On 19.12.2018 16:32, Chris Chiu wrote: > On Wed, Dec 19, 2018 at 4:28 AM Heiner Kallweit <hkallwe...@gmail.com> wrote: >> >> On 18.12.2018 14:25, Chris Chiu wrote: >>> On Tue, Dec 18, 2018 at 3:08 AM Heiner Kallweit <hkallwe...@gmail.com> >>> wrote: >>>> >>>> On 17.12.2018 14:25, Chris Chiu wrote: >>>>> On Fri, Dec 14, 2018 at 3:37 PM Heiner Kallweit <hkallwe...@gmail.com> >>>>> wrote: >>>>>> >>>>>> On 14.12.2018 04:33, Chris Chiu wrote: >>>>>>> On Thu, Dec 13, 2018 at 10:20 AM Chris Chiu <c...@endlessm.com> wrote: >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> Hi, >>>>>>>> We got an acer laptop which has a problem with ethernet networking >>>>>>>> after >>>>>>>> resuming from S3. The ethernet is popular realtek r8168. The lspci >>>>>>>> shows as >>>>>>>> follows. >>>>>>>> 02:00.1 Ethernet controller [0200]: Realtek Semiconductor Co., Ltd. >>>>>>>> RTL8111/8168/8411 PCI Express Gigabit Ethernet Controller [10ec:8168] >>>>>>>> (rev 12) >>>>>>>> >>>>>> Helpful would be a "dmesg | grep r8169", especially chip name + XID. >>>>>> >>>>> [ 22.362774] r8169 0000:02:00.1 (unnamed net_device) >>>>> (uninitialized): mac_version = 0x2b >>>>> [ 22.365580] libphy: r8169: probed >>>>> [ 22.365958] r8169 0000:02:00.1 eth0: RTL8411, 00:e0:b8:1f:cb:83, >>>>> XID 5c800800, IRQ 38 >>>>> [ 22.365961] r8169 0000:02:00.1 eth0: jumbo features [frames: 9200 >>>>> bytes, tx checksumming: ko] >>>>> >>>> Thanks for the info. >>>> >>>>>>>> The problem is the ethernet is not accessible after resume. >>>>>>>> Pinging via >>>>>>>> ethernet always shows the response `Destination Host Unreachable`. >>>>>>>> However, >>>>>>>> the interesting part is, when I run tcpdump to monitor the problematic >>>>>>>> ethernet >>>>>>>> interface, the networking is back to alive. But it's dead again after >>>>>>>> I stop tcpdump. >>>>>>>> One more thing, if I ping the problematic machine from others, it >>>>>>>> achieves the >>>>>>>> same effect as above tcpdump. Maybe it's about the register setting >>>>>>>> for RX path? >>>>>>>> >>>>>> You could compare the register dumps (ethtool -d) before and after S3 >>>>>> sleep >>>>>> to find out whether there's a difference. >>>>>> >>>>> >>>>> Actually, I just found I lead the wrong direction. The S3 suspend does >>>>> help to reproduce, >>>>> but it's not necessary. All I need to do is ping around 5 mins and the >>>>> network connection >>>>> fails. And I also find one thing interesting, disabling the MSI-X >>>>> interrupt like commit >>>>> [d49c88d7677ba737e9d2759a87db0402d5ab2607] can fix this problem. >>>>> Although I don't >>>>> understand the root cause. Anything I can do to help? >>>>> >>>> This is indeed very, very weird. You say switching from MSI-X to MSI fixes >>>> the issue, but also pinging the machine from outside brings back the >>>> network. >>>> Both actions affect totally different corners. >>>> >>>> The commit and related issue you mention was a workaround in the driver, >>>> the root cause was a MSI-X-related issue with certain Intel chipsets deep >>>> in the PCI core. After this was fixed we removed the workaround again. >>>> This shouldn't be related to your issue. >>>> >>>> Hard to say for now is whether the issue is: >>>> - a driver issue >>>> - a hardware issue in the RTL8411 >>>> - an issue with the chipset on your mainboard >>>> >>>> According to your description it doesn't take a special scenario to trigger >>>> the issue, so most likely also other users of Acer notebooks with RTL8411 >>>> should be affected (after briefly checking this should be at least Aspire >>>> F15, V15, V7). Therefore I wonder why there aren't more reports. >>>> >>>> This commit added MSI-X support: 6c6aa15fdea5 ("r8169: improve interrupt >>>> handling") >>>> So you could test this revision and the one before. >>>> >>>> Eventually, if the issue really should be caused by a side effect of using >>>> MSI-X, then the question is whether we need to disable MSI-X for RTL8411 >>>> in general or just for RTL8411 and a certain subsystem id. >>>> >>> >>> I tried the kernel with the head on 6c6aa15fdea5 ("r8169: improve >>> interrupt handling"), >>> the problem still there. Then I revert to the previous revision, the >>> problem goes away. >>> So I think it's pretty much the side effect of MSI-X. However, as you >>> mentioned that >>> you didn't hit this problem, I'll ask the vendor to verify if this >>> problem also happens on >>> other machines with the same chip. Then we can determine to disable for >>> specific >>> mac version or just a certain subsystem id. >>> >>>>>>>> I tried the latest 4.20 rc version but the problem still there. I >>>>>>>> also tried some >>>>>>>> hw_reset or init thing in the resume path but no effect. Any >>>>>>>> suggestion for this? >>>>>>>> Thanks >>>>>>>> >>>>>> Did previous kernel versions work? If it's a regression, a bisect would >>>>>> be >>>>>> appreciated, because with the chip versions I've got I can't reproduce >>>>>> the issue. >>>>>> >>>>>>>> Chris >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Gentle ping. Any additional information required? >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Chris >>>>>>> >>>>>> Heiner >>>>> >>>> >>> >> >> As an additional note: >> I found that the rtsx_pci driver doesn't support MSI-X currently. >> The following patch adds MSI-X support (it's compile-tested only >> because I don't have a system with RTL8411). >> Would be interesting to see whether it makes a difference if both >> components on this combo chip use MSI-X. >> >> --- >> drivers/misc/cardreader/rtsx_pcr.c | 51 ++++++++++-------------------- >> include/linux/rtsx_pci.h | 1 - >> 2 files changed, 16 insertions(+), 36 deletions(-) >> >> diff --git a/drivers/misc/cardreader/rtsx_pcr.c >> b/drivers/misc/cardreader/rtsx_pcr.c >> index da445223f..d1349c248 100644 >> --- a/drivers/misc/cardreader/rtsx_pcr.c >> +++ b/drivers/misc/cardreader/rtsx_pcr.c >> @@ -35,10 +35,6 @@ >> >> #include "rtsx_pcr.h" >> >> -static bool msi_en = true; >> -module_param(msi_en, bool, S_IRUGO | S_IWUSR); >> -MODULE_PARM_DESC(msi_en, "Enable MSI"); >> - >> static DEFINE_IDR(rtsx_pci_idr); >> static DEFINE_SPINLOCK(rtsx_pci_lock); >> >> @@ -1049,22 +1045,21 @@ static irqreturn_t rtsx_pci_isr(int irq, void >> *dev_id) >> >> static int rtsx_pci_acquire_irq(struct rtsx_pcr *pcr) >> { >> - pcr_dbg(pcr, "%s: pcr->msi_en = %d, pci->irq = %d\n", >> - __func__, pcr->msi_en, pcr->pci->irq); >> + int ret; >> >> - if (request_irq(pcr->pci->irq, rtsx_pci_isr, >> - pcr->msi_en ? 0 : IRQF_SHARED, >> - DRV_NAME_RTSX_PCI, pcr)) { >> - dev_err(&(pcr->pci->dev), >> - "rtsx_sdmmc: unable to grab IRQ %d, disabling >> device\n", >> - pcr->pci->irq); >> - return -1; >> - } >> + ret = pci_alloc_irq_vectors(pcr->pci, 1, 1, PCI_IRQ_ALL_TYPES); >> + if (ret < 0) >> + goto err; >> >> - pcr->irq = pcr->pci->irq; >> - pci_intx(pcr->pci, !pcr->msi_en); >> + ret = pci_request_irq(pcr->pci, 0, rtsx_pci_isr, NULL, pcr, >> + DRV_NAME_RTSX_PCI); >> + if (ret) >> + goto err; >> >> return 0; >> +err: >> + pci_err(pcr->pci, "rtsx_sdmmc: unable to grab interrupt\n"); >> + return ret; >> } >> >> static void rtsx_enable_aspm(struct rtsx_pcr *pcr) >> @@ -1496,19 +1491,11 @@ static int rtsx_pci_probe(struct pci_dev *pcidev, >> INIT_DELAYED_WORK(&pcr->carddet_work, rtsx_pci_card_detect); >> INIT_DELAYED_WORK(&pcr->idle_work, rtsx_pci_idle_work); >> >> - pcr->msi_en = msi_en; >> - if (pcr->msi_en) { >> - ret = pci_enable_msi(pcidev); >> - if (ret) >> - pcr->msi_en = false; >> - } >> - >> ret = rtsx_pci_acquire_irq(pcr); >> if (ret < 0) >> - goto disable_msi; >> + goto free_dma; >> >> pci_set_master(pcidev); >> - synchronize_irq(pcr->irq); >> >> ret = rtsx_pci_init_chip(pcr); >> if (ret < 0) >> @@ -1528,10 +1515,8 @@ static int rtsx_pci_probe(struct pci_dev *pcidev, >> return 0; >> >> disable_irq: >> - free_irq(pcr->irq, (void *)pcr); >> -disable_msi: >> - if (pcr->msi_en) >> - pci_disable_msi(pcr->pci); >> + pci_free_irq(pcr->pci, 0, pcr); >> +free_dma: >> dma_free_coherent(&(pcr->pci->dev), RTSX_RESV_BUF_LEN, >> pcr->rtsx_resv_buf, pcr->rtsx_resv_buf_addr); >> unmap: >> @@ -1568,9 +1553,7 @@ static void rtsx_pci_remove(struct pci_dev *pcidev) >> >> dma_free_coherent(&(pcr->pci->dev), RTSX_RESV_BUF_LEN, >> pcr->rtsx_resv_buf, pcr->rtsx_resv_buf_addr); >> - free_irq(pcr->irq, (void *)pcr); >> - if (pcr->msi_en) >> - pci_disable_msi(pcr->pci); >> + pci_free_irq(pcr->pci, 0, pcr); >> iounmap(pcr->remap_addr); >> >> pci_release_regions(pcidev); >> @@ -1664,9 +1647,7 @@ static void rtsx_pci_shutdown(struct pci_dev *pcidev) >> rtsx_pci_power_off(pcr, HOST_ENTER_S1); >> >> pci_disable_device(pcidev); >> - free_irq(pcr->irq, (void *)pcr); >> - if (pcr->msi_en) >> - pci_disable_msi(pcr->pci); >> + pci_free_irq(pcr->pci, 0, pcr); >> } >> >> #else /* CONFIG_PM */ >> diff --git a/include/linux/rtsx_pci.h b/include/linux/rtsx_pci.h >> index e964bbd03..10abfe7f2 100644 >> --- a/include/linux/rtsx_pci.h >> +++ b/include/linux/rtsx_pci.h >> @@ -1190,7 +1190,6 @@ struct rtsx_pcr { >> /* pci resources */ >> unsigned long addr; >> void __iomem *remap_addr; >> - int irq; >> >> /* host reserved buffer */ >> void *rtsx_resv_buf; >> -- >> 2.20.0 >> > > As mentioned in the last email, the rtsx_pci seems to make no > difference. I still tried the kernel with this patch applied, the > problem still persists. I also tried the vendor driver and it works > without any problem. I'd rather like to find out the root cause > instead of a workaround. Any better idea? > Thanks for your efforts! The vendor driver doesn't support MSI-X, therefore the issue doesn't occur. I'm running out of ideas, so I will write to a contact in Realtek who few times provided helpful information already.
> Chris > Heiner