Re: [PATCH 1/4] mailbox: add support for System Control and Power Interface(SCPI) protocol

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Hi Tixy,

On 29/04/15 12:43, Jon Medhurst (Tixy) wrote:
On Wed, 2015-04-29 at 11:53 +0100, Sudeep Holla wrote:
On 28/04/15 14:54, Jon Medhurst (Tixy) wrote:
On Mon, 2015-04-27 at 12:40 +0100, Sudeep Holla wrote:
[...]
+     int ret;
+     u8 token, chan;
+     struct scpi_xfer *msg;
+     struct scpi_chan *scpi_chan;
+
+     chan = atomic_inc_return(&scpi_info->next_chan) % scpi_info->num_chans;
+     scpi_chan = scpi_info->channels + chan;
+
+     msg = get_scpi_xfer(scpi_chan);
+     if (!msg)
+             return -ENOMEM;
+
+     token = atomic_inc_return(&scpi_chan->token) & CMD_TOKEN_ID_MASK;

So, this 8 bit token is what's used to 'uniquely' identify a pending
command. But as it's just an incrementing value, then if one command
gets delayed for long enough that 256 more are issued then we will have
a non-unique value and scpi_process_cmd can go wrong.


IMO by the time 256 message are queued up and serviced we would timeout
on the initial command. Moreover the core mailbox has sent the mailbox
length to 20(MBOX_TX_QUEUE_LEN) which needs to removed to even get the
remote chance of hit the corner case.

The corner case can be hit even if the queue length is only 2, because
other processes/cpus can use the other message we don't own here and
they can send then receive a message using that, 256 times. The corner
case doesn't require 256 simultaneous outstanding requests.


Good point, I missed it completely.

That is the reason I suggested that rather than using an incrementing
value for the 'unique' token, that each message instead contain the
value of the token to use with it.


Note, this delay doesn't just have to be at the SCPI end. We could get
preempted here (?) before actually sending the command to the SCP and
other kernel threads or processes could send those other 256 commands
before we get to run again.


Agreed, but we would still timeout after 3 jiffies max.

But we haven't started any timeout yet, the 3 jiffies won't start until
we get scheduled again and call wait_for_completion_timeout below.

Agreed.


Wouldn't it be better instead to have scpi_alloc_xfer_list add a unique
number to each struct scpi_xfer.


One of reason using it part of command is that SCP gives it back in the
response to compare.

Can't we fill the token in the command from the value stored in the
struct scpi_xfer we are using to send that command?


Yes we can but 256 limitation still exists but solve some issues at-least.

+
+     msg->slot = BIT(SCPI_SLOT);
+     msg->cmd = PACK_SCPI_CMD(cmd, token, len);
+     msg->tx_buf = tx_buf;
+     msg->tx_len = len;
+     msg->rx_buf = rx_buf;
+     init_completion(&msg->done);
+
+     ret = mbox_send_message(scpi_chan->chan, msg);
+     if (ret < 0 || !rx_buf)
+             goto out;
+
+     if (!wait_for_completion_timeout(&msg->done, MAX_RX_TIMEOUT))
+             ret = -ETIMEDOUT;
+     else
+             /* first status word */
+             ret = le32_to_cpu(msg->status);
+out:
+     if (ret < 0 && rx_buf) /* remove entry from the list if timed-out */

So, even with my suggestion that the unique message identifies are
fixed values stored in struct scpi_xfer, we can still have the situation
where we timeout a request, that scpi_xfer then getting used for another
request, and finally the SCP completes the request that we timed out,
which has the same 'unique' value as the later one.


As explained above I can't imagine hitting this condition. I will think
more on that again.

I can imagine :-) If we timeout and discard messages, and reuse it's
unique id, there is always the possibility of this confusion occurring.
No amount of coding in the kernel can get around that. The only thing
you can do to get out of this quandary is make assumptions about how the
SCP firmware behaves.


Agreed again.


One way to handle that it to not have any timeout on requests and assume
the firmware isn't buggy.


That's something I can't do ;) based on my experience so far. It's good
to assume firmware *can be buggy* and handle all possible errors.

I'm inclined to agree.


Thanks :)

  Think
about the development firmware using this driver. This has been very
useful when I was testing the development versions. Even under stress
conditions I still see timeouts(very rarely though), so my personal
preference is to have them.

But the SCPI protocol unfortunately doesn't seem to allow us to robustly
handle timeouts. Well, we could keep a list of tokens used in timed out
messages, and not reuse them. But if, as you say, timeouts do occur,
then with only 256 available, we are likely to run out.


Yes :(

When I brought this up 9 months ago, it was pointed out that the
limitation of an 8-bit token for a message because was because the
protocol designers had were cramming it into the 32-bit value poked into
the MHU register. The new finished protocol spec doesn't use the MHU
register any more for this data, but the limitations we're kept by
specifying the same command data format but just stored in the shared
memory. Pity the opportunity wasn't taken to expand the token size to
something that allowed more robust use.


IMO may not be true, since the whole redesign was to align something
similar to ACPI PCC, they got influenced too much from it. Even that
has just 64-bit header and they tried to keep the same.

Regards,
Sudeep
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