Re: [PATCH net] net: phy: micrel: populate .soft_reset for KSZ9131

From: Andrew Lunn
Date: Thu Jan 11 2024 - 20:31:07 EST


On Wed, Jan 10, 2024 at 03:20:19PM +0200, claudiu beznea wrote:
> Hi, Andrew, Russell,
>
> On 05.01.2024 16:36, Andrew Lunn wrote:
> > On Fri, Jan 05, 2024 at 09:43:22AM +0000, Russell King (Oracle) wrote:
> >> On Fri, Jan 05, 2024 at 10:52:42AM +0200, Claudiu wrote:
> >>> The order of PHY-related operations in ravb_open() is as follows:
> >>> ravb_open() ->
> >>> ravb_phy_start() ->
> >>> ravb_phy_init() ->
> >>> of_phy_connect() ->
> >>> phy_connect_direct() ->
> >>> phy_attach_direct() ->
> >>> phy_init_hw() ->
> >>> phydev->drv->soft_reset()
> >>> phydev->drv->config_init()
> >>> phydev->drv->config_intr()
> >>> phy_resume()
> >>> kszphy_resume()
> >>>
> >>> The order of PHY-related operations in ravb_close is as follows:
> >>> ravb_close() ->
> >>> phy_stop() ->
> >>> phy_suspend() ->
> >>> kszphy_suspend() ->
> >>> genphy_suspend()
> >>> // set BMCR_PDOWN bit in MII_BMCR
> >>
> >> Andrew,
> >>
> >> This looks wrong to me - shouldn't we be resuming the PHY before
> >> attempting to configure it?
> >
> > Hummm. The opposite of phy_stop() is phy_start(). So it would be the
> > logical order to perform the resume as the first action of
> > phy_start(), not phy_attach_direct().
> >
> > In phy_connect_direct(), we don't need the PHY to be operational
> > yet. That happens with phy_start().
> >
> > The standard says:
> >
> > 22.2.4.1.5 Power down
> >
> > The PHY may be placed in a low-power consumption state by setting
> > bit 0.11 to a logic one. Clearing bit 0.11 to zero allows normal
> > operation. The specific behavior of a PHY in the power-down state is
> > implementation specific. While in the power-down state, the PHY
> > shall respond to management transactions.
> >
> > So i would say this PHY is broken, its not responding to all
> > management transactions. So in that respect, Claudiu fix is correct.
> >
> > But i also somewhat agree with you, this looks wrong, but in a
> > different way to how you see it. However, moving the phy_resume() to
> > phy_start() seems a bit risky. So i'm not sure we should actually do
> > that.
>
> It's not clear to me if you both agree with this fix. Could you please let
> me know?

Hi Claudiu

I think this is a valid workaround for the broken hardware.

Reviewed-by: Andrew Lunn <andrew@xxxxxxx>

There might be further discussion about if suspend and resume are
being done at the correct time, but i think that is orthogonal.

Andrew