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authorArnd Bergmann <arnd@arndb.de>2016-05-13 15:52:27 +0200
committerFelipe Balbi <felipe.balbi@linux.intel.com>2016-05-31 11:24:17 +0300
commit23e3439296a55affce3ef0ab78f1c2e03aec8767 (patch)
treeccf72c308644cf6fc68ee6b203900f8e0a2cf7f9 /drivers/usb/dwc2
parent53642399aa71b7c3b15d0305dc54738c4222bb1e (diff)
downloadblackbird-op-linux-23e3439296a55affce3ef0ab78f1c2e03aec8767.tar.gz
blackbird-op-linux-23e3439296a55affce3ef0ab78f1c2e03aec8767.zip
usb: dwc2: fix regression on big-endian PowerPC/ARM systems
A patch that went into Linux-4.4 to fix big-endian mode on a Lantiq MIPS system unfortunately broke big-endian operation on PowerPC APM82181 as reported by Christian Lamparter, and likely other systems. It actually introduced multiple issues: - it broke big-endian ARM kernels: any machine that was working correctly with a little-endian kernel is no longer using byteswaps on big-endian kernels, which clearly breaks them. - On PowerPC the same thing must be true: if it was working before, using big-endian kernels is now broken. Unlike ARM, 32-bit PowerPC usually uses big-endian kernels, so they are likely all broken. - The barrier for dwc2_writel is on the wrong side of the __raw_writel(), so the MMIO no longer synchronizes with DMA operations. - On architectures that require specific CPU instructions for MMIO access, using the __raw_ variant may turn this into a pointer dereference that does not have the same effect as the readl/writel. This patch is a simple revert for all architectures other than MIPS, in the hope that we can more easily backport it to fix the regression on PowerPC and ARM systems without breaking the Lantiq system again. We should follow this up with a more elaborate change to add runtime detection of endianness, to make sure it also works on all other combinations of architectures and implementations of the usb-dwc2 device. That patch however will be fairly large and not appropriate for backports to stable kernels. Felipe suggested a different approach, using an endianness switching register to always put the device into LE mode, but unfortunately the dwc2 hardware does not provide a generic way to do that. Also, I see no practical way of addressing the problem more generally by patching architecture specific code on MIPS. Fixes: 95c8bc360944 ("usb: dwc2: Use platform endianness when accessing registers") Acked-by: John Youn <johnyoun@synopsys.com> Tested-by: Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@googlemail.com> Signed-off-by: Arnd Bergmann <arnd@arndb.de> Signed-off-by: Felipe Balbi <felipe.balbi@linux.intel.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'drivers/usb/dwc2')
-rw-r--r--drivers/usb/dwc2/core.h27
1 files changed, 27 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/drivers/usb/dwc2/core.h b/drivers/usb/dwc2/core.h
index 3c58d633ce80..dec0b21fc626 100644
--- a/drivers/usb/dwc2/core.h
+++ b/drivers/usb/dwc2/core.h
@@ -64,6 +64,17 @@
DWC2_TRACE_SCHEDULER_VB(pr_fmt("%s: SCH: " fmt), \
dev_name(hsotg->dev), ##__VA_ARGS__)
+#ifdef CONFIG_MIPS
+/*
+ * There are some MIPS machines that can run in either big-endian
+ * or little-endian mode and that use the dwc2 register without
+ * a byteswap in both ways.
+ * Unlike other architectures, MIPS apparently does not require a
+ * barrier before the __raw_writel() to synchronize with DMA but does
+ * require the barrier after the __raw_writel() to serialize a set of
+ * writes. This set of operations was added specifically for MIPS and
+ * should only be used there.
+ */
static inline u32 dwc2_readl(const void __iomem *addr)
{
u32 value = __raw_readl(addr);
@@ -90,6 +101,22 @@ static inline void dwc2_writel(u32 value, void __iomem *addr)
pr_info("INFO:: wrote %08x to %p\n", value, addr);
#endif
}
+#else
+/* Normal architectures just use readl/write */
+static inline u32 dwc2_readl(const void __iomem *addr)
+{
+ return readl(addr);
+}
+
+static inline void dwc2_writel(u32 value, void __iomem *addr)
+{
+ writel(value, addr);
+
+#ifdef DWC2_LOG_WRITES
+ pr_info("info:: wrote %08x to %p\n", value, addr);
+#endif
+}
+#endif
/* Maximum number of Endpoints/HostChannels */
#define MAX_EPS_CHANNELS 16
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