On Tue, Apr 16, 2024 at 06:34:10PM +0000, Michael Pratt wrote: > Commit 8f3631f0f6eb ("serial/8250: Use fifo in 8250 console driver") > reworked functions for basic 8250 and 16550 type serial devices > in order to enable and use the internal fifo device for buffering, > however the default timeout of 10 ms remained, which is proving > to be insufficient for low baud rates like 9600, causing data overrun. > > Unforunately, that commit was written and accepted just before commit > 31f6bd7fad3b ("serial: Store character timing information to uart_port") > which introduced the frame_time member of the uart_port struct > in order to store the amount of time it takes to send one uart frame > relative to the baud rate and other serial port configuration, > and commit f9008285bb69 ("serial: Drop timeout from uart_port") > which established function uart_fifo_timeout() in order to > calculate a reasonable timeout to wait until flushing > the fifo device before writing data again when partially filled, > using the now stored frame_time value and size of the buffer. > > Fix this by using the stored timeout value made with this new function > to calculate the timeout for the fifo device, when enabled, and when > the buffer is larger than 1 byte (unknown port default). > > The previous 2 commits add the struct members used here > in order to store the values, so that the calculations > are offloaded from the functions that are called > during a write operation for better performance. > > Tested on a MIPS device (ar934x) at baud rates 625, 9600, 115200. ... > unsigned int status, tmout = 10000; > > - /* Wait up to 10ms for the character(s) to be sent. */ > + /* Wait for a time relative to buffer size and baud */ > + if (up->fifo_enable && up->port.timeout) > + tmout = jiffies_to_usecs(up->port.timeout); Why do we still use that default? Can't we calculate timeout even for\ FIFO-less / FIFO-disabled devices? -- With Best Regards, Andy Shevchenko