On Tue, Sep 01, 2020 at 07:38:10PM +0200, Thomas Bogendoerfer wrote: > On Tue, Sep 01, 2020 at 07:16:27PM +0200, Christoph Hellwig wrote: > > Well, if IP22 doesn't speculate (which I'm pretty sure is the case), > > dma_sync_single_for_cpu should indeeed be a no-op. But then there > > also shouldn't be anything in the cache, as the previous > > dma_sync_single_for_device should have invalidated it. So it seems like > > we are missing one (or more) ownership transfers to the device. I'll > > try to look at the the ownership management in a little more detail > > tomorrow. > > this is the problem: > > /* Always check for received packets. */ > sgiseeq_rx(dev, sp, hregs, sregs); > > so the driver will look at the rx descriptor on every interrupt, so > we cache the rx descriptor on the first interrupt and if there was > $no rx packet, we will only see it, if cache line gets flushed for > some other reason. kick_tx() does a busy loop checking tx descriptors, > with just sync_desc_cpu... the patch below fixes the problem. Thomas. diff --git a/drivers/net/ethernet/seeq/sgiseeq.c b/drivers/net/ethernet/seeq/sgiseeq.c index 8507ff242014..876e3700a0e4 100644 --- a/drivers/net/ethernet/seeq/sgiseeq.c +++ b/drivers/net/ethernet/seeq/sgiseeq.c @@ -112,14 +112,18 @@ struct sgiseeq_private { static inline void dma_sync_desc_cpu(struct net_device *dev, void *addr) { - dma_cache_sync(dev->dev.parent, addr, sizeof(struct sgiseeq_rx_desc), - DMA_FROM_DEVICE); + struct sgiseeq_private *sp = netdev_priv(dev); + + dma_sync_single_for_device(dev->dev.parent, VIRT_TO_DMA(sp, addr), + sizeof(struct sgiseeq_rx_desc), DMA_FROM_DEVICE); } static inline void dma_sync_desc_dev(struct net_device *dev, void *addr) { - dma_cache_sync(dev->dev.parent, addr, sizeof(struct sgiseeq_rx_desc), - DMA_TO_DEVICE); + struct sgiseeq_private *sp = netdev_priv(dev); + + dma_sync_single_for_device(dev->dev.parent, VIRT_TO_DMA(sp, addr), + sizeof(struct sgiseeq_rx_desc), DMA_TO_DEVICE); } -- Crap can work. Given enough thrust pigs will fly, but it's not necessarily a good idea. [ RFC1925, 2.3 ]