Hi Manivannan,

Manivannan Sadhasivam <[email protected]> wrote on Wed,
03 Feb 2021 17:11:31 +0530:

> On 3 February 2021 4:54:22 PM IST, Boris Brezillon 
> <[email protected]> wrote:
> >On Wed, 03 Feb 2021 16:22:42 +0530
> >Manivannan Sadhasivam <[email protected]> wrote:
> >  
> >> On 3 February 2021 3:49:14 PM IST, Boris Brezillon  
> ><[email protected]> wrote:  
> >> >On Wed, 03 Feb 2021 15:42:02 +0530
> >> >Manivannan Sadhasivam <[email protected]> wrote:
> >> >    
> >> >> >> 
> >> >> >> I got more information from the vendor, Telit. The access to  
> >the    
> >> >3rd      
> >> >> >partition is protected by Trustzone and any access in non  
> >privileged  
> >> >> >mode (where Linux kernel runs) causes kernel panic and the device
> >> >> >reboots.     
> >> >
> >> >Out of curiosity, is it a per-CS-line thing or is this section
> >> >protected on all CS?
> >> >    
> >> 
> >> Sorry, I didn't get your question.   
> >
> >The qcom controller can handle several chips, each connected through a
> >different CS (chip-select) line, right? I'm wondering if the firmware
> >running in secure mode has the ability to block access for a specific
> >CS line or if all CS lines have the same constraint. That will impact
> >the way you describe it in your DT (in one case the secure-region
> >property should be under the controller node, in the other case it
> >should be under the NAND chip node).  
> 
> Right. I believe the implementation is common to all NAND chips so the 
> property should be in the controller node. 

Looks weird: do you mean that each of the chips will have a secure area?

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