SPI-NOR flash devicetree error int_res==16 EBUSY

Dear Nordic Team,

I found a few similar issues in this forum but nothing that then solved my problem which brought me to the conclusion it might be different here.

I try to add an external SPI-NOR flash (MX25R8035F) to nrf52832 project. I started with the example in zephyr/samples/drivers/spi_flash which is for nrf52840 and changed the dts file as follows:


Here I post the "arduino-spi", I also tried with SPI0 and SPI1, same behavior.

nrf52dk_nrf52832.dts:

aliases {
 ...

 ...
spi-flash0 = &mx25r80;
};

arduino_spi: &spi2 {
status = "okay";
cs-gpios = <&gpio0 20 GPIO_ACTIVE_LOW>;
pinctrl-0 = <&spi2_default>;
pinctrl-1 = <&spi2_sleep>;
pinctrl-names = "default", "sleep";

mx25r80: mx25r8035f@0 {
compatible = "jedec,spi-nor";
label="MX25R80";
reg = <0>;
spi-max-frequency = <33000000>;
size = <0x800000>;
jedec-id = [c2 28 14];
};
};

my code:

const struct device *flash_dev = DEVICE_DT_GET(DT_ALIAS(spi_flash0));

void main(void)
{
    if (!device_is_ready(flash_dev)) {
        printk("%s: device not ready.\n", flash_dev->name);
    }
    ...
}



The problem:
The flash device gets partly  initialized since flash_dev.state.initialized == 1 and partly not since flash_dev.state.init_res==16 (should be 0). That is why device_is_ready() return false.
I see this in the debugger as below:



I see on my oszilloscope that SPI itself is working because I get responses from the external flash, so I can't be doing everything wrong. But the write and read process is working incorrectly, meaning that if I write something to a location, I get a wrong response when reading again.

Do you have any ideas what the problem could be? 
I also tried to research what EBUSY in the devicetree means in general and found that it often has to do with wrong pins. However, this can't be the case here, since my SPI is working, do you agree?

Thank you very much in advance,
Joanna

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  • Hi Joanna

    Due to the Easter holiday we are rather short on staff, so delayed replies must be expected. I've not been able to review the screenshots as of yet, but I notice you say that you're sending data with a voltage level of 5V when using the Arduino. The MX25R8035F only seem to support operational voltages up to 3.6V, so are you still using this external flash, or are you using some other board with the Arduino?

    I'll investigate if we're able to view the psdata files somehow on our end. I think you should be able to upload them in a .zip folder here on DevZone.

    Best regards,

    Simon

  • Hi Simon,

    yes, I am still using the  MX25R8035F. I supply it with 3.3V, but the signals the Arduino sends are 5V-level and the reply from the flash is level 3.3V. I am aware that this does not comply to the datasheet, but out of desperation I gave it a try and it works...


    Here are the .psdata files as .zip folder. Let me know, if you can't open them.

    psdata-files.zip

    Regards,
    Joanna


  • Hi 

    Sorry about the late update, but we've been delayed by Easter and myself being sick the last days. And now I need to get a green light from our IT department in order to get the program I need to open the psdata files correctly, as we'd like to take a closer look at these plots. 

    Do you know what the 0xFF commando here does? It seems very strange that the same flash chip doesn't respond to the 9F command with dfferent data from the nRF and the Arduino device.

    Thank you for your patience!

    Simon

Reply
  • Hi 

    Sorry about the late update, but we've been delayed by Easter and myself being sick the last days. And now I need to get a green light from our IT department in order to get the program I need to open the psdata files correctly, as we'd like to take a closer look at these plots. 

    Do you know what the 0xFF commando here does? It seems very strange that the same flash chip doesn't respond to the 9F command with dfferent data from the nRF and the Arduino device.

    Thank you for your patience!

    Simon

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