On Wed, Jan 11, 2023 at 05:20:18PM +0800, Frank.Sae wrote: > Hi Andrew, > > On 2023/1/6 21:55, Andrew Lunn wrote: > >>> Why is this needed? When the MAC driver connects to the PHY, it passes > >>> phy-mode. For RGMII, this is one of: > >> > >>> linux/phy.h: PHY_INTERFACE_MODE_RGMII, > >>> linux/phy.h: PHY_INTERFACE_MODE_RGMII_ID, > >>> linux/phy.h: PHY_INTERFACE_MODE_RGMII_RXID, > >>> linux/phy.h: PHY_INTERFACE_MODE_RGMII_TXID, > >>> > >>> This tells you if you need to add a delay for the RX clock line, the > >>> TX clock line, or both. That is all you need to know for basic RGMII > >>> delays. > >>> > >> > >> This basic delay can be controlled by hardware or the phy-mode which > >> passes from MAC driver. > >> Default value depends on power on strapping, according to the voltage > >> of RXD0 pin (low = 0, turn off; high = 1, turn on). > >> > >> Add this for the case that This basic delay is controlled by hardware, > >> and software don't change this. > > > > You should always do what phy-mode contains. Always. We have had > > problems in the past where a PHY driver ignored the phy-mode, and left > > the PHY however it was strapped. Which worked. But developers put the > > wrong phy-mode value in DT. Then somebody had a board which actually > > required that the DT value really did work, because the strapping was > > wrong. So the driver was fixed to respect the PHY mode, made that > > board work, and broke all the other boards which had the wrong > > phy-mode in DT. > > > > If the user want the driver to leave the mode alone, use the > > strapping, they should use PHY_INTERFACE_MODE_NA. It is not well > > documented, but it is used in a few places. However, i don't recommend > > it. > > > > RX delay = rx-delay-basic (0ns or 1.9ns) + x-delay-additional-ps > (N*150ps, N = 0 ~ 15) > If rx-delay-basic is removed and controlled by phy-mode. > when phy-mode is rgmii-id or rgmii-rxid, RX delay is 1.9ns + N*150ps. > But sometimes 1.9ns is still too big, we just need 0ns + N*150ps. > > For this case, can we do like following ? > rx-internal-delay-ps: > enum: [ 0, 150, 300, 450, 600, 750, 900, 1050, 1200, 1350, 1500, > 1650, 1800, 1900, 1950, 2050, 2100, 2200, 2250, 2350, 2500, 2650, 2800, > 2950, 3100, 3250, 3400, 3550, 3700, 3850, 4000, 4150 ] > default: 0 > rx-internal-delay-ps is 0ns + N*150ps and 1.9ns + N*150ps. > And check whether need rx-delay-basic (1.9ns) by the val of > rx-internal-delay-ps? Please take a look at phy_get_internal_delay() and the drivers which use it. Andrew