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Message-ID: <d4c6fb27-0eb2-68c5-94c4-475f1e8ab206@ti.com>
Date: Thu, 6 Feb 2020 17:23:22 -0600
From: Dan Murphy <dmurphy@...com>
To: Heiner Kallweit <hkallweit1@...il.com>, <andrew@...n.ch>,
<f.fainelli@...il.com>
CC: <linux@...linux.org.uk>, <davem@...emloft.net>,
<netdev@...r.kernel.org>, <linux-kernel@...r.kernel.org>
Subject: Re: [PATCH net-next v2] net: phy: dp83867: Add speed optimization
feature
Heiner
On 2/6/20 5:04 PM, Heiner Kallweit wrote:
> On 06.02.2020 23:36, Dan Murphy wrote:
>> Heiner
>>
>> On 2/6/20 4:28 PM, Heiner Kallweit wrote:
>>> On 06.02.2020 23:13, Dan Murphy wrote:
>>>> Heiner
>>>>
>>>> On 2/5/20 3:16 PM, Heiner Kallweit wrote:
>>>>> On 04.02.2020 19:13, Dan Murphy wrote:
>>>>>> Set the speed optimization bit on the DP83867 PHY.
>>>>>> This feature can also be strapped on the 64 pin PHY devices
>>>>>> but the 48 pin devices do not have the strap pin available to enable
>>>>>> this feature in the hardware. PHY team suggests to have this bit set.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> With this bit set the PHY will auto negotiate and report the link
>>>>>> parameters in the PHYSTS register. This register provides a single
>>>>>> location within the register set for quick access to commonly accessed
>>>>>> information.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> In this case when auto negotiation is on the PHY core reads the bits
>>>>>> that have been configured or if auto negotiation is off the PHY core
>>>>>> reads the BMCR register and sets the phydev parameters accordingly.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> This Giga bit PHY can throttle the speed to 100Mbps or 10Mbps to accomodate a
>>>>>> 4-wire cable. If this should occur the PHYSTS register contains the
>>>>>> current negotiated speed and duplex mode.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> In overriding the genphy_read_status the dp83867_read_status will do a
>>>>>> genphy_read_status to setup the LP and pause bits. And then the PHYSTS
>>>>>> register is read and the phydev speed and duplex mode settings are
>>>>>> updated.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Signed-off-by: Dan Murphy <dmurphy@...com>
>>>>>> ---
>>>>>> v2 - Updated read status to call genphy_read_status first, added link_change
>>>>>> callback to notify of speed change and use phy_set_bits - https://lore.kernel.org/patchwork/patch/1188348/
>>>>>>
>>>>> As stated in the first review, it would be appreciated if you implement
>>>>> also the downshift tunable. This could be a separate patch in this series.
>>>>> Most of the implementation would be boilerplate code.
>>>> I looked at this today and there are no registers that allow tuning the downshift attempts. There is only a RO register that tells you how many attempts it took to achieve a link. So at the very least we could put in the get_tunable but there will be no set.
>>>>
>>> The get operation for the downshift tunable should return after how many failed
>>> attempts the PHY starts a downshift. This doesn't match with your description of
>>> this register, so yes: Implementing the tunable for this PHY doesn't make sense.
>> True. This register is only going to return 1,2,4 and 8. And it is defaulted to 4 attempts.
>>> However this register may be useful in the link_change_notify() callback to
>>> figure out whether a downshift happened, to trigger the info message you had in
>>> your first version.
>> Thats a good idea but.. The register is defaulted to always report 4 attempts were made. It never reports 0 attempts so we would never know the truth behind the reporting. Kinda like matching the speeds.
>>
> I just had a brief look at the datasheet here: http://www.ti.com/lit/ds/symlink/dp83867ir.pdf
> It says: The number of failed link attempts before falling back to 100-M operation is configurable. (p.45)
> Description of SPEED_OPT_ATTEMPT_CNT in CFG2 says "select attempt count", so it sounds like it's
> an RW register. It's marked as RO however, maybe it's a typo in the datasheet.
> Did you test whether register is writable?
Yes I did and it was a no go. It is definitely a RO. I will complain
to the HW team and get it straightened out. We have time before
net-next opens
> Last but not least this register is exactly what's needed for the downshift tunable.
>
> Checking whether a downshift occurred should be possible by reading SPEED_OPT_EVENT_INT in ISR.
> In interrupt mode however this may require a custom interrupt handler (implementation of
> handle_interrupt callback).
Yes the HW team did say R13b5 could be checked but after thinking about
it the issue with that is that is a clear on read register so other
status would be lost. There could be a race condition between the
interrupt handler and the link notification change to be able to
indicate whether the downshift happened or not.
Same with polling mode can we be guaranteed that the status would be
updated before the link change was called?
Dan
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