-----Original Message-----
From: Heiko Schocher <h...@denx.de> 
Sent: Tuesday, November 17, 2020 11:42 PM
To: Duffin, CooperX <cooperx.duf...@intel.com>
Cc: Simon Glass <s...@chromium.org>; U-Boot Mailing List 
<u-boot@lists.denx.de>; uboot-snps-...@synopsys.com; Tom Rini 
<tr...@konsulko.com>; Robert Beckett <bob.beck...@collabora.com>; Wolgang Denk 
<w...@denx.de>; Ian Ray <ian....@ge.com>
Subject: Re: [dwi2c PATCH v1] dwi2c add offsets to reads

Hello Simon,

Am 17.11.2020 um 00:20 schrieb Simon Glass:
> +Heiko Schocher who might know more about this I2C question

Sorry for late response ...

> On Mon, 9 Nov 2020 at 15:09, Duffin, CooperX <cooperx.duf...@intel.com> wrote:
>>
>> -----Original Message-----
>> From: Simon Glass <s...@chromium.org>
>> Sent: Saturday, November 7, 2020 1:33 PM
>> To: Duffin, CooperX <cooperx.duf...@intel.com>
>> Cc: U-Boot Mailing List <u-boot@lists.denx.de>; 
>> uboot-snps-...@synopsys.com; Tom Rini <tr...@konsulko.com>; Robert 
>> Beckett <bob.beck...@collabora.com>; Heiko Schocher <h...@denx.de>; 
>> Wolgang Denk <w...@denx.de>; Ian Ray <ian....@ge.com>
>> Subject: Re: [dwi2c PATCH v1] dwi2c add offsets to reads
>>
>> Hi CooperX,
>>
>> On Fri, 6 Nov 2020 at 16:08, Duffin, CooperX <cooperx.duf...@intel.com> 
>> wrote:
>>>
>>> Hello Simon,
>>>
>>> I wasn’t using the test/dm/i2c I this was tested using hardware where I was 
>>> using the dm_i2c_read() function. I just tried to use the test/dm/i2c where 
>>> I am following the README but I keep getting  "sdl2-config: Command not 
>>> found". I suspect it would also fail where it is trying to read but I will 
>>> have to get test/dm/i2c working before I know for sure.
>>>
>>> Essentially my test was
>>>
>>> int uboot_app (int argc, char * const argv[]) {
>>>         uint8_t buf[10];
>>>         uint8_t read_buf[5];
>>>         uint8_t dev_addr;
>>>         uint32_t bus_speed;
>>>         //i2c_bus device pointer
>>>         struct udevice *i2c_led;
>>>         struct udevice *bus;
>>>         app_startup(argv);
>>>         /* Print the ABI version */
>>>         printf ("Example expects ABI version %d\n", XF_VERSION);
>>>         printf ("Actual U-Boot ABI version %d\n", 
>>> (int)get_version());
>>>
>>>         dev_addr = 0x60;
>>>         bus_speed = 100000; //100KHz
>>>         printf("starting test i2c\n");
>>>         buf[0] = 'b';
>>>         buf[1] = 'o';
>>>         buf[2] = 'o';
>>>         buf[3] = 't';
>>>         //Get i2c chip, init the code
>>>         printf("init starting\n");
>>>         if(i2c_get_chip_for_busnum(0 , 0x60, 1, &i2c_led)!=0){
>>>                 printf("ERROR: no device found at %x \n",dev_addr);
>>>                 return (0);
>>>         }
>>>         uclass_get_device_by_seq(UCLASS_I2C, 0, &bus);
>>>         printf("Setting bus speed to %d\n", bus_speed);
>>>         if(dm_i2c_set_bus_speed(bus,bus_speed)!=0){
>>>                 printf("ERROR: Cannot set buspeed\n");
>>>                 return (0);
>>>         }
>>>         printf("i2c_led name is %s\n",i2c_led->name);
>>>         if(i2c_led == NULL){
>>>                 printf("ERROR i2c_led 0 is null\n");
>>>                 return (0);
>>>         }
>>>         printf("Writing\n");
>>>         for(unsigned int a =0; a< 4; a++){
>>>                 if(dm_i2c_write(i2c_led,a,&buf[a],1)!=0){
>>>                         printf("ERROR writing\n");
>>>                         return (0);
>>>                 }
>>>         }
>>>
>>>         printf("Reading\n");
>>>         for(unsigned int a =0; a< 4; a++){
>>>                 if(dm_i2c_read(i2c_led,a,&read_buf[a],1)!=0){
>>>                         printf("ERROR writing\n");
>>>                         return (0);
>>>                 }
>>>         }
>>>         printf("read buffer is %c, %c, %c, %c \n",read_buf[0],read_buf[1], 
>>> read_buf[2],read_buf[3]);
>>>         printf ("\n\n");
>>>         return (0);
>>> }
>>>
>>> ## Starting application at 0x0C100000 ...
>>> Example expects ABI version 10
>>> Actual U-Boot ABI version 10
>>> starting test i2c
>>> init starting
>>> Setting bus speed to 100000
>>> i2c_led name is generic_60
>>> Writing
>>> Reading
>>> read buffer is o, o, o, o
>>>
>>> with the fix I get:
>>>
>>> ## Starting application at 0x0C100000 ...
>>> Example expects ABI version 10
>>> Actual U-Boot ABI version 10
>>> starting test i2c
>>> init starting
>>> Setting bus speed to 100000
>>> i2c_led name is generic_60
>>> Writing
>>> Reading
>>> read buffer is b, o, o, t
>>>
>>> which is correct. Similarly if I stop auto boot I get a similar result:
>>>
>>> Hit any key to stop autoboot:  0
>>> device # i2c
>>> i2c - I2C sub-system
>>>
>>> Assuming I write "boot" to the device device # i2c dev 0 Setting bus 
>>> to 0 device # i2c md 0x60 0 4
>>> 0000: 6f 6f 6f 6f    oooo
>>>
>>> With the fix/patch I get:
>>>
>>> device# i2c md 0x60 0 4
>>> 0000: 62 6f 6f 74    boot
>>>
>>> Which is correct. Also the reads were working in linux leading to my 
>>> original suspicion that there might be something going on in the driver. 
>>> Hopefully that answers your question let me know if you have anymore.
>>
>> I had a bit of a look at this. If you look at dm_i2c_read() it actually 
>> builds the address into the buffer it sends. So when it gets to 
>> __dw_i2c_write() the alen parameter is always 0. That function is actually a 
>> holdover from before driver model, so one day the alen and addr parameters 
>> will go away.
>>
>> I wonder if your device does not support multiple-byte reads or writes? Can 
>> you try the i2c md with a single byte? There is a DM_I2C_CHIP_WR_ADDRESS 
>> option to handle this - see the 'i2c flags'
>> command.
>>
>> In the designware_i2c_xfer(), try printing out the bytes that it gets in 
>> each message using i2c_dump_msgs().
>>
>> Also check the i2c_get_chip() function which you are using. See if
>> chip->offset_len is set to 1 as it should be, for your device. If 
>> chip->not,
>> perhaps something is missing.
>>
>> In short I am not really sure what is going on, but I think it needs more 
>> investigation.
>>
>> BTW with this mailing list we like people to reply inline or at the bottom, 
>> not at the top.
>>
>> Regards,
>> Simon
>>
>>>
>>> Best regards,
>>>
>>> -Cooper Duffin
>>> -----Original Message-----
>>> From: Simon Glass <s...@chromium.org>
>>> Sent: Friday, November 6, 2020 10:51 AM
>>> To: Duffin, CooperX <cooperx.duf...@intel.com>
>>> Cc: U-Boot Mailing List <u-boot@lists.denx.de>; 
>>> uboot-snps-...@synopsys.com; Tom Rini <tr...@konsulko.com>; Robert 
>>> Beckett <bob.beck...@collabora.com>; Heiko Schocher <h...@denx.de>; 
>>> Wolgang Denk <w...@denx.de>; Ian Ray <ian....@ge.com>
>>> Subject: Re: [dwi2c PATCH v1] dwi2c add offsets to reads
>>>
>>> Hi Cduffinx,
>>>
>>> On Thu, 5 Nov 2020 at 14:26, cduffinx <cooperx.duf...@intel.com> wrote:
>>>>
>>>> modify the designware_i2c_xfer function to use 1 byte per address, 
>>>> it was set to 0 before which makes it think its reading a register type.
>>>> Added offset of where it is supposed to read from. Before it was 
>>>> always reading from offset 0 despite specifying the offset in the 
>>>> higher level function.
>>>>
>>>> Signed-off-by: Cooper Duffin <cooperx.duf...@intel.com>
>>>> Signed-off-by: cduffinx <cooperx.duf...@intel.com>
>>>> ---
>>>>
>>>>  drivers/i2c/designware_i2c.c | 5 +++--
>>>>  drivers/i2c/i2c-uclass.c     | 1 +
>>>>  include/i2c.h                | 1 +
>>>>  3 files changed, 5 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-)
>>>>
>>>
>>> Thanks for the patch!
>>>
>>> Is there a test that was failing before (test/dm/i2c.c) or should we add a 
>>> new one to catch this?
>>>
>>> Regards,
>>> Simon
>>
>> [Duffin, CooperX]
>> Thanks for the reply Simon.  I tried a couple more things.
>>
>> Simon Glass <s...@chromium.org> wrote:
>>> I wonder if your device does not support multiple-byte reads or writes? Can 
>>> you try the i2c md with a single byte? There is a DM_I2C_CHIP_WR_ADDRESS 
>>> option to handle this - see the 'i2c flags'
>>> command.
>>
>> I tried with the flag DM_I2C_CHIP_WR_ADDRESS but it did not make a 
>> difference. A single byte read will yield the following:
>>
>> Device # i2c md 0x60 0 1
>> 0000: 6f    o
>>
>> Which is not correct in fact it doesn’t seem to matter how much I read it 
>> only picks up the second character I wrote to it. For example if I read 16 
>> characters I get:
>> device# i2c flags 0x60 4
>> device # i2c md 0x60 0 10
>> 0000: 6f 6f 6f 6f 6f 6f 6f 6f 6f 6f 6f 6f 6f 6f 6f 6f    oooooooooooooooo
>>
>> I can tell the writes are working because I am writing to an LED display and 
>> I can see the proper characters get displayed. Also I think my i2c device 
>> needs restarts in-between each byte for it to work properly, so I need to be 
>> able to read individual bytes with there corresponding offsets, also 
>> i2c-tools supports this.
>>
>> Simon Glass <s...@chromium.org> wrote:
>>> Also check the i2c_get_chip() function which you are using. See if
>>> chip->offset_len is set to 1 as it should be, for your device. If 
>>> chip->not,
>>> perhaps something is missing.
>> If I use this command I get:
>>
>> device # i2c olen 0x60
>> 1
>>
>> This is  without the patch BTW.

Hard to say here anything usefull, without the chance to try out...

trying with an i2c epprom (imx6 based board)

=> i2c md 0x58 0 10
0000: 01 00 04 23 00 02 b1 61 00 23 00 10 00 00 03 09    ...#...a.#......
=> i2c md 0x58 0 1
0000: 01    .
=> i2c md 0x58 1 1
0001: 00    .
=> i2c md 0x58 2 1
0002: 04    .
=> i2c md 0x58 3 1
0003: 23    #
=>

=> i2c flags 0x58
0
=> i2c olen 0x58
1
=>

May you can enable debug in drivers/i2c/designware_i2c.c driver?

So we should see, what sort of messages designware_i2c_xfer() gets ... and may 
have an idea... and may add

717                 debug("i2c_xfer: chip=0x%x, len=0x%x\n", msg->addr, 
msg->len);

also a dump of msg->buf and msg->len.

bye,
Heiko
-- 
DENX Software Engineering GmbH,      Managing Director: Wolfgang Denk
HRB 165235 Munich, Office: Kirchenstr.5, D-82194 Groebenzell, Germany
Phone: +49-8142-66989-52   Fax: +49-8142-66989-80   Email: h...@denx.de
[Duffin, CooperX] 
Sorry About the late reply

After changing the debug to printf and adding the msg->buf I get the following:

Hit any key to stop autoboot:  0 
device # i2c dev 0
Setting bus to 0
I2C bus i2c@ffc02900 version 0x3230302a
device # i2c md 0x60 0 4
i2c_xfer: 2 messages
i2c_xfer: chip=0x60, len=0x1, buf=0x7fa2d398
i2c_xfer: chip=0x60, len=0x4, buf=0x7fa2d460
0000: 6f 6f 6f 6f    oooo

Additionally if I run my standalone application I get this 

I2C bus i2c@ffc02900 version 0x3230302a
Setting bus speed to 100000
i2c_led name is generic_60
Writing
i2c_xfer: 1 messages
i2c_xfer: chip=0x60, len=0x2, buf=0x7fa2ced0
i2c_xfer: 1 messages
i2c_xfer: chip=0x60, len=0x2, buf=0x7fa2ced0
i2c_xfer: 1 messages
i2c_xfer: chip=0x60, len=0x2, buf=0x7fa2ced0
i2c_xfer: 1 messages
i2c_xfer: chip=0x60, len=0x2, buf=0x7fa2ced0
Reading
i2c_xfer: 2 messages
i2c_xfer: chip=0x60, len=0x1, buf=0x7fa2cf28
i2c_xfer: chip=0x60, len=0x1, buf=0x7fa2cf88
i2c_xfer: 2 messages
i2c_xfer: chip=0x60, len=0x1, buf=0x7fa2cf28
i2c_xfer: chip=0x60, len=0x1, buf=0x7fa2cf89
i2c_xfer: 2 messages
i2c_xfer: chip=0x60, len=0x1, buf=0x7fa2cf28
i2c_xfer: chip=0x60, len=0x1, buf=0x7fa2cf8a
i2c_xfer: 2 messages
i2c_xfer: chip=0x60, len=0x1, buf=0x7fa2cf28
i2c_xfer: chip=0x60, len=0x1, buf=0x7fa2cf8b
read buffer is o, o, o, o

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