• Takashi Sakamoto's avatar
    firewire: core: send bus reset promptly on gap count error · 7ed43800
    Takashi Sakamoto authored
    If we are bus manager and the bus has inconsistent gap counts, send a
    bus reset immediately instead of trying to read the root node's config
    ROM first. Otherwise, we could spend a lot of time trying to read the
    config ROM but never succeeding.
    
    This eliminates a 50+ second delay before the FireWire bus is usable after
    a newly connected device is powered on in certain circumstances.
    
    The delay occurs if a gap count inconsistency occurs, we are not the root
    node, and we become bus manager. One scenario that causes this is with a TI
    XIO2213B OHCI, the first time a Sony DSR-25 is powered on after being
    connected to the FireWire cable. In this configuration, the Linux box will
    not receive the initial PHY configuration packet sent by the DSR-25 as IRM,
    resulting in the DSR-25 having a gap count of 44 while the Linux box has a
    gap count of 63.
    
    FireWire devices have a gap count parameter, which is set to 63 on power-up
    and can be changed with a PHY configuration packet. This determines the
    duration of the subaction and arbitration gaps. For reliable communication,
    all nodes on a FireWire bus must have the same gap count.
    
    A node may have zero or more of the following roles: root node, bus manager
    (BM), isochronous resource manager (IRM), and cycle master. Unless a root
    node was forced with a PHY configuration packet, any node might become root
    node after a bus reset. Only the root node can become cycle master. If the
    root node is not cycle master capable, the BM or IRM should force a change
    of root node.
    
    After a bus reset, each node sends a self-ID packet, which contains its
    current gap count. A single bus reset does not change the gap count, but
    two bus resets in a row will set the gap count to 63. Because a consistent
    gap count is required for reliable communication, IEEE 1394a-2000 requires
    that the bus manager generate a bus reset if it detects that the gap count
    is inconsistent.
    
    When the gap count is inconsistent, build_tree() will notice this after the
    self identification process. It will set card->gap_count to the invalid
    value 0. If we become bus master, this will force bm_work() to send a bus
    reset when it performs gap count optimization.
    
    After a bus reset, there is no bus manager. We will almost always try to
    become bus manager. Once we become bus manager, we will first determine
    whether the root node is cycle master capable. Then, we will determine if
    the gap count should be changed. If either the root node or the gap count
    should be changed, we will generate a bus reset.
    
    To determine if the root node is cycle master capable, we read its
    configuration ROM. bm_work() will wait until we have finished trying to
    read the configuration ROM.
    
    However, an inconsistent gap count can make this take a long time.
    read_config_rom() will read the first few quadlets from the config ROM. Due
    to the gap count inconsistency, eventually one of the reads will time out.
    When read_config_rom() fails, fw_device_init() calls it again until
    MAX_RETRIES is reached. This takes 50+ seconds.
    
    Once we give up trying to read the configuration ROM, bm_work() will wake
    up, assume that the root node is not cycle master capable, and do a bus
    reset. Hopefully, this will resolve the gap count inconsistency.
    
    This change makes bm_work() check for an inconsistent gap count before
    waiting for the root node's configuration ROM. If the gap count is
    inconsistent, bm_work() will immediately do a bus reset. This eliminates
    the 50+ second delay and rapidly brings the bus to a working state.
    
    I considered that if the gap count is inconsistent, a PHY configuration
    packet might not be successful, so it could be desirable to skip the PHY
    configuration packet before the bus reset in this case. However, IEEE
    1394a-2000 and IEEE 1394-2008 say that the bus manager may transmit a PHY
    configuration packet before a bus reset when correcting a gap count error.
    Since the standard endorses this, I decided it's safe to retain the PHY
    configuration packet transmission.
    
    Normally, after a topology change, we will reset the bus a maximum of 5
    times to change the root node and perform gap count optimization. However,
    if there is a gap count inconsistency, we must always generate a bus reset.
    Otherwise the gap count inconsistency will persist and communication will
    be unreliable. For that reason, if there is a gap count inconstency, we
    generate a bus reset even if we already reached the 5 reset limit.
    Signed-off-by: default avatarAdam Goldman <adamg@pobox.com>
    Reference: https://sourceforge.net/p/linux1394/mailman/message/58727806/Signed-off-by: default avatarTakashi Sakamoto <o-takashi@sakamocchi.jp>
    7ed43800
core-card.c 20.9 KB