Re: [PATCH net-next v5 4/4] phy: aquantia: Determine rate adaptation support from registers

From: Vladimir Oltean
Date: Fri Jan 06 2023 - 09:18:29 EST


On Thu, Jan 05, 2023 at 06:51:33PM +0000, Russell King (Oracle) wrote:
> On Thu, Jan 05, 2023 at 07:43:42PM +0200, Vladimir Oltean wrote:
> > On Thu, Jan 05, 2023 at 02:40:50PM +0000, Russell King (Oracle) wrote:
> > > > If the PHY firmware uses a combination like this: 10GBASE-R/XFI for
> > > > media speeds of 10G, 5G, 2.5G (rate adapted), and SGMII for 1G, 100M
> > > > and 10M, a call to your implementation of
> > > > aqr107_get_rate_matching(PHY_INTERFACE_MODE_10GBASER) would return
> > > > RATE_MATCH_NONE, right? So only ETHTOOL_LINK_MODE_10000baseT_Full_BIT
> > > > would be advertised on the media side?
> > >
> > > No, beause of the special condition in phylink that if it's a clause 45
> > > PHY and we use something like 10GBASE-R, we don't limit to just 10G
> > > speed, but try all interface modes - on the assumption that the PHY
> > > will switch its host interface.
> > >
> > > RATE_MATCH_NONE doesn't state anything about whether the PHY operates
> > > in a single interface mode or not - with 10G PHYs (and thus clause 45
> > > PHYs) it seems very common from current observations for
> > > implementations to do this kind of host-interface switching.
> >
> > So you mention commits
> > 7642cc28fd37 ("net: phylink: fix PHY validation with rate adaption") and
> > df3f57ac9605 ("net: phylink: extend clause 45 PHY validation workaround").
> >
> > IIUC, these allow the advertised capabilities to be more than 10G (based
> > on supported_interfaces), on the premise that it's possible for the PHY
> > to switch SERDES protocol to achieve lower speeds.
>
> I didn't mention any commits, but yes, it's ever since the second commit
> you list above, which was necessary to get PHYs which switch their
> interface mode to work sanely. It essentially allows everything that
> the combination of host and PHY supports, because we couldn't do much
> better at the time that commit was written.
>
> > This does partly correct the last part of my question, but I believe
> > that the essence of it still remains. We won't make use of PAUSE rate
> > adaptation to support the speeds which aren't directly covered by the
> > supported_interfaces. Aren't we interpreting the PHY provisioning somewhat
> > too conservatively in this case, or do you believe that this is just an
> > academic concern?
>
> Do you have a better idea how to come up with a list of link modes that
> the PHY should advertise to its link partner and also report as
> supported given the combination of:
>
> - PHYs that switch their host interface
> - PHYs that may support some kind of rate adaption
> - PCS/MACs that may support half-duplex at some speeds
> - PCS/MACs that might support pause modes, and might support them only
> with certain interface modes
>
> Layered on top of that is being able to determine which interface a PHY/
> PCS/MAC should be using when e.g. a 10G copper PHY is inserted (which
> could be inserted into a host which only supports up to 1G.)
>
> I've spent considerable time trying to work out a solution to this, and
> even before we had rate adaption, it isn't easy to solve. I've
> experimented with several different solutions, and it's from numerous
> trials that led to this host_interfaces/mac_capabilities structure -
> but that still doesn't let us solve the problems I mention above since
> we have no idea what the PHY itself is capable of, or how it's going to
> behave, or really which interface modes it might switch between if it's
> a clause 45 PHY.
>
> I've experimented with adding phy->supported_interfaces so a phylib
> driver can advertise what interfaces it supports. I've also
> experimented with phy->possible_interfaces which reports the interface
> modes that the PHY _is_ going to switch between having selected its
> operating mode. I've not submitted them because even with this, it all
> still seems rather inadequate - and there is a huge amount of work to
> update all the phylib drivers to provide even that basic information,
> let alone have much confidence that it is correct.
>
> You can find these experiments, as normal, in my net-queue branch in
> my git tree. These date from before we had rate adaption, so they take
> no account of the recent addition of this extra variable.

Don't we actually need an API for the PHY resembling the following?

struct phy_host_cfg {
phy_interface_t interface;
int rate_matching;
};

/* Caller must kfree() @host_cfg */
int phy_get_host_cfg_for_linkmode(struct phy_device *phydev,
enum ethtool_link_mode_bit_indices linkmode,
struct phy_host_cfg **host_cfg,
int *num_host_cfg)
{
if (!phydev->drv->get_host_cfg_for_linkmode) {
/* Assume that PHYs can't change host interface and don't
* support rate matching
*/
*host_cfg = kcalloc(sizeof(*host_cfg), GFP_KERNEL);
*num_host_cfg = 1;
*host_cfg[0].interface = phydev->interface;
*host_cfg[0].rate_matching = RATE_MATCH_NONE;

return 0;
}

return phydev->drv->get_host_cfg_for_linkmode(phydev, linkmode,
host_cfg, num_host_cfg);
}

/* Calling this is only necessary if @num_host_cfg returned by
* phy_get_host_cfg_for_linkmode() is larger than 1.
*/
int phy_set_host_cfg_for_linkmode(struct phy_device *phydev,
enum ethtool_link_mode_bit_indices linkmode,
const struct phy_host_cfg *host_cfg)
{
if (!phydev->drv->set_host_cfg_for_linkmode)
return -EOPNOTSUPP;

return phydev->drv->set_host_cfg_for_linkmode(phydev, linkmode,
host_cfg);
}

Based on the host_cfg array returned by the PHY for each link mode,
phylink could figure out (by intersecting with the MAC/PCS's
host_interfaces/mac_capabilities) what should be advertised and what
shouldn't.