diff --git a/MAINTAINERS b/MAINTAINERS
index c22d34b11f648e7ef4acd6717e9f777da440f1c4..0df29ce05e5a5bcb7098f1868ce3796ced881e7c 100644
--- a/MAINTAINERS
+++ b/MAINTAINERS
@@ -2567,6 +2567,12 @@ M:	drzeus-mmc@drzeus.cx
 L:	linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org
 S:	Maintained
 
+MULTIMEDIA CARD (MMC) ETC. OVER SPI
+P:	David Brownell
+M:	dbrownell@users.sourceforge.net
+L:	linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org
+S:	Odd fixes
+
 MULTISOUND SOUND DRIVER
 P:	Andrew Veliath
 M:	andrewtv@usa.net
diff --git a/drivers/mmc/host/Kconfig b/drivers/mmc/host/Kconfig
index e23082fe88d0ddebac4921b54631fb75bed935e0..68fb052afd3ee12b548bb46298534325f988d2f6 100644
--- a/drivers/mmc/host/Kconfig
+++ b/drivers/mmc/host/Kconfig
@@ -100,3 +100,16 @@ config MMC_TIFM_SD
           To compile this driver as a module, choose M here: the
 	  module will be called tifm_sd.
 
+config MMC_SPI
+	tristate "MMC/SD over SPI (EXPERIMENTAL)"
+	depends on MMC && SPI_MASTER && !HIGHMEM && EXPERIMENTAL
+	select CRC7
+	select CRC_ITU_T
+	help
+	  Some systems accss MMC/SD cards using a SPI controller instead of
+	  using a "native" MMC/SD controller.  This has a disadvantage of
+	  being relatively high overhead, but a compensating advantage of
+	  working on many systems without dedicated MMC/SD controllers.
+
+	  If unsure, or if your system has no SPI master driver, say N.
+
diff --git a/drivers/mmc/host/Makefile b/drivers/mmc/host/Makefile
index 6685f64345b4d649b16113dae53ec6bb00e21dcb..8dc82ce647b7baa2128f88c3cabffa3bcf8551dc 100644
--- a/drivers/mmc/host/Makefile
+++ b/drivers/mmc/host/Makefile
@@ -15,4 +15,5 @@ obj-$(CONFIG_MMC_AU1X)		+= au1xmmc.o
 obj-$(CONFIG_MMC_OMAP)		+= omap.o
 obj-$(CONFIG_MMC_AT91)		+= at91_mci.o
 obj-$(CONFIG_MMC_TIFM_SD)	+= tifm_sd.o
+obj-$(CONFIG_MMC_SPI)		+= mmc_spi.o
 
diff --git a/drivers/mmc/host/mmc_spi.c b/drivers/mmc/host/mmc_spi.c
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..f30327bba6f68232132c1684b5bbd53495e71d40
--- /dev/null
+++ b/drivers/mmc/host/mmc_spi.c
@@ -0,0 +1,1408 @@
+/*
+ * mmc_spi.c - Access SD/MMC cards through SPI master controllers
+ *
+ * (C) Copyright 2005, Intec Automation,
+ *		Mike Lavender (mike@steroidmicros)
+ * (C) Copyright 2006-2007, David Brownell
+ * (C) Copyright 2007, Axis Communications,
+ *		Hans-Peter Nilsson (hp@axis.com)
+ * (C) Copyright 2007, ATRON electronic GmbH,
+ *		Jan Nikitenko <jan.nikitenko@gmail.com>
+ *
+ *
+ * This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
+ * it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
+ * the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
+ * (at your option) any later version.
+ *
+ * This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
+ * but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
+ * MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the
+ * GNU General Public License for more details.
+ *
+ * You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
+ * along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
+ * Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA.
+ */
+#include <linux/hrtimer.h>
+#include <linux/delay.h>
+#include <linux/blkdev.h>
+#include <linux/dma-mapping.h>
+#include <linux/crc7.h>
+#include <linux/crc-itu-t.h>
+
+#include <linux/mmc/host.h>
+#include <linux/mmc/mmc.h>		/* for R1_SPI_* bit values */
+
+#include <linux/spi/spi.h>
+#include <linux/spi/mmc_spi.h>
+
+#include <asm/unaligned.h>
+
+
+/* NOTES:
+ *
+ * - For now, we won't try to interoperate with a real mmc/sd/sdio
+ *   controller, although some of them do have hardware support for
+ *   SPI protocol.  The main reason for such configs would be mmc-ish
+ *   cards like DataFlash, which don't support that "native" protocol.
+ *
+ *   We don't have a "DataFlash/MMC/SD/SDIO card slot" abstraction to
+ *   switch between driver stacks, and in any case if "native" mode
+ *   is available, it will be faster and hence preferable.
+ *
+ * - MMC depends on a different chipselect management policy than the
+ *   SPI interface currently supports for shared bus segments:  it needs
+ *   to issue multiple spi_message requests with the chipselect active,
+ *   using the results of one message to decide the next one to issue.
+ *
+ *   Pending updates to the programming interface, this driver expects
+ *   that it not share the bus with other drivers (precluding conflicts).
+ *
+ * - We tell the controller to keep the chipselect active from the
+ *   beginning of an mmc_host_ops.request until the end.  So beware
+ *   of SPI controller drivers that mis-handle the cs_change flag!
+ *
+ *   However, many cards seem OK with chipselect flapping up/down
+ *   during that time ... at least on unshared bus segments.
+ */
+
+
+/*
+ * Local protocol constants, internal to data block protocols.
+ */
+
+/* Response tokens used to ack each block written: */
+#define SPI_MMC_RESPONSE_CODE(x)	((x) & 0x1f)
+#define SPI_RESPONSE_ACCEPTED		((2 << 1)|1)
+#define SPI_RESPONSE_CRC_ERR		((5 << 1)|1)
+#define SPI_RESPONSE_WRITE_ERR		((6 << 1)|1)
+
+/* Read and write blocks start with these tokens and end with crc;
+ * on error, read tokens act like a subset of R2_SPI_* values.
+ */
+#define SPI_TOKEN_SINGLE	0xfe	/* single block r/w, multiblock read */
+#define SPI_TOKEN_MULTI_WRITE	0xfc	/* multiblock write */
+#define SPI_TOKEN_STOP_TRAN	0xfd	/* terminate multiblock write */
+
+#define MMC_SPI_BLOCKSIZE	512
+
+
+/* These fixed timeouts come from the latest SD specs, which say to ignore
+ * the CSD values.  The R1B value is for card erase (e.g. the "I forgot the
+ * card's password" scenario); it's mostly applied to STOP_TRANSMISSION after
+ * reads which takes nowhere near that long.  Older cards may be able to use
+ * shorter timeouts ... but why bother?
+ */
+#define readblock_timeout	ktime_set(0, 100 * 1000 * 1000)
+#define writeblock_timeout	ktime_set(0, 250 * 1000 * 1000)
+#define r1b_timeout		ktime_set(3, 0)
+
+
+/****************************************************************************/
+
+/*
+ * Local Data Structures
+ */
+
+/* "scratch" is per-{command,block} data exchanged with the card */
+struct scratch {
+	u8			status[29];
+	u8			data_token;
+	__be16			crc_val;
+};
+
+struct mmc_spi_host {
+	struct mmc_host		*mmc;
+	struct spi_device	*spi;
+
+	unsigned char		power_mode;
+	u16			powerup_msecs;
+
+	struct mmc_spi_platform_data	*pdata;
+
+	/* for bulk data transfers */
+	struct spi_transfer	token, t, crc, early_status;
+	struct spi_message	m;
+
+	/* for status readback */
+	struct spi_transfer	status;
+	struct spi_message	readback;
+
+	/* underlying DMA-aware controller, or null */
+	struct device		*dma_dev;
+
+	/* buffer used for commands and for message "overhead" */
+	struct scratch		*data;
+	dma_addr_t		data_dma;
+
+	/* Specs say to write ones most of the time, even when the card
+	 * has no need to read its input data; and many cards won't care.
+	 * This is our source of those ones.
+	 */
+	void			*ones;
+	dma_addr_t		ones_dma;
+};
+
+
+/****************************************************************************/
+
+/*
+ * MMC-over-SPI protocol glue, used by the MMC stack interface
+ */
+
+static inline int mmc_cs_off(struct mmc_spi_host *host)
+{
+	/* chipselect will always be inactive after setup() */
+	return spi_setup(host->spi);
+}
+
+static int
+mmc_spi_readbytes(struct mmc_spi_host *host, unsigned len)
+{
+	int status;
+
+	if (len > sizeof(*host->data)) {
+		WARN_ON(1);
+		return -EIO;
+	}
+
+	host->status.len = len;
+
+	if (host->dma_dev)
+		dma_sync_single_for_device(host->dma_dev,
+				host->data_dma, sizeof(*host->data),
+				DMA_FROM_DEVICE);
+
+	status = spi_sync(host->spi, &host->readback);
+	if (status == 0)
+		status = host->readback.status;
+
+	if (host->dma_dev)
+		dma_sync_single_for_cpu(host->dma_dev,
+				host->data_dma, sizeof(*host->data),
+				DMA_FROM_DEVICE);
+
+	return status;
+}
+
+static int
+mmc_spi_skip(struct mmc_spi_host *host, ktime_t timeout, unsigned n, u8 byte)
+{
+	u8		*cp = host->data->status;
+
+	timeout = ktime_add(timeout, ktime_get());
+
+	while (1) {
+		int		status;
+		unsigned	i;
+
+		status = mmc_spi_readbytes(host, n);
+		if (status < 0)
+			return status;
+
+		for (i = 0; i < n; i++) {
+			if (cp[i] != byte)
+				return cp[i];
+		}
+
+		/* REVISIT investigate msleep() to avoid busy-wait I/O
+		 * in at least some cases.
+		 */
+		if (ktime_to_ns(ktime_sub(ktime_get(), timeout)) > 0)
+			break;
+	}
+	return -ETIMEDOUT;
+}
+
+static inline int
+mmc_spi_wait_unbusy(struct mmc_spi_host *host, ktime_t timeout)
+{
+	return mmc_spi_skip(host, timeout, sizeof(host->data->status), 0);
+}
+
+static int mmc_spi_readtoken(struct mmc_spi_host *host)
+{
+	return mmc_spi_skip(host, readblock_timeout, 1, 0xff);
+}
+
+
+/*
+ * Note that for SPI, cmd->resp[0] is not the same data as "native" protocol
+ * hosts return!  The low byte holds R1_SPI bits.  The next byte may hold
+ * R2_SPI bits ... for SEND_STATUS, or after data read errors.
+ *
+ * cmd->resp[1] holds any four-byte response, for R3 (READ_OCR) and on
+ * newer cards R7 (IF_COND).
+ */
+
+static char *maptype(struct mmc_command *cmd)
+{
+	switch (mmc_spi_resp_type(cmd)) {
+	case MMC_RSP_SPI_R1:	return "R1";
+	case MMC_RSP_SPI_R1B:	return "R1B";
+	case MMC_RSP_SPI_R2:	return "R2/R5";
+	case MMC_RSP_SPI_R3:	return "R3/R4/R7";
+	default:		return "?";
+	}
+}
+
+/* return zero, else negative errno after setting cmd->error */
+static int mmc_spi_response_get(struct mmc_spi_host *host,
+		struct mmc_command *cmd, int cs_on)
+{
+	u8	*cp = host->data->status;
+	u8	*end = cp + host->t.len;
+	int	value = 0;
+	char	tag[32];
+
+	snprintf(tag, sizeof(tag), "  ... CMD%d response SPI_%s",
+		cmd->opcode, maptype(cmd));
+
+	/* Except for data block reads, the whole response will already
+	 * be stored in the scratch buffer.  It's somewhere after the
+	 * command and the first byte we read after it.  We ignore that
+	 * first byte.  After STOP_TRANSMISSION command it may include
+	 * two data bits, but otherwise it's all ones.
+	 */
+	cp += 8;
+	while (cp < end && *cp == 0xff)
+		cp++;
+
+	/* Data block reads (R1 response types) may need more data... */
+	if (cp == end) {
+		unsigned	i;
+
+		cp = host->data->status;
+
+		/* Card sends N(CR) (== 1..8) bytes of all-ones then one
+		 * status byte ... and we already scanned 2 bytes.
+		 *
+		 * REVISIT block read paths use nasty byte-at-a-time I/O
+		 * so it can always DMA directly into the target buffer.
+		 * It'd probably be better to memcpy() the first chunk and
+		 * avoid extra i/o calls...
+		 */
+		for (i = 2; i < 9; i++) {
+			value = mmc_spi_readbytes(host, 1);
+			if (value < 0)
+				goto done;
+			if (*cp != 0xff)
+				goto checkstatus;
+		}
+		value = -ETIMEDOUT;
+		goto done;
+	}
+
+checkstatus:
+	if (*cp & 0x80) {
+		dev_dbg(&host->spi->dev, "%s: INVALID RESPONSE, %02x\n",
+					tag, *cp);
+		value = -EBADR;
+		goto done;
+	}
+
+	cmd->resp[0] = *cp++;
+	cmd->error = 0;
+
+	/* Status byte: the entire seven-bit R1 response.  */
+	if (cmd->resp[0] != 0) {
+		if ((R1_SPI_PARAMETER | R1_SPI_ADDRESS
+					| R1_SPI_ILLEGAL_COMMAND)
+				& cmd->resp[0])
+			value = -EINVAL;
+		else if (R1_SPI_COM_CRC & cmd->resp[0])
+			value = -EILSEQ;
+		else if ((R1_SPI_ERASE_SEQ | R1_SPI_ERASE_RESET)
+				& cmd->resp[0])
+			value = -EIO;
+		/* else R1_SPI_IDLE, "it's resetting" */
+	}
+
+	switch (mmc_spi_resp_type(cmd)) {
+
+	/* SPI R1B == R1 + busy; STOP_TRANSMISSION (for multiblock reads)
+	 * and less-common stuff like various erase operations.
+	 */
+	case MMC_RSP_SPI_R1B:
+		/* maybe we read all the busy tokens already */
+		while (cp < end && *cp == 0)
+			cp++;
+		if (cp == end)
+			mmc_spi_wait_unbusy(host, r1b_timeout);
+		break;
+
+	/* SPI R2 == R1 + second status byte; SEND_STATUS
+	 * SPI R5 == R1 + data byte; IO_RW_DIRECT
+	 */
+	case MMC_RSP_SPI_R2:
+		cmd->resp[0] |= *cp << 8;
+		break;
+
+	/* SPI R3, R4, or R7 == R1 + 4 bytes */
+	case MMC_RSP_SPI_R3:
+		cmd->resp[1] = be32_to_cpu(get_unaligned((u32 *)cp));
+		break;
+
+	/* SPI R1 == just one status byte */
+	case MMC_RSP_SPI_R1:
+		break;
+
+	default:
+		dev_dbg(&host->spi->dev, "bad response type %04x\n",
+				mmc_spi_resp_type(cmd));
+		if (value >= 0)
+			value = -EINVAL;
+		goto done;
+	}
+
+	if (value < 0)
+		dev_dbg(&host->spi->dev, "%s: resp %04x %08x\n",
+			tag, cmd->resp[0], cmd->resp[1]);
+
+	/* disable chipselect on errors and some success cases */
+	if (value >= 0 && cs_on)
+		return value;
+done:
+	if (value < 0)
+		cmd->error = value;
+	mmc_cs_off(host);
+	return value;
+}
+
+/* Issue command and read its response.
+ * Returns zero on success, negative for error.
+ *
+ * On error, caller must cope with mmc core retry mechanism.  That
+ * means immediate low-level resubmit, which affects the bus lock...
+ */
+static int
+mmc_spi_command_send(struct mmc_spi_host *host,
+		struct mmc_request *mrq,
+		struct mmc_command *cmd, int cs_on)
+{
+	struct scratch		*data = host->data;
+	u8			*cp = data->status;
+	u32			arg = cmd->arg;
+	int			status;
+	struct spi_transfer	*t;
+
+	/* We can handle most commands (except block reads) in one full
+	 * duplex I/O operation before either starting the next transfer
+	 * (data block or command) or else deselecting the card.
+	 *
+	 * First, write 7 bytes:
+	 *  - an all-ones byte to ensure the card is ready
+	 *  - opcode byte (plus start and transmission bits)
+	 *  - four bytes of big-endian argument
+	 *  - crc7 (plus end bit) ... always computed, it's cheap
+	 *
+	 * We init the whole buffer to all-ones, which is what we need
+	 * to write while we're reading (later) response data.
+	 */
+	memset(cp++, 0xff, sizeof(data->status));
+
+	*cp++ = 0x40 | cmd->opcode;
+	*cp++ = (u8)(arg >> 24);
+	*cp++ = (u8)(arg >> 16);
+	*cp++ = (u8)(arg >> 8);
+	*cp++ = (u8)arg;
+	*cp++ = (crc7(0, &data->status[1], 5) << 1) | 0x01;
+
+	/* Then, read up to 13 bytes (while writing all-ones):
+	 *  - N(CR) (== 1..8) bytes of all-ones
+	 *  - status byte (for all response types)
+	 *  - the rest of the response, either:
+	 *      + nothing, for R1 or R1B responses
+	 *	+ second status byte, for R2 responses
+	 *	+ four data bytes, for R3 and R7 responses
+	 *
+	 * Finally, read some more bytes ... in the nice cases we know in
+	 * advance how many, and reading 1 more is always OK:
+	 *  - N(EC) (== 0..N) bytes of all-ones, before deselect/finish
+	 *  - N(RC) (== 1..N) bytes of all-ones, before next command
+	 *  - N(WR) (== 1..N) bytes of all-ones, before data write
+	 *
+	 * So in those cases one full duplex I/O of at most 21 bytes will
+	 * handle the whole command, leaving the card ready to receive a
+	 * data block or new command.  We do that whenever we can, shaving
+	 * CPU and IRQ costs (especially when using DMA or FIFOs).
+	 *
+	 * There are two other cases, where it's not generally practical
+	 * to rely on a single I/O:
+	 *
+	 *  - R1B responses need at least N(EC) bytes of all-zeroes.
+	 *
+	 *    In this case we can *try* to fit it into one I/O, then
+	 *    maybe read more data later.
+	 *
+	 *  - Data block reads are more troublesome, since a variable
+	 *    number of padding bytes precede the token and data.
+	 *      + N(CX) (== 0..8) bytes of all-ones, before CSD or CID
+	 *      + N(AC) (== 1..many) bytes of all-ones
+	 *
+	 *    In this case we currently only have minimal speedups here:
+	 *    when N(CR) == 1 we can avoid I/O in response_get().
+	 */
+	if (cs_on && (mrq->data->flags & MMC_DATA_READ)) {
+		cp += 2;	/* min(N(CR)) + status */
+		/* R1 */
+	} else {
+		cp += 10;	/* max(N(CR)) + status + min(N(RC),N(WR)) */
+		if (cmd->flags & MMC_RSP_SPI_S2)	/* R2/R5 */
+			cp++;
+		else if (cmd->flags & MMC_RSP_SPI_B4)	/* R3/R4/R7 */
+			cp += 4;
+		else if (cmd->flags & MMC_RSP_BUSY)	/* R1B */
+			cp = data->status + sizeof(data->status);
+		/* else:  R1 (most commands) */
+	}
+
+	dev_dbg(&host->spi->dev, "  mmc_spi: CMD%d, resp %s\n",
+		cmd->opcode, maptype(cmd));
+
+	/* send command, leaving chipselect active */
+	spi_message_init(&host->m);
+
+	t = &host->t;
+	memset(t, 0, sizeof(*t));
+	t->tx_buf = t->rx_buf = data->status;
+	t->tx_dma = t->rx_dma = host->data_dma;
+	t->len = cp - data->status;
+	t->cs_change = 1;
+	spi_message_add_tail(t, &host->m);
+
+	if (host->dma_dev) {
+		host->m.is_dma_mapped = 1;
+		dma_sync_single_for_device(host->dma_dev,
+				host->data_dma, sizeof(*host->data),
+				DMA_BIDIRECTIONAL);
+	}
+	status = spi_sync(host->spi, &host->m);
+	if (status == 0)
+		status = host->m.status;
+
+	if (host->dma_dev)
+		dma_sync_single_for_cpu(host->dma_dev,
+				host->data_dma, sizeof(*host->data),
+				DMA_BIDIRECTIONAL);
+	if (status < 0) {
+		dev_dbg(&host->spi->dev, "  ... write returned %d\n", status);
+		cmd->error = status;
+		return status;
+	}
+
+	/* after no-data commands and STOP_TRANSMISSION, chipselect off */
+	return mmc_spi_response_get(host, cmd, cs_on);
+}
+
+/* Build data message with up to four separate transfers.  For TX, we
+ * start by writing the data token.  And in most cases, we finish with
+ * a status transfer.
+ *
+ * We always provide TX data for data and CRC.  The MMC/SD protocol
+ * requires us to write ones; but Linux defaults to writing zeroes;
+ * so we explicitly initialize it to all ones on RX paths.
+ *
+ * We also handle DMA mapping, so the underlying SPI controller does
+ * not need to (re)do it for each message.
+ */
+static void
+mmc_spi_setup_data_message(
+	struct mmc_spi_host	*host,
+	int			multiple,
+	enum dma_data_direction	direction)
+{
+	struct spi_transfer	*t;
+	struct scratch		*scratch = host->data;
+	dma_addr_t		dma = host->data_dma;
+
+	spi_message_init(&host->m);
+	if (dma)
+		host->m.is_dma_mapped = 1;
+
+	/* for reads, readblock() skips 0xff bytes before finding
+	 * the token; for writes, this transfer issues that token.
+	 */
+	if (direction == DMA_TO_DEVICE) {
+		t = &host->token;
+		memset(t, 0, sizeof(*t));
+		t->len = 1;
+		if (multiple)
+			scratch->data_token = SPI_TOKEN_MULTI_WRITE;
+		else
+			scratch->data_token = SPI_TOKEN_SINGLE;
+		t->tx_buf = &scratch->data_token;
+		if (dma)
+			t->tx_dma = dma + offsetof(struct scratch, data_token);
+		spi_message_add_tail(t, &host->m);
+	}
+
+	/* Body of transfer is buffer, then CRC ...
+	 * either TX-only, or RX with TX-ones.
+	 */
+	t = &host->t;
+	memset(t, 0, sizeof(*t));
+	t->tx_buf = host->ones;
+	t->tx_dma = host->ones_dma;
+	/* length and actual buffer info are written later */
+	spi_message_add_tail(t, &host->m);
+
+	t = &host->crc;
+	memset(t, 0, sizeof(*t));
+	t->len = 2;
+	if (direction == DMA_TO_DEVICE) {
+		/* the actual CRC may get written later */
+		t->tx_buf = &scratch->crc_val;
+		if (dma)
+			t->tx_dma = dma + offsetof(struct scratch, crc_val);
+	} else {
+		t->tx_buf = host->ones;
+		t->tx_dma = host->ones_dma;
+		t->rx_buf = &scratch->crc_val;
+		if (dma)
+			t->rx_dma = dma + offsetof(struct scratch, crc_val);
+	}
+	spi_message_add_tail(t, &host->m);
+
+	/*
+	 * A single block read is followed by N(EC) [0+] all-ones bytes
+	 * before deselect ... don't bother.
+	 *
+	 * Multiblock reads are followed by N(AC) [1+] all-ones bytes before
+	 * the next block is read, or a STOP_TRANSMISSION is issued.  We'll
+	 * collect that single byte, so readblock() doesn't need to.
+	 *
+	 * For a write, the one-byte data response follows immediately, then
+	 * come zero or more busy bytes, then N(WR) [1+] all-ones bytes.
+	 * Then single block reads may deselect, and multiblock ones issue
+	 * the next token (next data block, or STOP_TRAN).  We can try to
+	 * minimize I/O ops by using a single read to collect end-of-busy.
+	 */
+	if (multiple || direction == DMA_TO_DEVICE) {
+		t = &host->early_status;
+		memset(t, 0, sizeof(*t));
+		t->len = (direction == DMA_TO_DEVICE)
+				? sizeof(scratch->status)
+				: 1;
+		t->tx_buf = host->ones;
+		t->tx_dma = host->ones_dma;
+		t->rx_buf = scratch->status;
+		if (dma)
+			t->rx_dma = dma + offsetof(struct scratch, status);
+		t->cs_change = 1;
+		spi_message_add_tail(t, &host->m);
+	}
+}
+
+/*
+ * Write one block:
+ *  - caller handled preceding N(WR) [1+] all-ones bytes
+ *  - data block
+ *	+ token
+ *	+ data bytes
+ *	+ crc16
+ *  - an all-ones byte ... card writes a data-response byte
+ *  - followed by N(EC) [0+] all-ones bytes, card writes zero/'busy'
+ *
+ * Return negative errno, else success.
+ */
+static int
+mmc_spi_writeblock(struct mmc_spi_host *host, struct spi_transfer *t)
+{
+	struct spi_device	*spi = host->spi;
+	int			status, i;
+	struct scratch		*scratch = host->data;
+
+	if (host->mmc->use_spi_crc)
+		scratch->crc_val = cpu_to_be16(
+				crc_itu_t(0, t->tx_buf, t->len));
+	if (host->dma_dev)
+		dma_sync_single_for_device(host->dma_dev,
+				host->data_dma, sizeof(*scratch),
+				DMA_BIDIRECTIONAL);
+
+	status = spi_sync(spi, &host->m);
+	if (status == 0)
+		status = host->m.status;
+
+	if (status != 0) {
+		dev_dbg(&spi->dev, "write error (%d)\n", status);
+		return status;
+	}
+
+	if (host->dma_dev)
+		dma_sync_single_for_cpu(host->dma_dev,
+				host->data_dma, sizeof(*scratch),
+				DMA_BIDIRECTIONAL);
+
+	/*
+	 * Get the transmission data-response reply.  It must follow
+	 * immediately after the data block we transferred.  This reply
+	 * doesn't necessarily tell whether the write operation succeeded;
+	 * it just says if the transmission was ok and whether *earlier*
+	 * writes succeeded; see the standard.
+	 */
+	switch (SPI_MMC_RESPONSE_CODE(scratch->status[0])) {
+	case SPI_RESPONSE_ACCEPTED:
+		status = 0;
+		break;
+	case SPI_RESPONSE_CRC_ERR:
+		/* host shall then issue MMC_STOP_TRANSMISSION */
+		status = -EILSEQ;
+		break;
+	case SPI_RESPONSE_WRITE_ERR:
+		/* host shall then issue MMC_STOP_TRANSMISSION,
+		 * and should MMC_SEND_STATUS to sort it out
+		 */
+		status = -EIO;
+		break;
+	default:
+		status = -EPROTO;
+		break;
+	}
+	if (status != 0) {
+		dev_dbg(&spi->dev, "write error %02x (%d)\n",
+			scratch->status[0], status);
+		return status;
+	}
+
+	t->tx_buf += t->len;
+	if (host->dma_dev)
+		t->tx_dma += t->len;
+
+	/* Return when not busy.  If we didn't collect that status yet,
+	 * we'll need some more I/O.
+	 */
+	for (i = 1; i < sizeof(scratch->status); i++) {
+		if (scratch->status[i] != 0)
+			return 0;
+	}
+	return mmc_spi_wait_unbusy(host, writeblock_timeout);
+}
+
+/*
+ * Read one block:
+ *  - skip leading all-ones bytes ... either
+ *      + N(AC) [1..f(clock,CSD)] usually, else
+ *      + N(CX) [0..8] when reading CSD or CID
+ *  - data block
+ *	+ token ... if error token, no data or crc
+ *	+ data bytes
+ *	+ crc16
+ *
+ * After single block reads, we're done; N(EC) [0+] all-ones bytes follow
+ * before dropping chipselect.
+ *
+ * For multiblock reads, caller either reads the next block or issues a
+ * STOP_TRANSMISSION command.
+ */
+static int
+mmc_spi_readblock(struct mmc_spi_host *host, struct spi_transfer *t)
+{
+	struct spi_device	*spi = host->spi;
+	int			status;
+	struct scratch		*scratch = host->data;
+
+	/* At least one SD card sends an all-zeroes byte when N(CX)
+	 * applies, before the all-ones bytes ... just cope with that.
+	 */
+	status = mmc_spi_readbytes(host, 1);
+	if (status < 0)
+		return status;
+	status = scratch->status[0];
+	if (status == 0xff || status == 0)
+		status = mmc_spi_readtoken(host);
+
+	if (status == SPI_TOKEN_SINGLE) {
+		if (host->dma_dev) {
+			dma_sync_single_for_device(host->dma_dev,
+					host->data_dma, sizeof(*scratch),
+					DMA_BIDIRECTIONAL);
+			dma_sync_single_for_device(host->dma_dev,
+					t->rx_dma, t->len,
+					DMA_FROM_DEVICE);
+		}
+
+		status = spi_sync(spi, &host->m);
+		if (status == 0)
+			status = host->m.status;
+
+		if (host->dma_dev) {
+			dma_sync_single_for_cpu(host->dma_dev,
+					host->data_dma, sizeof(*scratch),
+					DMA_BIDIRECTIONAL);
+			dma_sync_single_for_cpu(host->dma_dev,
+					t->rx_dma, t->len,
+					DMA_FROM_DEVICE);
+		}
+
+	} else {
+		dev_dbg(&spi->dev, "read error %02x (%d)\n", status, status);
+
+		/* we've read extra garbage, timed out, etc */
+		if (status < 0)
+			return status;
+
+		/* low four bits are an R2 subset, fifth seems to be
+		 * vendor specific ... map them all to generic error..
+		 */
+		return -EIO;
+	}
+
+	if (host->mmc->use_spi_crc) {
+		u16 crc = crc_itu_t(0, t->rx_buf, t->len);
+
+		be16_to_cpus(&scratch->crc_val);
+		if (scratch->crc_val != crc) {
+			dev_dbg(&spi->dev, "read - crc error: crc_val=0x%04x, "
+					"computed=0x%04x len=%d\n",
+					scratch->crc_val, crc, t->len);
+			return -EILSEQ;
+		}
+	}
+
+	t->rx_buf += t->len;
+	if (host->dma_dev)
+		t->rx_dma += t->len;
+
+	return 0;
+}
+
+/*
+ * An MMC/SD data stage includes one or more blocks, optional CRCs,
+ * and inline handshaking.  That handhaking makes it unlike most
+ * other SPI protocol stacks.
+ */
+static void
+mmc_spi_data_do(struct mmc_spi_host *host, struct mmc_command *cmd,
+		struct mmc_data *data, u32 blk_size)
+{
+	struct spi_device	*spi = host->spi;
+	struct device		*dma_dev = host->dma_dev;
+	struct spi_transfer	*t;
+	enum dma_data_direction	direction;
+	struct scatterlist	*sg;
+	unsigned		n_sg;
+	int			multiple = (data->blocks > 1);
+
+	if (data->flags & MMC_DATA_READ)
+		direction = DMA_FROM_DEVICE;
+	else
+		direction = DMA_TO_DEVICE;
+	mmc_spi_setup_data_message(host, multiple, direction);
+	t = &host->t;
+
+	/* Handle scatterlist segments one at a time, with synch for
+	 * each 512-byte block
+	 */
+	for (sg = data->sg, n_sg = data->sg_len; n_sg; n_sg--, sg++) {
+		int			status = 0;
+		dma_addr_t		dma_addr = 0;
+		void			*kmap_addr;
+		unsigned		length = sg->length;
+		enum dma_data_direction	dir = direction;
+
+		/* set up dma mapping for controller drivers that might
+		 * use DMA ... though they may fall back to PIO
+		 */
+		if (dma_dev) {
+			/* never invalidate whole *shared* pages ... */
+			if ((sg->offset != 0 || length != PAGE_SIZE)
+					&& dir == DMA_FROM_DEVICE)
+				dir = DMA_BIDIRECTIONAL;
+
+			dma_addr = dma_map_page(dma_dev, sg->page, 0,
+						PAGE_SIZE, dir);
+			if (direction == DMA_TO_DEVICE)
+				t->tx_dma = dma_addr + sg->offset;
+			else
+				t->rx_dma = dma_addr + sg->offset;
+		}
+
+		/* allow pio too; we don't allow highmem */
+		kmap_addr = kmap(sg->page);
+		if (direction == DMA_TO_DEVICE)
+			t->tx_buf = kmap_addr + sg->offset;
+		else
+			t->rx_buf = kmap_addr + sg->offset;
+
+		/* transfer each block, and update request status */
+		while (length) {
+			t->len = min(length, blk_size);
+
+			dev_dbg(&host->spi->dev,
+				"    mmc_spi: %s block, %d bytes\n",
+				(direction == DMA_TO_DEVICE)
+				? "write"
+				: "read",
+				t->len);
+
+			if (direction == DMA_TO_DEVICE)
+				status = mmc_spi_writeblock(host, t);
+			else
+				status = mmc_spi_readblock(host, t);
+			if (status < 0)
+				break;
+
+			data->bytes_xfered += t->len;
+			length -= t->len;
+
+			if (!multiple)
+				break;
+		}
+
+		/* discard mappings */
+		if (direction == DMA_FROM_DEVICE)
+			flush_kernel_dcache_page(sg->page);
+		kunmap(sg->page);
+		if (dma_dev)
+			dma_unmap_page(dma_dev, dma_addr, PAGE_SIZE, dir);
+
+		if (status < 0) {
+			data->error = status;
+			dev_dbg(&spi->dev, "%s status %d\n",
+				(direction == DMA_TO_DEVICE)
+					? "write" : "read",
+				status);
+			break;
+		}
+	}
+
+	/* NOTE some docs describe an MMC-only SET_BLOCK_COUNT (CMD23) that
+	 * can be issued before multiblock writes.  Unlike its more widely
+	 * documented analogue for SD cards (SET_WR_BLK_ERASE_COUNT, ACMD23),
+	 * that can affect the STOP_TRAN logic.   Complete (and current)
+	 * MMC specs should sort that out before Linux starts using CMD23.
+	 */
+	if (direction == DMA_TO_DEVICE && multiple) {
+		struct scratch	*scratch = host->data;
+		int		tmp;
+		const unsigned	statlen = sizeof(scratch->status);
+
+		dev_dbg(&spi->dev, "    mmc_spi: STOP_TRAN\n");
+
+		/* Tweak the per-block message we set up earlier by morphing
+		 * it to hold single buffer with the token followed by some
+		 * all-ones bytes ... skip N(BR) (0..1), scan the rest for
+		 * "not busy any longer" status, and leave chip selected.
+		 */
+		INIT_LIST_HEAD(&host->m.transfers);
+		list_add(&host->early_status.transfer_list,
+				&host->m.transfers);
+
+		memset(scratch->status, 0xff, statlen);
+		scratch->status[0] = SPI_TOKEN_STOP_TRAN;
+
+		host->early_status.tx_buf = host->early_status.rx_buf;
+		host->early_status.tx_dma = host->early_status.rx_dma;
+		host->early_status.len = statlen;
+
+		if (host->dma_dev)
+			dma_sync_single_for_device(host->dma_dev,
+					host->data_dma, sizeof(*scratch),
+					DMA_BIDIRECTIONAL);
+
+		tmp = spi_sync(spi, &host->m);
+		if (tmp == 0)
+			tmp = host->m.status;
+
+		if (host->dma_dev)
+			dma_sync_single_for_cpu(host->dma_dev,
+					host->data_dma, sizeof(*scratch),
+					DMA_BIDIRECTIONAL);
+
+		if (tmp < 0) {
+			if (!data->error)
+				data->error = tmp;
+			return;
+		}
+
+		/* Ideally we collected "not busy" status with one I/O,
+		 * avoiding wasteful byte-at-a-time scanning... but more
+		 * I/O is often needed.
+		 */
+		for (tmp = 2; tmp < statlen; tmp++) {
+			if (scratch->status[tmp] != 0)
+				return;
+		}
+		tmp = mmc_spi_wait_unbusy(host, writeblock_timeout);
+		if (tmp < 0 && !data->error)
+			data->error = tmp;
+	}
+}
+
+/****************************************************************************/
+
+/*
+ * MMC driver implementation -- the interface to the MMC stack
+ */
+
+static void mmc_spi_request(struct mmc_host *mmc, struct mmc_request *mrq)
+{
+	struct mmc_spi_host	*host = mmc_priv(mmc);
+	int			status = -EINVAL;
+
+#ifdef DEBUG
+	/* MMC core and layered drivers *MUST* issue SPI-aware commands */
+	{
+		struct mmc_command	*cmd;
+		int			invalid = 0;
+
+		cmd = mrq->cmd;
+		if (!mmc_spi_resp_type(cmd)) {
+			dev_dbg(&host->spi->dev, "bogus command\n");
+			cmd->error = -EINVAL;
+			invalid = 1;
+		}
+
+		cmd = mrq->stop;
+		if (cmd && !mmc_spi_resp_type(cmd)) {
+			dev_dbg(&host->spi->dev, "bogus STOP command\n");
+			cmd->error = -EINVAL;
+			invalid = 1;
+		}
+
+		if (invalid) {
+			dump_stack();
+			mmc_request_done(host->mmc, mrq);
+			return;
+		}
+	}
+#endif
+
+	/* issue command; then optionally data and stop */
+	status = mmc_spi_command_send(host, mrq, mrq->cmd, mrq->data != NULL);
+	if (status == 0 && mrq->data) {
+		mmc_spi_data_do(host, mrq->cmd, mrq->data, mrq->data->blksz);
+		if (mrq->stop)
+			status = mmc_spi_command_send(host, mrq, mrq->stop, 0);
+		else
+			mmc_cs_off(host);
+	}
+
+	mmc_request_done(host->mmc, mrq);
+}
+
+/* See Section 6.4.1, in SD "Simplified Physical Layer Specification 2.0"
+ *
+ * NOTE that here we can't know that the card has just been powered up;
+ * not all MMC/SD sockets support power switching.
+ *
+ * FIXME when the card is still in SPI mode, e.g. from a previous kernel,
+ * this doesn't seem to do the right thing at all...
+ */
+static void mmc_spi_initsequence(struct mmc_spi_host *host)
+{
+	/* Try to be very sure any previous command has completed;
+	 * wait till not-busy, skip debris from any old commands.
+	 */
+	mmc_spi_wait_unbusy(host, r1b_timeout);
+	mmc_spi_readbytes(host, 10);
+
+	/*
+	 * Do a burst with chipselect active-high.  We need to do this to
+	 * meet the requirement of 74 clock cycles with both chipselect
+	 * and CMD (MOSI) high before CMD0 ... after the card has been
+	 * powered up to Vdd(min), and so is ready to take commands.
+	 *
+	 * Some cards are particularly needy of this (e.g. Viking "SD256")
+	 * while most others don't seem to care.
+	 *
+	 * Note that this is one of the places MMC/SD plays games with the
+	 * SPI protocol.  Another is that when chipselect is released while
+	 * the card returns BUSY status, the clock must issue several cycles
+	 * with chipselect high before the card will stop driving its output.
+	 */
+	host->spi->mode |= SPI_CS_HIGH;
+	if (spi_setup(host->spi) != 0) {
+		/* Just warn; most cards work without it. */
+		dev_warn(&host->spi->dev,
+				"can't change chip-select polarity\n");
+		host->spi->mode &= ~SPI_CS_HIGH;
+	} else {
+		mmc_spi_readbytes(host, 18);
+
+		host->spi->mode &= ~SPI_CS_HIGH;
+		if (spi_setup(host->spi) != 0) {
+			/* Wot, we can't get the same setup we had before? */
+			dev_err(&host->spi->dev,
+					"can't restore chip-select polarity\n");
+		}
+	}
+}
+
+static char *mmc_powerstring(u8 power_mode)
+{
+	switch (power_mode) {
+	case MMC_POWER_OFF: return "off";
+	case MMC_POWER_UP:  return "up";
+	case MMC_POWER_ON:  return "on";
+	}
+	return "?";
+}
+
+static void mmc_spi_set_ios(struct mmc_host *mmc, struct mmc_ios *ios)
+{
+	struct mmc_spi_host *host = mmc_priv(mmc);
+
+	if (host->power_mode != ios->power_mode) {
+		int		canpower;
+
+		canpower = host->pdata && host->pdata->setpower;
+
+		dev_dbg(&host->spi->dev, "mmc_spi: power %s (%d)%s\n",
+				mmc_powerstring(ios->power_mode),
+				ios->vdd,
+				canpower ? ", can switch" : "");
+
+		/* switch power on/off if possible, accounting for
+		 * max 250msec powerup time if needed.
+		 */
+		if (canpower) {
+			switch (ios->power_mode) {
+			case MMC_POWER_OFF:
+			case MMC_POWER_UP:
+				host->pdata->setpower(&host->spi->dev,
+						ios->vdd);
+				if (ios->power_mode == MMC_POWER_UP)
+					msleep(host->powerup_msecs);
+			}
+		}
+
+		/* See 6.4.1 in the simplified SD card physical spec 2.0 */
+		if (ios->power_mode == MMC_POWER_ON)
+			mmc_spi_initsequence(host);
+
+		/* If powering down, ground all card inputs to avoid power
+		 * delivery from data lines!  On a shared SPI bus, this
+		 * will probably be temporary; 6.4.2 of the simplified SD
+		 * spec says this must last at least 1msec.
+		 *
+		 *   - Clock low means CPOL 0, e.g. mode 0
+		 *   - MOSI low comes from writing zero
+		 *   - Chipselect is usually active low...
+		 */
+		if (canpower && ios->power_mode == MMC_POWER_OFF) {
+			int mres;
+
+			host->spi->mode &= ~(SPI_CPOL|SPI_CPHA);
+			mres = spi_setup(host->spi);
+			if (mres < 0)
+				dev_dbg(&host->spi->dev,
+					"switch to SPI mode 0 failed\n");
+
+			if (spi_w8r8(host->spi, 0x00) < 0)
+				dev_dbg(&host->spi->dev,
+					"put spi signals to low failed\n");
+
+			/*
+			 * Now clock should be low due to spi mode 0;
+			 * MOSI should be low because of written 0x00;
+			 * chipselect should be low (it is active low)
+			 * power supply is off, so now MMC is off too!
+			 *
+			 * FIXME no, chipselect can be high since the
+			 * device is inactive and SPI_CS_HIGH is clear...
+			 */
+			msleep(10);
+			if (mres == 0) {
+				host->spi->mode |= (SPI_CPOL|SPI_CPHA);
+				mres = spi_setup(host->spi);
+				if (mres < 0)
+					dev_dbg(&host->spi->dev,
+						"switch back to SPI mode 3"
+						" failed\n");
+			}
+		}
+
+		host->power_mode = ios->power_mode;
+	}
+
+	if (host->spi->max_speed_hz != ios->clock && ios->clock != 0) {
+		int		status;
+
+		host->spi->max_speed_hz = ios->clock;
+		status = spi_setup(host->spi);
+		dev_dbg(&host->spi->dev,
+			"mmc_spi:  clock to %d Hz, %d\n",
+			host->spi->max_speed_hz, status);
+	}
+}
+
+static int mmc_spi_get_ro(struct mmc_host *mmc)
+{
+	struct mmc_spi_host *host = mmc_priv(mmc);
+
+	if (host->pdata && host->pdata->get_ro)
+		return host->pdata->get_ro(mmc->parent);
+	/* board doesn't support read only detection; assume writeable */
+	return 0;
+}
+
+
+static const struct mmc_host_ops mmc_spi_ops = {
+	.request	= mmc_spi_request,
+	.set_ios	= mmc_spi_set_ios,
+	.get_ro		= mmc_spi_get_ro,
+};
+
+
+/****************************************************************************/
+
+/*
+ * SPI driver implementation
+ */
+
+static irqreturn_t
+mmc_spi_detect_irq(int irq, void *mmc)
+{
+	struct mmc_spi_host *host = mmc_priv(mmc);
+	u16 delay_msec = max(host->pdata->detect_delay, (u16)100);
+
+	mmc_detect_change(mmc, msecs_to_jiffies(delay_msec));
+	return IRQ_HANDLED;
+}
+
+static int mmc_spi_probe(struct spi_device *spi)
+{
+	void			*ones;
+	struct mmc_host		*mmc;
+	struct mmc_spi_host	*host;
+	int			status;
+
+	/* MMC and SD specs only seem to care that sampling is on the
+	 * rising edge ... meaning SPI modes 0 or 3.  So either SPI mode
+	 * should be legit.  We'll use mode 0 since it seems to be a
+	 * bit less troublesome on some hardware ... unclear why.
+	 */
+	spi->mode = SPI_MODE_0;
+	spi->bits_per_word = 8;
+
+	status = spi_setup(spi);
+	if (status < 0) {
+		dev_dbg(&spi->dev, "needs SPI mode %02x, %d KHz; %d\n",
+				spi->mode, spi->max_speed_hz / 1000,
+				status);
+		return status;
+	}
+
+	/* We can use the bus safely iff nobody else will interfere with
+	 * us.  That is, either we have the experimental exclusive access
+	 * primitives ... or else there's nobody to share it with.
+	 */
+	if (spi->master->num_chipselect > 1) {
+		struct device	*parent = spi->dev.parent;
+
+		/* If there are multiple devices on this bus, we
+		 * can't proceed.
+		 */
+		spin_lock(&parent->klist_children.k_lock);
+		if (parent->klist_children.k_list.next
+				!= parent->klist_children.k_list.prev)
+			status = -EMLINK;
+		else
+			status = 0;
+		spin_unlock(&parent->klist_children.k_lock);
+		if (status < 0) {
+			dev_err(&spi->dev, "can't share SPI bus\n");
+			return status;
+		}
+
+		/* REVISIT we can't guarantee another device won't
+		 * be added later.  It's uncommon though ... for now,
+		 * work as if this is safe.
+		 */
+		dev_warn(&spi->dev, "ASSUMING unshared SPI bus!\n");
+	}
+
+	/* We need a supply of ones to transmit.  This is the only time
+	 * the CPU touches these, so cache coherency isn't a concern.
+	 *
+	 * NOTE if many systems use more than one MMC-over-SPI connector
+	 * it'd save some memory to share this.  That's evidently rare.
+	 */
+	status = -ENOMEM;
+	ones = kmalloc(MMC_SPI_BLOCKSIZE, GFP_KERNEL);
+	if (!ones)
+		goto nomem;
+	memset(ones, 0xff, MMC_SPI_BLOCKSIZE);
+
+	mmc = mmc_alloc_host(sizeof(*host), &spi->dev);
+	if (!mmc)
+		goto nomem;
+
+	mmc->ops = &mmc_spi_ops;
+	mmc->max_blk_size = MMC_SPI_BLOCKSIZE;
+
+	/* As long as we keep track of the number of successfully
+	 * transmitted blocks, we're good for multiwrite.
+	 */
+	mmc->caps = MMC_CAP_SPI | MMC_CAP_MULTIWRITE;
+
+	/* SPI doesn't need the lowspeed device identification thing for
+	 * MMC or SD cards, since it never comes up in open drain mode.
+	 * That's good; some SPI masters can't handle very low speeds!
+	 *
+	 * However, low speed SDIO cards need not handle over 400 KHz;
+	 * that's the only reason not to use a few MHz for f_min (until
+	 * the upper layer reads the target frequency from the CSD).
+	 */
+	mmc->f_min = 400000;
+	mmc->f_max = spi->max_speed_hz;
+
+	host = mmc_priv(mmc);
+	host->mmc = mmc;
+	host->spi = spi;
+
+	host->ones = ones;
+
+	/* Platform data is used to hook up things like card sensing
+	 * and power switching gpios.
+	 */
+	host->pdata = spi->dev.platform_data;
+	if (host->pdata)
+		mmc->ocr_avail = host->pdata->ocr_mask;
+	if (!mmc->ocr_avail) {
+		dev_warn(&spi->dev, "ASSUMING 3.2-3.4 V slot power\n");
+		mmc->ocr_avail = MMC_VDD_32_33|MMC_VDD_33_34;
+	}
+	if (host->pdata && host->pdata->setpower) {
+		host->powerup_msecs = host->pdata->powerup_msecs;
+		if (!host->powerup_msecs || host->powerup_msecs > 250)
+			host->powerup_msecs = 250;
+	}
+
+	dev_set_drvdata(&spi->dev, mmc);
+
+	/* preallocate dma buffers */
+	host->data = kmalloc(sizeof(*host->data), GFP_KERNEL);
+	if (!host->data)
+		goto fail_nobuf1;
+
+	if (spi->master->cdev.dev->dma_mask) {
+		struct device	*dev = spi->master->cdev.dev;
+
+		host->dma_dev = dev;
+		host->ones_dma = dma_map_single(dev, ones,
+				MMC_SPI_BLOCKSIZE, DMA_TO_DEVICE);
+		host->data_dma = dma_map_single(dev, host->data,
+				sizeof(*host->data), DMA_BIDIRECTIONAL);
+
+		/* REVISIT in theory those map operations can fail... */
+
+		dma_sync_single_for_cpu(host->dma_dev,
+				host->data_dma, sizeof(*host->data),
+				DMA_BIDIRECTIONAL);
+	}
+
+	/* setup message for status/busy readback */
+	spi_message_init(&host->readback);
+	host->readback.is_dma_mapped = (host->dma_dev != NULL);
+
+	spi_message_add_tail(&host->status, &host->readback);
+	host->status.tx_buf = host->ones;
+	host->status.tx_dma = host->ones_dma;
+	host->status.rx_buf = &host->data->status;
+	host->status.rx_dma = host->data_dma + offsetof(struct scratch, status);
+	host->status.cs_change = 1;
+
+	/* register card detect irq */
+	if (host->pdata && host->pdata->init) {
+		status = host->pdata->init(&spi->dev, mmc_spi_detect_irq, mmc);
+		if (status != 0)
+			goto fail_glue_init;
+	}
+
+	status = mmc_add_host(mmc);
+	if (status != 0)
+		goto fail_add_host;
+
+	dev_info(&spi->dev, "SD/MMC host %s%s%s%s\n",
+			mmc->class_dev.bus_id,
+			host->dma_dev ? "" : ", no DMA",
+			(host->pdata && host->pdata->get_ro)
+				? "" : ", no WP",
+			(host->pdata && host->pdata->setpower)
+				? "" : ", no poweroff");
+	return 0;
+
+fail_add_host:
+	mmc_remove_host (mmc);
+fail_glue_init:
+	if (host->dma_dev)
+		dma_unmap_single(host->dma_dev, host->data_dma,
+				sizeof(*host->data), DMA_BIDIRECTIONAL);
+	kfree(host->data);
+
+fail_nobuf1:
+	mmc_free_host(mmc);
+	dev_set_drvdata(&spi->dev, NULL);
+
+nomem:
+	kfree(ones);
+	return status;
+}
+
+
+static int __devexit mmc_spi_remove(struct spi_device *spi)
+{
+	struct mmc_host		*mmc = dev_get_drvdata(&spi->dev);
+	struct mmc_spi_host	*host;
+
+	if (mmc) {
+		host = mmc_priv(mmc);
+
+		/* prevent new mmc_detect_change() calls */
+		if (host->pdata && host->pdata->exit)
+			host->pdata->exit(&spi->dev, mmc);
+
+		mmc_remove_host(mmc);
+
+		if (host->dma_dev) {
+			dma_unmap_single(host->dma_dev, host->ones_dma,
+				MMC_SPI_BLOCKSIZE, DMA_TO_DEVICE);
+			dma_unmap_single(host->dma_dev, host->data_dma,
+				sizeof(*host->data), DMA_BIDIRECTIONAL);
+		}
+
+		kfree(host->data);
+		kfree(host->ones);
+
+		spi->max_speed_hz = mmc->f_max;
+		mmc_free_host(mmc);
+		dev_set_drvdata(&spi->dev, NULL);
+	}
+	return 0;
+}
+
+
+static struct spi_driver mmc_spi_driver = {
+	.driver = {
+		.name =		"mmc_spi",
+		.bus =		&spi_bus_type,
+		.owner =	THIS_MODULE,
+	},
+	.probe =	mmc_spi_probe,
+	.remove =	__devexit_p(mmc_spi_remove),
+};
+
+
+static int __init mmc_spi_init(void)
+{
+	return spi_register_driver(&mmc_spi_driver);
+}
+module_init(mmc_spi_init);
+
+
+static void __exit mmc_spi_exit(void)
+{
+	spi_unregister_driver(&mmc_spi_driver);
+}
+module_exit(mmc_spi_exit);
+
+
+MODULE_AUTHOR("Mike Lavender, David Brownell, "
+		"Hans-Peter Nilsson, Jan Nikitenko");
+MODULE_DESCRIPTION("SPI SD/MMC host driver");
+MODULE_LICENSE("GPL");
diff --git a/include/linux/spi/mmc_spi.h b/include/linux/spi/mmc_spi.h
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..e9bbe3ebd7217c23a9a96bb2f3adfe6f536914f5
--- /dev/null
+++ b/include/linux/spi/mmc_spi.h
@@ -0,0 +1,33 @@
+#ifndef __LINUX_SPI_MMC_SPI_H
+#define __LINUX_SPI_MMC_SPI_H
+
+struct device;
+struct mmc_host;
+
+/* Put this in platform_data of a device being used to manage an MMC/SD
+ * card slot.  (Modeled after PXA mmc glue; see that for usage examples.)
+ *
+ * REVISIT This is not a spi-specific notion.  Any card slot should be
+ * able to handle it.  If the MMC core doesn't adopt this kind of notion,
+ * switch the "struct device *" parameters over to "struct spi_device *".
+ */
+struct mmc_spi_platform_data {
+	/* driver activation and (optional) card detect irq hookup */
+	int (*init)(struct device *,
+		irqreturn_t (*)(int, void *),
+		void *);
+	void (*exit)(struct device *, void *);
+
+	/* sense switch on sd cards */
+	int (*get_ro)(struct device *);
+
+	/* how long to debounce card detect, in msecs */
+	u16 detect_delay;
+
+	/* power management */
+	u16 powerup_msecs;		/* delay of up to 250 msec */
+	u32 ocr_mask;			/* available voltages */
+	void (*setpower)(struct device *, unsigned int maskval);
+};
+
+#endif /* __LINUX_SPI_MMC_SPI_H */