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/*
* This file is part of the flashrom project.
*
* This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
* it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
* the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
* (at your option) any later version.
*
* This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
* but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
* MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
* GNU General Public License for more details.
*/
#ifndef __SPI_COMMAND_H__
#define __SPI_COMMAND_H__ 1
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <stdbool.h>
/*
* Modern SPI flashes support dual and quad i/o modes. However, there are
* subtle differences about which parts of a transactions are transferred
* in which mode. The transaction is generally divided into three phases:
* * opcode
* * address
* * data
*
* For each phase, the number of concurrently transferred bits is specified,
* hence we get a triple like
* * 1-1-1
* which tells us that all three phases are transferred in single i/o
* mode. Or, for instance,
* * 1-4-4
* which tells us the opcode is transferred in single i/o mode, but
* the address and data are transferred in quad i/o mode.
*
* There are a few common combinations, often chips support all of them:
* * 1-1-1 single i/o
* * 1-1-2 dual output (for reads, only the flash outputs two bits at once)
* * 1-2-2 dual i/o (both controller and flash can transfer two bits at once)
* * 1-1-4 quad output (for reads, only the flash outputs four bits at once)
* * 1-4-4 quad i/o (both controller and flash can transfer four bits at once)
* * 4-4-4 QPI
* In all modes that transfer the opcode in single i/o, the opcode tells the
* flash what to expect, i.e. how further bytes will be transferred. This
* achieves backwards compatibility with simple SPI controllers. The QPI
* mode, OTOH, is not backwards compatible and usually needs to be entered
* first with a special opcode. In QPI mode, only fast-read instructions
* (w/ dummy cycles) are supported; the number of dummy cycles is often
* configurable.
*
* For dual i/o, MOSI and MISO lines are bidirectional. So this can work
* without any special setup, if both controller and flash are compatible.
*
* For quad i/o, usually the flash's /HOLD and /WP pins are re-purposed, and
* the controller needs additional pins. The pin muxes inside the flash are
* usually controlled by a quad-enable (QE) bit in the status register. This
* is *not* to be confused with entering QPI mode. Quad-enable merely says
* that the pins are available for data transfer.
*/
enum io_mode {
SINGLE_IO_1_1_1,
DUAL_OUT_1_1_2,
DUAL_IO_1_2_2,
QUAD_OUT_1_1_4,
QUAD_IO_1_4_4,
QPI_4_4_4,
};
/* describes properties of a read operation */
struct spi_read_op {
enum io_mode io_mode;
bool native_4ba;
uint8_t opcode;
uint8_t mode_byte; /* optional byte to send after the address, if != 0 */
uint8_t dummy_len; /* dummy bytes (including optional mode byte) */
};
struct spi_command {
enum io_mode io_mode;
size_t opcode_len; /* bytes to write in opcode i/o phase */
size_t address_len; /* bytes to write in address i/o phase */
size_t write_len; /* bytes to write in data i/o phase */
size_t high_z_len; /* dummy bytes to skip in data i/o phase */
size_t read_len; /* bytes to read in data i/o phase */
const unsigned char *writearr;
unsigned char *readarr;
};
#define NULL_SPI_CMD { 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, NULL, NULL, }
static inline size_t spi_write_len(const struct spi_command *const cmd)
{
return cmd->opcode_len + cmd->address_len + cmd->write_len;
}
static inline size_t spi_read_len(const struct spi_command *const cmd)
{
return cmd->high_z_len + cmd->read_len;
}
static inline bool spi_is_empty(const struct spi_command *const cmd)
{
return !spi_write_len(cmd) && !spi_read_len(cmd);
}
int spi_send_command(const struct flashctx *, unsigned int writecnt, unsigned int readcnt, const unsigned char *writearr, unsigned char *readarr);
int spi_send_multicommand(const struct flashctx *, struct spi_command *cmds);
#endif /* !__SPI_COMMAND_H__ */