2022-03-09 13:13:19

by Oleksij Rempel

[permalink] [raw]
Subject: net: asix: best way to handle orphan PHYs

Hello all,

I have ASIX based USB Ethernet adapter with two PHYs: internal and
external. The internal PHY is enabled by default and there seems to be
no way to disable internal PHY on the MAC level without affecting the
external PHY.

What is the preferred method to suspend internal PHY?
Currently I have following options:
- suspend PHY in the probe function of the PHY driver
- get the phydev in the MAC driver and call phy_suspend()
- whisper magic numbers from the MAC driver directly this the MDIO bus.

Are there other options?

Regards,
Oleksij
--
Pengutronix e.K. | |
Steuerwalder Str. 21 | http://www.pengutronix.de/ |
31137 Hildesheim, Germany | Phone: +49-5121-206917-0 |
Amtsgericht Hildesheim, HRA 2686 | Fax: +49-5121-206917-5555 |


2022-03-09 15:31:07

by Andrew Lunn

[permalink] [raw]
Subject: Re: net: asix: best way to handle orphan PHYs

On Wed, Mar 09, 2022 at 01:18:35PM +0100, Oleksij Rempel wrote:
> Hello all,
>
> I have ASIX based USB Ethernet adapter with two PHYs: internal and
> external. The internal PHY is enabled by default and there seems to be
> no way to disable internal PHY on the MAC level without affecting the
> external PHY.
>
> What is the preferred method to suspend internal PHY?
> Currently I have following options:
> - suspend PHY in the probe function of the PHY driver
> - get the phydev in the MAC driver and call phy_suspend()
> - whisper magic numbers from the MAC driver directly this the MDIO bus.
>
> Are there other options?

Hi Oleksij

Can you unique identity this device? Does it have a custom VID:PID?

It seems like suspending it in the PHY driver would be messy. How do
you identify the PHY is part of your devices and should be suspended?

Doing it from the MAC driver seems better, your identification
information is close to hand.

I would avoid the magic numbers, since phy_suspend() makes it clear
what you are doing.

Is there one MDIO bus with two devices, or two MDIO busses? If there
are two busses, you could maybe add an extra flag to the bus structure
you pass to mdiobus_register() which indicates it should suspend all
PHY it finds on the bus during enumeration of the bus. Generally we
don't want this, if the PHY has link already we want to keep it, to
avoid the 1.5s delay causes by autoneg. But if we know the PHYs on the
bus are not going to be used, it would be a good point to suspend
them.

Andrew

2022-03-09 16:11:32

by Oleksij Rempel

[permalink] [raw]
Subject: Re: net: asix: best way to handle orphan PHYs

Hi Andrew,

On Wed, Mar 09, 2022 at 02:31:18PM +0100, Andrew Lunn wrote:
> On Wed, Mar 09, 2022 at 01:18:35PM +0100, Oleksij Rempel wrote:
> > Hello all,
> >
> > I have ASIX based USB Ethernet adapter with two PHYs: internal and
> > external. The internal PHY is enabled by default and there seems to be
> > no way to disable internal PHY on the MAC level without affecting the
> > external PHY.
> >
> > What is the preferred method to suspend internal PHY?
> > Currently I have following options:
> > - suspend PHY in the probe function of the PHY driver
> > - get the phydev in the MAC driver and call phy_suspend()
> > - whisper magic numbers from the MAC driver directly this the MDIO bus.
> >
> > Are there other options?
>
> Hi Oleksij
>
> Can you unique identity this device? Does it have a custom VID:PID?

No, currently it has generic VID:PID.

> It seems like suspending it in the PHY driver would be messy. How do
> you identify the PHY is part of your devices and should be suspended?

EEPROM provides information, which PHY address should be used. If
address is 0x10, it is internal PHY. Different parts of ASIX driver use
this logic.

> Doing it from the MAC driver seems better, your identification
> information is close to hand.
>
> I would avoid the magic numbers, since phy_suspend() makes it clear
> what you are doing.
>
> Is there one MDIO bus with two devices, or two MDIO busses? If there
> are two busses, you could maybe add an extra flag to the bus structure
> you pass to mdiobus_register() which indicates it should suspend all
> PHY it finds on the bus during enumeration of the bus. Generally we
> don't want this, if the PHY has link already we want to keep it, to
> avoid the 1.5s delay causes by autoneg. But if we know the PHYs on the
> bus are not going to be used, it would be a good point to suspend
> them.

It is one MDIO bus with multiple PHYs one of them is the internal PHY.
ax88772 seems to provide way to put the PHY to reset from one of MAC
register. See drivers/net/usb/asix_devices.c
ax88772_hw_reset()
if (priv->embd_phy)
...
else
asix_sw_reset(dev, AX_SWRESET_IPPD | AX_SWRESET_PRL,

But this way is not working for the ax88772b variant.

Ok, so if phy_suspend() is the preffered way, I need to get phydev
without attaching it. Correct? Do we already have some helpers to do it?

Regards,
Oleksij
--
Pengutronix e.K. | |
Steuerwalder Str. 21 | http://www.pengutronix.de/ |
31137 Hildesheim, Germany | Phone: +49-5121-206917-0 |
Amtsgericht Hildesheim, HRA 2686 | Fax: +49-5121-206917-5555 |

2022-03-09 16:26:13

by Andrew Lunn

[permalink] [raw]
Subject: Re: net: asix: best way to handle orphan PHYs

> EEPROM provides information, which PHY address should be used. If
> address is 0x10, it is internal PHY. Different parts of ASIX driver use
> this logic.

O.K, so the solution should be generic, unless there are devices with
bad EEPROM content.

> Ok, so if phy_suspend() is the preffered way, I need to get phydev
> without attaching it. Correct? Do we already have some helpers to do it?

mdiobus_get_phy() will get you the phydev is you know the bus and the
address.

Andrew