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Message-ID: <YdQ46conUeZ3Qaac@Red>
Date: Tue, 4 Jan 2022 13:09:13 +0100
From: Corentin Labbe <clabbe.montjoie@...il.com>
To: "Russell King (Oracle)" <linux@...linux.org.uk>
Cc: linus.walleij@...aro.org, ulli.kroll@...glemail.com,
kuba@...nel.org, davem@...emloft.net, andrew@...n.ch,
hkallweit1@...il.com, linux-arm-kernel@...ts.infradead.org,
netdev@...r.kernel.org, linux-kernel@...r.kernel.org
Subject: Re: net: phy: marvell: network working with generic PHY and not with
marvell PHY
Le Tue, Jan 04, 2022 at 11:41:40AM +0000, Russell King (Oracle) a écrit :
> On Tue, Jan 04, 2022 at 12:33:15PM +0100, Corentin Labbe wrote:
> > Le Tue, Jan 04, 2022 at 11:14:46AM +0000, Russell King (Oracle) a écrit :
> > > On Tue, Jan 04, 2022 at 11:58:01AM +0100, Corentin Labbe wrote:
> > > > Hello
> > > >
> > > > I have a gemini SSI 1328 box which has a cortina ethernet MAC with a Marvell 88E1118 as given by:
> > > > Marvell 88E1118 gpio-0:01: attached PHY driver (mii_bus:phy_addr=gpio-0:01, irq=POLL)
> > > > So booting with CONFIG_MARVELL_PHY=y lead to a non-working network with link set at 1Gbit
> > > > Setting 'max-speed = <100>;' (as current state in mainline dtb) lead to a working network.
> > > > By not working, I mean kernel started with ip=dhcp cannot get an IP.
> > >
> > > How is the PHY connected to the host (which interface mode?) If it's
> > > RGMII, it could be that the wrong RGMII interface mode is specified in
> > > DT.
> > >
> >
> > The PHY is set as RGMII in DT (arch/arm/boot/dts/gemini-ssi1328.dts)
> > The only change to the mainline dtb is removing the max-speed.
>
> So, it's using "rgmii" with no delay configured at the PHY with the
> speed limited to 100Mbps. You then remove the speed limitation and
> it doesn't work at 1Gbps.
>
> I think I've seen this on other platforms (imx6 + ar8035) when the
> RGMII delay is not correctly configured - it will work at slower
> speeds but not 1G.
>
> The RGMII spec specifies that there will be a delay - and the delay can
> be introduced by either the MAC, PHY or by PCB track routing. It sounds
> to me like your boot environment configures the PHY to introduce the
> necessary delay, but then, because the DT "rgmii" mode means "no delay
> at the PHY" when you use the Marvell driver (which respects that), the
> Marvell driver configures the PHY for no delay, resulting in a non-
> working situation at 1G.
>
> I would suggest checking how the boot environment configures the PHY,
> and change the "rgmii" mode in DT to match. There is a description of
> the four RGMII modes in Documentation/networking/phy.rst that may help
> understand what each one means.
>
So if I understand, the generic PHY does not touch delays and so values set by bootloader are kept.
The boot environment give no clue on how the PHY is set.
Only debug showed is:
PHY 0 Addr 1 Vendor ID: 0x01410e11
mii_write: phy_addr=0x1 reg_addr=0x4 value=0x5e1
mii_write: phy_addr=0x1 reg_addr=0x9 value=0x300
mii_write: phy_addr=0x1 reg_addr=0x0 value=0x1200
mii_write: phy_addr=0x1 reg_addr=0x0 value=0x9200
mii_write: phy_addr=0x1 reg_addr=0x0 value=0x1200
Does it is possible to dump PHY registers when using generic PHY and find delay values ?
For example ethtool -d eth0 ?
If not, my only choice is to bruteforce all delay values until it works.
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