Hi Andrew, On 25/05/24 12:01 am, Andrew Lunn wrote: > EXTERNAL EMAIL: Do not click links or open attachments unless you know the content is safe > >> After a considerable ammount of headscratching it seems that disabling collision >> detection on the macphy is the only way of getting it stable. >> When PLCA is enabled it's expected that CD causes problems, when running >> in CSMA/CD mode it was unexpected (for me at least). > > Now we are back to, why is your system different? What is triggering a > collision for you, but not Parthiban? I am using PHY driver which has "Disable CD if PLCA is enabled" fix. Probably that could be the reason that why I am not running into these issues. > > There is nothing in the standard about reporting a collision. So this > is a Microchip extension? So the framework is not doing anything when > it happens, which will explain why it becomes a storm.... Until we do > have a mechanism to handle vendor specific interrupts, the frame work > should disable them all, to avoid this storm. "IEEE 10BASE-T1S Implementation Specification" from OPEN Alliance does specify this in the section "5.2 Collision Detection (CD) / Handling" for the Automotive environment support. https://opensig.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/20230215_10BASE-T1S_system_implementation_V1_0.pdf The automotive EMC immunity requirements exceeds the alien crosstalk noise levels defined in IEEE 802.3cgTM-2019 [1]. Therefore, in such environment the CD mechanism of the PHY may not be able to distinguish noise from collisions, limiting the achievable level of immunity. > > Does the datasheet document what to do on a collision? How are you > supposed to clear the condition? "8.5 PLCA Collision Detection" section in the LAN8650/1 datasheet describes the importance of disabling collision detection in case of PLCA mode enabled. When nodes in a mixing segment are properly configured for PLCA operation there will be no physical collisions. However, under certain conditions, including mixing segments with significant inherent noise due to reflections, and systems under high electromagnetic stress, false collisions may be detected. The false detection of late collisions will result in the transmitting node dropping the packet. As packets are typically received correctly in these conditions, it is recommended to disable collision detection at any time that PLCA is enabled and active. Collision detection is disabled by writing a zero to the Collision Detect Enable (CDEN) bit in the Collision Detector Control 0 (CDCTL0) register. https://ww1.microchip.com/downloads/aemDocuments/documents/AIS/ProductDocuments/DataSheets/LAN8650-1-Data-Sheet-60001734.pdf Hope this clarifies. Best regards, Parthiban V > > Andrew