On Fri, 13 Feb 2009 17:47:39 +0300 Anton Vorontsov <avoront...@ru.mvista.com> wrote:
> @@ -831,7 +832,12 @@ static void sdhci_prepare_data(struct sdhci_host *host, > struct mmc_data *data) > sdhci_set_transfer_irqs(host); > > /* We do not handle DMA boundaries, so set it to max (512 KiB) */ > - sdhci_writew(host, SDHCI_MAKE_BLKSZ(7, data->blksz), SDHCI_BLOCK_SIZE); > + if (host->quirks & SDHCI_QUIRK_MAX_BLK_SZ_4096) > + blksz = data->blksz; > + else > + blksz = SDHCI_MAKE_BLKSZ(7, data->blksz); > + > + sdhci_writew(host, blksz, SDHCI_BLOCK_SIZE); > sdhci_writew(host, data->blocks, SDHCI_BLOCK_COUNT); > } > Hmm.. I seem to have overlooked this part previously. I guess they've basically stripped out the DMA boundary stuff and used the bits for other things? At this point I'm leaning more towards simply not supporting their extended block size. After all, is it ever used? Rgds -- -- Pierre Ossman WARNING: This correspondence is being monitored by the Swedish government. Make sure your server uses encryption for SMTP traffic and consider using PGP for end-to-end encryption.
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