@@ -281,6 +281,9 @@ static int ufs_qcom_host_reset(struct ufs_hba *hba)
static u32 ufs_qcom_get_hs_gear(struct ufs_hba *hba, u32 hs_gear)
{
struct ufs_qcom_host *host = ufshcd_get_variant(hba);
+ struct device *dev = hba->dev;
+ u32 max_device_gear, max_hcd_gear, reg;
+ int ret;
if (host->hw_ver.major == 0x1) {
/*
@@ -292,8 +295,29 @@ static u32 ufs_qcom_get_hs_gear(struct ufs_hba *hba, u32 hs_gear)
*/
if (hs_gear > UFS_HS_G2)
return UFS_HS_G2;
+ } else if (host->hw_ver.major > 0x3) {
+ /*
+ * Starting from UFS controller v4, Qcom supports dual gear mode (i.e., the
+ * controller/PHY can be configured to run in two gear speeds). But that
+ * requires an agreement between the UFS controller and the device. Below
+ * code tries to find the max gear of both and decides which gear to use.
+ *
+ * First get the max gear supported by the UFS device if available.
+ * If the property is not defined in devicetree, then use the default gear.
+ */
+ ret = of_property_read_u32(dev->of_node, "max-device-gear", &max_device_gear);
+ if (ret)
+ goto err_out;
+
+ /* Next get the max gear supported by the UFS controller */
+ reg = ufshcd_readl(hba, REG_UFS_PARAM0);
+ max_hcd_gear = UFS_QCOM_MAX_GEAR(reg);
+
+ /* Now return the minimum of both gears */
+ return min(max_device_gear, max_hcd_gear);
}
+err_out:
/* Default is HS-G3 */
return UFS_HS_G3;
}
@@ -303,7 +327,7 @@ static int ufs_qcom_power_up_sequence(struct ufs_hba *hba)
struct ufs_qcom_host *host = ufshcd_get_variant(hba);
struct phy *phy = host->generic_phy;
int ret;
- bool is_rate_B = UFS_QCOM_LIMIT_HS_RATE == PA_HS_MODE_B;
+ u32 hs_gear;
/* Reset UFS Host Controller and PHY */
ret = ufs_qcom_host_reset(hba);
@@ -311,8 +335,9 @@ static int ufs_qcom_power_up_sequence(struct ufs_hba *hba)
dev_warn(hba->dev, "%s: host reset returned %d\n",
__func__, ret);
- if (is_rate_B)
- phy_set_mode(phy, PHY_MODE_UFS_HS_B);
+ /* UFS_HS_G2 is used here since that's the least gear supported by legacy Qcom platforms */
+ hs_gear = ufs_qcom_get_hs_gear(hba, UFS_HS_G2);
+ phy_set_mode_ext(phy, PHY_MODE_UFS_HS_B, hs_gear);
/* phy initialization - calibrate the phy */
ret = phy_init(phy);
@@ -94,6 +94,10 @@ enum {
#define TMRLUT_HW_CGC_EN BIT(6)
#define OCSC_HW_CGC_EN BIT(7)
+/* bit definitions for REG_UFS_PARAM0 */
+#define MAX_HS_GEAR_MASK GENMASK(6, 4)
+#define UFS_QCOM_MAX_GEAR(x) FIELD_GET(MAX_HS_GEAR_MASK, (x))
+
/* bit definition for UFS_UFS_TEST_BUS_CTRL_n */
#define TEST_BUS_SUB_SEL_MASK GENMASK(4, 0) /* All XXX_SEL fields are 5 bits wide */
Starting from UFS controller v4, Qcom supports dual gear mode (i.e., the controller/PHY can be configured to run in two gear speeds). But that requires an agreement between the UFS controller and the UFS device. This commit finds the max gear supported by both controller and device then decides which one to use. UFS controller's max gear can be read from the REG_UFS_PARAM0 register and UFS device's max gear can be read from the "max-device-gear" devicetree property. The UFS PHY also needs to be configured with the decided gear using the phy_set_mode_ext() API. Signed-off-by: Manivannan Sadhasivam <manivannan.sadhasivam@linaro.org> --- drivers/ufs/host/ufs-qcom.c | 31 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++--- drivers/ufs/host/ufs-qcom.h | 4 ++++ 2 files changed, 32 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-)