| |
| The Spidernet Device Driver |
| =========================== |
| |
| Written by Linas Vepstas <linas@austin.ibm.com> |
| |
| Version of 7 June 2007 |
| |
| Abstract |
| ======== |
| This document sketches the structure of portions of the spidernet |
| device driver in the Linux kernel tree. The spidernet is a gigabit |
| ethernet device built into the Toshiba southbridge commonly used |
| in the SONY Playstation 3 and the IBM QS20 Cell blade. |
| |
| The Structure of the RX Ring. |
| ============================= |
| The receive (RX) ring is a circular linked list of RX descriptors, |
| together with three pointers into the ring that are used to manage its |
| contents. |
| |
| The elements of the ring are called "descriptors" or "descrs"; they |
| describe the received data. This includes a pointer to a buffer |
| containing the received data, the buffer size, and various status bits. |
| |
| There are three primary states that a descriptor can be in: "empty", |
| "full" and "not-in-use". An "empty" or "ready" descriptor is ready |
| to receive data from the hardware. A "full" descriptor has data in it, |
| and is waiting to be emptied and processed by the OS. A "not-in-use" |
| descriptor is neither empty or full; it is simply not ready. It may |
| not even have a data buffer in it, or is otherwise unusable. |
| |
| During normal operation, on device startup, the OS (specifically, the |
| spidernet device driver) allocates a set of RX descriptors and RX |
| buffers. These are all marked "empty", ready to receive data. This |
| ring is handed off to the hardware, which sequentially fills in the |
| buffers, and marks them "full". The OS follows up, taking the full |
| buffers, processing them, and re-marking them empty. |
| |
| This filling and emptying is managed by three pointers, the "head" |
| and "tail" pointers, managed by the OS, and a hardware current |
| descriptor pointer (GDACTDPA). The GDACTDPA points at the descr |
| currently being filled. When this descr is filled, the hardware |
| marks it full, and advances the GDACTDPA by one. Thus, when there is |
| flowing RX traffic, every descr behind it should be marked "full", |
| and everything in front of it should be "empty". If the hardware |
| discovers that the current descr is not empty, it will signal an |
| interrupt, and halt processing. |
| |
| The tail pointer tails or trails the hardware pointer. When the |
| hardware is ahead, the tail pointer will be pointing at a "full" |
| descr. The OS will process this descr, and then mark it "not-in-use", |
| and advance the tail pointer. Thus, when there is flowing RX traffic, |
| all of the descrs in front of the tail pointer should be "full", and |
| all of those behind it should be "not-in-use". When RX traffic is not |
| flowing, then the tail pointer can catch up to the hardware pointer. |
| The OS will then note that the current tail is "empty", and halt |
| processing. |
| |
| The head pointer (somewhat mis-named) follows after the tail pointer. |
| When traffic is flowing, then the head pointer will be pointing at |
| a "not-in-use" descr. The OS will perform various housekeeping duties |
| on this descr. This includes allocating a new data buffer and |
| dma-mapping it so as to make it visible to the hardware. The OS will |
| then mark the descr as "empty", ready to receive data. Thus, when there |
| is flowing RX traffic, everything in front of the head pointer should |
| be "not-in-use", and everything behind it should be "empty". If no |
| RX traffic is flowing, then the head pointer can catch up to the tail |
| pointer, at which point the OS will notice that the head descr is |
| "empty", and it will halt processing. |
| |
| Thus, in an idle system, the GDACTDPA, tail and head pointers will |
| all be pointing at the same descr, which should be "empty". All of the |
| other descrs in the ring should be "empty" as well. |
| |
| The show_rx_chain() routine will print out the locations of the |
| GDACTDPA, tail and head pointers. It will also summarize the contents |
| of the ring, starting at the tail pointer, and listing the status |
| of the descrs that follow. |
| |
| A typical example of the output, for a nearly idle system, might be |
| |
| net eth1: Total number of descrs=256 |
| net eth1: Chain tail located at descr=20 |
| net eth1: Chain head is at 20 |
| net eth1: HW curr desc (GDACTDPA) is at 21 |
| net eth1: Have 1 descrs with stat=x40800101 |
| net eth1: HW next desc (GDACNEXTDA) is at 22 |
| net eth1: Last 255 descrs with stat=xa0800000 |
| |
| In the above, the hardware has filled in one descr, number 20. Both |
| head and tail are pointing at 20, because it has not yet been emptied. |
| Meanwhile, hw is pointing at 21, which is free. |
| |
| The "Have nnn decrs" refers to the descr starting at the tail: in this |
| case, nnn=1 descr, starting at descr 20. The "Last nnn descrs" refers |
| to all of the rest of the descrs, from the last status change. The "nnn" |
| is a count of how many descrs have exactly the same status. |
| |
| The status x4... corresponds to "full" and status xa... corresponds |
| to "empty". The actual value printed is RXCOMST_A. |
| |
| In the device driver source code, a different set of names are |
| used for these same concepts, so that |
| |
| "empty" == SPIDER_NET_DESCR_CARDOWNED == 0xa |
| "full" == SPIDER_NET_DESCR_FRAME_END == 0x4 |
| "not in use" == SPIDER_NET_DESCR_NOT_IN_USE == 0xf |
| |
| |
| The RX RAM full bug/feature |
| =========================== |
| |
| As long as the OS can empty out the RX buffers at a rate faster than |
| the hardware can fill them, there is no problem. If, for some reason, |
| the OS fails to empty the RX ring fast enough, the hardware GDACTDPA |
| pointer will catch up to the head, notice the not-empty condition, |
| ad stop. However, RX packets may still continue arriving on the wire. |
| The spidernet chip can save some limited number of these in local RAM. |
| When this local ram fills up, the spider chip will issue an interrupt |
| indicating this (GHIINT0STS will show ERRINT, and the GRMFLLINT bit |
| will be set in GHIINT1STS). When the RX ram full condition occurs, |
| a certain bug/feature is triggered that has to be specially handled. |
| This section describes the special handling for this condition. |
| |
| When the OS finally has a chance to run, it will empty out the RX ring. |
| In particular, it will clear the descriptor on which the hardware had |
| stopped. However, once the hardware has decided that a certain |
| descriptor is invalid, it will not restart at that descriptor; instead |
| it will restart at the next descr. This potentially will lead to a |
| deadlock condition, as the tail pointer will be pointing at this descr, |
| which, from the OS point of view, is empty; the OS will be waiting for |
| this descr to be filled. However, the hardware has skipped this descr, |
| and is filling the next descrs. Since the OS doesn't see this, there |
| is a potential deadlock, with the OS waiting for one descr to fill, |
| while the hardware is waiting for a different set of descrs to become |
| empty. |
| |
| A call to show_rx_chain() at this point indicates the nature of the |
| problem. A typical print when the network is hung shows the following: |
| |
| net eth1: Spider RX RAM full, incoming packets might be discarded! |
| net eth1: Total number of descrs=256 |
| net eth1: Chain tail located at descr=255 |
| net eth1: Chain head is at 255 |
| net eth1: HW curr desc (GDACTDPA) is at 0 |
| net eth1: Have 1 descrs with stat=xa0800000 |
| net eth1: HW next desc (GDACNEXTDA) is at 1 |
| net eth1: Have 127 descrs with stat=x40800101 |
| net eth1: Have 1 descrs with stat=x40800001 |
| net eth1: Have 126 descrs with stat=x40800101 |
| net eth1: Last 1 descrs with stat=xa0800000 |
| |
| Both the tail and head pointers are pointing at descr 255, which is |
| marked xa... which is "empty". Thus, from the OS point of view, there |
| is nothing to be done. In particular, there is the implicit assumption |
| that everything in front of the "empty" descr must surely also be empty, |
| as explained in the last section. The OS is waiting for descr 255 to |
| become non-empty, which, in this case, will never happen. |
| |
| The HW pointer is at descr 0. This descr is marked 0x4.. or "full". |
| Since its already full, the hardware can do nothing more, and thus has |
| halted processing. Notice that descrs 0 through 254 are all marked |
| "full", while descr 254 and 255 are empty. (The "Last 1 descrs" is |
| descr 254, since tail was at 255.) Thus, the system is deadlocked, |
| and there can be no forward progress; the OS thinks there's nothing |
| to do, and the hardware has nowhere to put incoming data. |
| |
| This bug/feature is worked around with the spider_net_resync_head_ptr() |
| routine. When the driver receives RX interrupts, but an examination |
| of the RX chain seems to show it is empty, then it is probable that |
| the hardware has skipped a descr or two (sometimes dozens under heavy |
| network conditions). The spider_net_resync_head_ptr() subroutine will |
| search the ring for the next full descr, and the driver will resume |
| operations there. Since this will leave "holes" in the ring, there |
| is also a spider_net_resync_tail_ptr() that will skip over such holes. |
| |
| As of this writing, the spider_net_resync() strategy seems to work very |
| well, even under heavy network loads. |
| |
| |
| The TX ring |
| =========== |
| The TX ring uses a low-watermark interrupt scheme to make sure that |
| the TX queue is appropriately serviced for large packet sizes. |
| |
| For packet sizes greater than about 1KBytes, the kernel can fill |
| the TX ring quicker than the device can drain it. Once the ring |
| is full, the netdev is stopped. When there is room in the ring, |
| the netdev needs to be reawakened, so that more TX packets are placed |
| in the ring. The hardware can empty the ring about four times per jiffy, |
| so its not appropriate to wait for the poll routine to refill, since |
| the poll routine runs only once per jiffy. The low-watermark mechanism |
| marks a descr about 1/4th of the way from the bottom of the queue, so |
| that an interrupt is generated when the descr is processed. This |
| interrupt wakes up the netdev, which can then refill the queue. |
| For large packets, this mechanism generates a relatively small number |
| of interrupts, about 1K/sec. For smaller packets, this will drop to zero |
| interrupts, as the hardware can empty the queue faster than the kernel |
| can fill it. |
| |
| |
| ======= END OF DOCUMENT ======== |
| |