Re: [RFC] New functions to manipulate registers for ethtool

From: Hitoshi Mitake
Date: Wed Dec 10 2008 - 06:26:44 EST


On Mon, 8 Dec 2008 09:36:53 -0800
"Brandeburg, Jesse" <jesse.brandeburg@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:

> David Miller wrote:
> > From: Valdis.Kletnieks@xxxxxx
> > Date: Mon, 08 Dec 2008 04:01:43 -0500
> >
> >> On Mon, 08 Dec 2008 00:54:31 PST, David Miller said:
> >>> From: Hitoshi Mitake <mitake@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
> >>> Date: Mon, 8 Dec 2008 17:12:30 +0900
> >>>
> >>>> I want to add two new functions to ethtool.
> >>>>
> >>>> One is for setting driver's registers on MMIO area like
> >>>> --change-eeprom option.
> >>>
> >>> You can map the registers into userspace using the bus
> >>> level mmap facilities exported to userspace.
>
> one hiccup, Arjan recently added functionality to the kernel that could
> disallow this unless a user overrides at boot. [1]
>
> also, there is a .config option that disallows this but I'm just
> mentioning it for posterity.
>
> >>> No ethtool support is necessary for this.
> >>
> >> Yes, but if Hitoshi wants to tell a user "run this command and send
> >> me the output", what's the incantation the user needs to use?
> >
>
> ethregs -s <bus>:<dev>.<fn>
>
> > That's an awful reason to have to two ways of doing the exact same
> > thing from userspace.
> >
> > Write the tool. Someone will if it's important enough (in fact
> > such code probably exists already).

Thanks for your replying, David, Valdis and Jesse.

>
> Hi Hitoshi,
> you probably want to download and install our ethregs utility.
> http://prdownloads.sf.net/e1000/ethregs-1.1.tar.gz
> (this is not a direct link as it seems but gets redirected to a mirror
> page, usually)
>

This is a nice software for me, Thanks.

> Please let me know if it doesn't support your device ID.

I used this on my environment.
My NICs are 82573L and 82573E. ethregs could detected them well.

It seems that this program doesn't support for writing value to registers.
I think making ethregs to support writing is not bad idea.
If you are not planning, I want to do that.

I'm not a professional of Intel's NICs.
How do you think?
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