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Date:	Thu, 16 Jun 2011 10:28:16 -0700
From:	Dirk Brandewie <dirk.brandewie@...il.com>
To:	Feng Tang <feng.tang@...el.com>
CC:	"linux-kernel@...r.kernel.org" <linux-kernel@...r.kernel.org>,
	"spi-devel-general@...ts.sourceforge.net" 
	<spi-devel-general@...ts.sourceforge.net>, alan@...ux.intel.com,
	alek.du@...el.com
Subject: Re: [PATCH 3/5] dw_spi: rework message processing

On 06/16/2011 07:00 AM, Feng Tang wrote:
> Hi Dirk,
>
> IMHO, the patch is too big, it contains too many changes to the original
> drivers, and we can't see clearly what you've changed to each logical
> code part or section, If possible, could you separate this patch to
> several small ones in a logical way.
>
> First, I have some questions, what devices have you tested with this patch?
> high speed, low speed? Do you have any performance data to show the benefit
> of this change? Current dw_spi driver has been tested with many devices, so
> to not break them or cause obvious regression, we have to be cautious.

See Thread with grant for list of environments where it has been tested.
The boot time of the platforms it is being used on decreased 2-5 seconds with no 
regressions reported.  It has been in use/under test for ~3 months in various 
Meego and Android builds.  It clears all the bugs reported against the driver 
that I am aware of.  If you can give me pointers to teams/projects that are 
using v2.6.37+ kernels I would be more that happy to provide them with patches 
for their kernel to ensure we get the most comprehensive test possible.

>
> Here are some general comments according to the commit logs:
> 1. I think the threaded irq handling is a good idea. And let driver chose to
>     use poll or interrupt is good, some other spi controller driver has used
>     that way for a long time
> 2. Why you remove the cs_change code, in some case, the controller is only
>     be used by one device, we don't need do the config for every single
>     spi_transfer

There is no guarantee that all the transfers in a given spi_message have the 
same values for  speed_hz, bits_per_word, cs_change and delay_usecs atleast 
nothing I could find put that restriction in place. Since we need to deal with 
possible changes (although unlikely) it gets rid some state we need to maintain 
and makes the code path common for all transfers.

> 3. Why do you remove the chip select control code, dw_spi controller hw has
>     some problem in chip select controller by SER, and thus many devices has
>     to use external GPIO has their chip select, this is real world usages!

Which devices/platforms are you referring to?  I was unable to find any 
platforms or client drivers using this functionality. If they are not public 
please respond internally.  In any case it is mute since I already agreed to put 
is back in in my response to Grant.

> 4. I saw you enable both TX/RX interrupt when doing interrupt transfer, spi
>     devices' TX/RX are born to be simutaneous, when one word is sent over
>     TX line, a RX word will be received from RX line, so both the orignal
>     interrupt transfer handling written by me and the later optimization
>     from Alek Du only enable TX interrupt, which will only generate half of
>     IRQs comparing to enble both TX/RX, this is huge when the data rate is
>     several Mb per second

I the current driver the txfltr register is set to 0 (FIFO empty) in the 
interrupt transfer case which will drop chip select every FIFO length bytes.

In my transfer setup the RX FIFO interrupt is set to a value lower than the TX 
threshold which will keep both interrupts from firing at the same time.

The TX interrupt will drive the transfer until there are less than tx_threshold 
bytes left to transfer then by the RX interrupt to drive the remainder of the 
transfer without dropping chip select.

> 5. Why do you change the logic of filling TX FIFO, the logic comes from use
>     case that the dw_spi driver is dealing with several high speed devices.
>

The version of the driver that I started with did not have the current fifo 
handling code.  I finished my changes before they showed up in the AC tree or 
the upstream kernel.  I picked up most to the fifo handling logic from the 
current driver with the exception of the rxtx_gap calculation which was not 
needed with the way I am maintaining the state and the addition of a check to 
avoid the register read in tx_max/rx_max if all bytes have been sent/received.
This avoids some overhead in the interrupt case.

> Thanks,
> Feng
>
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