[PATCH net-next 01/15] net: dsa: mt7530: always trap frames to active CPU port on MT7530
Arınç ÜNAL
arinc.unal at arinc9.com
Sun Dec 17 03:39:46 PST 2023
On 7.12.2023 20:48, Vladimir Oltean wrote:
> On Sat, Dec 02, 2023 at 11:29:18AM +0300, Arınç ÜNAL wrote:
>>>> struct mt7530_priv {
>>>> struct device *dev;
>>>> @@ -786,6 +787,7 @@ struct mt7530_priv {
>>>> struct irq_domain *irq_domain;
>>>> u32 irq_enable;
>>>> int (*create_sgmii)(struct mt7530_priv *priv, bool dual_sgmii);
>>>> + unsigned long active_cpu_ports;
>>>
>>> So this will be 32 or 64 bit in size. Presumably you know how many CPU
>>> ports there can be, which looking at this code must be less than 8 as
>>> CPU_PORT_MASK is only 3 bits in size. So, maybe use a u8, and check
>>> that cpu_dp->index <= 7 ?
>
> We picked "unsigned long" as storage because that's also the size of the
> argument that __ffs() takes. But admittedly, we could have also stored a
> smaller variable and promote it to unsigned long when we pass it to __ffs().
>
>> Aren't there other mechanisms to check that cpu_dp->index is a valid port?
>
> cpu_dp->index is guaranteed by DSA to be valid (according to the "reg"
> value from the device tree and smaller than ds->num_ports). It's just a
> question of balancing this kind of optimization with the possibility
> that a future switch appears which has more than MT7530_NUM_PORTS (7) ports.
If this was to happen - as unlikely as I find it - I would suggest adding a
new MTXXXX_NUM_PORTS and set priv->ds->num_ports to it after checking
priv->id. I'm a maintainer here so I'll keep an eye out.
>
>>
>> mt7530_rmw(priv, MT7530_MFC, CPU_EN | CPU_PORT_MASK, val);
>> }
>>
>> struct mt7530_priv {
>> [...]
>> u8 active_cpu_ports;
>> };
>
> Actually, looking at the code now, I don't understand why we even keep
> track of the active_cpu_ports mask in the driver. We could read the
> MT7530_MFC register in mt753x_conduit_state_change(), flip the bit
> corresponding just to cpu_dp->index (rather than rmw all of CPU_PORT_MASK),
> and write back the result. And to address Russell's concern, we could test
> whether the resulting CPU_PORT_MASK portion of what we're going to write
> back is all-zeroes or not, and if it is, clear the CPU_EN bit, otherwise
> set it.
Correct me if I'm wrong, we introduced priv->active_cpu_ports because
CPU_PORT_MASK from the MT7530_MFC register is a 3-bit mask, meant to keep a
single port number ranging from 0 to 7. There's no single bit corresponding
to cpu_dp->index on the MT7530_MFC register. So I don't see how what you
suggest here would work.
This is what I've got right now:
static void
mt753x_conduit_state_change(struct dsa_switch *ds,
const struct net_device *conduit,
bool operational)
{
struct dsa_port *cpu_dp = conduit->dsa_ptr;
struct mt7530_priv *priv = ds->priv;
u8 mask;
int val = 0;
/* Set the CPU port to trap frames to for MT7530. Trapped frames will be
* forwarded to the numerically smallest CPU port which the DSA conduit
* interface its affine to is up.
*/
if (priv->id != ID_MT7530 && priv->id != ID_MT7621)
return;
mask = BIT(cpu_dp->index);
if (operational)
priv->active_cpu_ports |= mask;
else
priv->active_cpu_ports &= ~mask;
if (priv->active_cpu_ports)
val =
CPU_EN |
CPU_PORT(__ffs((unsigned long)priv->active_cpu_ports));
mt7530_rmw(priv, MT7530_MFC, CPU_EN | CPU_PORT_MASK, val);
}
>
>>
>>>
>>> I would also suggest moving irq_enable after create_sgmii, to avoid
>>> holes in the struct.
>>
>> Sorry, I've got no idea about this. Could you explain why would there
>> possibly be holes in the struct with the current ordering of the members of
>> the mt7530_priv structure?
>>
>> Arınç
>
> FWIW:
>
> $ pahole -C mt7530_priv $KBUILD_OUTPUT/drivers/net/dsa/mt7530.o
> struct mt7530_priv {
> struct device * dev; /* 0 8 */
> struct dsa_switch * ds; /* 8 8 */
> struct mii_bus * bus; /* 16 8 */
> struct regmap * regmap; /* 24 8 */
> struct reset_control * rstc; /* 32 8 */
> struct regulator * core_pwr; /* 40 8 */
> struct regulator * io_pwr; /* 48 8 */
> struct gpio_desc * reset; /* 56 8 */
> /* --- cacheline 1 boundary (64 bytes) --- */
> const struct mt753x_info * info; /* 64 8 */
> unsigned int id; /* 72 4 */
> bool mcm; /* 76 1 */
>
> /* XXX 3 bytes hole, try to pack */
>
> phy_interface_t p6_interface; /* 80 4 */
> phy_interface_t p5_interface; /* 84 4 */
> unsigned int p5_intf_sel; /* 88 4 */
> u8 mirror_rx; /* 92 1 */
> u8 mirror_tx; /* 93 1 */
>
> /* XXX 2 bytes hole, try to pack */
>
> struct mt7530_port ports[7]; /* 96 168 */
> /* --- cacheline 4 boundary (256 bytes) was 8 bytes ago --- */
> struct mt753x_pcs pcs[7]; /* 264 280 */
> /* --- cacheline 8 boundary (512 bytes) was 32 bytes ago --- */
> struct mutex reg_mutex; /* 544 32 */
> /* --- cacheline 9 boundary (576 bytes) --- */
> int irq; /* 576 4 */
>
> /* XXX 4 bytes hole, try to pack */
>
> struct irq_domain * irq_domain; /* 584 8 */
> u32 irq_enable; /* 592 4 */
>
> /* XXX 4 bytes hole, try to pack */
>
> int (*create_sgmii)(struct mt7530_priv *, bool); /* 600 8 */
> unsigned long active_cpu_ports; /* 608 8 */
>
> /* size: 616, cachelines: 10, members: 24 */
> /* sum members: 603, holes: 4, sum holes: 13 */
> /* last cacheline: 40 bytes */
> };
>
> It's not like this makes any practical difference, as struct mt7530_priv
> isn't used from hot paths, but tidying it up is a good sign of clean,
> careful development, and of understanding memory alignment.
Got it, thanks. I've got a few patches that introduce changes to the
mt7530_priv structure. I'll make sure that, in the end, mt7530_priv won't
have any holes.
Arınç
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