On Sun, Sep 18, 2022 at 01:41:13PM -0700, Florian Fainelli wrote: > On 9/18/2022 12:13 PM, Lukas Wunner wrote: > > On Mon, Aug 29, 2022 at 01:40:05PM +0200, Marek Szyprowski wrote: > > > I've finally traced what has happened. I've double checked and indeed > > > the 1758bde2e4aa commit fixed the issue on next-20220516 kernel and as > > > such it has been merged to linus tree. Then the commit 744d23c71af3 > > > ("net: phy: Warn about incorrect mdio_bus_phy_resume() state") has been > > > merged to linus tree, which triggers a new warning during the > > > suspend/resume cycle with smsc95xx driver. Please note, that the > > > smsc95xx still works fine regardless that warning. However it look that > > > the commit 1758bde2e4aa only hide a real problem, which the commit > > > 744d23c71af3 warns about. > > > > > > Probably a proper fix for smsc95xx driver is to call phy_stop/start > > > during suspend/resume cycle, like in similar patches for other drivers: > > > > > > https://lore.kernel.org/all/20220825023951.3220-1-f.fainelli@xxxxxxxxx/ > > > > No, smsc95xx.c relies on mdio_bus_phy_{suspend,resume}() and there's > > no need to call phy_{stop,start}() > > > 744d23c71af3 was flawed and 6dbe852c379f has already fixed a portion > > of the fallout. > > > > However the WARN() condition still seems too broad and causes false > > positives such as in your case. In particular, mdio_bus_phy_suspend() > > may leave the device in PHY_UP state, so that's a legal state that > > needs to be exempted from the WARN(). > > How is that a legal state when the PHY should be suspended? Even if we are > interrupt driven, the state machine should be stopped, does not mean that > Wake-on-LAN or other activity interrupts should be disabled. mdio_bus_phy_suspend() phy_stop_machine() phydev->state = PHY_UP # if (phydev->state >= PHY_UP) So apparently PHY_UP is a legal state for a suspended PHY. > > Does the issue still appear even after 6dbe852c379f? > > > > If it does, could you test whether exempting PHY_UP silences the > > gratuitous WARN splat? I.e.: > > If you allow PHY_UP, then the warning becomes effectively useless, so I > don't believe this is quite what you want to do here. Hm, maybe the WARN() should be dropped altogether? Thanks, Lukas