Linus Torvalds | 1da177e | 2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700 | [diff] [blame^] | 1 | README on the Compact Flash for Card Engines |
| 2 | ============================================ |
| 3 | |
| 4 | There are three challenges in supporting the CF interface of the Card |
| 5 | Engines. First, every IO operation must be followed with IO to |
| 6 | another memory region. Second, the slot is wired for one-to-one |
| 7 | address mapping *and* it is wired for 16 bit access only. Second, the |
| 8 | interrupt request line from the CF device isn't wired. |
| 9 | |
| 10 | The IOBARRIER issue is covered in README.IOBARRIER. This isn't an |
| 11 | onerous problem. Enough said here. |
| 12 | |
| 13 | The addressing issue is solved in the |
| 14 | arch/arm/mach-lh7a40x/ide-lpd7a40x.c file with some awkward |
| 15 | work-arounds. We implement a special SELECT_DRIVE routine that is |
| 16 | called before the IDE driver performs its own SELECT_DRIVE. Our code |
| 17 | recognizes that the SELECT register cannot be modified without also |
| 18 | writing a command. It send an IDLE_IMMEDIATE command on selecting a |
| 19 | drive. The function also prevents drive select to the slave drive |
| 20 | since there can be only one. The awkward part is that the IDE driver, |
| 21 | even though we have a select procedure, also attempts to change the |
| 22 | drive by writing directly the SELECT register. This attempt is |
| 23 | explicitly blocked by the OUTB function--not pretty, but effective. |
| 24 | |
| 25 | The lack of interrupts is a more serious problem. Even though the CF |
| 26 | card is fast when compared to a normal IDE device, we don't know that |
| 27 | the CF is really flash. A user could use one of the very small hard |
| 28 | drives being shipped with a CF interface. The IDE code includes a |
| 29 | check for interfaces that lack an IRQ. In these cases, submitting a |
| 30 | command to the IDE controller is followed by a call to poll for |
| 31 | completion. If the device isn't immediately ready, it schedules a |
| 32 | timer to poll again later. |