Hello.
Currently the link status auto-negotiation is enabled
for any SGMII link with fixed-link DT binding.
The regression was reported:
https://lkml.org/lkml/2015/7/8/865
Apparently not all HW that implements SGMII protocol, generates the
inband status for the auto-negotiation to work.
More details here:
https://lkml.org/lkml/2015/7/10/206
The following patches reverts to the old behavior by default,
which is to not enable the auto-negotiation for fixed-link.
The new DT property is added that allows to explicitly request
the auto-negotiation.
Those who were affected by the change, please send your Tested-by,
Thanks!
Currently fixed_phy driver recognizes only the link-up state.
This simple patch adds an implementation of link-down state.
It fixes the status registers when link is down, and also allows
to register the fixed-phy with link down without specifying the speed.
Signed-off-by: Stas Sergeev <[email protected]>
CC: Florian Fainelli <[email protected]>
CC: [email protected]
CC: [email protected]
---
drivers/net/phy/fixed_phy.c | 8 +++++---
1 file changed, 5 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-)
diff --git a/drivers/net/phy/fixed_phy.c b/drivers/net/phy/fixed_phy.c
index 1960b46..479b93f 100644
--- a/drivers/net/phy/fixed_phy.c
+++ b/drivers/net/phy/fixed_phy.c
@@ -52,6 +52,10 @@ static int fixed_phy_update_regs(struct fixed_phy *fp)
u16 lpagb = 0;
u16 lpa = 0;
+ if (!fp->status.link)
+ goto done;
+ bmsr |= BMSR_LSTATUS | BMSR_ANEGCOMPLETE;
+
if (fp->status.duplex) {
bmcr |= BMCR_FULLDPLX;
@@ -96,15 +100,13 @@ static int fixed_phy_update_regs(struct fixed_phy *fp)
}
}
- if (fp->status.link)
- bmsr |= BMSR_LSTATUS | BMSR_ANEGCOMPLETE;
-
if (fp->status.pause)
lpa |= LPA_PAUSE_CAP;
if (fp->status.asym_pause)
lpa |= LPA_PAUSE_ASYM;
+done:
fp->regs[MII_PHYSID1] = 0;
fp->regs[MII_PHYSID2] = 0;
--
1.9.1
Currently the PHY management type is selected by the MAC driver arbitrary.
The decision is based on the presence of the "fixed-link" node and on a
will of the driver's authors.
This caused a regression recently, when mvneta driver suddenly started
to use the in-band status for auto-negotiation on fixed links.
It appears the auto-negotiation may not work when expected by the MAC driver.
Sebastien Rannou explains:
<< Yes, I confirm that my HW does not generate an in-band status. AFAIK, it's
a PHY that aggregates 4xSGMIIs to 1xQSGMII ; the MAC side of the PHY (with
inband status) is connected to the switch through QSGMII, and in this context
we are on the media side of the PHY. >>
https://lkml.org/lkml/2015/7/10/206
This patch introduces the new string property 'managed' that allows
the user to set the management type explicitly.
The supported values are:
"auto" - default. Uses either MDIO or nothing, depending on the presence
of the fixed-link node
"in-band-status" - use in-band status
Signed-off-by: Stas Sergeev <[email protected]>
CC: Rob Herring <[email protected]>
CC: Pawel Moll <[email protected]>
CC: Mark Rutland <[email protected]>
CC: Ian Campbell <[email protected]>
CC: Kumar Gala <[email protected]>
CC: Florian Fainelli <[email protected]>
CC: Grant Likely <[email protected]>
CC: [email protected]
CC: [email protected]
CC: [email protected]
---
Documentation/devicetree/bindings/net/ethernet.txt | 4 ++++
drivers/of/of_mdio.c | 19 +++++++++++++++++--
2 files changed, 21 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-)
diff --git a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/net/ethernet.txt b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/net/ethernet.txt
index 3fc3605..cb115a3 100644
--- a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/net/ethernet.txt
+++ b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/net/ethernet.txt
@@ -19,7 +19,11 @@ The following properties are common to the Ethernet controllers:
- phy: the same as "phy-handle" property, not recommended for new bindings.
- phy-device: the same as "phy-handle" property, not recommended for new
bindings.
+- managed: string, specifies the PHY management type. Supported values are:
+ "auto", "in-band-status". "auto" is the default, it usess MDIO for
+ management if fixed-link is not specified.
Child nodes of the Ethernet controller are typically the individual PHY devices
connected via the MDIO bus (sometimes the MDIO bus controller is separate).
They are described in the phy.txt file in this same directory.
+For non-MDIO PHY management see fixed-link.txt.
diff --git a/drivers/of/of_mdio.c b/drivers/of/of_mdio.c
index 1bd4305..5dc1ef95 100644
--- a/drivers/of/of_mdio.c
+++ b/drivers/of/of_mdio.c
@@ -262,7 +262,8 @@ EXPORT_SYMBOL(of_phy_attach);
bool of_phy_is_fixed_link(struct device_node *np)
{
struct device_node *dn;
- int len;
+ int len, err;
+ const char *managed;
/* New binding */
dn = of_get_child_by_name(np, "fixed-link");
@@ -271,6 +272,10 @@ bool of_phy_is_fixed_link(struct device_node *np)
return true;
}
+ err = of_property_read_string(np, "managed", &managed);
+ if (err == 0 && strcmp(managed, "auto") != 0)
+ return true;
+
/* Old binding */
if (of_get_property(np, "fixed-link", &len) &&
len == (5 * sizeof(__be32)))
@@ -285,8 +290,18 @@ int of_phy_register_fixed_link(struct device_node *np)
struct fixed_phy_status status = {};
struct device_node *fixed_link_node;
const __be32 *fixed_link_prop;
- int len;
+ int len, err;
struct phy_device *phy;
+ const char *managed;
+
+ err = of_property_read_string(np, "managed", &managed);
+ if (err == 0) {
+ if (strcmp(managed, "in-band-status") == 0) {
+ /* status is zeroed, namely its .link member */
+ phy = fixed_phy_register(PHY_POLL, &status, np);
+ return IS_ERR(phy) ? PTR_ERR(phy) : 0;
+ }
+ }
/* New binding */
fixed_link_node = of_get_child_by_name(np, "fixed-link");
--
1.9.1
The commit 898b2970e2c9 ("mvneta: implement SGMII-based in-band link state
signaling") implemented the link parameters auto-negotiation unconditionally.
Unfortunately it appears that some HW that implements SGMII protocol,
doesn't generate the inband status, so it is not possible to auto-negotiate
anything with such HW.
This patch enables the auto-negotiation only if explicitly requested with
the 'managed' DT property.
This patch fixes the following regression:
https://lkml.org/lkml/2015/7/8/865
Signed-off-by: Stas Sergeev <[email protected]>
CC: Thomas Petazzoni <[email protected]>
CC: [email protected]
CC: [email protected]
---
drivers/net/ethernet/marvell/mvneta.c | 9 +++++----
1 file changed, 5 insertions(+), 4 deletions(-)
diff --git a/drivers/net/ethernet/marvell/mvneta.c b/drivers/net/ethernet/marvell/mvneta.c
index 74176ec..7a1deee 100644
--- a/drivers/net/ethernet/marvell/mvneta.c
+++ b/drivers/net/ethernet/marvell/mvneta.c
@@ -3008,8 +3008,8 @@ static int mvneta_probe(struct platform_device *pdev)
const char *dt_mac_addr;
char hw_mac_addr[ETH_ALEN];
const char *mac_from;
+ const char *managed;
int phy_mode;
- int fixed_phy = 0;
int err;
/* Our multiqueue support is not complete, so for now, only
@@ -3043,7 +3043,6 @@ static int mvneta_probe(struct platform_device *pdev)
dev_err(&pdev->dev, "cannot register fixed PHY\n");
goto err_free_irq;
}
- fixed_phy = 1;
/* In the case of a fixed PHY, the DT node associated
* to the PHY is the Ethernet MAC DT node.
@@ -3067,8 +3066,10 @@ static int mvneta_probe(struct platform_device *pdev)
pp = netdev_priv(dev);
pp->phy_node = phy_node;
pp->phy_interface = phy_mode;
- pp->use_inband_status = (phy_mode == PHY_INTERFACE_MODE_SGMII) &&
- fixed_phy;
+
+ err = of_property_read_string(dn, "managed", &managed);
+ pp->use_inband_status = (err == 0 &&
+ strcmp(managed, "in-band-status") == 0);
pp->clk = devm_clk_get(&pdev->dev, NULL);
if (IS_ERR(pp->clk)) {
--
1.9.1
On 16/07/15 07:50, Stas Sergeev wrote:
>
> Currently fixed_phy driver recognizes only the link-up state.
> This simple patch adds an implementation of link-down state.
> It fixes the status registers when link is down, and also allows
> to register the fixed-phy with link down without specifying the speed.
This patch still breaks my setups here, e.g: drivers/net/dsa/bcm_sf2.c,
but I will look into it.
Do we really need this for now for your two other patches to work
properly, or is it just nicer to have?
>
> Signed-off-by: Stas Sergeev <[email protected]>
>
> CC: Florian Fainelli <[email protected]>
> CC: [email protected]
> CC: [email protected]
> ---
> drivers/net/phy/fixed_phy.c | 8 +++++---
> 1 file changed, 5 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-)
>
> diff --git a/drivers/net/phy/fixed_phy.c b/drivers/net/phy/fixed_phy.c
> index 1960b46..479b93f 100644
> --- a/drivers/net/phy/fixed_phy.c
> +++ b/drivers/net/phy/fixed_phy.c
> @@ -52,6 +52,10 @@ static int fixed_phy_update_regs(struct fixed_phy *fp)
> u16 lpagb = 0;
> u16 lpa = 0;
>
> + if (!fp->status.link)
> + goto done;
> + bmsr |= BMSR_LSTATUS | BMSR_ANEGCOMPLETE;
> +
> if (fp->status.duplex) {
> bmcr |= BMCR_FULLDPLX;
>
> @@ -96,15 +100,13 @@ static int fixed_phy_update_regs(struct fixed_phy *fp)
> }
> }
>
> - if (fp->status.link)
> - bmsr |= BMSR_LSTATUS | BMSR_ANEGCOMPLETE;
> -
> if (fp->status.pause)
> lpa |= LPA_PAUSE_CAP;
>
> if (fp->status.asym_pause)
> lpa |= LPA_PAUSE_ASYM;
>
> +done:
> fp->regs[MII_PHYSID1] = 0;
> fp->regs[MII_PHYSID2] = 0;
>
--
Florian
17.07.2015 02:25, Florian Fainelli пишет:
> On 16/07/15 07:50, Stas Sergeev wrote:
>>
>> Currently fixed_phy driver recognizes only the link-up state.
>> This simple patch adds an implementation of link-down state.
>> It fixes the status registers when link is down, and also allows
>> to register the fixed-phy with link down without specifying the speed.
>
> This patch still breaks my setups here, e.g: drivers/net/dsa/bcm_sf2.c,
> but I will look into it.
>
> Do we really need this for now for your two other patches to work
> properly, or is it just nicer to have?
Yes, absolutely.
Otherwise registering fixed phy will return -EINVAL
because of the missing link speed (even though the link
is down).
Please, see what makes a problem. I can't reproduce what you report.
On 17/07/15 04:26, Stas Sergeev wrote:
> 17.07.2015 02:25, Florian Fainelli пишет:
>> On 16/07/15 07:50, Stas Sergeev wrote:
>>>
>>> Currently fixed_phy driver recognizes only the link-up state.
>>> This simple patch adds an implementation of link-down state.
>>> It fixes the status registers when link is down, and also allows
>>> to register the fixed-phy with link down without specifying the speed.
>>
>> This patch still breaks my setups here, e.g: drivers/net/dsa/bcm_sf2.c,
>> but I will look into it.
>>
>> Do we really need this for now for your two other patches to work
>> properly, or is it just nicer to have?
> Yes, absolutely.
> Otherwise registering fixed phy will return -EINVAL
> because of the missing link speed (even though the link
> is down).
Ok, I see the problem that you have now. Arguably you could say that
according to the fixed-link binding, speed needs to be specified and the
code correctly errors out with such an error if you do not specify it. I
also agree that having to specify speed and duplex for something you
will end-up auto-negotiating has no useful purpose.
>
> Please, see what makes a problem. I can't reproduce what you report.
>
So is different is that I use a link_update callback, and so we rely on
at least one call of this function to initialize the hardware in
drivers/net/dsa/bcm_sf2.c for this to work, after that, the hardware
reflects the fixed link parameters we configured, and we feed the
fixed_phy_status information from the hardware directly.
>From there I see two different ways to fix this:
- we ignore the fixed_phy_update_regs return value in fixed_phy_add(),
but that will make us avoid doing verification on the speed, which is
not so great, but is essentially what your patch does anyway
- we update the use of the fixed PHY link_update in drivers using it and
convert them to use fixed_phy_update_state instead, which can take some
time and effort to convert
What do you think? I would go with option 1 and eventually introduce a
special switch() case on the speed settings just to validate we know them.
Thanks
--
Florian
17.07.2015 21:50, Florian Fainelli пишет:
> On 17/07/15 04:26, Stas Sergeev wrote:
>> 17.07.2015 02:25, Florian Fainelli пишет:
>>> On 16/07/15 07:50, Stas Sergeev wrote:
>>>> Currently fixed_phy driver recognizes only the link-up state.
>>>> This simple patch adds an implementation of link-down state.
>>>> It fixes the status registers when link is down, and also allows
>>>> to register the fixed-phy with link down without specifying the speed.
>>> This patch still breaks my setups here, e.g: drivers/net/dsa/bcm_sf2.c,
>>> but I will look into it.
>>>
>>> Do we really need this for now for your two other patches to work
>>> properly, or is it just nicer to have?
>> Yes, absolutely.
>> Otherwise registering fixed phy will return -EINVAL
>> because of the missing link speed (even though the link
>> is down).
> Ok, I see the problem that you have now. Arguably you could say that
> according to the fixed-link binding, speed needs to be specified and the
> code correctly errors out with such an error if you do not specify it. I
Aren't you missing the fact that .link=0?
I think what you say is true only for the link-up case, no?
.speed==0 is valid for link-down IMHO: no link - zero speed.
> So is different is that I use a link_update callback, and so we rely on
> at least one call of this function to initialize the hardware in
> drivers/net/dsa/bcm_sf2.c
Do you mean this?:
core_writel(priv, reg, CORE_STS_OVERRIDE_GMIIP_PORT(port));
Maybe just moving the HW initialization bits to some init func
will be a quick fix?
> for this to work, after that, the hardware
> reflects the fixed link parameters we configured, and we feed the
> fixed_phy_status information from the hardware directly.
>
> >From there I see two different ways to fix this:
>
> - we ignore the fixed_phy_update_regs return value in fixed_phy_add(),
> but that will make us avoid doing verification on the speed, which is
> not so great, but is essentially what your patch does anyway
No, it does not. All it does is to allow no speed _when link is down_,
which is IMHO a very logical fix. The speed checks for the link-up
case are all still there.
> - we update the use of the fixed PHY link_update in drivers using it
IMHO just 2 drivers: bcmii.c and bcm_sf2.c, and the change
is likely trivial, although of course I am not sure in details.
> and
> convert them to use fixed_phy_update_state instead, which can take some
> time and effort to convert
Maybe just move the initialization bits out of the link_update
callback, but still use the callback for now? Should be simple, no?
On 17/07/15 13:03, Stas Sergeev wrote:
> 17.07.2015 21:50, Florian Fainelli пишет:
>> On 17/07/15 04:26, Stas Sergeev wrote:
>>> 17.07.2015 02:25, Florian Fainelli пишет:
>>>> On 16/07/15 07:50, Stas Sergeev wrote:
>>>>> Currently fixed_phy driver recognizes only the link-up state.
>>>>> This simple patch adds an implementation of link-down state.
>>>>> It fixes the status registers when link is down, and also allows
>>>>> to register the fixed-phy with link down without specifying the speed.
>>>> This patch still breaks my setups here, e.g: drivers/net/dsa/bcm_sf2.c,
>>>> but I will look into it.
>>>>
>>>> Do we really need this for now for your two other patches to work
>>>> properly, or is it just nicer to have?
>>> Yes, absolutely.
>>> Otherwise registering fixed phy will return -EINVAL
>>> because of the missing link speed (even though the link
>>> is down).
>> Ok, I see the problem that you have now. Arguably you could say that
>> according to the fixed-link binding, speed needs to be specified and the
>> code correctly errors out with such an error if you do not specify it. I
> Aren't you missing the fact that .link=0?
> I think what you say is true only for the link-up case, no?
> .speed==0 is valid for link-down IMHO: no link - zero speed.
Pardon me being very dense and stupid here, but your problem is that the
"speed" parameter is not specified in your DT, and we end-up returning
-EINVAL from of_phy_register_fixed_link(), is that what is happening?
And even if we silenced that error, we would end-up calling
fixed_phy_add() which would also return -EINVAL because then, we would
have status.link = 1, but no speed. So I better understand what is it
that you are after here, and that is also a broken Device Tree, is not
it? So this was the reason why in earlier versions of the patchset you
ended-up with a given speed which would make us pass this condition, right?
>
>> So is different is that I use a link_update callback, and so we rely on
>> at least one call of this function to initialize the hardware in
>> drivers/net/dsa/bcm_sf2.c
> Do you mean this?:
> core_writel(priv, reg, CORE_STS_OVERRIDE_GMIIP_PORT(port));
> Maybe just moving the HW initialization bits to some init func
> will be a quick fix?
Well, the problem with that is that to know how we should be configuring
the hardware in the adjust_link function, we need to run the link_update
function first. By default, there is no auto-negotiation on these fixed
links at all, so we cannot rely on any value being programmed other than
those specified in DT.
>
>> for this to work, after that, the hardware
>> reflects the fixed link parameters we configured, and we feed the
>> fixed_phy_status information from the hardware directly.
>>
>> >From there I see two different ways to fix this:
>>
>> - we ignore the fixed_phy_update_regs return value in fixed_phy_add(),
>> but that will make us avoid doing verification on the speed, which is
>> not so great, but is essentially what your patch does anyway
> No, it does not. All it does is to allow no speed _when link is down_,
> which is IMHO a very logical fix. The speed checks for the link-up
> case are all still there.
>
>> - we update the use of the fixed PHY link_update in drivers using it
> IMHO just 2 drivers: bcmii.c and bcm_sf2.c, and the change
> is likely trivial, although of course I am not sure in details.
The changes are not trivial, it took a while to get that logic done
correctly, and this would increase the number of patches to backport to
-stable, which is not ideal.
>
>> and
>> convert them to use fixed_phy_update_state instead, which can take some
>> time and effort to convert
> Maybe just move the initialization bits out of the link_update
> callback, but still use the callback for now? Should be simple, no?
Let me see if I have a smart idea other the weekend on how to do this.
--
Florian
18.07.2015 01:01, Florian Fainelli пишет:
> On 17/07/15 13:03, Stas Sergeev wrote:
>> 17.07.2015 21:50, Florian Fainelli пишет:
>>> On 17/07/15 04:26, Stas Sergeev wrote:
>>>> 17.07.2015 02:25, Florian Fainelli пишет:
>>>>> On 16/07/15 07:50, Stas Sergeev wrote:
>>>>>> Currently fixed_phy driver recognizes only the link-up state.
>>>>>> This simple patch adds an implementation of link-down state.
>>>>>> It fixes the status registers when link is down, and also allows
>>>>>> to register the fixed-phy with link down without specifying the speed.
>>>>> This patch still breaks my setups here, e.g: drivers/net/dsa/bcm_sf2.c,
>>>>> but I will look into it.
>>>>>
>>>>> Do we really need this for now for your two other patches to work
>>>>> properly, or is it just nicer to have?
>>>> Yes, absolutely.
>>>> Otherwise registering fixed phy will return -EINVAL
>>>> because of the missing link speed (even though the link
>>>> is down).
>>> Ok, I see the problem that you have now. Arguably you could say that
>>> according to the fixed-link binding, speed needs to be specified and the
>>> code correctly errors out with such an error if you do not specify it. I
>> Aren't you missing the fact that .link=0?
>> I think what you say is true only for the link-up case, no?
>> .speed==0 is valid for link-down IMHO: no link - zero speed.
> Pardon me being very dense and stupid here, but your problem is that the
> "speed" parameter is not specified in your DT,
Not even a fixed-link at all, since the latest patches.
I removed fixed-link defs from my DT.
> and we end-up returning
> -EINVAL from of_phy_register_fixed_link(), is that what is happening?
Yes.
> And even if we silenced that error,
I don't agree with calling it an error silencing.
To me it is a fix. It will also return a more correct status when
link is down.
> we would end-up calling
> fixed_phy_add() which would also return -EINVAL because then, we would
> have status.link = 1, but no speed.
Why link=1 and no speed? This is not valid, should never
be used. The error checking is still there to prevent it.
> So I better understand what is it
> that you are after here, and that is also a broken Device Tree, is not
> it?
I don't understand. If you didn't specify the in-band status, you
_must_ set the speed. There is no broken DT in either case.
> So this was the reason why in earlier versions of the patchset you
> ended-up with a given speed which would make us pass this condition, right?
As explained earlier, yes.
>>> So is different is that I use a link_update callback, and so we rely on
>>> at least one call of this function to initialize the hardware in
>>> drivers/net/dsa/bcm_sf2.c
>> Do you mean this?:
>> core_writel(priv, reg, CORE_STS_OVERRIDE_GMIIP_PORT(port));
>> Maybe just moving the HW initialization bits to some init func
>> will be a quick fix?
> Well, the problem with that is that to know how we should be configuring
> the hardware in the adjust_link function, we need to run the link_update
> function first. By default, there is no auto-negotiation on these fixed
> links at all, so we cannot rely on any value being programmed other than
> those specified in DT.
Ah, so is my understanding correct that in fixed_link_update()
you set .link=0 and as a result get wrong speed in adjust_link(),
which gets then written to init HW?
AFAIK when link is down, you are not allowed to rely on the PHY
status registers to read speed from, or am I wrong? So if my
understanding is correct, this was working by a pure luck.
As for the quick fix - why not to do this pre-init in fixed_link_update()
instead of adjust_link()? In fixed_link_update() you'll get the speed
right from DT, so it will be correct.
> The changes are not trivial, it took a while to get that logic done
For a longer term fix,
how about adding a *status arg to of_phy_register_fixed_link() to
always get the status back to the driver, unless NULL is provided?
Using an update callback for that doesn't look like the best thing
to do. And besides, if we move to my fixed_phy_update_state(),
this will be needed anyway.
On 17/07/15 16:24, Stas Sergeev wrote:
> 18.07.2015 01:01, Florian Fainelli пишет:
>> On 17/07/15 13:03, Stas Sergeev wrote:
>>> 17.07.2015 21:50, Florian Fainelli пишет:
>>>> On 17/07/15 04:26, Stas Sergeev wrote:
>>>>> 17.07.2015 02:25, Florian Fainelli пишет:
>>>>>> On 16/07/15 07:50, Stas Sergeev wrote:
>>>>>>> Currently fixed_phy driver recognizes only the link-up state.
>>>>>>> This simple patch adds an implementation of link-down state.
>>>>>>> It fixes the status registers when link is down, and also allows
>>>>>>> to register the fixed-phy with link down without specifying the
>>>>>>> speed.
>>>>>> This patch still breaks my setups here, e.g:
>>>>>> drivers/net/dsa/bcm_sf2.c,
>>>>>> but I will look into it.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Do we really need this for now for your two other patches to work
>>>>>> properly, or is it just nicer to have?
>>>>> Yes, absolutely.
>>>>> Otherwise registering fixed phy will return -EINVAL
>>>>> because of the missing link speed (even though the link
>>>>> is down).
>>>> Ok, I see the problem that you have now. Arguably you could say that
>>>> according to the fixed-link binding, speed needs to be specified and
>>>> the
>>>> code correctly errors out with such an error if you do not specify
>>>> it. I
>>> Aren't you missing the fact that .link=0?
>>> I think what you say is true only for the link-up case, no?
>>> .speed==0 is valid for link-down IMHO: no link - zero speed.
>> Pardon me being very dense and stupid here, but your problem is that the
>> "speed" parameter is not specified in your DT,
> Not even a fixed-link at all, since the latest patches.
> I removed fixed-link defs from my DT.
Hummm, okay, so you just have the inband-status property and that's it,
not even a fixed-link node anymore, right? How does
mvneta_fixed_link_update() work then since it needs a fixed PHY to be
registered?
>
>> and we end-up returning
>> -EINVAL from of_phy_register_fixed_link(), is that what is happening?
> Yes.
>
>> And even if we silenced that error,
> I don't agree with calling it an error silencing.
> To me it is a fix. It will also return a more correct status when
> link is down.
>
>> we would end-up calling
>> fixed_phy_add() which would also return -EINVAL because then, we would
>> have status.link = 1, but no speed.
> Why link=1 and no speed? This is not valid, should never
> be used. The error checking is still there to prevent it.
>
>> So I better understand what is it
>> that you are after here, and that is also a broken Device Tree, is not
>> it?
> I don't understand. If you didn't specify the in-band status, you
> _must_ set the speed. There is no broken DT in either case.
>
>> So this was the reason why in earlier versions of the patchset you
>> ended-up with a given speed which would make us pass this condition,
>> right?
> As explained earlier, yes.
>
>
>>>> So is different is that I use a link_update callback, and so we rely on
>>>> at least one call of this function to initialize the hardware in
>>>> drivers/net/dsa/bcm_sf2.c
>>> Do you mean this?:
>>> core_writel(priv, reg, CORE_STS_OVERRIDE_GMIIP_PORT(port));
>>> Maybe just moving the HW initialization bits to some init func
>>> will be a quick fix?
>> Well, the problem with that is that to know how we should be configuring
>> the hardware in the adjust_link function, we need to run the link_update
>> function first. By default, there is no auto-negotiation on these fixed
>> links at all, so we cannot rely on any value being programmed other than
>> those specified in DT.
> Ah, so is my understanding correct that in fixed_link_update()
> you set .link=0 and as a result get wrong speed in adjust_link(),
> which gets then written to init HW?
Yes, that's what happens.
> AFAIK when link is down, you are not allowed to rely on the PHY
> status registers to read speed from, or am I wrong? So if my
> understanding is correct, this was working by a pure luck.
Well, it's more like it is undefined, and before this patch, the fixed
PHY would update everything except the link status indication.
> As for the quick fix - why not to do this pre-init in fixed_link_update()
> instead of adjust_link()? In fixed_link_update() you'll get the speed
> right from DT, so it will be correct.
fixed_link_update() only gets called once you start your PHY state
machine, unfortunately, not upon fixed PHY device registration, and it
runs before your adjust_link callback does, that's why starting with
correct parameters is kind of important here. Of course, this could be
fixed.
>
>> The changes are not trivial, it took a while to get that logic done
> For a longer term fix,
> how about adding a *status arg to of_phy_register_fixed_link() to
> always get the status back to the driver, unless NULL is provided?
> Using an update callback for that doesn't look like the best thing
> to do. And besides, if we move to my fixed_phy_update_state(),
> this will be needed anyway.
I agree that the link_update callback is not the best thing, it polls
the hardware and comes with that problem that it may or may not have yet
run to configure your fixed_phy_status appropriately.
--
Florian
18.07.2015 02:35, Florian Fainelli пишет:
> On 17/07/15 16:24, Stas Sergeev wrote:
>> 18.07.2015 01:01, Florian Fainelli пишет:
>>> On 17/07/15 13:03, Stas Sergeev wrote:
>>>> 17.07.2015 21:50, Florian Fainelli пишет:
>>>>> On 17/07/15 04:26, Stas Sergeev wrote:
>>>>>> 17.07.2015 02:25, Florian Fainelli пишет:
>>>>>>> On 16/07/15 07:50, Stas Sergeev wrote:
>>>>>>>> Currently fixed_phy driver recognizes only the link-up state.
>>>>>>>> This simple patch adds an implementation of link-down state.
>>>>>>>> It fixes the status registers when link is down, and also allows
>>>>>>>> to register the fixed-phy with link down without specifying the
>>>>>>>> speed.
>>>>>>> This patch still breaks my setups here, e.g:
>>>>>>> drivers/net/dsa/bcm_sf2.c,
>>>>>>> but I will look into it.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Do we really need this for now for your two other patches to work
>>>>>>> properly, or is it just nicer to have?
>>>>>> Yes, absolutely.
>>>>>> Otherwise registering fixed phy will return -EINVAL
>>>>>> because of the missing link speed (even though the link
>>>>>> is down).
>>>>> Ok, I see the problem that you have now. Arguably you could say that
>>>>> according to the fixed-link binding, speed needs to be specified and
>>>>> the
>>>>> code correctly errors out with such an error if you do not specify
>>>>> it. I
>>>> Aren't you missing the fact that .link=0?
>>>> I think what you say is true only for the link-up case, no?
>>>> .speed==0 is valid for link-down IMHO: no link - zero speed.
>>> Pardon me being very dense and stupid here, but your problem is that the
>>> "speed" parameter is not specified in your DT,
>> Not even a fixed-link at all, since the latest patches.
>> I removed fixed-link defs from my DT.
> Hummm, okay, so you just have the inband-status property and that's it,
> not even a fixed-link node anymore, right? How does
> mvneta_fixed_link_update() work then since it needs a fixed PHY to be
> registered?
You can see it from my patch:
---
+ err = of_property_read_string(np, "managed", &managed);
+ if (err == 0) {
+ if (strcmp(managed, "in-band-status") == 0) {
+ /* status is zeroed, namely its .link member */
+ phy = fixed_phy_register(PHY_POLL, &status, np);
+ return IS_ERR(phy) ? PTR_ERR(phy) : 0;
+ }
+ }
---
which is the hunk added to the of_phy_register_fixed_link().
So in that case we register fixed-phy, but do not parse the fixed-link.
>> AFAIK when link is down, you are not allowed to rely on the PHY
>> status registers to read speed from, or am I wrong? So if my
>> understanding is correct, this was working by a pure luck.
> Well, it's more like it is undefined, and before this patch, the fixed
> PHY would update everything except the link status indication.
And what about the real MDIO PHY? Or does it never hit this
"undefined" code path?
Anyway, if you call it undefined, I guess you automatically agree
this needs to be fixed. :)
>> As for the quick fix - why not to do this pre-init in fixed_link_update()
>> instead of adjust_link()? In fixed_link_update() you'll get the speed
>> right from DT, so it will be correct.
> fixed_link_update() only gets called once you start your PHY state
> machine, unfortunately, not upon fixed PHY device registration, and it
> runs before your adjust_link callback does,
So you say fixed_link_update() runs before adjust_link callback does,
which looks logical. Why would you need it to run on device registration,
if it runs earlier than adjust_link (which you use for init) even now?
Le 07/17/15 16:53, Stas Sergeev a écrit :
> 18.07.2015 02:35, Florian Fainelli пишет:
>> On 17/07/15 16:24, Stas Sergeev wrote:
>>> 18.07.2015 01:01, Florian Fainelli пишет:
>>>> On 17/07/15 13:03, Stas Sergeev wrote:
>>>>> 17.07.2015 21:50, Florian Fainelli пишет:
>>>>>> On 17/07/15 04:26, Stas Sergeev wrote:
>>>>>>> 17.07.2015 02:25, Florian Fainelli пишет:
>>>>>>>> On 16/07/15 07:50, Stas Sergeev wrote:
>>>>>>>>> Currently fixed_phy driver recognizes only the link-up state.
>>>>>>>>> This simple patch adds an implementation of link-down state.
>>>>>>>>> It fixes the status registers when link is down, and also allows
>>>>>>>>> to register the fixed-phy with link down without specifying the
>>>>>>>>> speed.
>>>>>>>> This patch still breaks my setups here, e.g:
>>>>>>>> drivers/net/dsa/bcm_sf2.c,
>>>>>>>> but I will look into it.
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> Do we really need this for now for your two other patches to work
>>>>>>>> properly, or is it just nicer to have?
>>>>>>> Yes, absolutely.
>>>>>>> Otherwise registering fixed phy will return -EINVAL
>>>>>>> because of the missing link speed (even though the link
>>>>>>> is down).
>>>>>> Ok, I see the problem that you have now. Arguably you could say that
>>>>>> according to the fixed-link binding, speed needs to be specified and
>>>>>> the
>>>>>> code correctly errors out with such an error if you do not specify
>>>>>> it. I
>>>>> Aren't you missing the fact that .link=0?
>>>>> I think what you say is true only for the link-up case, no?
>>>>> .speed==0 is valid for link-down IMHO: no link - zero speed.
>>>> Pardon me being very dense and stupid here, but your problem is that
>>>> the
>>>> "speed" parameter is not specified in your DT,
>>> Not even a fixed-link at all, since the latest patches.
>>> I removed fixed-link defs from my DT.
>> Hummm, okay, so you just have the inband-status property and that's it,
>> not even a fixed-link node anymore, right? How does
>> mvneta_fixed_link_update() work then since it needs a fixed PHY to be
>> registered?
> You can see it from my patch:
> ---
>
> + err = of_property_read_string(np, "managed", &managed);
> + if (err == 0) {
> + if (strcmp(managed, "in-band-status") == 0) {
> + /* status is zeroed, namely its .link member */
> + phy = fixed_phy_register(PHY_POLL, &status, np);
> + return IS_ERR(phy) ? PTR_ERR(phy) : 0;
> + }
> + }
>
> ---
> which is the hunk added to the of_phy_register_fixed_link().
> So in that case we register fixed-phy, but do not parse the fixed-link.
Ok, I missed that part. Could not you just override everything that is
needed here to get past the point where you register your fixed PHY even
with link = 0, this will be discarded anyway once you start in-band
negotiation.
>
>>> AFAIK when link is down, you are not allowed to rely on the PHY
>>> status registers to read speed from, or am I wrong? So if my
>>> understanding is correct, this was working by a pure luck.
>> Well, it's more like it is undefined, and before this patch, the fixed
>> PHY would update everything except the link status indication.
> And what about the real MDIO PHY? Or does it never hit this
> "undefined" code path?
> Anyway, if you call it undefined, I guess you automatically agree
> this needs to be fixed. :)
I should have been clearer; it is undefined for real PHYs it was not for
fixed PHYs, you can rely on the configuration that was done during
registration. Maybe not the best assumption; but it worked, and with
this patch it no longer works, so we want to find something here.
>
>>> As for the quick fix - why not to do this pre-init in
>>> fixed_link_update()
>>> instead of adjust_link()? In fixed_link_update() you'll get the speed
>>> right from DT, so it will be correct.
>> fixed_link_update() only gets called once you start your PHY state
>> machine, unfortunately, not upon fixed PHY device registration, and it
>> runs before your adjust_link callback does,
> So you say fixed_link_update() runs before adjust_link callback does,
> which looks logical. Why would you need it to run on device registration,
> if it runs earlier than adjust_link (which you use for init) even now?
There could be multiple reasons:
- device might be clock gated, until you "open" it you cannot
necessarily start making register accesses
- interfaces can be brought up/down separately so you want to stop the
PHY state machine accordingly
I will work on something anyway.
--
Florian
18.07.2015 05:29, Florian Fainelli пишет:
> Le 07/17/15 16:53, Stas Sergeev a écrit :
>> 18.07.2015 02:35, Florian Fainelli пишет:
>>> On 17/07/15 16:24, Stas Sergeev wrote:
>>>> 18.07.2015 01:01, Florian Fainelli пишет:
>>>>> On 17/07/15 13:03, Stas Sergeev wrote:
>>>>>> 17.07.2015 21:50, Florian Fainelli пишет:
>>>>>>> On 17/07/15 04:26, Stas Sergeev wrote:
>>>>>>>> 17.07.2015 02:25, Florian Fainelli пишет:
>>>>>>>>> On 16/07/15 07:50, Stas Sergeev wrote:
>>>>>>>>>> Currently fixed_phy driver recognizes only the link-up state.
>>>>>>>>>> This simple patch adds an implementation of link-down state.
>>>>>>>>>> It fixes the status registers when link is down, and also allows
>>>>>>>>>> to register the fixed-phy with link down without specifying the
>>>>>>>>>> speed.
>>>>>>>>> This patch still breaks my setups here, e.g:
>>>>>>>>> drivers/net/dsa/bcm_sf2.c,
>>>>>>>>> but I will look into it.
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> Do we really need this for now for your two other patches to work
>>>>>>>>> properly, or is it just nicer to have?
>>>>>>>> Yes, absolutely.
>>>>>>>> Otherwise registering fixed phy will return -EINVAL
>>>>>>>> because of the missing link speed (even though the link
>>>>>>>> is down).
>>>>>>> Ok, I see the problem that you have now. Arguably you could say that
>>>>>>> according to the fixed-link binding, speed needs to be specified and
>>>>>>> the
>>>>>>> code correctly errors out with such an error if you do not specify
>>>>>>> it. I
>>>>>> Aren't you missing the fact that .link=0?
>>>>>> I think what you say is true only for the link-up case, no?
>>>>>> .speed==0 is valid for link-down IMHO: no link - zero speed.
>>>>> Pardon me being very dense and stupid here, but your problem is that
>>>>> the
>>>>> "speed" parameter is not specified in your DT,
>>>> Not even a fixed-link at all, since the latest patches.
>>>> I removed fixed-link defs from my DT.
>>> Hummm, okay, so you just have the inband-status property and that's it,
>>> not even a fixed-link node anymore, right? How does
>>> mvneta_fixed_link_update() work then since it needs a fixed PHY to be
>>> registered?
>> You can see it from my patch:
>> ---
>>
>> + err = of_property_read_string(np, "managed", &managed);
>> + if (err == 0) {
>> + if (strcmp(managed, "in-band-status") == 0) {
>> + /* status is zeroed, namely its .link member */
>> + phy = fixed_phy_register(PHY_POLL, &status, np);
>> + return IS_ERR(phy) ? PTR_ERR(phy) : 0;
>> + }
>> + }
>>
>> ---
>> which is the hunk added to the of_phy_register_fixed_link().
>> So in that case we register fixed-phy, but do not parse the fixed-link.
> Ok, I missed that part. Could not you just override everything that is
> needed here to get past the point where you register your fixed PHY even
> with link = 0, this will be discarded anyway once you start in-band
> negotiation.
Maybe my English is bad, but I have problems understanding
some of your senteneces. What do you mean?
If you meant to re-use the existing registration code instead
of adding a new hunk, please note that there is no fixed-link
node at all, so we do not even enter the parsing code block.
As such, there is nothing to override.
> I will work on something anyway.
Thanks, hope to hear from you soon.
This stream of regressions is disturbing. :)
Should finally be fixed for real.