Re: [drivers/net/phy/sfp] intermittent failure in state machine checks
From: Russell King - ARM Linux admin <linux@armlinux.org.uk>
Date: 2020-01-10 17:38:58
On Fri, Jan 10, 2020 at 05:19:35PM +0000, ѽ҉ᶬḳ℠ wrote:
On 10/01/2020 17:08, Russell King - ARM Linux admin wrote:quoted
On Fri, Jan 10, 2020 at 04:53:06PM +0000, ѽ҉ᶬḳ℠ wrote:quoted
Seems that the debug avenue has been exhausted, short of running SFP.C in debug mode.You're saying you never see TX_FAULT asserted other than when the interface is down?Yes, it never exhibits once the iif is up - it is rock-stable in that state, only ever when being transitioned from down state to up state. Pardon, if that has not been made explicitly clear previously.
I think if we were to have SFP debug enabled, you'll find that TX_FAULT is being reported to SFP as being asserted. You probably aren't running that while loop, as it will exit when it sees TX_FAULT asserted. So, here's another bit of shell code for you to run: ip li set dev eth2 down; \ ip li set dev eth2 up; \ date while :; do cat /proc/uptime while ! grep -A5 'tx-fault.*in hi' /sys/kernel/debug/gpio; do :; done cat /proc/uptime while ! grep -A5 'tx-fault.*in lo' /sys/kernel/debug/gpio; do :; done done This will give you output such as: Fri 10 Jan 17:31:06 GMT 2020 774869.13 1535859.48 gpio-509 ( |tx-fault ) in hi ... 774869.14 1535859.49 gpio-509 ( |tx-fault ) in lo ... 774869.15 1535859.50 The first date and "uptime" output is the timestamp when the interface was brought up. Subsequent "uptime" outputs can be used to calculate the time difference in seconds between the state printed immediately prior to the uptime output, and the first "uptime" output. So in the above example, the tx-fault signal was hi at 10ms, and then went low 20ms after the up. However, bear in mind that even this will not be good enough to spot transitory changes on TX_FAULT - as your I2C GPIO expander is interrupt capable, watching /proc/interrupts may tell you more. If the TX_FAULT signal is as stable as you claim it is, you should see the interrupt count for it remaining the same. -- RMK's Patch system: https://www.armlinux.org.uk/developer/patches/ FTTC broadband for 0.8mile line in suburbia: sync at 12.1Mbps down 622kbps up According to speedtest.net: 11.9Mbps down 500kbps up