A global delay parameter has the side effect of being overwritten with 0 if a
single ZL2004 or ZL6105 is instantiated. If other chips supported by the same
driver are in the system, this will result in access errors for those chips.
To solve the problem, keep a per-instance copy of the delay parameter, and do
not change the original parameter.
Signed-off-by: Guenter Roeck <linux@roeck-us.net>
Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org # 3.1+
Acked-by: Jean Delvare <khali@linux-fr.org>
struct zl6100_data {
int id;
ktime_t access; /* chip access time */
+ int delay; /* Delay between chip accesses in uS */
struct pmbus_driver_info info;
};
/* Some chips need a delay between accesses */
static inline void zl6100_wait(const struct zl6100_data *data)
{
- if (delay) {
+ if (data->delay) {
s64 delta = ktime_us_delta(ktime_get(), data->access);
- if (delta < delay)
- udelay(delay - delta);
+ if (delta < data->delay)
+ udelay(data->delay - delta);
}
}
* can be cleared later for additional chips if tests show that it
* is not needed (in other words, better be safe than sorry).
*/
+ data->delay = delay;
if (data->id == zl2004 || data->id == zl6105)
- delay = 0;
+ data->delay = 0;
/*
* Since there was a direct I2C device access above, wait before