Hi Doug, On Tue, Apr 02, 2019 at 03:44:44PM -0700, Douglas Anderson wrote: > The software running on the Chrome OS Embedded Controller (cros_ec) > handles SPI transfers in a bit of a wonky way. Specifically if the EC > sees too long of a delay in a SPI transfer it will give up and the > transfer will be counted as failed. Unfortunately the timeout is > fairly short, though the actual number may be different for different > EC codebases. > > We can end up tripping the timeout pretty easily if we happen to > preempt the task running the SPI transfer and don't get back to it for > a little while. > > Historically this hasn't been a _huge_ deal because: > 1. On old devices Chrome OS used to run PREEMPT_VOLUNTARY. That meant > we were pretty unlikely to take a big break from the transfer. > 2. On recent devices we had faster / more processors. > 3. Recent devices didn't use "cros-ec-spi-pre-delay". Using that > delay makes us more likely to trip this use case. > 4. For whatever reasons (I didn't dig) old kernels seem to be less > likely to trip this. > 5. For the most part it's kinda OK if a few transfers to the EC fail. > Mostly we're just polling the battery or doing some other task > where we'll try again. > > Even with the above things, this issue has reared its ugly head > periodically. We could solve this in a nice way by adding reliable > retries to the EC protocol [1] or by re-designing the code in the EC > codebase to allow it to wait longer, but that code doesn't ever seem > to get changed. ...and even if it did, it wouldn't help old devices. > > It's now time to finally take a crack at making this a little better. > This patch isn't guaranteed to make every cros_ec SPI transfer > perfect, but it should improve things by a few orders of magnitude. > Specifically you can try this on a rk3288-veyron Chromebook (which is > slower and also _does_ need "cros-ec-spi-pre-delay"): > md5sum /dev/zero & > md5sum /dev/zero & > md5sum /dev/zero & > md5sum /dev/zero & > while true; do > cat /sys/class/power_supply/sbs-20-000b/charge_now > /dev/null; > done > ...before this patch you'll see boatloads of errors. After this patch I > don't see any in the testing I did. > > The way this patch works is by effectively boosting the priority of > the cros_ec transfers. As far as I know there is no simple way to > just boost the priority of the current process temporarily so the way > we accomplish this is by creating a "WQ_HIGHPRI" workqueue and doing > the transfers there. > > NOTE: this patch relies on the fact that the SPI framework attempts to > push the messages out on the calling context (which is the one that is > boosted to high priority). As I understand from earlier (long ago) > discussions with Mark Brown this should be a fine assumption. Even if > it isn't true sometimes this patch will still not make things worse. > > [1] https://crbug.com/678675 > > Signed-off-by: Douglas Anderson <dianders@xxxxxxxxxxxx> > --- > > drivers/platform/chrome/cros_ec_spi.c | 107 ++++++++++++++++++++++++-- > 1 file changed, 101 insertions(+), 6 deletions(-) > > diff --git a/drivers/platform/chrome/cros_ec_spi.c b/drivers/platform/chrome/cros_ec_spi.c > index ffc38f9d4829..101f2deb7d3c 100644 > --- a/drivers/platform/chrome/cros_ec_spi.c > +++ b/drivers/platform/chrome/cros_ec_spi.c > > ... > > +static int cros_ec_pkt_xfer_spi(struct cros_ec_device *ec_dev, > + struct cros_ec_command *ec_msg) > +{ > + struct cros_ec_spi *ec_spi = ec_dev->priv; > + struct cros_ec_xfer_work_params params; > + > + INIT_WORK(¶ms.work, cros_ec_pkt_xfer_spi_work); > + params.ec_dev = ec_dev; > + params.ec_msg = ec_msg; > + > + queue_work(ec_spi->high_pri_wq, ¶ms.work); > + flush_workqueue(ec_spi->high_pri_wq); IIRC dedicated workqueues should be avoided unless they are needed. In this case it seems you could use system_highpri_wq + a completion. This would add a few extra lines to deal with the completion, in exchange the code to create the workqueue could be removed. > + return params.ret; > +} > + > +static void cros_ec_cmd_xfer_spi_work(struct work_struct *work) > +{ > + struct cros_ec_xfer_work_params *params; > + > + params = container_of(work, struct cros_ec_xfer_work_params, work); > + params->ret = do_cros_ec_cmd_xfer_spi(params->ec_dev, params->ec_msg); > +} > + > +static int cros_ec_cmd_xfer_spi(struct cros_ec_device *ec_dev, > + struct cros_ec_command *ec_msg) > +{ > + struct cros_ec_spi *ec_spi = ec_dev->priv; > + struct cros_ec_xfer_work_params params; > + > + INIT_WORK(¶ms.work, cros_ec_cmd_xfer_spi_work); > + params.ec_dev = ec_dev; > + params.ec_msg = ec_msg; > + > + queue_work(ec_spi->high_pri_wq, ¶ms.work); > + flush_workqueue(ec_spi->high_pri_wq); > + > + return params.ret; > +} This is essentially a copy of cros_ec_pkt_xfer_spi() above. You could add a wrapper that receives the work function to avoid the duplicate code. Cheers Matthias _______________________________________________ Linux-rockchip mailing list Linux-rockchip@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.infradead.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-rockchip