On Tue, Apr 06, 2021 at 10:35:07PM +0200, Martin Blumenstingl wrote: > PHY auto polling on the GSWIP hardware can be used so link changes > (speed, link up/down, etc.) can be detected automatically. Internally > GSWIP reads the PHY's registers for this functionality. Based on this > automatic detection GSWIP can also automatically re-configure it's port > settings. Unfortunately this auto polling (and configuration) mechanism > seems to cause various issues observed by different people on different > devices: > - FritzBox 7360v2: the two Gbit/s ports (connected to the two internal > PHY11G instances) are working fine but the two Fast Ethernet ports > (using an AR8030 RMII PHY) are completely dead (neither RX nor TX are > received). It turns out that the AR8030 PHY sets the BMSR_ESTATEN bit > as well as the ESTATUS_1000_TFULL and ESTATUS_1000_XFULL bits. This > makes the PHY auto polling state machine (rightfully?) think that the > established link speed (when the other side is Gbit/s capable) is > 1Gbit/s. > - None of the Ethernet ports on the Zyxel P-2812HNU-F1 (two are > connected to the internal PHY11G GPHYs while the other three are > external RGMII PHYs) are working. Neither RX nor TX traffic was > observed. It is not clear which part of the PHY auto polling state- > machine caused this. > - FritzBox 7412 (only one LAN port which is connected to one of the > internal GPHYs running in PHY22F / Fast Ethernet mode) was seeing > random disconnects (link down events could be seen). Sometimes all > traffic would stop after such disconnect. It is not clear which part > of the PHY auto polling state-machine cauased this. > - TP-Link TD-W9980 (two ports are connected to the internal GPHYs > running in PHY11G / Gbit/s mode, the other two are external RGMII > PHYs) was affected by similar issues as the FritzBox 7412 just without > the "link down" events > > Switch to software based configuration instead of PHY auto polling (and > letting the GSWIP hardware configure the ports automatically) for the > following link parameters: > - link up/down > - link speed > - full/half duplex > - flow control (RX / TX pause) > > After a big round of manual testing by various people (who helped test > this on OpenWrt) it turns out that this fixes all reported issues. > > Additionally it can be considered more future proof because any > "quirk" which is implemented for a PHY on the driver side can now be > used with the GSWIP hardware as well because Linux is in control of the > link parameters. > > As a nice side-effect this also solves a problem where fixed-links were > not supported previously because we were relying on the PHY auto polling > mechanism, which cannot work for fixed-links as there's no PHY from > where it can read the registers. Configuring the link settings on the > GSWIP ports means that we now use the settings from device-tree also for > ports with fixed-links. > > Fixes: 14fceff4771e51 ("net: dsa: Add Lantiq / Intel DSA driver for vrx200") > Fixes: 3e6fdeb28f4c33 ("net: dsa: lantiq_gswip: Let GSWIP automatically set the xMII clock") > Cc: stable@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx > Acked-by: Hauke Mehrtens <hauke@xxxxxxxxxx> > Signed-off-by: Martin Blumenstingl <martin.blumenstingl@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> Having the MAC polling the PHY is pretty much always a bad idea. Reviewed-by: Andrew Lunn <andrew@xxxxxxx> Andrew