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Date:	Fri, 6 Oct 2006 16:35:23 -0700
From:	David Brownell <david-b@...bell.net>
To:	"Andrea Paterniani" <a.paterniani@...pp-eng.it>
Cc:	"Andrew Morton" <akpm@...l.org>,
	"Linux Kernel list" <linux-kernel@...r.kernel.org>
Subject: Re: [patch 2.6.18-git] SPI -- Freescale iMX SPI controller driver

On Tuesday 03 October 2006 9:08 am, Andrea Paterniani wrote:
> Here some questions and answers to your comments, (please consider I'm nearly new to kernel programming).
> 
> 
> 
> > ...
> > ug.  Why not simply open-code
> >
> > 	readl(addr + DATA);
> 
> I found usefull to define macros to use inside code something like
> 	rd_CONTROL(regs)
> instead of
> 	readl(regs + 0x08)
> since to me the macro sounds more friendly.
> Should I have to adhere to some standard ?

The standards are more or less to avoid creating namespace clutter,
and to make explicit where register access happens.  Defining new
macros violates the former; not being able to tell where the chip
registers are accessed (because they're wrapped in macros) violates
the latter.


> > The use of loops_per_jiffy seems inappropriate.  That's an IO-space read in
> > there, which is slow.  This timeout will be very long indeed.
> 
> Please suggest me what it's more appropriate.

Pick a constant, use it.



> > I see tasklets being scheduled, but no tasklet_disable() or tasklet_kill(),
> > etc.  Is this driver racy against shutdown or rmmod?
> 
> Do you mean I should use tasklet_kill() inside spi_imx_remove ?

That's how I read it.  :)


> > > +	drv_data->rd_data_phys = (dma_addr_t)res->start;
> >
> > I don't think it's correct to cast a kernel virtual address straight to a
> > dma_addr_t.
> 
> File include/asm-arm/types.h defines
> 	typedef u32 dma_addr_t;
> Also I think that for ARM architecture resource_size_t in practice
> is u32 since CONFIG_RESOURCES_64BIT isn't defined. 
> Is this construction correct ? If not what should I do ?

I think it's correct; it's certainly standard for converting physical
addresses to DMA addresses.  (Andrew got that one wrong; resource
addresses are physical, not virtual.)

- Dave

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