On Mon, Apr 11, 2011 at 08:02:27PM -0600, Kenneth Heitke wrote:

> mini-core. The driver supports FIFO mode (for low bandwidth applications)
> and block mode (interrupt generated for each block-size data transfer).
> The driver currently does not support DMA transfers.

> +static inline void qup_i2c_pwr_disable(struct qup_i2c_dev *dev)
> +{
> +     dev_dbg(dev->dev, "%s\n", __func__);
> +
> +     if (pm_runtime_enabled(dev->dev)) {
> +             pm_runtime_mark_last_busy(dev->dev);
> +             pm_runtime_put_sync(dev->dev);
> +     } else
> +             qup_i2c_clk_disable(dev);
> +}

What happens if someone changes the pm_runtime configuration in between
a pwr_disable() and the corresponding enable?

> +static void
> +qup_issue_read(struct qup_i2c_dev *dev, struct i2c_msg *msg, int *idx,
> +             uint32_t carry_over)
> +{
> +     uint16_t addr = (msg->addr << 1) | 1;
> +     /*
> +      * QUP limit 256 bytes per read. By HW design, 0 in the 8-bit field
> +      * is treated as 256 byte read.
> +      */
> +     uint16_t rd_len = ((dev->cnt == 256) ? 0 : dev->cnt);

This is a substantila incompatibility with most I2C ccontrollers i the
kernel.  Is it possible for the driver to deal with this transparently,
for example by expanding into a number of continued transfers?  If not
we should add support to the I2C core for determining transfer limits,
the 256 bytes limit is pretty low.

> +             /* HW limits Read upto 256 bytes in 1 read without stop */
> +             if (dev->msg->flags & I2C_M_RD) {
> +                     qup_set_read_mode(dev, dev->cnt);
> +                     if (dev->cnt > 256)
> +                             dev->cnt = 256;

This definitely seems buggy - there's no error returned to the caller?
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