently done changes the internal state of the SPI memory. If a SoC reset
occurs, some early bootloaders not supporting this 4byte address mode expect
to use only 3byte addresses for (Fast) Read operations => the boot is broken.
Then using the dedicated 4byte address op codes fixes the issue as they don't
change the internal memory state so early bootloader can still use 3byte
address op codes.

Best regards,

Cyrille



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