| /* |
| * Copyright (c) 2006 QLogic, Inc. All rights reserved. |
| * Copyright (c) 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006 PathScale, Inc. All rights reserved. |
| * |
| * This software is available to you under a choice of one of two |
| * licenses. You may choose to be licensed under the terms of the GNU |
| * General Public License (GPL) Version 2, available from the file |
| * COPYING in the main directory of this source tree, or the |
| * OpenIB.org BSD license below: |
| * |
| * Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or |
| * without modification, are permitted provided that the following |
| * conditions are met: |
| * |
| * - Redistributions of source code must retain the above |
| * copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following |
| * disclaimer. |
| * |
| * - Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above |
| * copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following |
| * disclaimer in the documentation and/or other materials |
| * provided with the distribution. |
| * |
| * THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, |
| * EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF |
| * MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND |
| * NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS |
| * BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN |
| * ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN |
| * CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE |
| * SOFTWARE. |
| */ |
| |
| #include <linux/pci.h> |
| |
| #include "ipath_kernel.h" |
| #include "ipath_verbs.h" |
| #include "ipath_common.h" |
| |
| /* |
| * Called when we might have an error that is specific to a particular |
| * PIO buffer, and may need to cancel that buffer, so it can be re-used. |
| */ |
| void ipath_disarm_senderrbufs(struct ipath_devdata *dd) |
| { |
| u32 piobcnt; |
| unsigned long sbuf[4]; |
| /* |
| * it's possible that sendbuffererror could have bits set; might |
| * have already done this as a result of hardware error handling |
| */ |
| piobcnt = dd->ipath_piobcnt2k + dd->ipath_piobcnt4k; |
| /* read these before writing errorclear */ |
| sbuf[0] = ipath_read_kreg64( |
| dd, dd->ipath_kregs->kr_sendbuffererror); |
| sbuf[1] = ipath_read_kreg64( |
| dd, dd->ipath_kregs->kr_sendbuffererror + 1); |
| if (piobcnt > 128) { |
| sbuf[2] = ipath_read_kreg64( |
| dd, dd->ipath_kregs->kr_sendbuffererror + 2); |
| sbuf[3] = ipath_read_kreg64( |
| dd, dd->ipath_kregs->kr_sendbuffererror + 3); |
| } |
| |
| if (sbuf[0] || sbuf[1] || (piobcnt > 128 && (sbuf[2] || sbuf[3]))) { |
| int i; |
| if (ipath_debug & (__IPATH_PKTDBG|__IPATH_DBG)) { |
| __IPATH_DBG_WHICH(__IPATH_PKTDBG|__IPATH_DBG, |
| "SendbufErrs %lx %lx", sbuf[0], |
| sbuf[1]); |
| if (ipath_debug & __IPATH_PKTDBG && piobcnt > 128) |
| printk(" %lx %lx ", sbuf[2], sbuf[3]); |
| printk("\n"); |
| } |
| |
| for (i = 0; i < piobcnt; i++) |
| if (test_bit(i, sbuf)) |
| ipath_disarm_piobufs(dd, i, 1); |
| dd->ipath_lastcancel = jiffies+3; /* no armlaunch for a bit */ |
| } |
| } |
| |
| |
| /* These are all rcv-related errors which we want to count for stats */ |
| #define E_SUM_PKTERRS \ |
| (INFINIPATH_E_RHDRLEN | INFINIPATH_E_RBADTID | \ |
| INFINIPATH_E_RBADVERSION | INFINIPATH_E_RHDR | \ |
| INFINIPATH_E_RLONGPKTLEN | INFINIPATH_E_RSHORTPKTLEN | \ |
| INFINIPATH_E_RMAXPKTLEN | INFINIPATH_E_RMINPKTLEN | \ |
| INFINIPATH_E_RFORMATERR | INFINIPATH_E_RUNSUPVL | \ |
| INFINIPATH_E_RUNEXPCHAR | INFINIPATH_E_REBP) |
| |
| /* These are all send-related errors which we want to count for stats */ |
| #define E_SUM_ERRS \ |
| (INFINIPATH_E_SPIOARMLAUNCH | INFINIPATH_E_SUNEXPERRPKTNUM | \ |
| INFINIPATH_E_SDROPPEDDATAPKT | INFINIPATH_E_SDROPPEDSMPPKT | \ |
| INFINIPATH_E_SMAXPKTLEN | INFINIPATH_E_SUNSUPVL | \ |
| INFINIPATH_E_SMINPKTLEN | INFINIPATH_E_SPKTLEN | \ |
| INFINIPATH_E_INVALIDADDR) |
| |
| /* |
| * these are errors that can occur when the link changes state while |
| * a packet is being sent or received. This doesn't cover things |
| * like EBP or VCRC that can be the result of a sending having the |
| * link change state, so we receive a "known bad" packet. |
| */ |
| #define E_SUM_LINK_PKTERRS \ |
| (INFINIPATH_E_SDROPPEDDATAPKT | INFINIPATH_E_SDROPPEDSMPPKT | \ |
| INFINIPATH_E_SMINPKTLEN | INFINIPATH_E_SPKTLEN | \ |
| INFINIPATH_E_RSHORTPKTLEN | INFINIPATH_E_RMINPKTLEN | \ |
| INFINIPATH_E_RUNEXPCHAR) |
| |
| static u64 handle_e_sum_errs(struct ipath_devdata *dd, ipath_err_t errs) |
| { |
| u64 ignore_this_time = 0; |
| |
| ipath_disarm_senderrbufs(dd); |
| if ((errs & E_SUM_LINK_PKTERRS) && |
| !(dd->ipath_flags & IPATH_LINKACTIVE)) { |
| /* |
| * This can happen when SMA is trying to bring the link |
| * up, but the IB link changes state at the "wrong" time. |
| * The IB logic then complains that the packet isn't |
| * valid. We don't want to confuse people, so we just |
| * don't print them, except at debug |
| */ |
| ipath_dbg("Ignoring packet errors %llx, because link not " |
| "ACTIVE\n", (unsigned long long) errs); |
| ignore_this_time = errs & E_SUM_LINK_PKTERRS; |
| } |
| |
| return ignore_this_time; |
| } |
| |
| /* generic hw error messages... */ |
| #define INFINIPATH_HWE_TXEMEMPARITYERR_MSG(a) \ |
| { \ |
| .mask = ( INFINIPATH_HWE_TXEMEMPARITYERR_##a << \ |
| INFINIPATH_HWE_TXEMEMPARITYERR_SHIFT ), \ |
| .msg = "TXE " #a " Memory Parity" \ |
| } |
| #define INFINIPATH_HWE_RXEMEMPARITYERR_MSG(a) \ |
| { \ |
| .mask = ( INFINIPATH_HWE_RXEMEMPARITYERR_##a << \ |
| INFINIPATH_HWE_RXEMEMPARITYERR_SHIFT ), \ |
| .msg = "RXE " #a " Memory Parity" \ |
| } |
| |
| static const struct ipath_hwerror_msgs ipath_generic_hwerror_msgs[] = { |
| INFINIPATH_HWE_MSG(IBCBUSFRSPCPARITYERR, "IPATH2IB Parity"), |
| INFINIPATH_HWE_MSG(IBCBUSTOSPCPARITYERR, "IB2IPATH Parity"), |
| |
| INFINIPATH_HWE_TXEMEMPARITYERR_MSG(PIOBUF), |
| INFINIPATH_HWE_TXEMEMPARITYERR_MSG(PIOPBC), |
| INFINIPATH_HWE_TXEMEMPARITYERR_MSG(PIOLAUNCHFIFO), |
| |
| INFINIPATH_HWE_RXEMEMPARITYERR_MSG(RCVBUF), |
| INFINIPATH_HWE_RXEMEMPARITYERR_MSG(LOOKUPQ), |
| INFINIPATH_HWE_RXEMEMPARITYERR_MSG(EAGERTID), |
| INFINIPATH_HWE_RXEMEMPARITYERR_MSG(EXPTID), |
| INFINIPATH_HWE_RXEMEMPARITYERR_MSG(FLAGBUF), |
| INFINIPATH_HWE_RXEMEMPARITYERR_MSG(DATAINFO), |
| INFINIPATH_HWE_RXEMEMPARITYERR_MSG(HDRINFO), |
| }; |
| |
| /** |
| * ipath_format_hwmsg - format a single hwerror message |
| * @msg message buffer |
| * @msgl length of message buffer |
| * @hwmsg message to add to message buffer |
| */ |
| static void ipath_format_hwmsg(char *msg, size_t msgl, const char *hwmsg) |
| { |
| strlcat(msg, "[", msgl); |
| strlcat(msg, hwmsg, msgl); |
| strlcat(msg, "]", msgl); |
| } |
| |
| /** |
| * ipath_format_hwerrors - format hardware error messages for display |
| * @hwerrs hardware errors bit vector |
| * @hwerrmsgs hardware error descriptions |
| * @nhwerrmsgs number of hwerrmsgs |
| * @msg message buffer |
| * @msgl message buffer length |
| */ |
| void ipath_format_hwerrors(u64 hwerrs, |
| const struct ipath_hwerror_msgs *hwerrmsgs, |
| size_t nhwerrmsgs, |
| char *msg, size_t msgl) |
| { |
| int i; |
| const int glen = |
| sizeof(ipath_generic_hwerror_msgs) / |
| sizeof(ipath_generic_hwerror_msgs[0]); |
| |
| for (i=0; i<glen; i++) { |
| if (hwerrs & ipath_generic_hwerror_msgs[i].mask) { |
| ipath_format_hwmsg(msg, msgl, |
| ipath_generic_hwerror_msgs[i].msg); |
| } |
| } |
| |
| for (i=0; i<nhwerrmsgs; i++) { |
| if (hwerrs & hwerrmsgs[i].mask) { |
| ipath_format_hwmsg(msg, msgl, hwerrmsgs[i].msg); |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /* return the strings for the most common link states */ |
| static char *ib_linkstate(u32 linkstate) |
| { |
| char *ret; |
| |
| switch (linkstate) { |
| case IPATH_IBSTATE_INIT: |
| ret = "Init"; |
| break; |
| case IPATH_IBSTATE_ARM: |
| ret = "Arm"; |
| break; |
| case IPATH_IBSTATE_ACTIVE: |
| ret = "Active"; |
| break; |
| default: |
| ret = "Down"; |
| } |
| |
| return ret; |
| } |
| |
| static void handle_e_ibstatuschanged(struct ipath_devdata *dd, |
| ipath_err_t errs, int noprint) |
| { |
| u64 val; |
| u32 ltstate, lstate; |
| |
| /* |
| * even if diags are enabled, we want to notice LINKINIT, etc. |
| * We just don't want to change the LED state, or |
| * dd->ipath_kregs->kr_ibcctrl |
| */ |
| val = ipath_read_kreg64(dd, dd->ipath_kregs->kr_ibcstatus); |
| lstate = val & IPATH_IBSTATE_MASK; |
| |
| /* |
| * this is confusing enough when it happens that I want to always put it |
| * on the console and in the logs. If it was a requested state change, |
| * we'll have already cleared the flags, so we won't print this warning |
| */ |
| if ((lstate != IPATH_IBSTATE_ARM && lstate != IPATH_IBSTATE_ACTIVE) |
| && (dd->ipath_flags & (IPATH_LINKARMED | IPATH_LINKACTIVE))) { |
| dev_info(&dd->pcidev->dev, "Link state changed from %s to %s\n", |
| (dd->ipath_flags & IPATH_LINKARMED) ? "ARM" : "ACTIVE", |
| ib_linkstate(lstate)); |
| /* |
| * Flush all queued sends when link went to DOWN or INIT, |
| * to be sure that they don't block SMA and other MAD packets |
| */ |
| ipath_write_kreg(dd, dd->ipath_kregs->kr_sendctrl, |
| INFINIPATH_S_ABORT); |
| ipath_disarm_piobufs(dd, dd->ipath_lastport_piobuf, |
| (unsigned)(dd->ipath_piobcnt2k + |
| dd->ipath_piobcnt4k) - |
| dd->ipath_lastport_piobuf); |
| } |
| else if (lstate == IPATH_IBSTATE_INIT || lstate == IPATH_IBSTATE_ARM || |
| lstate == IPATH_IBSTATE_ACTIVE) { |
| /* |
| * only print at SMA if there is a change, debug if not |
| * (sometimes we want to know that, usually not). |
| */ |
| if (lstate == ((unsigned) dd->ipath_lastibcstat |
| & IPATH_IBSTATE_MASK)) { |
| ipath_dbg("Status change intr but no change (%s)\n", |
| ib_linkstate(lstate)); |
| } |
| else |
| ipath_cdbg(VERBOSE, "Unit %u link state %s, last " |
| "was %s\n", dd->ipath_unit, |
| ib_linkstate(lstate), |
| ib_linkstate((unsigned) |
| dd->ipath_lastibcstat |
| & IPATH_IBSTATE_MASK)); |
| } |
| else { |
| lstate = dd->ipath_lastibcstat & IPATH_IBSTATE_MASK; |
| if (lstate == IPATH_IBSTATE_INIT || |
| lstate == IPATH_IBSTATE_ARM || |
| lstate == IPATH_IBSTATE_ACTIVE) |
| ipath_cdbg(VERBOSE, "Unit %u link state down" |
| " (state 0x%x), from %s\n", |
| dd->ipath_unit, |
| (u32)val & IPATH_IBSTATE_MASK, |
| ib_linkstate(lstate)); |
| else |
| ipath_cdbg(VERBOSE, "Unit %u link state changed " |
| "to 0x%x from down (%x)\n", |
| dd->ipath_unit, (u32) val, lstate); |
| } |
| ltstate = (val >> INFINIPATH_IBCS_LINKTRAININGSTATE_SHIFT) & |
| INFINIPATH_IBCS_LINKTRAININGSTATE_MASK; |
| lstate = (val >> INFINIPATH_IBCS_LINKSTATE_SHIFT) & |
| INFINIPATH_IBCS_LINKSTATE_MASK; |
| |
| if (ltstate == INFINIPATH_IBCS_LT_STATE_POLLACTIVE || |
| ltstate == INFINIPATH_IBCS_LT_STATE_POLLQUIET) { |
| u32 last_ltstate; |
| |
| /* |
| * Ignore cycling back and forth from Polling.Active |
| * to Polling.Quiet while waiting for the other end of |
| * the link to come up. We will cycle back and forth |
| * between them if no cable is plugged in, |
| * the other device is powered off or disabled, etc. |
| */ |
| last_ltstate = (dd->ipath_lastibcstat >> |
| INFINIPATH_IBCS_LINKTRAININGSTATE_SHIFT) |
| & INFINIPATH_IBCS_LINKTRAININGSTATE_MASK; |
| if (last_ltstate == INFINIPATH_IBCS_LT_STATE_POLLACTIVE |
| || last_ltstate == |
| INFINIPATH_IBCS_LT_STATE_POLLQUIET) { |
| if (dd->ipath_ibpollcnt > 40) { |
| dd->ipath_flags |= IPATH_NOCABLE; |
| *dd->ipath_statusp |= |
| IPATH_STATUS_IB_NOCABLE; |
| } else |
| dd->ipath_ibpollcnt++; |
| goto skip_ibchange; |
| } |
| } |
| dd->ipath_ibpollcnt = 0; /* some state other than 2 or 3 */ |
| ipath_stats.sps_iblink++; |
| if (ltstate != INFINIPATH_IBCS_LT_STATE_LINKUP) { |
| dd->ipath_flags |= IPATH_LINKDOWN; |
| dd->ipath_flags &= ~(IPATH_LINKUNK | IPATH_LINKINIT |
| | IPATH_LINKACTIVE | |
| IPATH_LINKARMED); |
| *dd->ipath_statusp &= ~IPATH_STATUS_IB_READY; |
| dd->ipath_lli_counter = 0; |
| if (!noprint) { |
| if (((dd->ipath_lastibcstat >> |
| INFINIPATH_IBCS_LINKSTATE_SHIFT) & |
| INFINIPATH_IBCS_LINKSTATE_MASK) |
| == INFINIPATH_IBCS_L_STATE_ACTIVE) |
| /* if from up to down be more vocal */ |
| ipath_cdbg(VERBOSE, |
| "Unit %u link now down (%s)\n", |
| dd->ipath_unit, |
| ipath_ibcstatus_str[ltstate]); |
| else |
| ipath_cdbg(VERBOSE, "Unit %u link is " |
| "down (%s)\n", dd->ipath_unit, |
| ipath_ibcstatus_str[ltstate]); |
| } |
| |
| dd->ipath_f_setextled(dd, lstate, ltstate); |
| } else if ((val & IPATH_IBSTATE_MASK) == IPATH_IBSTATE_ACTIVE) { |
| dd->ipath_flags |= IPATH_LINKACTIVE; |
| dd->ipath_flags &= |
| ~(IPATH_LINKUNK | IPATH_LINKINIT | IPATH_LINKDOWN | |
| IPATH_LINKARMED | IPATH_NOCABLE); |
| *dd->ipath_statusp &= ~IPATH_STATUS_IB_NOCABLE; |
| *dd->ipath_statusp |= |
| IPATH_STATUS_IB_READY | IPATH_STATUS_IB_CONF; |
| dd->ipath_f_setextled(dd, lstate, ltstate); |
| } else if ((val & IPATH_IBSTATE_MASK) == IPATH_IBSTATE_INIT) { |
| /* |
| * set INIT and DOWN. Down is checked by most of the other |
| * code, but INIT is useful to know in a few places. |
| */ |
| dd->ipath_flags |= IPATH_LINKINIT | IPATH_LINKDOWN; |
| dd->ipath_flags &= |
| ~(IPATH_LINKUNK | IPATH_LINKACTIVE | IPATH_LINKARMED |
| | IPATH_NOCABLE); |
| *dd->ipath_statusp &= ~(IPATH_STATUS_IB_NOCABLE |
| | IPATH_STATUS_IB_READY); |
| dd->ipath_f_setextled(dd, lstate, ltstate); |
| } else if ((val & IPATH_IBSTATE_MASK) == IPATH_IBSTATE_ARM) { |
| dd->ipath_flags |= IPATH_LINKARMED; |
| dd->ipath_flags &= |
| ~(IPATH_LINKUNK | IPATH_LINKDOWN | IPATH_LINKINIT | |
| IPATH_LINKACTIVE | IPATH_NOCABLE); |
| *dd->ipath_statusp &= ~(IPATH_STATUS_IB_NOCABLE |
| | IPATH_STATUS_IB_READY); |
| dd->ipath_f_setextled(dd, lstate, ltstate); |
| } else { |
| if (!noprint) |
| ipath_dbg("IBstatuschange unit %u: %s (%x)\n", |
| dd->ipath_unit, |
| ipath_ibcstatus_str[ltstate], ltstate); |
| } |
| skip_ibchange: |
| dd->ipath_lastibcstat = val; |
| } |
| |
| static void handle_supp_msgs(struct ipath_devdata *dd, |
| unsigned supp_msgs, char msg[512]) |
| { |
| /* |
| * Print the message unless it's ibc status change only, which |
| * happens so often we never want to count it. |
| */ |
| if (dd->ipath_lasterror & ~INFINIPATH_E_IBSTATUSCHANGED) { |
| ipath_decode_err(msg, sizeof msg, dd->ipath_lasterror & |
| ~INFINIPATH_E_IBSTATUSCHANGED); |
| if (dd->ipath_lasterror & |
| ~(INFINIPATH_E_RRCVEGRFULL | INFINIPATH_E_RRCVHDRFULL)) |
| ipath_dev_err(dd, "Suppressed %u messages for " |
| "fast-repeating errors (%s) (%llx)\n", |
| supp_msgs, msg, |
| (unsigned long long) |
| dd->ipath_lasterror); |
| else { |
| /* |
| * rcvegrfull and rcvhdrqfull are "normal", for some |
| * types of processes (mostly benchmarks) that send |
| * huge numbers of messages, while not processing |
| * them. So only complain about these at debug |
| * level. |
| */ |
| ipath_dbg("Suppressed %u messages for %s\n", |
| supp_msgs, msg); |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| |
| static unsigned handle_frequent_errors(struct ipath_devdata *dd, |
| ipath_err_t errs, char msg[512], |
| int *noprint) |
| { |
| unsigned long nc; |
| static unsigned long nextmsg_time; |
| static unsigned nmsgs, supp_msgs; |
| |
| /* |
| * Throttle back "fast" messages to no more than 10 per 5 seconds. |
| * This isn't perfect, but it's a reasonable heuristic. If we get |
| * more than 10, give a 6x longer delay. |
| */ |
| nc = jiffies; |
| if (nmsgs > 10) { |
| if (time_before(nc, nextmsg_time)) { |
| *noprint = 1; |
| if (!supp_msgs++) |
| nextmsg_time = nc + HZ * 3; |
| } |
| else if (supp_msgs) { |
| handle_supp_msgs(dd, supp_msgs, msg); |
| supp_msgs = 0; |
| nmsgs = 0; |
| } |
| } |
| else if (!nmsgs++ || time_after(nc, nextmsg_time)) |
| nextmsg_time = nc + HZ / 2; |
| |
| return supp_msgs; |
| } |
| |
| static int handle_errors(struct ipath_devdata *dd, ipath_err_t errs) |
| { |
| char msg[512]; |
| u64 ignore_this_time = 0; |
| int i; |
| int chkerrpkts = 0, noprint = 0; |
| unsigned supp_msgs; |
| |
| supp_msgs = handle_frequent_errors(dd, errs, msg, &noprint); |
| |
| /* |
| * don't report errors that are masked (includes those always |
| * ignored) |
| */ |
| errs &= ~dd->ipath_maskederrs; |
| |
| /* do these first, they are most important */ |
| if (errs & INFINIPATH_E_HARDWARE) { |
| /* reuse same msg buf */ |
| dd->ipath_f_handle_hwerrors(dd, msg, sizeof msg); |
| } |
| |
| if (!noprint && (errs & ~dd->ipath_e_bitsextant)) |
| ipath_dev_err(dd, "error interrupt with unknown errors " |
| "%llx set\n", (unsigned long long) |
| (errs & ~dd->ipath_e_bitsextant)); |
| |
| if (errs & E_SUM_ERRS) |
| ignore_this_time = handle_e_sum_errs(dd, errs); |
| else if ((errs & E_SUM_LINK_PKTERRS) && |
| !(dd->ipath_flags & IPATH_LINKACTIVE)) { |
| /* |
| * This can happen when SMA is trying to bring the link |
| * up, but the IB link changes state at the "wrong" time. |
| * The IB logic then complains that the packet isn't |
| * valid. We don't want to confuse people, so we just |
| * don't print them, except at debug |
| */ |
| ipath_dbg("Ignoring packet errors %llx, because link not " |
| "ACTIVE\n", (unsigned long long) errs); |
| ignore_this_time = errs & E_SUM_LINK_PKTERRS; |
| } |
| |
| if (supp_msgs == 250000) { |
| /* |
| * It's not entirely reasonable assuming that the errors set |
| * in the last clear period are all responsible for the |
| * problem, but the alternative is to assume it's the only |
| * ones on this particular interrupt, which also isn't great |
| */ |
| dd->ipath_maskederrs |= dd->ipath_lasterror | errs; |
| ipath_write_kreg(dd, dd->ipath_kregs->kr_errormask, |
| ~dd->ipath_maskederrs); |
| ipath_decode_err(msg, sizeof msg, |
| (dd->ipath_maskederrs & ~dd-> |
| ipath_ignorederrs)); |
| |
| if ((dd->ipath_maskederrs & ~dd->ipath_ignorederrs) & |
| ~(INFINIPATH_E_RRCVEGRFULL | INFINIPATH_E_RRCVHDRFULL)) |
| ipath_dev_err(dd, "Disabling error(s) %llx because " |
| "occurring too frequently (%s)\n", |
| (unsigned long long) |
| (dd->ipath_maskederrs & |
| ~dd->ipath_ignorederrs), msg); |
| else { |
| /* |
| * rcvegrfull and rcvhdrqfull are "normal", |
| * for some types of processes (mostly benchmarks) |
| * that send huge numbers of messages, while not |
| * processing them. So only complain about |
| * these at debug level. |
| */ |
| ipath_dbg("Disabling frequent queue full errors " |
| "(%s)\n", msg); |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| * Re-enable the masked errors after around 3 minutes. in |
| * ipath_get_faststats(). If we have a series of fast |
| * repeating but different errors, the interval will keep |
| * stretching out, but that's OK, as that's pretty |
| * catastrophic. |
| */ |
| dd->ipath_unmasktime = jiffies + HZ * 180; |
| } |
| |
| ipath_write_kreg(dd, dd->ipath_kregs->kr_errorclear, errs); |
| if (ignore_this_time) |
| errs &= ~ignore_this_time; |
| if (errs & ~dd->ipath_lasterror) { |
| errs &= ~dd->ipath_lasterror; |
| /* never suppress duplicate hwerrors or ibstatuschange */ |
| dd->ipath_lasterror |= errs & |
| ~(INFINIPATH_E_HARDWARE | |
| INFINIPATH_E_IBSTATUSCHANGED); |
| } |
| |
| /* likely due to cancel, so suppress */ |
| if ((errs & (INFINIPATH_E_SPKTLEN | INFINIPATH_E_SPIOARMLAUNCH)) && |
| dd->ipath_lastcancel > jiffies) { |
| ipath_dbg("Suppressed armlaunch/spktlen after error send cancel\n"); |
| errs &= ~(INFINIPATH_E_SPIOARMLAUNCH | INFINIPATH_E_SPKTLEN); |
| } |
| |
| if (!errs) |
| return 0; |
| |
| if (!noprint) |
| /* |
| * the ones we mask off are handled specially below or above |
| */ |
| ipath_decode_err(msg, sizeof msg, |
| errs & ~(INFINIPATH_E_IBSTATUSCHANGED | |
| INFINIPATH_E_RRCVEGRFULL | |
| INFINIPATH_E_RRCVHDRFULL | |
| INFINIPATH_E_HARDWARE)); |
| else |
| /* so we don't need if (!noprint) at strlcat's below */ |
| *msg = 0; |
| |
| if (errs & E_SUM_PKTERRS) { |
| ipath_stats.sps_pkterrs++; |
| chkerrpkts = 1; |
| } |
| if (errs & E_SUM_ERRS) |
| ipath_stats.sps_errs++; |
| |
| if (errs & (INFINIPATH_E_RICRC | INFINIPATH_E_RVCRC)) { |
| ipath_stats.sps_crcerrs++; |
| chkerrpkts = 1; |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| * We don't want to print these two as they happen, or we can make |
| * the situation even worse, because it takes so long to print |
| * messages to serial consoles. Kernel ports get printed from |
| * fast_stats, no more than every 5 seconds, user ports get printed |
| * on close |
| */ |
| if (errs & INFINIPATH_E_RRCVHDRFULL) { |
| int any; |
| u32 hd, tl; |
| ipath_stats.sps_hdrqfull++; |
| for (any = i = 0; i < dd->ipath_cfgports; i++) { |
| struct ipath_portdata *pd = dd->ipath_pd[i]; |
| if (i == 0) { |
| hd = dd->ipath_port0head; |
| tl = (u32) le64_to_cpu( |
| *dd->ipath_hdrqtailptr); |
| } else if (pd && pd->port_cnt && |
| pd->port_rcvhdrtail_kvaddr) { |
| /* |
| * don't report same point multiple times, |
| * except kernel |
| */ |
| tl = *(u64 *) pd->port_rcvhdrtail_kvaddr; |
| if (tl == dd->ipath_lastrcvhdrqtails[i]) |
| continue; |
| hd = ipath_read_ureg32(dd, ur_rcvhdrhead, |
| i); |
| } else |
| continue; |
| if (hd == (tl + 1) || |
| (!hd && tl == dd->ipath_hdrqlast)) { |
| if (i == 0) |
| chkerrpkts = 1; |
| dd->ipath_lastrcvhdrqtails[i] = tl; |
| pd->port_hdrqfull++; |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| if (errs & INFINIPATH_E_RRCVEGRFULL) { |
| /* |
| * since this is of less importance and not likely to |
| * happen without also getting hdrfull, only count |
| * occurrences; don't check each port (or even the kernel |
| * vs user) |
| */ |
| ipath_stats.sps_etidfull++; |
| if (dd->ipath_port0head != |
| (u32) le64_to_cpu(*dd->ipath_hdrqtailptr)) |
| chkerrpkts = 1; |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| * do this before IBSTATUSCHANGED, in case both bits set in a single |
| * interrupt; we want the STATUSCHANGE to "win", so we do our |
| * internal copy of state machine correctly |
| */ |
| if (errs & INFINIPATH_E_RIBLOSTLINK) { |
| /* |
| * force through block below |
| */ |
| errs |= INFINIPATH_E_IBSTATUSCHANGED; |
| ipath_stats.sps_iblink++; |
| dd->ipath_flags |= IPATH_LINKDOWN; |
| dd->ipath_flags &= ~(IPATH_LINKUNK | IPATH_LINKINIT |
| | IPATH_LINKARMED | IPATH_LINKACTIVE); |
| *dd->ipath_statusp &= ~IPATH_STATUS_IB_READY; |
| if (!noprint) { |
| u64 st = ipath_read_kreg64( |
| dd, dd->ipath_kregs->kr_ibcstatus); |
| |
| ipath_dbg("Lost link, link now down (%s)\n", |
| ipath_ibcstatus_str[st & 0xf]); |
| } |
| } |
| if (errs & INFINIPATH_E_IBSTATUSCHANGED) |
| handle_e_ibstatuschanged(dd, errs, noprint); |
| |
| if (errs & INFINIPATH_E_RESET) { |
| if (!noprint) |
| ipath_dev_err(dd, "Got reset, requires re-init " |
| "(unload and reload driver)\n"); |
| dd->ipath_flags &= ~IPATH_INITTED; /* needs re-init */ |
| /* mark as having had error */ |
| *dd->ipath_statusp |= IPATH_STATUS_HWERROR; |
| *dd->ipath_statusp &= ~IPATH_STATUS_IB_CONF; |
| } |
| |
| if (!noprint && *msg) |
| ipath_dev_err(dd, "%s error\n", msg); |
| if (dd->ipath_state_wanted & dd->ipath_flags) { |
| ipath_cdbg(VERBOSE, "driver wanted state %x, iflags now %x, " |
| "waking\n", dd->ipath_state_wanted, |
| dd->ipath_flags); |
| wake_up_interruptible(&ipath_state_wait); |
| } |
| |
| return chkerrpkts; |
| } |
| |
| /* this is separate to allow for better optimization of ipath_intr() */ |
| |
| static void ipath_bad_intr(struct ipath_devdata *dd, u32 * unexpectp) |
| { |
| /* |
| * sometimes happen during driver init and unload, don't want |
| * to process any interrupts at that point |
| */ |
| |
| /* this is just a bandaid, not a fix, if something goes badly |
| * wrong */ |
| if (++*unexpectp > 100) { |
| if (++*unexpectp > 105) { |
| /* |
| * ok, we must be taking somebody else's interrupts, |
| * due to a messed up mptable and/or PIRQ table, so |
| * unregister the interrupt. We've seen this during |
| * linuxbios development work, and it may happen in |
| * the future again. |
| */ |
| if (dd->pcidev && dd->ipath_irq) { |
| ipath_dev_err(dd, "Now %u unexpected " |
| "interrupts, unregistering " |
| "interrupt handler\n", |
| *unexpectp); |
| ipath_dbg("free_irq of irq %d\n", |
| dd->ipath_irq); |
| dd->ipath_f_free_irq(dd); |
| } |
| } |
| if (ipath_read_kreg32(dd, dd->ipath_kregs->kr_intmask)) { |
| ipath_dev_err(dd, "%u unexpected interrupts, " |
| "disabling interrupts completely\n", |
| *unexpectp); |
| /* |
| * disable all interrupts, something is very wrong |
| */ |
| ipath_write_kreg(dd, dd->ipath_kregs->kr_intmask, |
| 0ULL); |
| } |
| } else if (*unexpectp > 1) |
| ipath_dbg("Interrupt when not ready, should not happen, " |
| "ignoring\n"); |
| } |
| |
| static void ipath_bad_regread(struct ipath_devdata *dd) |
| { |
| static int allbits; |
| |
| /* separate routine, for better optimization of ipath_intr() */ |
| |
| /* |
| * We print the message and disable interrupts, in hope of |
| * having a better chance of debugging the problem. |
| */ |
| ipath_dev_err(dd, |
| "Read of interrupt status failed (all bits set)\n"); |
| if (allbits++) { |
| /* disable all interrupts, something is very wrong */ |
| ipath_write_kreg(dd, dd->ipath_kregs->kr_intmask, 0ULL); |
| if (allbits == 2) { |
| ipath_dev_err(dd, "Still bad interrupt status, " |
| "unregistering interrupt\n"); |
| dd->ipath_f_free_irq(dd); |
| } else if (allbits > 2) { |
| if ((allbits % 10000) == 0) |
| printk("."); |
| } else |
| ipath_dev_err(dd, "Disabling interrupts, " |
| "multiple errors\n"); |
| } |
| } |
| |
| static void handle_port_pioavail(struct ipath_devdata *dd) |
| { |
| u32 i; |
| /* |
| * start from port 1, since for now port 0 is never using |
| * wait_event for PIO |
| */ |
| for (i = 1; dd->ipath_portpiowait && i < dd->ipath_cfgports; i++) { |
| struct ipath_portdata *pd = dd->ipath_pd[i]; |
| |
| if (pd && pd->port_cnt && |
| dd->ipath_portpiowait & (1U << i)) { |
| clear_bit(i, &dd->ipath_portpiowait); |
| if (test_bit(IPATH_PORT_WAITING_PIO, |
| &pd->port_flag)) { |
| clear_bit(IPATH_PORT_WAITING_PIO, |
| &pd->port_flag); |
| wake_up_interruptible(&pd->port_wait); |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| |
| static void handle_layer_pioavail(struct ipath_devdata *dd) |
| { |
| int ret; |
| |
| ret = ipath_ib_piobufavail(dd->verbs_dev); |
| if (ret > 0) |
| goto set; |
| |
| return; |
| set: |
| set_bit(IPATH_S_PIOINTBUFAVAIL, &dd->ipath_sendctrl); |
| ipath_write_kreg(dd, dd->ipath_kregs->kr_sendctrl, |
| dd->ipath_sendctrl); |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| * Handle receive interrupts for user ports; this means a user |
| * process was waiting for a packet to arrive, and didn't want |
| * to poll |
| */ |
| static void handle_urcv(struct ipath_devdata *dd, u32 istat) |
| { |
| u64 portr; |
| int i; |
| int rcvdint = 0; |
| |
| portr = ((istat >> INFINIPATH_I_RCVAVAIL_SHIFT) & |
| dd->ipath_i_rcvavail_mask) |
| | ((istat >> INFINIPATH_I_RCVURG_SHIFT) & |
| dd->ipath_i_rcvurg_mask); |
| for (i = 1; i < dd->ipath_cfgports; i++) { |
| struct ipath_portdata *pd = dd->ipath_pd[i]; |
| if (portr & (1 << i) && pd && pd->port_cnt && |
| test_bit(IPATH_PORT_WAITING_RCV, &pd->port_flag)) { |
| int rcbit; |
| clear_bit(IPATH_PORT_WAITING_RCV, |
| &pd->port_flag); |
| rcbit = i + INFINIPATH_R_INTRAVAIL_SHIFT; |
| clear_bit(1UL << rcbit, &dd->ipath_rcvctrl); |
| wake_up_interruptible(&pd->port_wait); |
| rcvdint = 1; |
| } |
| } |
| if (rcvdint) { |
| /* only want to take one interrupt, so turn off the rcv |
| * interrupt for all the ports that we did the wakeup on |
| * (but never for kernel port) |
| */ |
| ipath_write_kreg(dd, dd->ipath_kregs->kr_rcvctrl, |
| dd->ipath_rcvctrl); |
| } |
| } |
| |
| irqreturn_t ipath_intr(int irq, void *data) |
| { |
| struct ipath_devdata *dd = data; |
| u32 istat, chk0rcv = 0; |
| ipath_err_t estat = 0; |
| irqreturn_t ret; |
| u32 oldhead, curtail; |
| static unsigned unexpected = 0; |
| static const u32 port0rbits = (1U<<INFINIPATH_I_RCVAVAIL_SHIFT) | |
| (1U<<INFINIPATH_I_RCVURG_SHIFT); |
| |
| ipath_stats.sps_ints++; |
| |
| if (!(dd->ipath_flags & IPATH_PRESENT)) { |
| /* |
| * This return value is not great, but we do not want the |
| * interrupt core code to remove our interrupt handler |
| * because we don't appear to be handling an interrupt |
| * during a chip reset. |
| */ |
| return IRQ_HANDLED; |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| * this needs to be flags&initted, not statusp, so we keep |
| * taking interrupts even after link goes down, etc. |
| * Also, we *must* clear the interrupt at some point, or we won't |
| * take it again, which can be real bad for errors, etc... |
| */ |
| |
| if (!(dd->ipath_flags & IPATH_INITTED)) { |
| ipath_bad_intr(dd, &unexpected); |
| ret = IRQ_NONE; |
| goto bail; |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| * We try to avoid reading the interrupt status register, since |
| * that's a PIO read, and stalls the processor for up to about |
| * ~0.25 usec. The idea is that if we processed a port0 packet, |
| * we blindly clear the port 0 receive interrupt bits, and nothing |
| * else, then return. If other interrupts are pending, the chip |
| * will re-interrupt us as soon as we write the intclear register. |
| * We then won't process any more kernel packets (if not the 2nd |
| * time, then the 3rd or 4th) and we'll then handle the other |
| * interrupts. We clear the interrupts first so that we don't |
| * lose intr for later packets that arrive while we are processing. |
| */ |
| oldhead = dd->ipath_port0head; |
| curtail = (u32)le64_to_cpu(*dd->ipath_hdrqtailptr); |
| if (oldhead != curtail) { |
| if (dd->ipath_flags & IPATH_GPIO_INTR) { |
| ipath_write_kreg(dd, dd->ipath_kregs->kr_gpio_clear, |
| (u64) (1 << IPATH_GPIO_PORT0_BIT)); |
| istat = port0rbits | INFINIPATH_I_GPIO; |
| } |
| else |
| istat = port0rbits; |
| ipath_write_kreg(dd, dd->ipath_kregs->kr_intclear, istat); |
| ipath_kreceive(dd); |
| if (oldhead != dd->ipath_port0head) { |
| ipath_stats.sps_fastrcvint++; |
| goto done; |
| } |
| } |
| |
| istat = ipath_read_kreg32(dd, dd->ipath_kregs->kr_intstatus); |
| |
| if (unlikely(!istat)) { |
| ipath_stats.sps_nullintr++; |
| ret = IRQ_NONE; /* not our interrupt, or already handled */ |
| goto bail; |
| } |
| if (unlikely(istat == -1)) { |
| ipath_bad_regread(dd); |
| /* don't know if it was our interrupt or not */ |
| ret = IRQ_NONE; |
| goto bail; |
| } |
| |
| if (unexpected) |
| unexpected = 0; |
| |
| if (unlikely(istat & ~dd->ipath_i_bitsextant)) |
| ipath_dev_err(dd, |
| "interrupt with unknown interrupts %x set\n", |
| istat & (u32) ~ dd->ipath_i_bitsextant); |
| else |
| ipath_cdbg(VERBOSE, "intr stat=0x%x\n", istat); |
| |
| if (unlikely(istat & INFINIPATH_I_ERROR)) { |
| ipath_stats.sps_errints++; |
| estat = ipath_read_kreg64(dd, |
| dd->ipath_kregs->kr_errorstatus); |
| if (!estat) |
| dev_info(&dd->pcidev->dev, "error interrupt (%x), " |
| "but no error bits set!\n", istat); |
| else if (estat == -1LL) |
| /* |
| * should we try clearing all, or hope next read |
| * works? |
| */ |
| ipath_dev_err(dd, "Read of error status failed " |
| "(all bits set); ignoring\n"); |
| else |
| if (handle_errors(dd, estat)) |
| /* force calling ipath_kreceive() */ |
| chk0rcv = 1; |
| } |
| |
| if (istat & INFINIPATH_I_GPIO) { |
| /* |
| * GPIO interrupts fall in two broad classes: |
| * GPIO_2 indicates (on some HT4xx boards) that a packet |
| * has arrived for Port 0. Checking for this |
| * is controlled by flag IPATH_GPIO_INTR. |
| * GPIO_3..5 on IBA6120 Rev2 chips indicate errors |
| * that we need to count. Checking for this |
| * is controlled by flag IPATH_GPIO_ERRINTRS. |
| */ |
| u32 gpiostatus; |
| u32 to_clear = 0; |
| |
| gpiostatus = ipath_read_kreg32( |
| dd, dd->ipath_kregs->kr_gpio_status); |
| /* First the error-counter case. |
| */ |
| if ((gpiostatus & IPATH_GPIO_ERRINTR_MASK) && |
| (dd->ipath_flags & IPATH_GPIO_ERRINTRS)) { |
| /* want to clear the bits we see asserted. */ |
| to_clear |= (gpiostatus & IPATH_GPIO_ERRINTR_MASK); |
| |
| /* |
| * Count appropriately, clear bits out of our copy, |
| * as they have been "handled". |
| */ |
| if (gpiostatus & (1 << IPATH_GPIO_RXUVL_BIT)) { |
| ipath_dbg("FlowCtl on UnsupVL\n"); |
| dd->ipath_rxfc_unsupvl_errs++; |
| } |
| if (gpiostatus & (1 << IPATH_GPIO_OVRUN_BIT)) { |
| ipath_dbg("Overrun Threshold exceeded\n"); |
| dd->ipath_overrun_thresh_errs++; |
| } |
| if (gpiostatus & (1 << IPATH_GPIO_LLI_BIT)) { |
| ipath_dbg("Local Link Integrity error\n"); |
| dd->ipath_lli_errs++; |
| } |
| gpiostatus &= ~IPATH_GPIO_ERRINTR_MASK; |
| } |
| /* Now the Port0 Receive case */ |
| if ((gpiostatus & (1 << IPATH_GPIO_PORT0_BIT)) && |
| (dd->ipath_flags & IPATH_GPIO_INTR)) { |
| /* |
| * GPIO status bit 2 is set, and we expected it. |
| * clear it and indicate in p0bits. |
| * This probably only happens if a Port0 pkt |
| * arrives at _just_ the wrong time, and we |
| * handle that by seting chk0rcv; |
| */ |
| to_clear |= (1 << IPATH_GPIO_PORT0_BIT); |
| gpiostatus &= ~(1 << IPATH_GPIO_PORT0_BIT); |
| chk0rcv = 1; |
| } |
| if (unlikely(gpiostatus)) { |
| /* |
| * Some unexpected bits remain. If they could have |
| * caused the interrupt, complain and clear. |
| * MEA: this is almost certainly non-ideal. |
| * we should look into auto-disable of unexpected |
| * GPIO interrupts, possibly on a "three strikes" |
| * basis. |
| */ |
| u32 mask; |
| mask = ipath_read_kreg32( |
| dd, dd->ipath_kregs->kr_gpio_mask); |
| if (mask & gpiostatus) { |
| ipath_dbg("Unexpected GPIO IRQ bits %x\n", |
| gpiostatus & mask); |
| to_clear |= (gpiostatus & mask); |
| } |
| } |
| if (to_clear) { |
| ipath_write_kreg(dd, dd->ipath_kregs->kr_gpio_clear, |
| (u64) to_clear); |
| } |
| } |
| chk0rcv |= istat & port0rbits; |
| |
| /* |
| * Clear the interrupt bits we found set, unless they are receive |
| * related, in which case we already cleared them above, and don't |
| * want to clear them again, because we might lose an interrupt. |
| * Clear it early, so we "know" know the chip will have seen this by |
| * the time we process the queue, and will re-interrupt if necessary. |
| * The processor itself won't take the interrupt again until we return. |
| */ |
| ipath_write_kreg(dd, dd->ipath_kregs->kr_intclear, istat); |
| |
| /* |
| * handle port0 receive before checking for pio buffers available, |
| * since receives can overflow; piobuf waiters can afford a few |
| * extra cycles, since they were waiting anyway, and user's waiting |
| * for receive are at the bottom. |
| */ |
| if (chk0rcv) { |
| ipath_kreceive(dd); |
| istat &= ~port0rbits; |
| } |
| |
| if (istat & ((dd->ipath_i_rcvavail_mask << |
| INFINIPATH_I_RCVAVAIL_SHIFT) |
| | (dd->ipath_i_rcvurg_mask << |
| INFINIPATH_I_RCVURG_SHIFT))) |
| handle_urcv(dd, istat); |
| |
| if (istat & INFINIPATH_I_SPIOBUFAVAIL) { |
| clear_bit(IPATH_S_PIOINTBUFAVAIL, &dd->ipath_sendctrl); |
| ipath_write_kreg(dd, dd->ipath_kregs->kr_sendctrl, |
| dd->ipath_sendctrl); |
| |
| if (dd->ipath_portpiowait) |
| handle_port_pioavail(dd); |
| |
| handle_layer_pioavail(dd); |
| } |
| |
| done: |
| ret = IRQ_HANDLED; |
| |
| bail: |
| return ret; |
| } |