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Thomas Gleixner authored
The RX buffer split causes packet loss in the hardware: What happens is: RX Packet 1 --> message buffer 1 (newdat bit is not cleared) RX Packet 2 --> message buffer 2 (newdat bit is not cleared) RX Packet 3 --> message buffer 3 (newdat bit is not cleared) RX Packet 4 --> message buffer 4 (newdat bit is not cleared) RX Packet 5 --> message buffer 5 (newdat bit is not cleared) RX Packet 6 --> message buffer 6 (newdat bit is not cleared) RX Packet 7 --> message buffer 7 (newdat bit is not cleared) RX Packet 8 --> message buffer 8 (newdat bit is not cleared) Clear newdat bit in message buffer 1 Clear newdat bit in message buffer 2 Clear newdat bit in message buffer 3 Clear newdat bit in message buffer 4 Clear newdat bit in message buffer 5 Clear newdat bit in message buffer 6 Clear newdat bit in message buffer 7 Clear newdat bit in message buffer 8 Now if during that clearing of newdat bits, a new message comes in, the HW gets confused and drops it. It does not matter how many of them you clear. I put a delay between clear of buffer 1 and buffer 2 which was long enough that the message should have been queued either in buffer 1 or buffer 9. But it did not show up anywhere. The next message ended up in buffer 1. So the hardware lost a packet of course without telling it via one of the error handlers. That does not happen on all clear newdat bit events. I see one of 10k packets dropped in the scenario which allows us to reproduce. But the trace looks always the same. Not splitting the RX Buffer avoids the packet loss but can cause reordering. It's hard to trigger, but it CAN happen. With that mode we use the HW as it was probably designed for. We read from the buffer 1 upwards and clear the buffer as we get the message. That's how all microcontrollers use it. So I assume that the way we handle the buffers was never really tested. According to the public documentation it should just work :) Let the user decide which evil is the lesser one. [ Oliver Hartkopp: Provided a sane config option and help text and made me switch to favour potential and unlikely reordering over packet loss ] Signed-off-by: Thomas Gleixner <tglx@linutronix.de> Tested-by: Alexander Stein <alexander.stein@systec-electronic.com> Signed-off-by: Marc Kleine-Budde <mkl@pengutronix.de>
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