1 /* SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0-only */ 2 /* 3 * Copyright (c) 2014-2016, The Linux Foundation. All rights reserved. 4 */ 5 6 #ifndef _UFS_QUIRKS_H_ 7 #define _UFS_QUIRKS_H_ 8 9 /* return true if s1 is a prefix of s2 */ 10 #define STR_PRFX_EQUAL(s1, s2) !strncmp(s1, s2, strlen(s1)) 11 12 #define UFS_ANY_VENDOR 0xFFFF 13 #define UFS_ANY_MODEL "ANY_MODEL" 14 15 #define UFS_VENDOR_TOSHIBA 0x198 16 #define UFS_VENDOR_SAMSUNG 0x1CE 17 #define UFS_VENDOR_SKHYNIX 0x1AD 18 19 /** 20 * ufs_dev_fix - ufs device quirk info 21 * @card: ufs card details 22 * @quirk: device quirk 23 */ 24 struct ufs_dev_fix { 25 struct ufs_dev_desc card; 26 unsigned int quirk; 27 }; 28 29 #define END_FIX { { 0 }, 0 } 30 31 /* add specific device quirk */ 32 #define UFS_FIX(_vendor, _model, _quirk) { \ 33 .card.wmanufacturerid = (_vendor),\ 34 .card.model = (_model), \ 35 .quirk = (_quirk), \ 36 } 37 38 /* 39 * Some vendor's UFS device sends back to back NACs for the DL data frames 40 * causing the host controller to raise the DFES error status. Sometimes 41 * such UFS devices send back to back NAC without waiting for new 42 * retransmitted DL frame from the host and in such cases it might be possible 43 * the Host UniPro goes into bad state without raising the DFES error 44 * interrupt. If this happens then all the pending commands would timeout 45 * only after respective SW command (which is generally too large). 46 * 47 * We can workaround such device behaviour like this: 48 * - As soon as SW sees the DL NAC error, it should schedule the error handler 49 * - Error handler would sleep for 50ms to see if there are any fatal errors 50 * raised by UFS controller. 51 * - If there are fatal errors then SW does normal error recovery. 52 * - If there are no fatal errors then SW sends the NOP command to device 53 * to check if link is alive. 54 * - If NOP command times out, SW does normal error recovery 55 * - If NOP command succeed, skip the error handling. 56 * 57 * If DL NAC error is seen multiple times with some vendor's UFS devices then 58 * enable this quirk to initiate quick error recovery and also silence related 59 * error logs to reduce spamming of kernel logs. 60 */ 61 #define UFS_DEVICE_QUIRK_RECOVERY_FROM_DL_NAC_ERRORS (1 << 2) 62 63 /* 64 * Few Toshiba UFS device models advertise RX_MIN_ACTIVATETIME_CAPABILITY as 65 * 600us which may not be enough for reliable hibern8 exit hardware sequence 66 * from UFS device. 67 * To workaround this issue, host should set its PA_TACTIVATE time to 1ms even 68 * if device advertises RX_MIN_ACTIVATETIME_CAPABILITY less than 1ms. 69 */ 70 #define UFS_DEVICE_QUIRK_PA_TACTIVATE (1 << 4) 71 72 /* 73 * It seems some UFS devices may keep drawing more than sleep current 74 * (atleast for 500us) from UFS rails (especially from VCCQ rail). 75 * To avoid this situation, add 2ms delay before putting these UFS 76 * rails in LPM mode. 77 */ 78 #define UFS_DEVICE_QUIRK_DELAY_BEFORE_LPM (1 << 6) 79 80 /* 81 * Some UFS devices require host PA_TACTIVATE to be lower than device 82 * PA_TACTIVATE, enabling this quirk ensure this. 83 */ 84 #define UFS_DEVICE_QUIRK_HOST_PA_TACTIVATE (1 << 7) 85 86 /* 87 * The max. value PA_SaveConfigTime is 250 (10us) but this is not enough for 88 * some vendors. 89 * Gear switch from PWM to HS may fail even with this max. PA_SaveConfigTime. 90 * Gear switch can be issued by host controller as an error recovery and any 91 * software delay will not help on this case so we need to increase 92 * PA_SaveConfigTime to >32us as per vendor recommendation. 93 */ 94 #define UFS_DEVICE_QUIRK_HOST_PA_SAVECONFIGTIME (1 << 8) 95 96 /* 97 * Some UFS devices require VS_DebugSaveConfigTime is 0x10, 98 * enabling this quirk ensure this. 99 */ 100 #define UFS_DEVICE_QUIRK_HOST_VS_DEBUGSAVECONFIGTIME (1 << 9) 101 102 #endif /* UFS_QUIRKS_H_ */ 103