Revision f6997bec6af43396ff530caee79e178d32774a49 authored by Miquel Raynal on 25 April 2018, 14:16:32 UTC, committed by Boris Brezillon on 26 April 2018, 17:06:42 UTC
The block responsible of parsing the DT for the number of chip-select
lines uses an 'if/else if/else if' block. The content of the second and
third 'else if' conditions are:
        1/ the actual condition to enter the sub-block and
        2/ the operation to do in this sub-block.

        [...]
        else if (condition1_to_enter && action1() == failed)
                raise_error();
        else if (condition2_to_enter && action2() == failed)
                raise_error();
        [...]

In case of failure, the sub-block is entered and an error raised.
Otherwise, in case of success, the code would continue erroneously in
the next 'else if' statement because it did not failed (and did not
enter the first 'else if' sub-block).

The first 'else if' refers to legacy bindings while the second 'else if'
refers to new bindings. The second 'else if', which is entered
erroneously, checks for the 'reg' property, which, for old bindings,
does not mean anything because it would not be the number of CS
available, but the regular register map of almost any DT node. This
being said, the content of the 'reg' property being the register map
offset and length, it has '2' values, so the number of CS in this
situation is assumed to be '2'.

When running nand_scan_ident() with 2 CS, the core will check for an
array of chips. It will first issue a RESET and then a READ_ID. Of
course this will trigger two timeouts because there is no chip in front
of the second CS:

[    1.367460] marvell-nfc f2720000.nand: Timeout on CMDD (NDSR: 0x00000080)
[    1.474292] marvell-nfc f2720000.nand: Timeout on CMDD (NDSR: 0x00000280)

Indeed, this is harmless and the core will then assume there is only one
valid CS.

Fix the logic in the whole block by entering each sub-block just on the
'is legacy' condition, doing the action inside the sub-block. This way,
when the action succeeds, the whole block is left.

Furthermore, for both the old bindings and the new bindings the same
logic was applied to retrieve the number of CS lines:
using of_get_property() to get a size in bytes, converted in the actual
number of lines by dividing it per sizeof(u32) (4 bytes).

This is fine for the 'reg' property which is a list of the CS IDs but
not for the 'num-cs' property which is directly the value of the number
of CS.

Anyway, no existing DT uses another value than 'num-cs = <1>' and no
other value has ever been supported by the old driver (pxa3xx_nand.c).
Remove this condition and apply a number of 1 CS anyway, as already
described in the bindings.

Finally, the 'reg' property of a 'nand' node (with the new bindings)
gives the IDs of each CS line in use. marvell_nand.c driver first look
at the number of CS lines that are present in this property.

Better use of_property_count_elems_of_size() than dividing by 4 the size
of the number of bytes returned by of_get_property().

Fixes: 02f26ecf8c772 ("mtd: nand: add reworked Marvell NAND controller driver")
Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org
Signed-off-by: Miquel Raynal <miquel.raynal@bootlin.com>
Tested-by: Chris Packham <chris.packham@alliedtelesis.co.nz>
Signed-off-by: Boris Brezillon <boris.brezillon@bootlin.com>
1 parent 7b70eb1
Raw File
cleanpatch
#!/usr/bin/env perl
# SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0
#
# Clean a patch file -- or directory of patch files -- of stealth whitespace.
# WARNING: this can be a highly destructive operation.  Use with caution.
#

use warnings;
use bytes;
use File::Basename;

# Default options
$max_width = 79;

# Clean up space-tab sequences, either by removing spaces or
# replacing them with tabs.
sub clean_space_tabs($)
{
    no bytes;			# Tab alignment depends on characters

    my($li) = @_;
    my($lo) = '';
    my $pos = 0;
    my $nsp = 0;
    my($i, $c);

    for ($i = 0; $i < length($li); $i++) {
	$c = substr($li, $i, 1);
	if ($c eq "\t") {
	    my $npos = ($pos+$nsp+8) & ~7;
	    my $ntab = ($npos >> 3) - ($pos >> 3);
	    $lo .= "\t" x $ntab;
	    $pos = $npos;
	    $nsp = 0;
	} elsif ($c eq "\n" || $c eq "\r") {
	    $lo .= " " x $nsp;
	    $pos += $nsp;
	    $nsp = 0;
	    $lo .= $c;
	    $pos = 0;
	} elsif ($c eq " ") {
	    $nsp++;
	} else {
	    $lo .= " " x $nsp;
	    $pos += $nsp;
	    $nsp = 0;
	    $lo .= $c;
	    $pos++;
	}
    }
    $lo .= " " x $nsp;
    return $lo;
}

# Compute the visual width of a string
sub strwidth($) {
    no bytes;			# Tab alignment depends on characters

    my($li) = @_;
    my($c, $i);
    my $pos = 0;
    my $mlen = 0;

    for ($i = 0; $i < length($li); $i++) {
	$c = substr($li,$i,1);
	if ($c eq "\t") {
	    $pos = ($pos+8) & ~7;
	} elsif ($c eq "\n") {
	    $mlen = $pos if ($pos > $mlen);
	    $pos = 0;
	} else {
	    $pos++;
	}
    }

    $mlen = $pos if ($pos > $mlen);
    return $mlen;
}

$name = basename($0);

@files = ();

while (defined($a = shift(@ARGV))) {
    if ($a =~ /^-/) {
	if ($a eq '-width' || $a eq '-w') {
	    $max_width = shift(@ARGV)+0;
	} else {
	    print STDERR "Usage: $name [-width #] files...\n";
	    exit 1;
	}
    } else {
	push(@files, $a);
    }
}

foreach $f ( @files ) {
    print STDERR "$name: $f\n";

    if (! -f $f) {
	print STDERR "$f: not a file\n";
	next;
    }

    if (!open(FILE, '+<', $f)) {
	print STDERR "$name: Cannot open file: $f: $!\n";
	next;
    }

    binmode FILE;

    # First, verify that it is not a binary file; consider any file
    # with a zero byte to be a binary file.  Is there any better, or
    # additional, heuristic that should be applied?
    $is_binary = 0;

    while (read(FILE, $data, 65536) > 0) {
	if ($data =~ /\0/) {
	    $is_binary = 1;
	    last;
	}
    }

    if ($is_binary) {
	print STDERR "$name: $f: binary file\n";
	next;
    }

    seek(FILE, 0, 0);

    $in_bytes = 0;
    $out_bytes = 0;
    $lineno = 0;

    @lines  = ();

    $in_hunk = 0;
    $err = 0;

    while ( defined($line = <FILE>) ) {
	$lineno++;
	$in_bytes += length($line);

	if (!$in_hunk) {
	    if ($line =~
		/^\@\@\s+\-([0-9]+),([0-9]+)\s+\+([0-9]+),([0-9]+)\s\@\@/) {
		$minus_lines = $2;
		$plus_lines = $4;
		if ($minus_lines || $plus_lines) {
		    $in_hunk = 1;
		    @hunk_lines = ($line);
		}
	    } else {
		push(@lines, $line);
		$out_bytes += length($line);
	    }
	} else {
	    # We're in a hunk

	    if ($line =~ /^\+/) {
		$plus_lines--;

		$text = substr($line, 1);
		$text =~ s/[ \t\r]*$//;		# Remove trailing spaces
		$text = clean_space_tabs($text);

		$l_width = strwidth($text);
		if ($max_width && $l_width > $max_width) {
		    print STDERR
			"$f:$lineno: adds line exceeds $max_width ",
			"characters ($l_width)\n";
		}

		push(@hunk_lines, '+'.$text);
	    } elsif ($line =~ /^\-/) {
		$minus_lines--;
		push(@hunk_lines, $line);
	    } elsif ($line =~ /^ /) {
		$plus_lines--;
		$minus_lines--;
		push(@hunk_lines, $line);
	    } else {
		print STDERR "$name: $f: malformed patch\n";
		$err = 1;
		last;
	    }

	    if ($plus_lines < 0 || $minus_lines < 0) {
		print STDERR "$name: $f: malformed patch\n";
		$err = 1;
		last;
	    } elsif ($plus_lines == 0 && $minus_lines == 0) {
		# End of a hunk.  Process this hunk.
		my $i;
		my $l;
		my @h = ();
		my $adj = 0;
		my $done = 0;

		for ($i = scalar(@hunk_lines)-1; $i > 0; $i--) {
		    $l = $hunk_lines[$i];
		    if (!$done && $l eq "+\n") {
			$adj++; # Skip this line
		    } elsif ($l =~ /^[ +]/) {
			$done = 1;
			unshift(@h, $l);
		    } else {
			unshift(@h, $l);
		    }
		}

		$l = $hunk_lines[0];  # Hunk header
		undef @hunk_lines;    # Free memory

		if ($adj) {
		    die unless
			($l =~ /^\@\@\s+\-([0-9]+),([0-9]+)\s+\+([0-9]+),([0-9]+)\s\@\@(.*)$/);
		    my $mstart = $1;
		    my $mlin = $2;
		    my $pstart = $3;
		    my $plin = $4;
		    my $tail = $5; # doesn't include the final newline

		    $l = sprintf("@@ -%d,%d +%d,%d @@%s\n",
				 $mstart, $mlin, $pstart, $plin-$adj,
				 $tail);
		}
		unshift(@h, $l);

		# Transfer to the output array
		foreach $l (@h) {
		    $out_bytes += length($l);
		    push(@lines, $l);
		}

		$in_hunk = 0;
	    }
	}
    }

    if ($in_hunk) {
	print STDERR "$name: $f: malformed patch\n";
	$err = 1;
    }

    if (!$err) {
	if ($in_bytes != $out_bytes) {
	    # Only write to the file if changed
	    seek(FILE, 0, 0);
	    print FILE @lines;

	    if ( !defined($where = tell(FILE)) ||
		 !truncate(FILE, $where) ) {
		die "$name: Failed to truncate modified file: $f: $!\n";
	    }
	}
    }

    close(FILE);
}
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