Sometimes the OMAP UART does not signal the DMA engine to unload the FIFO. Usually this happens when we have >threshold bytes in the FIFO and start the DMA transfer. It seems that in those cases the UART won't trigger the transfer once the requested threshold is reached. In some rare cases the UART does not trigger the DMA transfer even if programmed while the FIFO was empty. In those cases the UART drops an RDI event and we have to empty the FIFO manually. If we ignore it because the DMA transfer is programmed then we will enter the function a few times until we receive the RX_TIMEOUT event. At that point the FIFO is usually full and we risk to overflow the FIFO. Reviewed-by: Tony Lindgren <tony@xxxxxxxxxxx> Tested-by: Tony Lindgren <tony@xxxxxxxxxxx> Signed-off-by: Sebastian Andrzej Siewior <bigeasy@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> --- drivers/tty/serial/8250/8250_dma.c | 18 ++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 18 insertions(+) diff --git a/drivers/tty/serial/8250/8250_dma.c b/drivers/tty/serial/8250/8250_dma.c index fa1dc966f394..898a6781d0b3 100644 --- a/drivers/tty/serial/8250/8250_dma.c +++ b/drivers/tty/serial/8250/8250_dma.c @@ -193,6 +193,24 @@ int serial8250_rx_dma(struct uart_8250_port *p, unsigned int iir) __dma_rx_do_complete(p, true); } return -ETIMEDOUT; + case UART_IIR_RDI: + if (p->bugs & UART_BUG_DMA_RX) + break; + /* + * The OMAP UART is a special BEAST. If we receive RDI we _have_ + * a DMA transfer programmed but it didn't worked. One reason is + * that we were too slow and there were too many bytes in the + * FIFO, the UART counted wrong and never kicked the DMA engine + * to do anything. That means once we receive RDI on OMAP than + * the DMA won't do anything soon so we have to cancel the DMA + * transfer and purge the FIFO manually. + */ + if (dma->rx_running) { + dmaengine_pause(dma->rxchan); + __dma_rx_do_complete(p, true); + } + return -ETIMEDOUT; + default: break; } -- 2.1.0 -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-omap" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html