Hi Mugunthan, On 21 December 2015 at 11:30, Stefan Roese <s...@denx.de> wrote: > On 21.12.2015 06:37, Mugunthan V N wrote: >> >> On Friday 18 December 2015 11:37 AM, Stefan Roese wrote: >>> >>> On 17.12.2015 17:44, Jagan Teki wrote: >>>> >>>> On 17 December 2015 at 13:26, Mugunthan V N <mugunthan...@ti.com> wrote: >>>>> >>>>> On Thursday 17 December 2015 12:43 PM, Jagan Teki wrote: >>>>>> >>>>>> On 17 December 2015 at 12:33, Mugunthan V N <mugunthan...@ti.com> >>>>>> wrote: >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Jagan >>>>>>> >>>>>>> On Tuesday 27 October 2015 07:24 PM, Mugunthan V N wrote: >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> This patch adds time measurement and throughput calculation for >>>>>>>> sf read/write commands. >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> The output of sf read changes from >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> ---8<--- >>>>>>>> SF: 4096 bytes @ 0x0 Read: OK >>>>>>>> --->8--- >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> to >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> ---8<--- >>>>>>>> SF: 4096 bytes @ 0x0 Read: OK in 6 ms (666 KiB/s) >>>>>>>> --->8--- >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> Signed-off-by: Mugunthan V N <mugunthan...@ti.com> >>>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>> Was it similar to 'sf update' ? please check it once. >>>>>> >>>>> >>>>> sf update out similar but also uses progressive output, in read/write >>>>> case it can't be done. The final throughput measurement is similar on >>>>> both update and read/write. >>>> >>>> >>>> True, that's what if we need a progressed throughput just use 'sf >>>> update' else normal 'sf read/write' It's look not good to me to add >>>> extra code on top of generic commands. What ever we wanted to extend >>>> features let's added it on 'sf update' than sf read/write, Sorry. >>> >>> >>> If I need to measure the time of commands, I use the "time" >>> command ("time sf write ...") by enabling it via CONFIG_CMD_TIME. >>> This provides all the needed information to detect performance >>> changes. >>> >> >> But similar kind of implementations is present for fatload and tftp. So >> I thought having similar performance log for sf read/write will be good >> as well. > > > Yes, I understand. I also find this output helpful. But I'm not sure, > if we should add this timing code to all these functions. Instead > of just using this common time command, if needed. To keep the > code size at a minimum. > > Of course its no big code addition, so I don't really have any bigger > reservations against it.
Why can't just use 'sf update' instead of adding again same code in 'sf read/write' since 'sf update' is doing more than just giving timing performance. Please try! thanks! -- Jagan. _______________________________________________ U-Boot mailing list U-Boot@lists.denx.de http://lists.denx.de/mailman/listinfo/u-boot