On Sat Jul 11 2020, Florian Fainelli wrote: > On 7/10/2020 4:36 AM, Kurt Kanzenbach wrote: >> From: Kamil Alkhouri <[email protected]> >> >> The switch has internal PTP hardware clocks. Add support for it. There are >> three >> clocks: >> >> * Synchronized >> * Syntonized >> * Free running >> >> Currently the synchronized clock is exported to user space which is a good >> default for the beginning. The free running clock might be exported later >> e.g. for implementing 802.1AS-2011/2020 Time Aware Bridges (TAB). The switch >> also supports cross time stamping for that purpose. >> >> The implementation adds support setting/getting the time as well as offset >> and >> frequency adjustments. However, the clock only holds a partial timeofday >> timestamp. This is why we track the seconds completely in software (see >> overflow >> work and last_ts). >> >> Furthermore, add the PTP multicast addresses into the FDB to forward that >> packages only to the CPU port where they are processed by a PTP program. >> >> Signed-off-by: Kamil Alkhouri <[email protected]> >> Signed-off-by: Kurt Kanzenbach <[email protected]> > > Are not you missing an depends on PTP_1588_CLOCK somewhere?
Most likely. Thanks!
>
>> ---
>
> [snip]
>
>>
>> +static int hellcreek_setup_fdb(struct hellcreek *hellcreek)
>> +{
>> + static struct hellcreek_fdb_entry ptp = {
>> + /* MAC: 01-1B-19-00-00-00 */
>> + .mac = { 0x01, 0x1b, 0x19, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00 },
>> + .portmask = 0x03, /* Management ports */
>
> Should not this depend on the actual number of ports enabled by the user
> and so it would be more logical to program those entries (or update
> them) at port_enable() time?
For me this is a switch configuration. It means forward all PTP traffic
to the switch's CPU port and therefore it doesn't depend on the enabled
ports.
Thanks,
Kurt
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