On Fri, Dec 20, 2024 at 03:12:03PM +0530, Md Sadre Alam wrote:On SDX75, QPIC use BAM-Lite and as per HW description this
Avoid writing unavailable register in BAM-Lite mode.
BAM_DESC_CNT_TRSHLD register is unavailable in BAM-Lite
mode. Its only available in BAM-NDP mode. So only write
this register for clients who is using BAM-NDP.
Signed-off-by: Md Sadre Alam <quic_mdalam@xxxxxxxxxxx>
What are we actually fixing here? Which platform is affected? Is there a
crash, reset, or incorrect behavior?
With older xPU it was being ignored but with new xPU its hanging. HW
We have had this code for years without reported issues, with both
BAM-NDP and BAM-Lite instances. The register documentation on APQ8016E
documents the BAM_DESC_CNT_TRSHLD register even for the BAM-Lite
instance. There is a comment that it doesn't apply to BAM-Lite, but I
would expect the written value just ends up being ignored in that case.
Apart from BAM-Lite this register available in all the BAM
Also, there is not just BAM-NDP and BAM-Lite, but also plain "BAM". What
about that one? Should we write to BAM_DESC_CNT_TRSHLD?
I got this data from HW team. Will confirm once again if any SOCs we are missing.
---
Change in [v4]
* Added in_range() macro
Change in [v3]
* Removed BAM_LITE macro
* Updated commit message
* Adjusted if condition check
* Renamed BAM-NDP macro to BAM_NDP_REVISION_START and
BAM_NDP_REVISION_END
Change in [v2]
* Replace 0xff with REVISION_MASK in the statement
bdev->bam_revision = val & REVISION_MASK
Change in [v1]
* Added initial patch
drivers/dma/qcom/bam_dma.c | 24 ++++++++++++++++--------
1 file changed, 16 insertions(+), 8 deletions(-)
diff --git a/drivers/dma/qcom/bam_dma.c b/drivers/dma/qcom/bam_dma.c
index bbc3276992bb..c14557efd577 100644
--- a/drivers/dma/qcom/bam_dma.c
+++ b/drivers/dma/qcom/bam_dma.c
@@ -59,6 +59,9 @@ struct bam_desc_hw {
#define DESC_FLAG_NWD BIT(12)
#define DESC_FLAG_CMD BIT(11)
+#define BAM_NDP_REVISION_START 0x20
+#define BAM_NDP_REVISION_END 0x27
+
Are you sure this covers all SoCs we support upstream? If one of the
older or newer supported SoCs uses a value outside of this range, it
will now be missing the register write.