diff options
author | Jan Kundrát <jan.kundrat@cesnet.cz> | 2021-02-25 18:31:48 +0100 |
---|---|---|
committer | Tony Nguyen <anthony.l.nguyen@intel.com> | 2021-10-29 09:42:59 -0700 |
commit | a97f8783a9374a1527d88477c23039a6f3e8a909 (patch) | |
tree | 355d1655720659e5560b9c5f35369a9fe0a75c4a /drivers/net/ethernet/intel/igb | |
parent | 3c6f3ae3bb2e5b2b67db324c100f29f7f56fad98 (diff) |
igb: unbreak I2C bit-banging on i350
The driver tried to use Linux' native software I2C bus master
(i2c-algo-bits) for exporting the I2C interface that talks to the SFP
cage(s) towards userspace. As-is, however, the physical SCL/SDA pins
were not moving at all, staying at logical 1 all the time.
The main culprit was the I2CPARAMS register where igb was not setting
the I2CBB_EN bit. That meant that all the careful signal bit-banging was
actually not being propagated to the chip pads (I verified this with a
scope).
The bit-banging was not correct either, because I2C is supposed to be an
open-collector bus, and the code was driving both lines via a totem
pole. The code was also trying to do operations which did not make any
sense with the i2c-algo-bits, namely manipulating both SDA and SCL from
igb_set_i2c_data (which is only supposed to set SDA). I'm not sure if
that was meant as an optimization, or was just flat out wrong, but given
that the i2c-algo-bits is set up to work with a totally dumb GPIO-ish
implementation underneath, there's no need for this code to be smart.
The open-drain vs. totem-pole is fixed by the usual trick where the
logical zero is implemented via regular output mode and outputting a
logical 0, and the logical high is implemented via the IO pad configured
as an input (thus floating), and letting the mandatory pull-up resistors
do the rest. Anything else is actually wrong on I2C where all devices
are supposed to have open-drain connection to the bus.
The missing I2CBB_EN is set (along with a safe initial value of the
GPIOs) just before registering this software I2C bus.
The chip datasheet mentions HW-implemented I2C transactions (SFP EEPROM
reads and writes) as well, but I'm not touching these for simplicity.
Tested on a LR-Link LRES2203PF-2SFP (which is an almost-miniPCIe form
factor card, a cable, and a module with two SFP cages). There was one
casualty, an old broken SFP we had laying around, which was used to
solder some thin wires as a DIY I2C breakout. Thanks for your service.
With this patch in place, I can `i2cdump -y 3 0x51 c` and read back data
which make sense. Yay.
Signed-off-by: Jan Kundrát <jan.kundrat@cesnet.cz>
See-also: https://www.spinics.net/lists/netdev/msg490554.html
Reviewed-by: Jesse Brandeburg <jesse.brandeburg@intel.com>
Tested-by: Tony Brelinski <tony.brelinski@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Tony Nguyen <anthony.l.nguyen@intel.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'drivers/net/ethernet/intel/igb')
-rw-r--r-- | drivers/net/ethernet/intel/igb/igb_main.c | 23 |
1 files changed, 15 insertions, 8 deletions
diff --git a/drivers/net/ethernet/intel/igb/igb_main.c b/drivers/net/ethernet/intel/igb/igb_main.c index e67a71c3f141..836be0d3b291 100644 --- a/drivers/net/ethernet/intel/igb/igb_main.c +++ b/drivers/net/ethernet/intel/igb/igb_main.c @@ -577,16 +577,15 @@ static void igb_set_i2c_data(void *data, int state) struct e1000_hw *hw = &adapter->hw; s32 i2cctl = rd32(E1000_I2CPARAMS); - if (state) - i2cctl |= E1000_I2C_DATA_OUT; - else + if (state) { + i2cctl |= E1000_I2C_DATA_OUT | E1000_I2C_DATA_OE_N; + } else { + i2cctl &= ~E1000_I2C_DATA_OE_N; i2cctl &= ~E1000_I2C_DATA_OUT; + } - i2cctl &= ~E1000_I2C_DATA_OE_N; - i2cctl |= E1000_I2C_CLK_OE_N; wr32(E1000_I2CPARAMS, i2cctl); wrfl(); - } /** @@ -603,8 +602,7 @@ static void igb_set_i2c_clk(void *data, int state) s32 i2cctl = rd32(E1000_I2CPARAMS); if (state) { - i2cctl |= E1000_I2C_CLK_OUT; - i2cctl &= ~E1000_I2C_CLK_OE_N; + i2cctl |= E1000_I2C_CLK_OUT | E1000_I2C_CLK_OE_N; } else { i2cctl &= ~E1000_I2C_CLK_OUT; i2cctl &= ~E1000_I2C_CLK_OE_N; @@ -3116,12 +3114,21 @@ static void igb_init_mas(struct igb_adapter *adapter) **/ static s32 igb_init_i2c(struct igb_adapter *adapter) { + struct e1000_hw *hw = &adapter->hw; s32 status = 0; + s32 i2cctl; /* I2C interface supported on i350 devices */ if (adapter->hw.mac.type != e1000_i350) return 0; + i2cctl = rd32(E1000_I2CPARAMS); + i2cctl |= E1000_I2CBB_EN + | E1000_I2C_CLK_OUT | E1000_I2C_CLK_OE_N + | E1000_I2C_DATA_OUT | E1000_I2C_DATA_OE_N; + wr32(E1000_I2CPARAMS, i2cctl); + wrfl(); + /* Initialize the i2c bus which is controlled by the registers. * This bus will use the i2c_algo_bit structure that implements * the protocol through toggling of the 4 bits in the register. |