Re: [PATCH net-next 2/2] net: phy: Add ability to debug RGMII connections
From: Russell King - ARM Linux admin
Date: Fri Oct 18 2019 - 09:23:33 EST
On Fri, Oct 18, 2019 at 04:09:30PM +0300, Vladimir Oltean wrote:
> Hi Andrew,
>
> On Fri, 18 Oct 2019 at 16:01, Andrew Lunn <andrew@xxxxxxx> wrote:
> >
> > > Well, that's the tricky part. You're sending a frame out, with no
> > > guarantee you'll get the same frame back in. So I'm not sure that any
> > > identifiers put inside the frame will survive.
> > > How do the tests pan out for you? Do you actually get to trigger this
> > > check? As I mentioned, my NIC drops the frames with bad FCS.
> >
> > My experience is, the NIC drops the frame and increments some the
> > counter about bad FCS. I do very occasionally see a frame delivered,
> > but i guess that is 1/65536 where the FCS just happens to be good by
> > accident. So i think some other algorithm should be used which is
> > unlikely to be good when the FCS is accidentally good, or just check
> > the contents of the packet, you know what is should contain.
> >
> > Are there any NICs which don't do hardware FCS? Is that something we
> > realistically need to consider?
> >
> > > Yes, but remember, nobody guarantees that a frame with DMAC
> > > ff:ff:ff:ff:ff:ff on egress will still have it on its way back. Again,
> > > this all depends on how you plan to manage the rx-all ethtool feature.
> >
> > Humm. Never heard that before. Are you saying some NICs rewrite the
> > DMAN?
> >
>
> I'm just trying to understand the circumstances under which this
> kernel thread makes sense.
> Checking for FCS validity means that the intention was to enable the
> reception of frames with bad FCS.
> Bad FCS after bad RGMII setup/hold times doesn't mean there's a small
> guy in there who rewrites the checksum. It means that frame octets get
> garbled. All octets are just as likely to get garbled, including the
> SFD, preamble, DMAC, etc.
> All I'm saying is that, if the intention of the patch is to actually
> process the FCS of frames before and after, then it should actually
> put the interface in promiscuous mode, so that frames with a
> non-garbled SFD and preamble can still be received, even though their
> DMAC was the one that got garbled.
Isn't the point of this to see which RGMII setting results in a working
setup?
So, is it not true that what we're after is receiving a _correct_ frame
that corresponds to the frame that was sent out?
Hence, if the DMAC got changed, it's irrelevent whether we received the
packet or not - since "no packet" || "changed packet" = fail.
--
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