Re: [PATCH v3 4/6] mtd: rawnand: add NVIDIA Tegra NAND Flash controller driver

From: Boris Brezillon
Date: Sun Jun 10 2018 - 11:32:12 EST


On Sun, 10 Jun 2018 18:00:06 +0300
Dmitry Osipenko <digetx@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:

> > >> That seems a lot of work for a code path I do not intend to ever use :-)
> > >
> > > Are you sure that resetting HW resets the timing and other registers
> > > configuration? Reset implementation is HW-specific, like for example in a
> > > case of a video decoder the registers state is re-intialized on HW reset,
> > > but registers configuration is untouched in a case of resetting GPU. I'd
> > > suggest to check whether NAND controller resetting affects the HW
> > > configuration.
> > It seems all registers are set back to their documented reset value:
> >
> > [boot loader/ROM initialized values]
> > [ 1.270253] tegra-nand 70008000.nand: Tegra NAND controller register
> > dump
> > [ 1.277051] tegra-nand 70008000.nand: COMMAND: 0x66880104
> > [ 1.282457] tegra-nand 70008000.nand: STATUS: 0x00000101
> > [ 1.287763] tegra-nand 70008000.nand: ISR: 0x01000120
> > [ 1.292818] tegra-nand 70008000.nand: IER: 0x00000000
> > [ 1.297863] tegra-nand 70008000.nand: CONFIG: 0x00840000
> > [ 1.303181] tegra-nand 70008000.nand: TIMING: 0x05040000
> > [ 1.308486] tegra-nand 70008000.nand: TIMING2: 0x00000003
> > [ 1.313897] tegra-nand 70008000.nand: CMD_REG1: 0x00000000
> > [ 1.319377] tegra-nand 70008000.nand: CMD_REG2: 0x00000030
> > [ 1.324868] tegra-nand 70008000.nand: ADDR_REG1: 0x03000000
> > [ 1.330435] tegra-nand 70008000.nand: ADDR_REG2: 0x00000000
> > [ 1.336011] tegra-nand 70008000.nand: DMA_MST_CTRL: 0x04100004
> > [ 1.341838] tegra-nand 70008000.nand: DMA_CFG_A: 0x00000fff
> > [ 1.347415] tegra-nand 70008000.nand: DMA_CFG_B: 0x0000001b
> > [ 1.352991] tegra-nand 70008000.nand: FIFO_CTRL: 0x0000aa00
> > [reset]
> > [ 1.358559] tegra-nand 70008000.nand: Tegra NAND controller register
> > dump
> > [ 1.365352] tegra-nand 70008000.nand: COMMAND: 0x00800004
> > [ 1.370744] tegra-nand 70008000.nand: STATUS: 0x00000101
> > [ 1.376060] tegra-nand 70008000.nand: ISR: 0x00000100
> > [ 1.381105] tegra-nand 70008000.nand: IER: 0x00000000
> > [ 1.386161] tegra-nand 70008000.nand: CONFIG: 0x10030000
> > [ 1.391466] tegra-nand 70008000.nand: TIMING: 0x00000000
> > [ 1.396782] tegra-nand 70008000.nand: TIMING2: 0x00000000
> > [ 1.402174] tegra-nand 70008000.nand: CMD_REG1: 0x00000000
> > [ 1.407664] tegra-nand 70008000.nand: CMD_REG2: 0x00000000
> > [ 1.413156] tegra-nand 70008000.nand: ADDR_REG1: 0x00000000
> > [ 1.418722] tegra-nand 70008000.nand: ADDR_REG2: 0x00000000
> > [ 1.424297] tegra-nand 70008000.nand: DMA_MST_CTRL: 0x24000000
> > [ 1.430123] tegra-nand 70008000.nand: DMA_CFG_A: 0x00000000
> > [ 1.435698] tegra-nand 70008000.nand: DMA_CFG_B: 0x00000000
> > [ 1.441264] tegra-nand 70008000.nand: FIFO_CTRL: 0x0000aa00
>
> Alright, then indeed it's not really worth to bother with HW resetting here.
> Probably only a kernel module reload or a reboot will help if HW is hung.
> Maybe NAND controller / chip recovering is something that NAND core should be
> handling in a such case by providing a nand_controller_reset() hook?
>

I don't see what the core could do to help with that. We'd end up with
a new hook implemented by the controller that would be called by the
controller driver when it knows it's safe to reset the controller. So,
why bother exposing that in the core?