[PATCH] mtd: nand: atmel: Relax tADL_min constraint

Brian Norris computersforpeace at gmail.com
Fri Aug 25 14:34:46 PDT 2017


Hi,

On Fri, Aug 25, 2017 at 08:23:06AM +0200, Boris Brezillon wrote:
> On Thu, 24 Aug 2017 21:09:13 -0700
> Brian Norris <computersforpeace at gmail.com> wrote:
> > So I take it you're fine with falling back to this case, where you just
> > get the "max" (and "max" is not quite 400ns)?
> 
> Right, max in this specific case is 71, and AFAIK the maximum master
> clock frequency we have on atmel boards is 200MHz (cycle = 5ns), so
> we'll actually get 5 * 71 = 355ns. Given that all atmel platforms I
> know have at most ONFI 2 compliant NANDs connected on it, and
> ONFI 2 says tADL_min should be 200ns, we should be good.
> 
> BTW, I think it would be good to handle timing differences between ONFI
> versions. Right now I took the most constraining timing among all ONFI
> versions and put it in the nand_timings table, but it might be better
> to adjust some timings based on chip->onfi_version to avoid problems
> like the one I'm fixing here.

I haven't read ONFI specs in a while, but that sounds sorta reasonable.
I don't know why ONFI updates would retroactively change timings
though...

> > 
> >         /*
> >          * Let's just put the maximum we can if the requested setting does
> >          * not fit in the register field.
> >          * We still return -ERANGE in case the caller cares.
> >          */
> > 
> > Could be nice if there was some kind of sanity check still (e.g., don't
> > allow 1ns when we requested 1000ns), but I'm not sure what that would
> > be.
> 
> I can add a min_cycles argument to the atmel_smc_cs_conf_set_timing()
> function to let the caller decide what is appropriate.

Perhaps I'm not thinking through well enough, but I don't know how the
caller would make a reasonable decision about this. It sounds more like
something needed fixed in the ONFI handling, like you mention above. If
the device actually allows 200ns, we shouldn't be passing in a 400ns
specification.

Anyway, I don't think this is an immediate concern, so not worth hacking
up this patch.

> > 
> > Unless I hear screaming, I'll queue this up and send it out within a
> > day.
> 
> Thanks a lot.

Pushed to linux-mtd.git.

Brian



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