[PATCH 1/2] mtd: spi-nor: When a flash memory is missing do not report an error
Michael Walle
michael at walle.cc
Thu Jul 14 14:51:56 PDT 2022
Am 2022-07-14 22:55, schrieb Michal Suchánek:
> On Thu, Jul 14, 2022 at 09:41:48PM +0200, Michael Walle wrote:
>> Hi,
>>
>> Am 2022-07-14 21:19, schrieb Michal Suchanek:
>> > It is normal that devices are designed with multiple types of storage,
>> > and only some types of storage are present.
>> >
>> > The kernel can handle this situation gracefully for many types of
>> > storage devices such as mmc or ata but it reports and error when spi
>> > flash is not present.
>> >
>> > Only print a notice that the storage device is missing when no response
>> > to the identify command is received.
>> >
>> > Consider reply buffers with all bits set to the same value no response.
>>
>> I'm not sure you can compare SPI with ATA and MMC. I'm just speaking
>> of
>> DT now, but there, for ATA and MMC you just describe the controller
>> and
>> it will auto-detect the connected storage. Whereas with SPI you
>> describe
>
> Why does mmc assume storage and SDIO must be descibed? Why the special
> casing?
I can't follow you here. My SDIO wireless card just works in an SD
slot and doesn't have to be described.
>> both the controller and the flash. So I'd argue that your hardware
>> description is wrong if it describes a flash which is not present.
>
> At any rate the situation is the same - the storage may be present
> sometimes. I don't think assuming some kind of device by defualt is a
> sound practice.
Where is the assumption when the DT tells you there is a flash
on a specific chip select but actually there it isn't. Shouldn't
the DT then be fixed?
Maybe I don't understand your problem. What are you trying to
solve? I mean this just demotes an error to an info message.
> However, when the board is designed for a specific kind of device which
> is not always present, and the kernel can detect the device, it is
> perfectly fine to describe it.
>
> The alternative is to not use the device at all, even when present,
> which is kind of useless.
Or let the bootloader update your device tree and disable the device
if it's not there? Or load an overlay if it is there?
-michael
More information about the linux-mtd
mailing list