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author | Cyrille Pitchen <cyrille.pitchen@atmel.com> | 2016-02-03 14:26:46 +0100 |
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committer | Brian Norris <computersforpeace@gmail.com> | 2016-02-12 11:35:13 -0800 |
commit | 3b5394a3ccffbfa1d1d448d48742853a862822c4 (patch) | |
tree | d167eb2fb40d1a6d652e07f459f5b9dd824fc5ae /drivers/mtd | |
parent | c08266794926a9f6c2940e8585fbcbdc51caa7ed (diff) | |
download | op-kernel-dev-3b5394a3ccffbfa1d1d448d48742853a862822c4.zip op-kernel-dev-3b5394a3ccffbfa1d1d448d48742853a862822c4.tar.gz |
mtd: spi-nor: remove micron_quad_enable()
This patch remove the micron_quad_enable() function which force the Quad
SPI mode. However, once this mode is enabled, the Micron memory expect ALL
commands to use the SPI 4-4-4 protocol. Hence a failure does occur when
calling spi_nor_wait_till_ready() right after the update of the Enhanced
Volatile Configuration Register (EVCR) in the micron_quad_enable() as
the SPI controller driver is not aware about the protocol change.
Since there is almost no performance increase using Fast Read 4-4-4
commands instead of Fast Read 1-1-4 commands, we rather keep on using the
Extended SPI mode than enabling the Quad SPI mode.
Let's take the example of the pretty standard use of 8 dummy cycles during
Fast Read operations on 64KB erase sectors:
Fast Read 1-1-4 requires 8 cycles for the command, then 24 cycles for the
3byte address followed by 8 dummy clock cycles and finally 65536*2 cycles
for the read data; so 131112 clock cycles.
On the other hand the Fast Read 4-4-4 would require 2 cycles for the
command, then 6 cycles for the 3byte address followed by 8 dummy clock
cycles and finally 65536*2 cycles for the read data. So 131088 clock
cycles. The theorical bandwidth increase is 0.0%.
Now using Fast Read operations on 512byte pages:
Fast Read 1-1-4 needs 8+24+8+(512*2) = 1064 clock cycles whereas Fast
Read 4-4-4 would requires 2+6+8+(512*2) = 1040 clock cycles. Hence the
theorical bandwidth increase is 2.3%.
Consecutive reads for non sequential pages is not a relevant use case so
The Quad SPI mode is not worth it.
mtd_speedtest seems to confirm these figures.
Signed-off-by: Cyrille Pitchen <cyrille.pitchen@atmel.com>
Fixes: 548cd3ab54da ("mtd: spi-nor: Add quad I/O support for Micron SPI NOR")
Signed-off-by: Brian Norris <computersforpeace@gmail.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'drivers/mtd')
-rw-r--r-- | drivers/mtd/spi-nor/spi-nor.c | 46 |
1 files changed, 1 insertions, 45 deletions
diff --git a/drivers/mtd/spi-nor/spi-nor.c b/drivers/mtd/spi-nor/spi-nor.c index 13e07ce..999b3ce5 100644 --- a/drivers/mtd/spi-nor/spi-nor.c +++ b/drivers/mtd/spi-nor/spi-nor.c @@ -1101,45 +1101,6 @@ static int spansion_quad_enable(struct spi_nor *nor) return 0; } -static int micron_quad_enable(struct spi_nor *nor) -{ - int ret; - u8 val; - - ret = nor->read_reg(nor, SPINOR_OP_RD_EVCR, &val, 1); - if (ret < 0) { - dev_err(nor->dev, "error %d reading EVCR\n", ret); - return ret; - } - - write_enable(nor); - - /* set EVCR, enable quad I/O */ - nor->cmd_buf[0] = val & ~EVCR_QUAD_EN_MICRON; - ret = nor->write_reg(nor, SPINOR_OP_WD_EVCR, nor->cmd_buf, 1); - if (ret < 0) { - dev_err(nor->dev, "error while writing EVCR register\n"); - return ret; - } - - ret = spi_nor_wait_till_ready(nor); - if (ret) - return ret; - - /* read EVCR and check it */ - ret = nor->read_reg(nor, SPINOR_OP_RD_EVCR, &val, 1); - if (ret < 0) { - dev_err(nor->dev, "error %d reading EVCR\n", ret); - return ret; - } - if (val & EVCR_QUAD_EN_MICRON) { - dev_err(nor->dev, "Micron EVCR Quad bit not clear\n"); - return -EINVAL; - } - - return 0; -} - static int set_quad_mode(struct spi_nor *nor, const struct flash_info *info) { int status; @@ -1153,12 +1114,7 @@ static int set_quad_mode(struct spi_nor *nor, const struct flash_info *info) } return status; case SNOR_MFR_MICRON: - status = micron_quad_enable(nor); - if (status) { - dev_err(nor->dev, "Micron quad-read not enabled\n"); - return -EINVAL; - } - return status; + return 0; default: status = spansion_quad_enable(nor); if (status) { |