linux/drivers/mmc
Adrian Hunter 6a11fc47f1 mmc: sd: Fix signal voltage when there is no power cycle
Some boards have SD card connectors where the power rail cannot be switched
off by the driver. However there are various circumstances when a card
might be re-initialized, such as after system resume, warm re-boot, or
error handling. However, a UHS card will continue to use 1.8V signaling
unless it is power cycled.

If the card has not been power cycled, it may still be using 1.8V
signaling. According to the SD spec., the Bus Speed Mode (function group 1)
bits 2 to 4 are zero if the card is initialized at 3.3V signal level. Thus
they can be used to determine if the card has already switched to 1.8V
signaling. Detect that situation and try to initialize a UHS-I (1.8V)
transfer mode.

Tested with the following cards:
  Transcend 4GB High Speed
  Kingston 64GB SDR104
  Lexar by Micron HIGH-PERFORMANCE 300x 16GB DDR50
  SanDisk Ultra 8GB DDR50
  Transcend Ultimate 600x 16GB SDR104
  Transcend Premium 300x 64GB SDR104
  Lexar by Micron Professional 1000x 32GB UHS-II SDR104
  SanDisk Extreme Pro 16GB SDR104

Signed-off-by: Adrian Hunter <adrian.hunter@intel.com>
Tested-by: Zhoujie Wu <zjwu@marvell.com>
Reviewed-by: Shawn Lin <shawn.lin@rock-chips.com>
Signed-off-by: Ulf Hansson <ulf.hansson@linaro.org>
2017-10-30 11:45:57 +01:00
..
core mmc: sd: Fix signal voltage when there is no power cycle 2017-10-30 11:45:57 +01:00
host mmc: dw_mmc: make const arrays mszs static 2017-10-30 11:45:56 +01:00
Kconfig mmc: Kconfig: downgrade CONFIG_MMC_DEBUG for host drivers only 2017-08-30 14:01:34 +02:00
Makefile mmc: Kconfig: downgrade CONFIG_MMC_DEBUG for host drivers only 2017-08-30 14:01:34 +02:00