> +static int ave_mdio_busywait(struct net_device *ndev) > +{ > + int ret = 1, loop = 100; > + u32 mdiosr; > + > + /* wait until completion */ > + while (1) { > + mdiosr = ave_r32(ndev, AVE_MDIOSR); > + if (!(mdiosr & AVE_MDIOSR_STS)) > + break; > + > + usleep_range(10, 20); > + if (!loop--) { > + netdev_err(ndev, > + "failed to read from MDIO (status:0x%08x)\n", > + mdiosr); > + ret = 0; ETIMEDOUT would be better. > + break; > + } > + } > + > + return ret; and then return 0 on success. That is the normal convention for return values. An error code, and 0. > +static int ave_mdiobus_write(struct mii_bus *bus, > + int phyid, int regnum, u16 val) > +{ > + struct net_device *ndev = bus->priv; > + u32 mdioctl; > + > + /* write address */ > + ave_w32(ndev, AVE_MDIOAR, (phyid << 8) | regnum); > + > + /* write data */ > + ave_w32(ndev, AVE_MDIOWDR, val); > + > + /* write request */ > + mdioctl = ave_r32(ndev, AVE_MDIOCTR); > + ave_w32(ndev, AVE_MDIOCTR, mdioctl | AVE_MDIOCTR_WREQ); > + > + if (!ave_mdio_busywait(ndev)) { > + netdev_err(ndev, "phy-%d reg-%x write failed\n", > + phyid, regnum); > + return -1; If ave_mdio_busywait() returns ETIMEDOUT, you can just return it. Returning -1 is not good. > + } > + > + return 0; > +} > + > +static irqreturn_t ave_interrupt(int irq, void *netdev) > +{ > + struct net_device *ndev = (struct net_device *)netdev; > + struct ave_private *priv = netdev_priv(ndev); > + u32 gimr_val, gisr_val; > + > + gimr_val = ave_irq_disable_all(ndev); > + > + /* get interrupt status */ > + gisr_val = ave_r32(ndev, AVE_GISR); > + > + /* PHY */ > + if (gisr_val & AVE_GI_PHY) { > + ave_w32(ndev, AVE_GISR, AVE_GI_PHY); > + if (priv->internal_phy_interrupt) > + phy_mac_interrupt(ndev->phydev, ndev->phydev->link); Humm. I don't think this is correct. You are supposed to give it the new link state, not the old. What does a PHY interrupt mean here? > +static void ave_adjust_link(struct net_device *ndev) > +{ > + struct ave_private *priv = netdev_priv(ndev); > + struct phy_device *phydev = ndev->phydev; > + u32 val, txcr, rxcr, rxcr_org; > + > + /* set RGMII speed */ > + val = ave_r32(ndev, AVE_TXCR); > + val &= ~(AVE_TXCR_TXSPD_100 | AVE_TXCR_TXSPD_1G); > + > + if (priv->phy_mode == PHY_INTERFACE_MODE_RGMII && > + phydev->speed == SPEED_1000) phy_interface_mode_is_rgmii(), so that you handle all the RGMII modes. > + val |= AVE_TXCR_TXSPD_1G; > + else if (phydev->speed == SPEED_100) > + val |= AVE_TXCR_TXSPD_100; > + > + ave_w32(ndev, AVE_TXCR, val); > + > + /* set RMII speed (100M/10M only) */ > + if (priv->phy_mode != PHY_INTERFACE_MODE_RGMII) { Not so safe. It would be better to check for the modes you actually support. > + if (phydev->link) > + netif_carrier_on(ndev); > + else > + netif_carrier_off(ndev); I don't think you need this. The phylib should do it for you. > + > + phy_print_status(phydev); > +} > + > +static int ave_init(struct net_device *ndev) > +{ > + struct ave_private *priv = netdev_priv(ndev); > + struct device *dev = ndev->dev.parent; > + struct device_node *phy_node, *np = dev->of_node; > + struct phy_device *phydev; > + const void *mac_addr; > + u32 supported; > + > + /* get mac address */ > + mac_addr = of_get_mac_address(np); > + if (mac_addr) > + ether_addr_copy(ndev->dev_addr, mac_addr); > + > + /* if the mac address is invalid, use random mac address */ > + if (!is_valid_ether_addr(ndev->dev_addr)) { > + eth_hw_addr_random(ndev); > + dev_warn(dev, "Using random MAC address: %pM\n", > + ndev->dev_addr); > + } > + > + /* attach PHY with MAC */ > + phy_node = of_get_next_available_child(np, NULL); ??? Should this not be looking for a phy-handle property? Documentation/devicetree/binds/net/ethernet.txt: - phy-handle: phandle, specifies a reference to a node representing a PHY device; this property is described in the Devicetree Specification and so preferred; > + phydev = of_phy_connect(ndev, phy_node, > + ave_adjust_link, 0, priv->phy_mode); > + if (!phydev) { > + dev_err(dev, "could not attach to PHY\n"); > + return -ENODEV; > + } > + of_node_put(phy_node); > + > + priv->phydev = phydev; > + phydev->autoneg = AUTONEG_ENABLE; > + phydev->speed = 0; > + phydev->duplex = 0; And this should not be needed. > + > + dev_info(dev, "connected to %s phy with id 0x%x\n", > + phydev->drv->name, phydev->phy_id); phy_attached_info() > + > + if (priv->phy_mode != PHY_INTERFACE_MODE_RGMII) { Same comment as above. > + supported = phydev->supported; > + phydev->supported &= ~PHY_GBIT_FEATURES; > + phydev->supported |= supported & PHY_BASIC_FEATURES; > + } > + > + /* PHY interrupt stop instruction is needed because the interrupt > + * continues to assert. > + */ > + phy_stop_interrupts(phydev); Could you explain this some more? It sounds like your interrupt controller is broken. > + > + /* When PHY driver can't handle its interrupt directly, > + * interrupt request always fails and polling method is used > + * alternatively. In this case, the libphy says > + * "libphy: uniphier-mdio: Can't get IRQ -1 (PHY)". > + */ > + phy_start_interrupts(phydev); -1 is PHY_POLL. So calling phy_start_interrupts() is wrong. In fact, you should not be calling phy_start_interrupts() at all. No other Ethernet driver does. > + > + phy_start_aneg(phydev); > + > + return 0; > +} > + > +static void ave_uninit(struct net_device *ndev) > +{ > + struct ave_private *priv = netdev_priv(ndev); > + > + phy_stop_interrupts(priv->phydev); And no other Ethernet driver calls phy_stop_interrupts either. Please take a look at this. > + phy_disconnect(priv->phydev); > +} > + Andrew -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe devicetree" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html