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Traditionally, Linux unlocks the whole flash because there are legacy devices which has the write protection bits set by default at startup. If you actually want to use the flash protection bits, eg. because there is a read-only part for a bootloader, this automatic unlocking is harmful. If there is no hardware write protection in place (usually called WP#), a startup of the kernel just discards this protection. I've gone through the datasheets of all the flashes (except the Intel ones where I could not find any datasheet nor reference) which supports the unlocking feature and looked how the sector protection was implemented. The currently supported flashes can be divided into the following two categories: (1) block protection bits are non-volatile. Thus they keep their values at reset and power-cycle (2) flashes where these bits are volatile. After reset or power-cycle, the whole memory array is protected. (a) some devices needs a special "Global Unprotect" command, eg. the Atmel AT25DF041A. (b) some devices require to clear the BPn bits in the status register. Due to the reasons above, we do not want to clear the bits for flashes which belong to category (1). Fortunately for us, only Atmel flashes fall into category (2a). Implement the "Global Protect" and "Global Unprotect" commands for these. For (2b) we can use normal block protection locking scheme. This patch adds a new flag to indicate the case (2). Only if we have such a flash we unlock the whole flash array. To be backwards compatible it also introduces a kernel configuration option which restores the complete legacy behavior ("Disable write protection on any flashes"). Hopefully, this will clean up "unlock the entire flash for legacy devices" once and for all. For reference here are the actually commits which introduced the legacy behavior (and extended the behavior to other chip manufacturers): commitf80e521c91
("mtd: m25p80: add support for the Intel/Numonyx {16,32,64}0S33B SPI flash chips") commitea60658a08
("mtd: m25p80: disable SST software protection bits by default") commit7228982442
("[MTD] m25p80: fix bug - ATmel spi flash fails to be copied to") Actually, this might also fix handling of the Atmel AT25DF flashes, because the original commit7228982442
("[MTD] m25p80: fix bug - ATmel spi flash fails to be copied to") was writing a 0 to the status register, which is a "Global Unprotect". This might not be the case in the current code which only handles the block protection bits BP2, BP1 and BP0. Thus, it depends on the current contents of the status register if this unlock actually corresponds to a "Global Unprotect" command. In the worst case, the current code might leave the AT25DF flashes in a write protected state. The commit191f5c2ed4
("mtd: spi-nor: use 16-bit WRR command when QE is set on spansion flashes") changed that behavior by just clearing BP2 to BP0 instead of writing a 0 to the status register. Further, the commit3e0930f109
("mtd: spi-nor: Rework the disabling of block write protection") expanded the unlock_all() feature to ANY flash which supports locking. Signed-off-by: Michael Walle <michael@walle.cc> Signed-off-by: Vignesh Raghavendra <vigneshr@ti.com> Reviewed-by: Tudor Ambarus <tudor.ambarus@microchip.com> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20201203162959.29589-8-michael@walle.cc
74 lines
2.5 KiB
Plaintext
74 lines
2.5 KiB
Plaintext
# SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0-only
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menuconfig MTD_SPI_NOR
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tristate "SPI NOR device support"
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depends on MTD
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depends on MTD && SPI_MASTER
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select SPI_MEM
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help
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This is the framework for the SPI NOR which can be used by the SPI
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device drivers and the SPI NOR device driver.
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if MTD_SPI_NOR
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config MTD_SPI_NOR_USE_4K_SECTORS
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bool "Use small 4096 B erase sectors"
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default y
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help
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Many flash memories support erasing small (4096 B) sectors. Depending
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on the usage this feature may provide performance gain in comparison
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to erasing whole blocks (32/64 KiB).
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Changing a small part of the flash's contents is usually faster with
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small sectors. On the other hand erasing should be faster when using
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64 KiB block instead of 16 × 4 KiB sectors.
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Please note that some tools/drivers/filesystems may not work with
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4096 B erase size (e.g. UBIFS requires 15 KiB as a minimum).
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choice
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prompt "Software write protection at boot"
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default MTD_SPI_NOR_SWP_DISABLE_ON_VOLATILE
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config MTD_SPI_NOR_SWP_DISABLE
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bool "Disable SWP on any flashes (legacy behavior)"
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help
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This option disables the software write protection on any SPI
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flashes at boot-up.
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Depending on the flash chip this either clears the block protection
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bits or does a "Global Unprotect" command.
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Don't use this if you intent to use the software write protection
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of your SPI flash. This is only to keep backwards compatibility.
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config MTD_SPI_NOR_SWP_DISABLE_ON_VOLATILE
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bool "Disable SWP on flashes w/ volatile protection bits"
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help
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Some SPI flashes have volatile block protection bits, ie. after a
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power-up or a reset the flash is software write protected by
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default.
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This option disables the software write protection for these kind
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of flashes while keeping it enabled for any other SPI flashes
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which have non-volatile write protection bits.
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If the software write protection will be disabled depending on
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the flash either the block protection bits are cleared or a
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"Global Unprotect" command is issued.
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If you are unsure, select this option.
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config MTD_SPI_NOR_SWP_KEEP
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bool "Keep software write protection as is"
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help
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If you select this option the software write protection of any
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SPI flashes will not be changed. If your flash is software write
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protected or will be automatically software write protected after
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power-up you have to manually unlock it before you are able to
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write to it.
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endchoice
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source "drivers/mtd/spi-nor/controllers/Kconfig"
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endif # MTD_SPI_NOR
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