Hi Sascha,
On 2022-06-21 09:46, Sascha Hauer wrote:
Hi Robin,
On Mon, Jun 20, 2022 at 04:33:02PM +0200, Robin van der Gracht wrote:
Hi,
Today I tried to run barebox with CONFIG_KEYBOARD_GPIO=y added to my
config.
and noticed my board hangs during boot. When I modify the probe function to
run without registering the poller[1] it boots as expected.
I started digging into the code to see how far the boot gets when I do
register the poller. I found that Barebox hangs in a do/while loop in
sdhci_transfer_data_dma[2].
The contents of the interrupt status (SDHCI_INT_STATUS) is 0 and stays that
way forever trapping the process in the loop.
Call stack:
initcall -> barebox_of_populate
state_probe drivers/misc/state.c
state_new_from_node common/state/state.c
of_find_path_by_node drivers/of/of_path.c
__of_find_path drivers/of/of_path.c
device_detect
drivers/base/driver.c
mci_detect_card
drivers/mci/mci-core.c
mci_card_probe
drivers/mci/mci-core.c
mci_startup
drivers/mci/mci-core.c
mci_startup_mmc
drivers/mci/mci-core.c
mmc_compare_ext_csds
drivers/mci/mci-core.c
mci_send_ext_csd
drivers/mci/mci-core.c
mci_send_cmd
drivers/mci/mci-core.c
esdhc_send_cmd
drivers/mci/imx-esdhc.c
__esdhc_send_cmd
drivers/mci/imx-esdhc-common.c
sdhci_transfer_data_dma drivers/mci/sdhci.c
I'm not sure how this happens. It's not the first transfer taking place. I
figured that mayby the poller[1] just adds some cpu load that opens up a
window for this to occur.
Maybe something else cleared the status register right before we entered
the
loop. Thats when I spotted this read/write construction[3]. It's executed
right before we enter the do/while loop and (over)writes to the irq status
register.
I removed the line with the write command[3] and my board boots as
expected.
Why are we (over)writing the status register right after reading it?
The idea is likely that we clear the interrupts that we just handled. It
seems by the time the status register is overwritten the DMA transfer is
already ongoing, and in your case even already done.
I can confirm this. When the data transfer is still ongoing the status
register holds 0x000000001 (SDHCI_INT_CMD_COMPLETE). A few lines above
the write there is a busy wait for this bit to be set.
When my board hangs the status register holds 0x0000000b at the timen it is
cleared. Which means the DMA engine has stopped on a buffer boundary.
Apparently this can sometimes happen shortly after starting.
We should only ever
clear the bits we have handled, like sdhci_transfer_data_dma() does with
sdhci_write32(sdhci, SDHCI_INT_STATUS, SDHCI_INT_DMA);
Ack. This would suffice:
sdhci_write32(&host->sdhci, SDHCI_INT_STATUS, SDHCI_INT_CMD_COMPLETE);
Apart from this line the code never checks the same bit twice, so
clearing anything shoudn't be necessary. Clearing the status register
once either at the start or the end of the function should be enough.
I think the right thing to do is just to remove the erroneous status
register write like you already did.
I'll submit a patch that removes the write. Thank you for thinking along.
- Robin