The spi_transfer parameter delay_usecs allows specifying a time to wait
after transferring a spi message. This wait can be quite long - some
devices, such as some Chrome OS ECs, require as much as 2000 usecs after
a SPI transaction, before it can respond.
(cf: arch/arm64/boot/dts/nvidia/tegra132-norrin.dts:
google,cros-ec-spi-msg-delay = <2000>
)
Blocking a CPU for 2 msecs in a busy loop like this doesn't seem very
friendly to other processes, so change the blocking delay to a sleep
to allow other things to use this CPU (or so it can sleep).
This should be safe to do, because:
(a) A post-transaction delay like this is always specified as a minimum
wait time
(b) A delay here is most likely not very time sensitive, as it occurs
after all data has been transferred
(c) This delay occurs in a non-critical section of the spi worker thread
so where it is safe to sleep.
Two caveats:
1) To avoid penalizing short delays, still use udelay for delays < 10us.
2) usleep_range() very often picks the upper bound, an upper bounds 10%
should be plenty.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Kurtz <djkurtz@chromium.org>
Signed-off-by: Mark Brown <broonie@kernel.org>
if (msg->status != -EINPROGRESS)
goto out;
- if (xfer->delay_usecs)
- udelay(xfer->delay_usecs);
+ if (xfer->delay_usecs) {
+ u16 us = xfer->delay_usecs;
+
+ if (us <= 10)
+ udelay(us);
+ else
+ usleep_range(us, us + DIV_ROUND_UP(us, 10));
+ }
if (xfer->cs_change) {
if (list_is_last(&xfer->transfer_list,