The reference manual from Rockchip claims this about the BSF (SPI Busy
Flag):
* 0 - SPI is idle or disabled
* 1 - SPI is actively transferring data
The above doesn't quite appear to be true. Specifically I found the
busy bit set when SPI was disabled. Let's change the WARN_ON() so we
only check the busy bit if the controller was enabled.
Signed-off-by: Doug Anderson <dianders@chromium.org>
Signed-off-by: Mark Brown <broonie@kernel.org>
int ret = 0;
struct rockchip_spi *rs = spi_master_get_devdata(master);
- WARN_ON((readl_relaxed(rs->regs + ROCKCHIP_SPI_SR) & SR_BUSY));
+ WARN_ON(readl_relaxed(rs->regs + ROCKCHIP_SPI_SSIENR) &&
+ (readl_relaxed(rs->regs + ROCKCHIP_SPI_SR) & SR_BUSY));
if (!xfer->tx_buf && !xfer->rx_buf) {
dev_err(rs->dev, "No buffer for transfer\n");