• Vladimir Oltean's avatar
    net: enetc: add a mini driver for the Integrated Endpoint Register Block · e7d48e5f
    Vladimir Oltean authored
    The NXP ENETC is a 4-port Ethernet controller which 'smells' to
    operating systems like 4 distinct PCIe PFs with SR-IOV, each PF having
    its own driver instance, but in fact there are some hardware resources
    which are shared between all ports, like for example the 256 KB SRAM
    FIFO between the MACs and the Host Transfer Agent which DMAs frames to
    DRAM.
    
    To hide the stuff that cannot be neatly exposed per port, the hardware
    designers came up with this idea of having a dedicated register block
    which is supposed to be populated by the bootloader, and contains
    everything configuration-related: MAC addresses, FIFO partitioning, etc.
    
    When a port is reset using PCIe Function Level Reset, its defaults are
    transferred from the IERB configuration. Most of the time, the settings
    made through the IERB are read-only in the port's memory space (if they
    are even visible), so they cannot be modified at runtime.
    
    Linux doesn't have any advanced FIFO partitioning requirements at all,
    but when reading through the hardware manual, it became clear that, even
    though there are many good 'recommendations' for default values, many of
    them were not actually put in practice on LS1028A. So we end up with a
    default configuration that:
    
    (a) does not have enough TX and RX byte credits to support the max MTU
        of 9600 (which the Linux driver claims already) properly (at full speed)
    (b) allows the FIFO to be overrun with RX traffic, potentially
        overwriting internal data structures.
    
    The last part sounds a bit catastrophic, but it isn't. Frames are
    supposed to transit the FIFO for a very short time, but they can
    actually accumulate there under 2 conditions:
    
    (a) there is very severe congestion on DRAM memory, or
    (b) the RX rings visible to the operating system were configured for
        lossless operation, and they just ran out of free buffers to copy
        the frame to. This is what is used to put backpressure onto the MAC
        with flow control.
    
    So since ENETC has not supported flow control thus far, RX FIFO overruns
    were never seen with Linux. But with the addition of flow control, we
    should configure some registers to prevent this from happening. What we
    are trying to protect against are bad actors which continue to send us
    traffic despite the fact that we have signaled a PAUSE condition. Of
    course we can't be lossless in that case, but it is best to configure
    the FIFO to do tail dropping rather than letting it overrun.
    
    So in a nutshell, this driver is a fixup for all the IERB default values
    that should have been but aren't.
    
    The IERB configuration needs to be done _before_ the PFs are enabled.
    So every PF searches for the presence of the "fsl,ls1028a-enetc-ierb"
    node in the device tree, and if it finds it, it "registers" with the
    IERB, which means that it requests the IERB to fix up its default
    values. This is done through -EPROBE_DEFER. The IERB driver is part of
    the fsl_enetc module, but is technically a platform driver, since the
    IERB is a good old fashioned MMIO region, as opposed to ENETC ports
    which pretend to be PCIe devices.
    
    The driver was already configuring ENETC_PTXMBAR (FIFO allocation for
    TX) because due to an omission, TXMBAR is a read/write register in the
    PF memory space. But the manual is quite clear that the formula for this
    should depend upon the TX byte credits (TXBCR). In turn, the TX byte
    credits are only readable/writable through the IERB. So if we want to
    ensure that the TXBCR register also has a value that is correct and in
    line with TXMBAR, there is simply no way this can be done from the PF
    driver, access to the IERB is needed.
    
    I could have modified U-Boot to fix up the IERB values, but that is
    quite undesirable, as old U-Boot versions are likely to be floating
    around for quite some time from now.
    Signed-off-by: default avatarVladimir Oltean <vladimir.oltean@nxp.com>
    Signed-off-by: default avatarDavid S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
    e7d48e5f
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