Hello. On Tue, 2011-06-21 at 23:04, Eric Miao wrote: > On Tue, Jun 21, 2011 at 10:20 PM, Stefan Schmidt > <[email protected]> wrote: > > > > On Tue, 2011-06-21 at 22:08, Eric Miao wrote: > >> On Tue, Jun 21, 2011 at 10:03 PM, Stefan Schmidt > >> <[email protected]> wrote: > >> > On Thu, 2011-06-16 at 17:44, Eric Miao wrote: > >> > > On Thu, Jun 16, 2011 at 5:19 PM, Stefan Schmidt > >> > > <[email protected]> wrote: > >> > > > > >> > > > Its either 8bit or 16bit for a message. The mentioned problem happens > >> > > > on a 8 bit message. It does nothing else then writing to a defined > >> > > > register address to trigger the hardware sending the data in the > >> > > > FIFO. > >> > > > >> > > This might get too much overhead. I didn't check the source code, but > >> > > my guess is it's waiting for interrupt for each message, and once the > >> > > interrupt of message being flushed out happens, it starts the next one > >> > > waiting for the FIFO empty interrupt coming. Did you try stuff more > >> > > bytes into a single message? > >> > > >> > Took me some time to implement and test al kind of different > >> > scenarios. As you suggested I tried to stuff more bytes into a message > >> > as well as testing all kind of combination with tx and rx thresholds, > >> > timout, PIO and DMA, cs_change , etc. No change. > >> > > >> > I then bit the bullet and changed the board to use the spi_gpio driver > >> > instead of pxa2xx. After some struggling (make sure you setup pin > >> > config correctly :)) I got it working but with the same result. > >> > > >> > My last test block was around using spi_async() instead of spi_sync > >> > and as well I was not able to reach my timing criteria. :( > >> > > >> > To me it seems right now as if it is just not possible to reach > >> > something in the 100 usec range with the SPI framework. Obviuously I > >> > would be loved to be proven wrong. :) > >> > > >> > As I'm running way out of time for this part of my project I'm back to > >> > the driver now trying to find a solution that avoids the tight timing > >> > criteria. > >> > >> I think for a time budget like this, you may want to try a dedicated > >> polling driver avoid all the interrupt/wait stuff, that's going to maximize > >> the throughput. If that's even not possible, it might be HW limitations. > > > > You mean like configuring the pins as plain GPIO and have some small > > bitbang functions on my own without the SPI framework? Just trying to > > understand in what direction you are pointing me. :) > > I mean just to have a small driver, configure the SPI controller with > hardcoded values, and try writing to the SSDR all by yourself, and > polling the SSSR status bits. Not something simulating SPI w/ GPIO, > that will be slow.
Wow, that is something I like to avoid doing at all. :) Thanks for the pointer though. Something to have in mind if everythings else fails. regards Stefan Schmidt ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ EditLive Enterprise is the world's most technically advanced content authoring tool. Experience the power of Track Changes, Inline Image Editing and ensure content is compliant with Accessibility Checking. http://p.sf.net/sfu/ephox-dev2dev _______________________________________________ spi-devel-general mailing list [email protected] https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/spi-devel-general
