Re: [PATCH] m68k/atari: EtherNEC - rewrite to use mainstream ne.c, take two

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On 12-04-01 04:49 AM, Michael Schmitz wrote:
Hi Paul, Geert,
And on re-reading the comments in the other part of the patch, i.e.
"...emulates the card interrupt via a timer"  --perhaps the driver
should be just fixed to support generic netpoll, instead of adding
an arch specific thing that amounts to netpoll.  Then anyone can
attempt to limp along and use one of these ancient relics w/o IRQ.
  
Here's take two of my patch to convert the m68k Atari ROM port Ethernet 
driver to use mainstream ne.c, with minimal changes to the core NE2000 
code.

In particular:

Changes to core net code:
* add a platform specific IRQ flag, so ne.c can share a hardware or 
timer interrupt with some other interrupt source.

Changes to arch/m68k code:
* register the 8390 platform device on Atari only if the hardware is present
* retain the old driver (atari_ethernec.c in Geert's tree) under a 
different config option, to be removed soon.

Regarding your suggestion that netpoll be used instead of a dedicated 
timer interrupt: no changes to ne.c or 8390p.c are required to use 
netpoll, it all works out of the box. All that is needed to use the 
driver with netpoll is setting the device interrupt to some source that  
can be registered, and enabling CONFIG_NETPOLL. Interrupt rate and hence 
throughput is lower with netpoll though, which is why I still prefer the 
dedicated timer option.

How much lower?  Enough to matter?  Implicit in that question is
the assumption that this is largely a hobbyist platform and nobody
is using it in a closet to route gigabytes of traffic.

Also, the only advantage to modifying ne.c is to allow dumping
the old driver.  What is the "remove soon" plan?  Any reason
for it to not be synchronous?  That would eliminate the Kconfig
churn and the introduction of the _OLD option.  Modifying ne.c
and then deciding to keep the old driver because it is "faster"
would make this change pointless.


Comments?

Some specific to the non-atari network parts inline below.

P.


Cheers,

  Michael Schmitz

Signed-off-by: Michael Schmitz <schmitz@xxxxxxxxxx>

--
 arch/m68k/atari/config.c                   |   41 
+++++++++++++++++++++++++---
 drivers/net/Space.c                        |    2 +-
 drivers/net/ethernet/8390/8390.h           |    8 +++++
 drivers/net/ethernet/8390/Kconfig          |   18 +++++++++++-
 drivers/net/ethernet/8390/Makefile         |    3 +-
 drivers/net/ethernet/8390/atari_ethernec.c |    6 ++--
 drivers/net/ethernet/8390/ne.c             |    5 ++-
 7 files changed, 71 insertions(+), 12 deletions(-)


[...]

diff --git a/drivers/net/ethernet/8390/8390.h 
b/drivers/net/ethernet/8390/8390.h
index ef325ff..9416245 100644
--- a/drivers/net/ethernet/8390/8390.h
+++ b/drivers/net/ethernet/8390/8390.h
@@ -32,6 +32,14 @@ extern void ei_poll(struct net_device *dev);
 extern void eip_poll(struct net_device *dev);
 #endif
 
+/* Some platforms may need special IRQ flags */
+#if IS_ENABLED(CONFIG_ATARI_ETHERNEC)
+#  define EI_IRQ_FLAGS    IRQF_SHARED
+#endif
+
+#ifndef EI_IRQ_FLAGS
+#  define EI_IRQ_FLAGS    0
+#endif

This seems more klunky than it needs to be.  If we assume that anyone
building ne.c on atari is hence trying to drive an ethernec device
than it can just be

#ifdef CONFIG_ATARI
#define EI_IRQ_FLAGS	IRQF_SHARED
#else
#define EI_IRQ_FLAGS	0
#endif

 
 /* Without I/O delay - non ISA or later chips */
 extern void NS8390_init(struct net_device *dev, int startp);
diff --git a/drivers/net/ethernet/8390/Kconfig 
b/drivers/net/ethernet/8390/Kconfig
index b801056..75875f2 100644
--- a/drivers/net/ethernet/8390/Kconfig
+++ b/drivers/net/ethernet/8390/Kconfig
@@ -226,11 +226,27 @@ config APNE
 config ATARI_ETHERNEC
     tristate "Atari EtherNEC Ethernet support"
     depends on ATARI_ROM_ISA
-    help
+    select CRC32
+    ---help---
+      Say Y to include support for the EtherNEC network adapter for the
+      ROM port. The driver works by polling instead of interrupts, so it
+      is quite slow.
+
+      To compile this driver as a module, choose M here: the module
+      will be called ne.
+
+config ATARI_ETHERNEC_OLD
+    tristate "Atari EtherNEC Ethernet support - obsolete driver"
+    depends on ATARI_ROM_ISA
+    select CRC32
+    ---help---
       Say Y to include support for the EtherNEC network adapter for the
       ROM port. The driver works by polling instead of interrupts, so it
       is quite slow.
 
+      To compile this driver as a module, choose M here: the module
+      will be called atari_ethernec.
+
 config NE3210
     tristate "Novell/Eagle/Microdyne NE3210 EISA support (EXPERIMENTAL)"
     depends on PCI && EISA && EXPERIMENTAL
diff --git a/drivers/net/ethernet/8390/Makefile 
b/drivers/net/ethernet/8390/Makefile
index d896466..e620355 100644
--- a/drivers/net/ethernet/8390/Makefile
+++ b/drivers/net/ethernet/8390/Makefile
@@ -6,7 +6,8 @@ obj-$(CONFIG_MAC8390) += mac8390.o
 obj-$(CONFIG_AC3200) += ac3200.o 8390.o
 obj-$(CONFIG_APNE) += apne.o 8390.o
 obj-$(CONFIG_ARM_ETHERH) += etherh.o
-obj-$(CONFIG_ATARI_ETHERNEC) += atari_ethernec.o 8390.o
+obj-$(CONFIG_ATARI_ETHERNEC_OLD) += atari_ethernec.o 8390.o
+obj-$(CONFIG_ATARI_ETHERNEC) += ne.o 8390p.o
 obj-$(CONFIG_AX88796) += ax88796.o
 obj-$(CONFIG_E2100) += e2100.o 8390.o
 obj-$(CONFIG_EL2) += 3c503.o 8390p.o
diff --git a/drivers/net/ethernet/8390/atari_ethernec.c 
b/drivers/net/ethernet/8390/atari_ethernec.c
index 086d968..5e8fb97 100644
--- a/drivers/net/ethernet/8390/atari_ethernec.c
+++ b/drivers/net/ethernet/8390/atari_ethernec.c
@@ -185,13 +185,13 @@ bad_clone_list[] __initdata = {
 #  define DCR_VAL 0x4b
 #elif defined(CONFIG_PLAT_OAKS32R)  || \
    defined(CONFIG_TOSHIBA_RBTX4927) || defined(CONFIG_TOSHIBA_RBTX4938) 
|| \
-   defined(CONFIG_ATARI_ETHERNEC) || defined(CONFIG_ATARI_ETHERNEC_MODULE)
+   IS_ENABLED(CONFIG_ATARI_ETHERNEC_OLD)
 #  define DCR_VAL 0x48        /* 8-bit mode */
 #else
 #  define DCR_VAL 0x49
 #endif
 
-#if defined(CONFIG_ATARI_ETHERNEC) || defined(CONFIG_ATARI_ETHERNEC_MODULE)
+#if IS_ENABLED(CONFIG_ATARI_ETHERNEC_OLD)
 #  define ETHERNEC_RTL_8019_BASE 0x300
 #  define ETHERNEC_RTL_8019_IRQ IRQ_MFP_TIMD
 #endif
@@ -357,7 +357,7 @@ struct net_device * __init atari_ethernec_probe(int 
unit)
     sprintf(dev->name, "eth%d", unit);
     netdev_boot_setup_check(dev);
 
-#if defined(CONFIG_ATARI_ETHERNEC)
+#if defined(CONFIG_ATARI_ETHERNEC_OLD)
     dev->base_addr = ETHERNEC_RTL_8019_BASE;
     dev->irq = ETHERNEC_RTL_8019_IRQ;
 #endif
diff --git a/drivers/net/ethernet/8390/ne.c b/drivers/net/ethernet/8390/ne.c
index f92ea2a..39678fc 100644
--- a/drivers/net/ethernet/8390/ne.c
+++ b/drivers/net/ethernet/8390/ne.c
@@ -165,7 +165,8 @@ bad_clone_list[] __initdata = {
 #if defined(CONFIG_PLAT_MAPPI)
 #  define DCR_VAL 0x4b
 #elif defined(CONFIG_PLAT_OAKS32R)  || \
-   defined(CONFIG_MACH_TX49XX)
+   defined(CONFIG_MACH_TX49XX) || \
+   IS_ENABLED(CONFIG_ATARI_ETHERNEC)

Rather than use IS_ENABLED on a driver setting, you can follow
the surrounding context and use defined(CONFIG_ATARI) -- i.e.
work off a platform setting.

Paul.

 #  define DCR_VAL 0x48        /* 8-bit mode */
 #else
 #  define DCR_VAL 0x49
@@ -492,7 +493,7 @@ static int __init ne_probe1(struct net_device *dev, 
unsigned long ioaddr)
 
     /* Snarf the interrupt now.  There's no point in waiting since we 
cannot
        share and the board will usually be enabled. */
-    ret = request_irq(dev->irq, eip_interrupt, 0, name, dev);
+    ret = request_irq(dev->irq, eip_interrupt, EI_IRQ_FLAGS, name, dev);
     if (ret) {
         printk (" unable to get IRQ %d (errno=%d).\n", dev->irq, ret);
         goto err_out;

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