Hi Andrew, thanks for a looking at this. Andrew Lunn <andrew@xxxxxxx> writes: >> void usbnet_link_change(struct usbnet *dev, bool link, bool need_reset) >> { >> /* update link after link is reseted */ >> if (link && !need_reset) >> netif_carrier_on(dev->net); >> else >> netif_carrier_off(dev->net); >> >> if (need_reset && link) >> usbnet_defer_kevent(dev, EVENT_LINK_RESET); >> else >> usbnet_defer_kevent(dev, EVENT_LINK_CHANGE); >> } > > This device is using phylink to manage the PHY. phylink will than > manage the carrier. It assumes it is solely responsible for the > carrier. So i think your fix is wrong. You probably should be removing > all code in this driver which touches the carrier. Ok, I wasn't aware that phylink manages netdev's carrier state. Then, is the patch wrong just because the asix driver shouldn't use the function, or is it wrong because the function should work differently (i.e., the semantics are different)? Surely the function is broken, isn't it? Calling netif_carrier_off() on link up event can't be right? Now the ASIX driver, I'm looking at it for some time now. It consists of two parts linked together. The ax88172a.c part doesn't use phylink, while the main asix_devices.c does. So I'm leaving ax88172a.c alone for now (while it could probably be better ported to the same framework, i.e., phylink). The main part uses usbnet.c, which does netif_carrier_{on,off}() in the above usbnet_link_change(). I guess I can make it use directly usbnet_defer_kevent() only so it won't be a problem. Also, usbnet.c calls usbnet_defer_kevent() and thus netif_carrier_off() in usbnet_probe, removing FLAG_LINK_INTR from asix_devices.c will stop that. The last place interacting with carrier status is asix_status(), called about 8 times a second by usbnet.c intr_complete(). This is independent of any MDIO traffic. Should I now remove this as well? I guess removing asix_status would suffice. -- Krzysztof "Chris" Hałasa Sieć Badawcza Łukasiewicz Przemysłowy Instytut Automatyki i Pomiarów PIAP Al. Jerozolimskie 202, 02-486 Warszawa