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While not an exhaustive usage tutorial, this describes the details needed to build more complex scenarios. Signed-off-by: Vladimir Oltean <olteanv@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
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311 lines
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=========================
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NXP SJA1105 switch driver
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=========================
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Overview
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========
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The NXP SJA1105 is a family of 6 devices:
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- SJA1105E: First generation, no TTEthernet
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- SJA1105T: First generation, TTEthernet
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- SJA1105P: Second generation, no TTEthernet, no SGMII
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- SJA1105Q: Second generation, TTEthernet, no SGMII
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- SJA1105R: Second generation, no TTEthernet, SGMII
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- SJA1105S: Second generation, TTEthernet, SGMII
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These are SPI-managed automotive switches, with all ports being gigabit
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capable, and supporting MII/RMII/RGMII and optionally SGMII on one port.
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Being automotive parts, their configuration interface is geared towards
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set-and-forget use, with minimal dynamic interaction at runtime. They
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require a static configuration to be composed by software and packed
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with CRC and table headers, and sent over SPI.
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The static configuration is composed of several configuration tables. Each
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table takes a number of entries. Some configuration tables can be (partially)
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reconfigured at runtime, some not. Some tables are mandatory, some not:
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============================= ================== =============================
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Table Mandatory Reconfigurable
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============================= ================== =============================
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Schedule no no
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Schedule entry points if Scheduling no
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VL Lookup no no
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VL Policing if VL Lookup no
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VL Forwarding if VL Lookup no
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L2 Lookup no no
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L2 Policing yes no
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VLAN Lookup yes yes
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L2 Forwarding yes partially (fully on P/Q/R/S)
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MAC Config yes partially (fully on P/Q/R/S)
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Schedule Params if Scheduling no
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Schedule Entry Points Params if Scheduling no
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VL Forwarding Params if VL Forwarding no
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L2 Lookup Params no partially (fully on P/Q/R/S)
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L2 Forwarding Params yes no
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Clock Sync Params no no
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AVB Params no no
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General Params yes partially
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Retagging no yes
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xMII Params yes no
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SGMII no yes
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============================= ================== =============================
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Also the configuration is write-only (software cannot read it back from the
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switch except for very few exceptions).
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The driver creates a static configuration at probe time, and keeps it at
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all times in memory, as a shadow for the hardware state. When required to
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change a hardware setting, the static configuration is also updated.
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If that changed setting can be transmitted to the switch through the dynamic
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reconfiguration interface, it is; otherwise the switch is reset and
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reprogrammed with the updated static configuration.
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Traffic support
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===============
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The switches do not support switch tagging in hardware. But they do support
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customizing the TPID by which VLAN traffic is identified as such. The switch
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driver is leveraging ``CONFIG_NET_DSA_TAG_8021Q`` by requesting that special
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VLANs (with a custom TPID of ``ETH_P_EDSA`` instead of ``ETH_P_8021Q``) are
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installed on its ports when not in ``vlan_filtering`` mode. This does not
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interfere with the reception and transmission of real 802.1Q-tagged traffic,
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because the switch does no longer parse those packets as VLAN after the TPID
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change.
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The TPID is restored when ``vlan_filtering`` is requested by the user through
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the bridge layer, and general IP termination becomes no longer possible through
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the switch netdevices in this mode.
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The switches have two programmable filters for link-local destination MACs.
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These are used to trap BPDUs and PTP traffic to the master netdevice, and are
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further used to support STP and 1588 ordinary clock/boundary clock
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functionality.
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The following traffic modes are supported over the switch netdevices:
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+--------------------+------------+------------------+------------------+
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| | Standalone | Bridged with | Bridged with |
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| | ports | vlan_filtering 0 | vlan_filtering 1 |
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+====================+============+==================+==================+
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| Regular traffic | Yes | Yes | No (use master) |
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+--------------------+------------+------------------+------------------+
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| Management traffic | Yes | Yes | Yes |
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| (BPDU, PTP) | | | |
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+--------------------+------------+------------------+------------------+
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Switching features
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==================
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The driver supports the configuration of L2 forwarding rules in hardware for
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port bridging. The forwarding, broadcast and flooding domain between ports can
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be restricted through two methods: either at the L2 forwarding level (isolate
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one bridge's ports from another's) or at the VLAN port membership level
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(isolate ports within the same bridge). The final forwarding decision taken by
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the hardware is a logical AND of these two sets of rules.
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The hardware tags all traffic internally with a port-based VLAN (pvid), or it
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decodes the VLAN information from the 802.1Q tag. Advanced VLAN classification
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is not possible. Once attributed a VLAN tag, frames are checked against the
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port's membership rules and dropped at ingress if they don't match any VLAN.
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This behavior is available when switch ports are enslaved to a bridge with
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``vlan_filtering 1``.
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Normally the hardware is not configurable with respect to VLAN awareness, but
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by changing what TPID the switch searches 802.1Q tags for, the semantics of a
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bridge with ``vlan_filtering 0`` can be kept (accept all traffic, tagged or
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untagged), and therefore this mode is also supported.
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Segregating the switch ports in multiple bridges is supported (e.g. 2 + 2), but
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all bridges should have the same level of VLAN awareness (either both have
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``vlan_filtering`` 0, or both 1). Also an inevitable limitation of the fact
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that VLAN awareness is global at the switch level is that once a bridge with
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``vlan_filtering`` enslaves at least one switch port, the other un-bridged
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ports are no longer available for standalone traffic termination.
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Topology and loop detection through STP is supported.
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L2 FDB manipulation (add/delete/dump) is currently possible for the first
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generation devices. Aging time of FDB entries, as well as enabling fully static
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management (no address learning and no flooding of unknown traffic) is not yet
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configurable in the driver.
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A special comment about bridging with other netdevices (illustrated with an
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example):
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A board has eth0, eth1, swp0@eth1, swp1@eth1, swp2@eth1, swp3@eth1.
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The switch ports (swp0-3) are under br0.
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It is desired that eth0 is turned into another switched port that communicates
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with swp0-3.
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If br0 has vlan_filtering 0, then eth0 can simply be added to br0 with the
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intended results.
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If br0 has vlan_filtering 1, then a new br1 interface needs to be created that
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enslaves eth0 and eth1 (the DSA master of the switch ports). This is because in
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this mode, the switch ports beneath br0 are not capable of regular traffic, and
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are only used as a conduit for switchdev operations.
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Offloads
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========
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Time-aware scheduling
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---------------------
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The switch supports a variation of the enhancements for scheduled traffic
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specified in IEEE 802.1Q-2018 (formerly 802.1Qbv). This means it can be used to
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ensure deterministic latency for priority traffic that is sent in-band with its
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gate-open event in the network schedule.
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This capability can be managed through the tc-taprio offload ('flags 2'). The
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difference compared to the software implementation of taprio is that the latter
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would only be able to shape traffic originated from the CPU, but not
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autonomously forwarded flows.
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The device has 8 traffic classes, and maps incoming frames to one of them based
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on the VLAN PCP bits (if no VLAN is present, the port-based default is used).
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As described in the previous sections, depending on the value of
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``vlan_filtering``, the EtherType recognized by the switch as being VLAN can
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either be the typical 0x8100 or a custom value used internally by the driver
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for tagging. Therefore, the switch ignores the VLAN PCP if used in standalone
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or bridge mode with ``vlan_filtering=0``, as it will not recognize the 0x8100
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EtherType. In these modes, injecting into a particular TX queue can only be
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done by the DSA net devices, which populate the PCP field of the tagging header
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on egress. Using ``vlan_filtering=1``, the behavior is the other way around:
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offloaded flows can be steered to TX queues based on the VLAN PCP, but the DSA
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net devices are no longer able to do that. To inject frames into a hardware TX
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queue with VLAN awareness active, it is necessary to create a VLAN
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sub-interface on the DSA master port, and send normal (0x8100) VLAN-tagged
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towards the switch, with the VLAN PCP bits set appropriately.
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Management traffic (having DMAC 01-80-C2-xx-xx-xx or 01-19-1B-xx-xx-xx) is the
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notable exception: the switch always treats it with a fixed priority and
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disregards any VLAN PCP bits even if present. The traffic class for management
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traffic has a value of 7 (highest priority) at the moment, which is not
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configurable in the driver.
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Below is an example of configuring a 500 us cyclic schedule on egress port
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``swp5``. The traffic class gate for management traffic (7) is open for 100 us,
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and the gates for all other traffic classes are open for 400 us::
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#!/bin/bash
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set -e -u -o pipefail
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NSEC_PER_SEC="1000000000"
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gatemask() {
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local tc_list="$1"
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local mask=0
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for tc in ${tc_list}; do
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mask=$((${mask} | (1 << ${tc})))
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done
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printf "%02x" ${mask}
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}
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if ! systemctl is-active --quiet ptp4l; then
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echo "Please start the ptp4l service"
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exit
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fi
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now=$(phc_ctl /dev/ptp1 get | gawk '/clock time is/ { print $5; }')
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# Phase-align the base time to the start of the next second.
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sec=$(echo "${now}" | gawk -F. '{ print $1; }')
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base_time="$(((${sec} + 1) * ${NSEC_PER_SEC}))"
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tc qdisc add dev swp5 parent root handle 100 taprio \
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num_tc 8 \
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map 0 1 2 3 5 6 7 \
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queues 1@0 1@1 1@2 1@3 1@4 1@5 1@6 1@7 \
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base-time ${base_time} \
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sched-entry S $(gatemask 7) 100000 \
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sched-entry S $(gatemask "0 1 2 3 4 5 6") 400000 \
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flags 2
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It is possible to apply the tc-taprio offload on multiple egress ports. There
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are hardware restrictions related to the fact that no gate event may trigger
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simultaneously on two ports. The driver checks the consistency of the schedules
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against this restriction and errors out when appropriate. Schedule analysis is
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needed to avoid this, which is outside the scope of the document.
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At the moment, the time-aware scheduler can only be triggered based on a
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standalone clock and not based on PTP time. This means the base-time argument
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from tc-taprio is ignored and the schedule starts right away. It also means it
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is more difficult to phase-align the scheduler with the other devices in the
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network.
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Device Tree bindings and board design
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=====================================
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This section references ``Documentation/devicetree/bindings/net/dsa/sja1105.txt``
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and aims to showcase some potential switch caveats.
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RMII PHY role and out-of-band signaling
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---------------------------------------
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In the RMII spec, the 50 MHz clock signals are either driven by the MAC or by
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an external oscillator (but not by the PHY).
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But the spec is rather loose and devices go outside it in several ways.
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Some PHYs go against the spec and may provide an output pin where they source
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the 50 MHz clock themselves, in an attempt to be helpful.
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On the other hand, the SJA1105 is only binary configurable - when in the RMII
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MAC role it will also attempt to drive the clock signal. To prevent this from
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happening it must be put in RMII PHY role.
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But doing so has some unintended consequences.
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In the RMII spec, the PHY can transmit extra out-of-band signals via RXD[1:0].
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These are practically some extra code words (/J/ and /K/) sent prior to the
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preamble of each frame. The MAC does not have this out-of-band signaling
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mechanism defined by the RMII spec.
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So when the SJA1105 port is put in PHY role to avoid having 2 drivers on the
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clock signal, inevitably an RMII PHY-to-PHY connection is created. The SJA1105
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emulates a PHY interface fully and generates the /J/ and /K/ symbols prior to
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frame preambles, which the real PHY is not expected to understand. So the PHY
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simply encodes the extra symbols received from the SJA1105-as-PHY onto the
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100Base-Tx wire.
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On the other side of the wire, some link partners might discard these extra
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symbols, while others might choke on them and discard the entire Ethernet
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frames that follow along. This looks like packet loss with some link partners
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but not with others.
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The take-away is that in RMII mode, the SJA1105 must be let to drive the
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reference clock if connected to a PHY.
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RGMII fixed-link and internal delays
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------------------------------------
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As mentioned in the bindings document, the second generation of devices has
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tunable delay lines as part of the MAC, which can be used to establish the
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correct RGMII timing budget.
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When powered up, these can shift the Rx and Tx clocks with a phase difference
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between 73.8 and 101.7 degrees.
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The catch is that the delay lines need to lock onto a clock signal with a
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stable frequency. This means that there must be at least 2 microseconds of
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silence between the clock at the old vs at the new frequency. Otherwise the
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lock is lost and the delay lines must be reset (powered down and back up).
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In RGMII the clock frequency changes with link speed (125 MHz at 1000 Mbps, 25
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MHz at 100 Mbps and 2.5 MHz at 10 Mbps), and link speed might change during the
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AN process.
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In the situation where the switch port is connected through an RGMII fixed-link
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to a link partner whose link state life cycle is outside the control of Linux
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(such as a different SoC), then the delay lines would remain unlocked (and
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inactive) until there is manual intervention (ifdown/ifup on the switch port).
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The take-away is that in RGMII mode, the switch's internal delays are only
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reliable if the link partner never changes link speeds, or if it does, it does
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so in a way that is coordinated with the switch port (practically, both ends of
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the fixed-link are under control of the same Linux system).
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As to why would a fixed-link interface ever change link speeds: there are
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Ethernet controllers out there which come out of reset in 100 Mbps mode, and
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their driver inevitably needs to change the speed and clock frequency if it's
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required to work at gigabit.
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MDIO bus and PHY management
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---------------------------
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The SJA1105 does not have an MDIO bus and does not perform in-band AN either.
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Therefore there is no link state notification coming from the switch device.
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A board would need to hook up the PHYs connected to the switch to any other
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MDIO bus available to Linux within the system (e.g. to the DSA master's MDIO
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bus). Link state management then works by the driver manually keeping in sync
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(over SPI commands) the MAC link speed with the settings negotiated by the PHY.
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