Wolfram Sang <w...@the-dreams.de> writes:

> On Mon, Nov 02, 2015 at 02:03:37AM +0000, Mans Rullgard wrote:
>> The BYTECNT register holds the transfer size minus one.  Setting it
>> to the correct value requires a dummy read/write only for zero-length
>> transfers as it is impossible to request one from the hardware.  If a
>> zero-length transfer is requested, changing the length to 1 and setting
>> "buf" to a dummy location allows making the main loops less convoluted.
>> 
>> In other words, this patch makes the driver transfer the number of bytes
>> requested unless this is zero, which is not supported by the hardware,
>> in which case one byte is transferred instead.
>
> Uh, this is wrong, zero byte should really not transfer anything. We
> need to fix that and bail out, so probably something like
>
>       if (!len)
>               return -EOPNOTSUPP;

So the existing driver is wrong to allow it.  Makes sense to drop that.

> Also, the xlr_func() should mask out I2C_FUNC_SMBUS_QUICK.

OK.

> Other than that, the patch looks good to me.
>
> Out of curiosity, your first driver had the registers 32bit apart. Now
> you can deal with 8bit. Is this configurable on this SoC?

It's all 32 bits.  The XLR driver uses a u32 * to access the registers.

-- 
Måns Rullgård
--
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in
the body of a message to majord...@vger.kernel.org
More majordomo info at  http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
Please read the FAQ at  http://www.tux.org/lkml/

Reply via email to