Since timeouts are only hit when there is a problem in the system, we
don't want to prematurely timeout on a functioning setup. Thus having
low timeouts (in milliseconds) doesn't gain us anything in the production
case, but rather increases likely hood of causing problems where none
otherwise exist.
Signed-off-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
CC: Haavard Skinnemoen <haavard.skinnemoen@atmel.com>
* Copyright (C) 2008 Atmel Corporation
*/
-/* Common parameters */
-#define SPI_FLASH_PROG_TIMEOUT ((10 * CONFIG_SYS_HZ) / 1000)
-#define SPI_FLASH_PAGE_ERASE_TIMEOUT ((50 * CONFIG_SYS_HZ) / 1000)
+/* Common parameters -- kind of high, but they should only occur when there
+ * is a problem (and well your system already is broken), so err on the side
+ * of caution in case we're dealing with slower SPI buses and/or processors.
+ */
+#define SPI_FLASH_PROG_TIMEOUT (2 * CONFIG_SYS_HZ)
+#define SPI_FLASH_PAGE_ERASE_TIMEOUT (5 * CONFIG_SYS_HZ)
#define SPI_FLASH_SECTOR_ERASE_TIMEOUT (10 * CONFIG_SYS_HZ)
/* Common commands */