On 10/23/2019 5:09 PM, Brendan Higgins wrote:
On Wed, Oct 23, 2019 at 2:17 PM Peter Rosin <peda@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
On 2019-10-22 19:44, Jae Hyun Yoo wrote:
On 10/22/2019 1:45 AM, Peter Rosin wrote:
On 2019-10-21 23:57, Jae Hyun Yoo wrote:
Hi Peter,
On 10/21/2019 2:05 PM, Peter Rosin wrote:
On 2019-10-21 22:24, Jae Hyun Yoo wrote:
Append a binding to support hardware timeout feature.
Signed-off-by: Jae Hyun Yoo <jae.hyun.yoo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
---
Documentation/devicetree/bindings/i2c/i2c-aspeed.txt | 2 ++
1 file changed, 2 insertions(+)
diff --git a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/i2c/i2c-aspeed.txt b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/i2c/i2c-aspeed.txt
index b47f6ccb196a..133bfedf4cdd 100644
--- a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/i2c/i2c-aspeed.txt
+++ b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/i2c/i2c-aspeed.txt
@@ -17,6 +17,8 @@ Optional Properties:
- bus-frequency : frequency of the bus clock in Hz defaults to 100 kHz when not
specified
- multi-master : states that there is another master active on this bus.
+- aspeed,hw-timeout-ms : Hardware timeout in milliseconds. If it's not
+ specified, the H/W timeout feature will be disabled.
Example:
Some SMBus clients support a smbus-timeout-disable binding for disabling
timeouts like this, for cases where the I2C adapter in question on occasion
is unable to keep the pace. Adding that property thus avoids undesired
timeouts when the client is SMBus conformant without it. Your new binding
is the reverse situation, where you want to add a timeout where one is
otherwise missing.
Anyway, since I2C does not have a specified lowest possible frequency, this
feels like something that is more in the SMBus arena. Should the property
perhaps be a generic property named smbus-timeout-ms, or something like
that?
Well, I tried upstreaming of the generic timeout property a year ago but
I agreed that the generic bus timeout property can be set by an ioctl
command so it didn't need to be added into device tree at that time. Not
sure if any need has come recently but I haven't heard that. This driver
still uses the generic timeout property which is provided by i2c core
for handling command timeouts, and it's out of scope from this patch
series.
If the above is not wanted or appropriate, then I would personally prefer
aspeed,bus-timeout-ms over aspeed,hw-timeout-ms. To me, hw-timeout-ms sounds
like a (more serious) timeout between the CPU and the I2C peripheral unit
or something like that. But I don't care deeply...
Changes I submitted in this patch set is for a different purpose which
is very Aspeed H/W specific, and actually it's a more serious timeout
setting indeed. If this H/W is used in multi-master environment, it
could meet a H/W hang that freezes itself in slave mode and it can't
escape from the state. To resolve the specific case, this H/W provides
self-recovery feature which monitors abnormal state of SDA, SCL and its
H/W state machine using the timeout setting to determine the escape
condition.
Are you saying that the aspeed HW is buggy and that this abnormal state
is self inflicted by the aspeed HW even if other masters on the bus
behave sanely? Because I didn't quite read it that way at all...
I don't think it's an Aspeed HW bug. Actually, this HW can be exposed to
very severe environments if it is used as a Baseboard Management
Controller which needs two or more multi-masters on a bus depends on
HW design. Also, it should expect unknown or buggy device attachment
on a bus through add-on card slots. Aspeed HW provides HW timeout
feature to support exceptional cases handling which comes from the
severe use cases.
To me, it sounded *exactly* like the state I2C clients end up in when an
I2C master "dies" and stops communicating in the middle of a transaction.
I.e. the thing that the SMBus timeout is designed to prevent (and the
state the I2C nine-clk-recovery sequence addresses). The only twist (that
I saw) was that the aspeed HW is also a master and that the aspeed master
driver is completely locked out from the bus while some obnoxious master
fails to complete its transaction (or whatever it was up to).
If this HW runs on a single-master bus, any master dying issue will be
cured by recovery logic which this driver already has and the logic uses
the bus timeout setting you are saying.
This patch set is mainly focusing on a 'slave mode hang' issue on a
'multi-master' bus which can't be covered by the recovery logic.
If this can only be triggered when the HW is acting as a slave, and by
aborted or otherwise funky master activity on the bus, then I wouldn't
call it an HW issue. Then it would be a bus issue. I.e. something needing
a bus-timeout instead of a hw-timeout.
Here is an example. In a multi-node BMC system, a peer master can be
shutdown in the middle of transaction, then this Aspeed HW keeps waiting
for a next event from the peer master but it can't happen because the
peer master was already shutdown. If we enable the 'slave inactive
timeout feature' using the HW timeout setting, the this HW can escape
from the waiting state. If we don't, this HW hangs forever in the
waiting state and it's the reason why I implemented this patch set.
The hw-timeout setting needs fine tuning depends on HW environment so
it should be different from the bus-timeout.
Yeah, ok, so you're basically confirming everything I said. I do
sense some confusion though, as you come across as a bit
defensive and seem to think that I am against the whole notion of
the patches. And that's not the case at all! My only issue is
with the naming. And I happen to think hw-timeout-ms is a really
bad name. It's way too broad and can mean just about anything.
When I read that, I think of some workaround for broken hardware,
not normal things like the other masters on the bus doing
confusing things. Funky bus activity from remote masters is
simply not an HW issue in my book, at least not an HW issue on
the local side of the bus. It's just something you *must expect*.
Sorry for not jumping in earlier, but I agree with Peter.
I like the name bus-timeout-ms better. It was not immediately clear
from reading your commit descriptions what this was all about.
Okay, I can change the name if the 'aspeed,hw-timeout-ms' is
inappropriate but I still doubt using of 'bus-timeout-ms'.
The 'bus-timeout-ms' is being used for some client drivers in hwmon
subsystem but it's not being used for any adapter driver currently.
Since adapter drivers also use timeout value which I2C core provides,
it could make confusion with it if I use 'bus-timeout-ms' for an adapter
node in DT. Though, I and Wolfram agreed last year that the adapter
timeout property can't be added into DT because it's purely S/W property
so using of 'bus-timeout-ms' in DT for H/W property setting of an
adapter device could be acceptable if we make consensus here.
Please share your thoughts or suggest a better name for it.
Thanks,
Jae