Hi Komal,
Your post ended up in my spam box once again... I really think you
should send your patches as text attachements (or inline) rather than
binary attachements. Using real names in To: and Cc: fields might help
as well.
> I have attached the updated patch, which addresses the most of review
> comments.
I'll review that new version later today, or tomorrow.
> >The comment is confusing, as this address is usually known as the
> >"slave address" in the I2C world. Masters don't need no address on an
> >I2C bus. "own" is not a very explicit parameter name, what about
> >"slave_addr"? Ideally this should be retrieved from platform_data too,
> >else you can't be sure you won't collide with a device on the bus.
>
> >"0 for default" doesn't make sense, as the default is, by definition,
> >when the user doesn't speficiy anything. That this is internally coded
> >as 0 is an implementation detail user-space doesn't need to know.
>
> Updated the comment and changed to slave_addr , and default is changed to "3".
Slightly better, though I still don't get why you worry setting an
address that will never be used.
> >> + if (armxor_rate > 16000000)
> >> + psc = (armxor_rate + 8000000) / 12000000;
> >> + else
> >> + psc = 0;
>
> >Can you please explain this formula?
>
> The OMAP core uses 8-bit value to divide the system clock (SCLK) and
> generates its own sampling clock (ICLK), and the core logic is sampled
> at clock rate of the system clock for the module, divided by (prescaler value + 1)
I should have been more precise, I guess. What surprises me are the
numbers themselves. It's frequent to see forumlae of the form
"a = (b + c/2) / c" to divide with proper rounding, but here you have
2c/3 instread of c/2. My question was more like: is it intentional, or a
typo? Also, with the code above, psc will never have value 1. The "if"
part will always compute to at least 2, and the "else" part to 0. Is
this OK?
> I think it is better to remove those lines and return error if length is zero.
> Is that ok?
Yes. This can be revisited later when/if someone finds a hack to work
around the problem.
> >> + /* We have an error */
> >> + if (dev->cmd_err & OMAP_I2C_STAT_NACK) {
> >> + if (msg->flags & I2C_M_IGNORE_NAK)
> >> + return 0;
>
> >Couldn't you have other error bits set as well? I2C_M_IGNORE_NAK means
> >you can ignore OMAP_I2C_STAT_NACK, not other errors.
>
> This is now being handled by first checking remaining errors first and then
> NACK. Is that ok?
Yes.
> >> + r = omap_i2c_read_reg(dev, OMAP_I2C_REV_REG) & 0xff;
> >> + dev_info(dev->dev, "bus %d rev%d.%d at %d kHz\n",
> >> + pdev->id - 1, r >> 4, r & 0xf, clock);
>
> >This "- 1" is error prone IMHO.
>
> Only if omap devices.c maintainer pushes the values less than one in device
> structure ;)
No, what I meant was rather that printing a bus number which differs
from the internal numbering might confuse the user at some point.
--
Jean Delvare
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