On Fri 2020-07-24 15:12:33, Marek Behún wrote:
On Fri, 24 Jul 2020 12:29:01 +0200
Pavel Machek [off-list ref] wrote:
quoted
In future, would you expect having software "1000/100/10/nolink"
triggers I could activate on my scrollock LED (or on GPIO controlled
LEDs) to indicate network activity?
Look at drivers/net/phy/phy_led_triggers.c, something like that could
be actually implemented there.
Some of the modes are useful, like the "1000/100/10/nolink". But some
of them are pretty weird, and I don't think anyone actually uses it
("1000-10/else", which is on if the device is linked at 1000mbps ar
10mbps, and else off? who would sacrifies a LED for this?).
I actually wanted to talk about the phy_led_triggers.c code. It
registers several trigger for each PHY, with the name in form:
phy-device-name:mode
where
phy-device-name is derived from OF
- sometimes it is in the form
d0032004.mdio-mii:01
- but sometimes in the form of whole OF path followed by ":" and
the PHY address:
/soc/internal-regs@d0000000/mdio@32004/switch0@10/mdio:08
mode is "link", "1Gbps", "100Mbps", "10Mbps" and so on"
So I have a GPIO LED, and I can set it to sw trigger so that it is on
when a specific PHY is linked on 1Gbps.
The problem is that on Turris Mox I can connect up to three 8-port
switches, which yields in 25 network PHYs overall. So reading the
trigger file results in 4290 bytes (look at attachment cat_trigger.txt).
I think the phy_led_triggers should have gone this way of having just
one trigger (like netdev has), and specifying phy device via and mode
via another file.
I agree with you. This is ... not pretty ... and it would be nice to
get it fixed.
Best regards,
Pavel
--
(english) http://www.livejournal.com/~pavelmachek
(cesky, pictures) http://atrey.karlin.mff.cuni.cz/~pavel/picture/horses/blog.html