From: John Fastabend <redacted>
Disabling TSO can cause the dev_watchdog timer to be triggered because
when TSO is disabled netif_tx_stop_all_queues is called. If the watchdog
timer fires while the queues are stopped and traffic has not recently been
sent on a paticular queue this is falsly identified as a hang and
ndo_tx_timeout() is called. This is ocossionally seen during testing.
This removes the netif_tx_stop_all_queues() it is not needed. The scheduler
submits skb's with dev_hard_start_xmit(), this checks if netif_needs_gso and
if so it calls dev_gso_segment. Disabling TSO will cause dev_hard_start_xmit()
to do the gso processing. However ixgbe does not use the features flags to
determine if it needs to use tso or not instead it uses skb->gso_size so
ixgbe will process these frames correctly regardless of the netdev features
flag.
Signed-off-by: John Fastabend <redacted>
Acked-by: Peter P Waskiewicz Jr <redacted>
Signed-off-by: Jeff Kirsher <redacted>
---
drivers/net/ixgbe/ixgbe_ethtool.c | 2 --
1 files changed, 0 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-)
diff --git a/drivers/net/ixgbe/ixgbe_ethtool.c b/drivers/net/ixgbe/ixgbe_ethtool.c
index 0d23434..7949a44 100644
--- a/drivers/net/ixgbe/ixgbe_ethtool.c
+++ b/drivers/net/ixgbe/ixgbe_ethtool.c
@@ -441,10 +441,8 @@ static int ixgbe_set_tso(struct net_device *netdev, u32 data)
netdev->features |= NETIF_F_TSO;
netdev->features |= NETIF_F_TSO6;
} else {
- netif_tx_stop_all_queues(netdev);
netdev->features &= ~NETIF_F_TSO;
netdev->features &= ~NETIF_F_TSO6;
- netif_tx_start_all_queues(netdev);
}
return 0;
}