On Fri, Aug 25, 2017 at 11:05 AM, Florian Fainelli <f.fainelli@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > On 08/24/2017 07:54 PM, Chen-Yu Tsai wrote: >> On Fri, Aug 25, 2017 at 3:59 AM, Florian Fainelli <f.fainelli@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: >>> On 08/24/2017 01:21 AM, Corentin Labbe wrote: >>>> On Wed, Aug 23, 2017 at 09:31:53AM -0700, Florian Fainelli wrote: >>>>> On 08/23/2017 12:49 AM, Maxime Ripard wrote: >>>>>> Hi Florian, >>>>>> >>>>>> On Tue, Aug 22, 2017 at 11:35:01AM -0700, Florian Fainelli wrote: >>>>>>>>>> So I think what you are saying is either impossible or engineering-wise >>>>>>>>>> a very stupid design, like using an external MAC with a discrete PHY >>>>>>>>>> connected to the internal MAC's MDIO bus, while using the internal MAC >>>>>>>>>> with the internal PHY. >>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>> Now can we please decide on something? We're a week and a half from >>>>>>>>>> the 4.13 release. If mdio-mux is wrong, then we could have two mdio >>>>>>>>>> nodes (internal-mdio & external-mdio). >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> I really don't see a need for a mdio-mux in the first place, just have >>>>>>>>> one MDIO controller (current state) sub-node which describes the >>>>>>>>> built-in STMMAC MDIO controller and declare the internal PHY as a child >>>>>>>>> node (along with 'phy-is-integrated'). If a different configuration is >>>>>>>>> used, then just put the external PHY as a child node there. >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> If fixed-link is required, the mdio node becomes unused anyway. >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> Works for everyone? >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> If we put an external PHY with reg=1 as a child of internal MDIO, >>>>>>>> il will be merged with internal PHY node and get >>>>>>>> phy-is-integrated. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Then have the .dtsi file contain just the mdio node, but no internal or >>>>>>> external PHY and push all the internal and external PHY node definition >>>>>>> (in its entirety) to the per-board DTS file, does not that work? >>>>>> >>>>>> If possible, I'd really like to have the internal PHY in the >>>>>> DTSI. It's always there in hardware anyway, and duplicating the PHY, >>>>>> with its clock, reset line, and whatever info we might need in the >>>>>> future in each and every board DTS that uses it will be very error >>>>>> prone and we will have the usual bunch of issues that come up with >>>>>> duplication. >>>>> >>>>> OK, then what if you put the internal PHY in the DTSI, mark it with a >>>>> status = "disabled" property, and have the per-board DTS put a status = >>>>> "okay" property along with a "phy-is-integrated" boolean property? Would >>>>> that work? >>>> >>>> No, I tested and for example with sun8i-h3-orangepi-plus.dts, the external PHY (ethernet-phy@1) is still merged. >>> >>> Is not there is a mistake in the unit address not matching the "reg" >>> property, or am I not looking at the right tree? >>> >>> &mdio { >>> ext_rgmii_phy: ethernet-phy@1 { >>> compatible = "ethernet-phy-ieee802.3-c22"; >>> reg = <0>; >>> }; >>> }; >>> >>> If the PHY is really at MDIO address 0, then it should be >>> ethernet-phy@0, and not ethernet-phy@1, and then no problem with the >>> merging? >> >> That is wrong. The board described in the example likely has a Realtek >> RTL8211E @ address 0x1. Address 0 for this PHY is a broadcast address, >> so it still works, but is the wrong representation. >> >>> >>> >>>> So that adding a 'status = "disabled"' does not bring anything. >>>> >>>>> >>>>> What I really don't think is necessary is: >>>>> >>>>> - duplicating the "mdio" controller node for external vs. internal PHY, >>>>> because this is not accurate, there is just one MDIO controller, but >>>>> there may be different kinds of MDIO/PHY devices attached >>>> >>>> For me, if we want to represent the reality, we need two MDIO: >>>> - since two PHY at the same address could co-exists >>>> - since they are isolated so not on the same MDIO bus >>> >>> Is that really true? It might be, but from experience with e.g: >>> bcmgenet, the integrated PHY and the external PHYs are on the same MDIO >>> bus, which is convenient, except when you have an address conflict. >> >> There's a mux in the hardware: either the internal MDIO+MII lines >> from the internal PHY are connected to the MAC, or the external >> MDIO+MII lines from the pin controller are connected. I believe >> this was already mentioned? > > There is obviously a mux for the data lines and clock to switch between > internal PHY and external PHYs, that does not mean there is one for MDIO > and MDC lines, which is what is being suggested to be used here, does > the mux also takes care of these lines? > >> >>> >>>> >>>>> - having the STMMAC driver MDIO probing code having to deal with a >>>>> "mdio" sub-node or an "internal-mdio" sub-node because this is confusing >>>>> and requiring more driver-level changes that are error prone >>>> >>>> My patch for stmmac is really small, only the name of my variable ("need_mdio_mux_ids") >>>> have to be changed to something like "register_parent_mdio" >>>> >>>> >>>> So I agree with Maxime, we need to avoid merging PHY nodes, and we can avoid it only by having two separate MDIO nodes. >>>> Furthermore, with only one MDIO, we will face with lots of small patch for adding phy-is-integrated, with two we do not need to change any board DT, all is simply clean. >>>> Really having two MDIO seems cleaner. >>> >>> The only valid thing that you have provided so far is this merging >>> problem. Anything else ranging from "we will face with lots of small >>> patch for adding phy-is-integrated" to "Really having two MDIO seems >>> cleaner." are hard to receive as technical arguments for correctness. >>> >>> What happens if someone connects an external PHY at the same MDIO >>> address than the internal PHY, which one do you get responses from? If >>> you shutdown the internal PHY and it stops responding, then this >>> probably becomes deterministic, but it still supports the fact there is >>> just one MDIO bus controller per MAC. >> >> Depends on whichever set of pins/lines are selected. But yeah, there's >> only one MDIO bus controller in the MAC. > > OK, so one MDIO controller, but what about the MDIO/MDC lines then, are > they also muxed, like the data/clock lines or not? Just tested. Yes the MDIO/MDC lines are also muxed and controlled through the same mux bit. 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