As those form factors are typically not runtime removable and as such
expect to always being powered up.
This is an experimental change, and we might revert it if it doens't help
Change-Id: I61187f297866f64589a546352828a0ff8169fa30
Some mSATA adapters seem to have trouble working with Rockbox using our
normal PIO timings; the timing value we use is probably out of spec and
is different to the OF. Switch to using the OF's timings according to
which PIO mode we select. This may not completely resolve problems with
these adapters but allows Rockbox to boot and play audio.
Change-Id: If73210700eb4af01864b373709ee1d15c775fb11
* Editing a bunch of drivers' thread routines in order to
implement a new feature is tedious.
* No matter the number of storage drivers, they share one thread.
No extra threads needed for CONFIG_STORAGE_MULTI.
* Each has an event callback called by the storage thread.
* A default callback is provided to fake sleeping in order to
trigger idle callbacks. It could also do other default processing.
Changes to it will be part of driver code without editing each
one.
* Drivers may sleep and wake as they please as long as they give
a low pulse on their storage bit to ask to go into sleep mode.
Idle callback is called on its behalf and driver immediately put
into sleep mode.
* Drivers may indicate they are to continue receiving events in
USB mode, otherwise they receve nothing until disconnect (they
do receive SYS_USB_DISCONNECTED no matter what).
* Rework a few things to keep the callback implementation sane
and maintainable. ata.c was dreadful with all those bools; make
it a state machine and easier to follow. Remove last_user_activity;
it has no purpose that isn't served by keeping the disk active
through last_disk_activity instead.
* Even-out stack sizes partly because of a lack of a decent place
to define them by driver or SoC or whatever; it doesn't seem too
critical to do that anyway. Many are simply too large while at
least one isn't really adequate. They may be individually
overridden if necessary (figure out where). The thread uses the
greatest size demanded. Newer file code is much more frugal with
stack space. I barely see use crack 50% after idle callbacks
(usually mid-40s). Card insert/eject doesn't demand much.
* No forcing of idle callbacks. If it isn't necessary for one or
more non-disk storage types, it really isn't any more necessary for
disk storage. Besides, it makes the whole thing easier to implement.
Change-Id: Id30c284d82a8af66e47f2cfe104c52cbd8aa7215
- Add description for attributes supported by Samsung HS081HA (80Gb)
and HS161JQ (CEATA 160Gb).
- Show error code when ata_read_smart() fails.
Change-Id: I618cc4f37d139fc90f596e2cf3a751346b27deb6
Adds ata_read_smart() function to storage ATA driver, current
SMART data can be displayed and optionally written to hard
disk using System->Debug menu.
Change-Id: Ie8817bb311d5d956df2f0fbfaf554e2d53e89a93
When using variadic macros there's no need for IF_MD2/IF_MV2 to deal
with function parameters. IF_MD/IF_MV are enough.
Throw in IF_MD_DRV/ID_MV_VOL that return the parameter if MD/MV, or 0
if not.
Change-Id: I7605e6039f3be19cb47110c84dcb3c5516f2c3eb
- ata.h is for users of ata.c
- ata-driver.h is for functions implemented by target-specific code and used by ata.c
- ata-target.h is for target-specific defines
git-svn-id: svn://svn.rockbox.org/rockbox/trunk@31182 a1c6a512-1295-4272-9138-f99709370657
This should be a good first step to allow multi-driver targets, like the Elio (ATA/SD), or the D2 (NAND/SD).
git-svn-id: svn://svn.rockbox.org/rockbox/trunk@18960 a1c6a512-1295-4272-9138-f99709370657
and shutdown and usb (it makes sense here). ata_sleep doesnt get broken
by callbacks.
* allow ata_sleep() at the end of buffering again
* config block uses ata_idle instead of delayed sector when saving
* remove delayed sector code from ata_mmc.c (idle callbacks are not yet
implemented for ata_mmc.c tho)
git-svn-id: svn://svn.rockbox.org/rockbox/trunk@11461 a1c6a512-1295-4272-9138-f99709370657