If you don't specify buswidth 2 (16 bits) in the device tree, FSMC doesn't even probe anymore:
fsmc-nand 10100000.flash: FSMC device partno 090, manufacturer 80, revision 00, config 00 nand: device found, Manufacturer ID: 0x20, Chip ID: 0xb1 nand: ST Micro 10100000.flash nand: bus width 8 instead of 16 bits nand: No NAND device found fsmc-nand 10100000.flash: probe with driver fsmc-nand failed with error -22
With this patch to use autodetection unless buswidth is specified, the device is properly detected again:
fsmc-nand 10100000.flash: FSMC device partno 090, manufacturer 80, revision 00, config 00 nand: device found, Manufacturer ID: 0x20, Chip ID: 0xb1 nand: ST Micro NAND 128MiB 1,8V 16-bit nand: 128 MiB, SLC, erase size: 128 KiB, page size: 2048, OOB size: 64 fsmc-nand 10100000.flash: Using 1-bit HW ECC scheme Scanning device for bad blocks
I don't know where or how this happened, I think some change in the nand core.
Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org Signed-off-by: Linus Walleij linus.walleij@linaro.org --- drivers/mtd/nand/raw/fsmc_nand.c | 4 +++- 1 file changed, 3 insertions(+), 1 deletion(-)
diff --git a/drivers/mtd/nand/raw/fsmc_nand.c b/drivers/mtd/nand/raw/fsmc_nand.c index df61db8ce466593d533e617c141a8d2498b3a180..154fd9bea3016b2fa7fa720a41ef9eeed6063fd5 100644 --- a/drivers/mtd/nand/raw/fsmc_nand.c +++ b/drivers/mtd/nand/raw/fsmc_nand.c @@ -879,7 +879,9 @@ static int fsmc_nand_probe_config_dt(struct platform_device *pdev, } else if (val != 1) { dev_err(&pdev->dev, "invalid bank-width %u\n", val); return -EINVAL; - } + }; + } else { + nand->options |= NAND_BUSWIDTH_AUTO; }
if (of_property_read_bool(np, "nand-skip-bbtscan"))
--- base-commit: 8f5ae30d69d7543eee0d70083daf4de8fe15d585 change-id: 20250914-fsmc-bd18e1a8116f
Best regards,
linux-stable-mirror@lists.linaro.org