Re: [PATCH v4 1/5] r8169: Coalesce r8169_mac_ocp_write/modify calls to reduce spinlock stalls

From: Jacob Keller
Date: Mon Oct 30 2023 - 17:51:00 EST




On 10/29/2023 4:04 AM, Mirsad Goran Todorovac wrote:> A pair of new
helpers r8168_mac_ocp_write_seq() and r8168_mac_ocp_modify_seq()
> are introduced.
>
> The motivation for these helpers was the locking overhead of 130 consecutive
> r8168_mac_ocp_write() calls in the RTL8411b reset after the NIC gets confused
> if the PHY is powered-down.
>
> To quote Heiner:
>
> On RTL8411b the RX unit gets confused if the PHY is powered-down.
> This was reported in [0] and confirmed by Realtek. Realtek provided
> a sequence to fix the RX unit after PHY wakeup.
>
> A series of about 130 r8168_mac_ocp_write() calls is performed to program the
> RTL registers for recovery, each doing an expensive spin_lock_irqsave() and
> spin_unlock_irqrestore().
>
> Each mac ocp write is made of:
>
> static void __r8168_mac_ocp_write(struct rtl8169_private *tp, u32 reg,
> u32 data)
> {
> if (rtl_ocp_reg_failure(reg))
> return;
>
> RTL_W32(tp, OCPDR, OCPAR_FLAG | (reg << 15) | data);
> }
>
> static void r8168_mac_ocp_write(struct rtl8169_private *tp, u32 reg,
> u32 data)
> {
> unsigned long flags;
>
> raw_spin_lock_irqsave(&tp->mac_ocp_lock, flags);
> __r8168_mac_ocp_write(tp, reg, data);
> raw_spin_unlock_irqrestore(&tp->mac_ocp_lock, flags);
> }
>
> Register programming is done through RTL_W32() macro which expands into
>
> #define RTL_W32(tp, reg, val32) writel((val32), tp->mmio_addr + (reg))
>
> which is further (on Alpha):
>
> extern inline void writel(u32 b, volatile void __iomem *addr)
> {
> mb();
> __raw_writel(b, addr);
> }
>
> or on i386/x86_64:
>
> #define build_mmio_write(name, size, type, reg, barrier) \
> static inline void name(type val, volatile void __iomem *addr) \
> { asm volatile("mov" size " %0,%1": :reg (val), \
> "m" (*(volatile type __force *)addr) barrier); }
>
> build_mmio_write(writel, "l", unsigned int, "r", :"memory")
>
> This obviously involves iat least a compiler barrier.
>
> mb() expands into something like this i.e. on x86_64:
>
> #define mb() asm volatile("lock; addl $0,0(%%esp)" ::: "memory")
>
> This means a whole lot of memory bus stalls: for spin_lock_irqsave(),
> memory barrier, writel(), and spin_unlock_irqrestore().
>
> With about 130 of these sequential calls to r8168_mac_ocp_write() this looks like
> a lock storm that will stall all of the cores and CPUs on the same memory controller
> for certain time I/O takes to finish.
>
> In a sequential case of RTL register programming, the writes to RTL registers
> can be coalesced under a same raw spinlock. This can dramatically decrease the
> number of bus stalls in a multicore or multi-CPU system.
>
> Macro helpers r8168_mac_ocp_write_seq() and r8168_mac_ocp_modify_seq() are
> provided to reduce lock contention:
>
> static void rtl_hw_start_8411_2(struct rtl8169_private *tp)
> {
>
> ...
>
> /* The following Realtek-provided magic fixes an issue with the RX unit
> * getting confused after the PHY having been powered-down.
> */
>
> static const struct recover_8411b_info init_zero_seq[] = {
> { 0xFC28, 0x0000 }, { 0xFC2A, 0x0000 }, { 0xFC2C, 0x0000 },
> ...
> };
>
> ...
>
> r8168_mac_ocp_write_seq(tp, init_zero_seq);
>
> ...
>
> }
>
> The hex data is preserved intact through s/r8168_mac_ocp_write[(]tp,/{ / and s/[)];/ },/
> functions that only changed the function names and the ending of the line, so the actual
> hex data is unchanged.
>
> To repeat, the reason for the introduction of the original commit
> was to enable recovery of the RX unit on the RTL8411b which was confused by the
> powered-down PHY. This sequence of r8168_mac_ocp_write() calls amplifies the problem
> into a series of about 500+ memory bus locks, most waiting for the main memory read,
> modify and write under a LOCK. The memory barrier in RTL_W32 should suffice for
> the programming sequence to reach RTL NIC registers.
>
> [0] https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1692075
>


I might have chosen to send some of this information as the cover letter
for the series instead of just as part of the commit message for [1/5],
but either way:

Reviewed-by: Jacob Keller <jacob.e.keller@xxxxxxxxx>