[PATCH 3/5] net: mvmdio: enhance driver to support SMI error/done interrupts
Thomas Petazzoni
thomas.petazzoni at free-electrons.com
Wed Jan 30 02:39:57 EST 2013
Dear Florian Fainelli,
On Tue, 29 Jan 2013 16:24:06 +0100, Florian Fainelli wrote:
> #define MVMDIO_SMI_DATA_SHIFT 0
> #define MVMDIO_SMI_PHY_ADDR_SHIFT 16
> @@ -36,12 +40,28 @@
> #define MVMDIO_SMI_WRITE_OPERATION 0
> #define MVMDIO_SMI_READ_VALID BIT(27)
> #define MVMDIO_SMI_BUSY BIT(28)
> +#define MVMDIO_ERR_INT_CAUSE 0x007C
> +#define MVMDIO_ERR_INT_SMI_DONE 0x00000010
> +#define MVMDIO_ERR_INT_MASK 0x0080
>
> struct orion_mdio_dev {
> struct mutex lock;
> void __iomem *regs;
> + /*
> + * If we have access to the error interrupt pin (which is
> + * somewhat misnamed as it not only reflects internal errors
> + * but also reflects SMI completion), use that to wait for
> + * SMI access completion instead of polling the SMI busy bit.
> + */
> + int err_interrupt;
> + wait_queue_head_t smi_busy_wait;
> };
>
> +static int orion_mdio_smi_is_done(struct orion_mdio_dev *dev)
> +{
> + return !(readl(dev->regs) & MVMDIO_SMI_BUSY);
> +}
> +
> /* Wait for the SMI unit to be ready for another operation
> */
> static int orion_mdio_wait_ready(struct mii_bus *bus)
> @@ -50,19 +70,30 @@ static int orion_mdio_wait_ready(struct mii_bus *bus)
> int count;
> u32 val;
>
> - count = 0;
> - while (1) {
> - val = readl(dev->regs);
> - if (!(val & MVMDIO_SMI_BUSY))
> - break;
> -
> - if (count > 100) {
> - dev_err(bus->parent, "Timeout: SMI busy for too long\n");
> - return -ETIMEDOUT;
> + if (dev->err_interrupt == NO_IRQ) {
> + count = 0;
> + while (1) {
> + val = readl(dev->regs);
> + if (!(val & MVMDIO_SMI_BUSY))
> + break;
What about using your new orion_mdio_smi_is_done() function here?
> +
> + if (count > 100) {
> + dev_err(bus->parent,
> + "Timeout: SMI busy for too long\n");
> + return -ETIMEDOUT;
> + }
> +
> + udelay(10);
> + count++;
> }
> + }
>
> - udelay(10);
> - count++;
> + if (!orion_mdio_smi_is_done(dev)) {
Maybe it should be in an else if block so that the waitqueue case is
only considered if there is an IRQ registered? Of course practically
speaking, it's OK because if there is no IRQ, we'll wait in the polling
loop above, and either exit from the function on timeout, or continue
on success. But it still would make the code a little bit clearer, I'd
say.
> static int orion_mdio_probe(struct platform_device *pdev)
> {
> struct device_node *np = pdev->dev.of_node;
> @@ -181,6 +227,19 @@ static int orion_mdio_probe(struct platform_device *pdev)
> return -ENODEV;
> }
>
> + dev->err_interrupt = NO_IRQ;
Not needed, you already do dev->err_interrupt = something() below.
> + init_waitqueue_head(&dev->smi_busy_wait);
> +
> + dev->err_interrupt = irq_of_parse_and_map(pdev->dev.of_node, 0);
> + if (dev->err_interrupt != NO_IRQ) {
> + ret = devm_request_irq(&pdev->dev, dev->err_interrupt,
> + orion_mdio_err_irq,
> + IRQF_SHARED, pdev->name, dev);
> + if (!ret)
> + writel(MVMDIO_ERR_INT_SMI_DONE,
> + dev->regs + MVMDIO_ERR_INT_MASK);
> + }
> +
> mutex_init(&dev->lock);
>
> ret = of_mdiobus_register(bus, np);
> @@ -202,6 +261,8 @@ static int orion_mdio_remove(struct platform_device *pdev)
> struct mii_bus *bus = platform_get_drvdata(pdev);
> struct orion_mdio_dev *dev = bus->priv;
>
> + writel(0, dev->regs + MVMDIO_ERR_INT_MASK);
> + free_irq(dev->err_interrupt, dev);
free_irq() not needed since the IRQ handler is registered with
devm_request_irq().
> mdiobus_unregister(bus);
> kfree(bus->irq);
> mdiobus_free(bus);
Thanks,
Thomas
--
Thomas Petazzoni, Free Electrons
Kernel, drivers, real-time and embedded Linux
development, consulting, training and support.
http://free-electrons.com
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