-
Anssi Hannula authored
[ Upstream commit acf138f1 ] The xilinx_emaclite uses __raw_writel and __raw_readl for register accesses. Those functions do not imply any kind of memory barriers and they may be reordered. The driver does not seem to take that into account, though, and the driver does not satisfy the ordering requirements of the hardware. For clear examples, see xemaclite_mdio_write() and xemaclite_mdio_read() which try to set MDIO address before initiating the transaction. I'm seeing system freezes with the driver with GCC 5.4 and current Linux kernels on Zynq-7000 SoC immediately when trying to use the interface. In commit 123c1407 ("net: emaclite: Do not use microblaze and ppc IO functions") the driver was switched from non-generic in_be32/out_be32 (memory barriers, big endian) to __raw_readl/__raw_writel (no memory barriers, native endian), so apparently the device follows system endianness and the driver was originally written with the assumption of memory barriers. Rather than try to hunt for each case of missing barrier, just switch the driver to use iowrite32/ioread32/iowrite32be/ioread32be depending on endianness instead. Tested on little-endian Zynq-7000 ARM SoC FPGA. Signed-off-by: Anssi Hannula <anssi.hannula@bitwise.fi> Fixes: 123c1407 ("net: emaclite: Do not use microblaze and ppc IO functions") Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net> Signed-off-by: Sasha Levin <alexander.levin@verizon.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
7f71f22a