Dear Florian,
        Thanks for your comments.

On Thu, 2018-12-13 at 21:11 -0800, Florian Fainelli wrote:
> Le 12/13/18 à 7:01 PM, biao huang a écrit :
> > Dear Andrew,
> >     Thanks for your comments.
> > 
> > On Thu, 2018-12-13 at 13:33 +0100, Andrew Lunn wrote:
> >> Hi Biao
> >>
> >>> + case PHY_INTERFACE_MODE_RGMII:
> >>> +         /* the PHY is not responsible for inserting any internal
> >>> +          * delay by itself in PHY_INTERFACE_MODE_RGMII case,
> >>> +          * so Ethernet MAC will insert delays for both transmit
> >>> +          * and receive path here.
> >>> +          */
> >>
> >> What if the PCB designed has decided to do a kink in the clock to add
> >> the delays? I don't think any of these delays should depend on the PHY
> >> interface mode. It is up to the device tree writer to set both the PHY
> >> delay and the MAC delay, based on knowledge of the board, including
> >> any kicks in the tracks. The driver should then do what it is told.
> >>
> > Originally, we recommend equal trace length on PCB, which means that
> > RGMII delay by PCB traces is not recommended. so only PHY/MAC delay is
> > taken into account in the transmit/receive path.
> > 
> > as you described above, maybe the equal PCB trace length assumption is
> > not reasonable, and we'll only handle MAC delay-ps in our driver based
> > on the device tree information no matter which rgmii is selected.
> 
> Expecting identical PCB traces is something that is hard to enforce with
> external customers, for internal reference boards, absolutely they
> should have those traces of equal length.
> 
yes, we'll set the corresponding register based on the
tx-delay-ps/rx-delay-ps in device tree for rgmii interface.
the PHY_INTERFACE_MODE_RGMII/-RXID/-TXID/-ID share the same flow in
Ethernet driver.

A new patch will be sent to fix this issue.
> > 
> > Since David already applied this patch, I'll send another patch to fix
> > this issue.
> >>> + if (!of_property_read_u32(plat->np, "mediatek,tx-delay-ps", 
> >>> &tx_delay_ps)) {
> >>> +         if (tx_delay_ps < plat->variant->tx_delay_max) {
> >>> +                 mac_delay->tx_delay = tx_delay_ps;
> >>> +         } else {
> >>> +                 dev_err(plat->dev, "Invalid TX clock delay: %dps\n", 
> >>> tx_delay_ps);
> >>> +                 return -EINVAL;
> >>> +         }
> >>> + }
> >>> +
> >>> + if (!of_property_read_u32(plat->np, "mediatek,rx-delay-ps", 
> >>> &rx_delay_ps)) {
> >>> +         if (rx_delay_ps < plat->variant->rx_delay_max) {
> >>> +                 mac_delay->rx_delay = rx_delay_ps;
> >>> +         } else {
> >>> +                 dev_err(plat->dev, "Invalid RX clock delay: %dps\n", 
> >>> rx_delay_ps);
> >>> +                 return -EINVAL;
> >>> +         }
> >>> + }
> >>> +
> >>> + mac_delay->tx_inv = of_property_read_bool(plat->np, 
> >>> "mediatek,txc-inverse");
> >>> + mac_delay->rx_inv = of_property_read_bool(plat->np, 
> >>> "mediatek,rxc-inverse");
> >>> + mac_delay->fine_tune = of_property_read_bool(plat->np, 
> >>> "mediatek,fine-tune");
> >>
> >> Why is fine tune needed? If the requested delay can be done using fine
> >> tune, it should use fine tune. If not, it should use rough tune. The
> >> driver can work this out itself.
> > 
> > find tune here represents a more accurate delay circuit than coarse
> > tune, and it's a parallel circuit of coarse tune.
> > For most delay, both fine and coarse tune can meet the requirement.
> > It's up to the user to select which one.
> > 
> > But only one of them can work at the same time, so we need a switch
> > flag(fine_tune here) to indicate which one is valid.
> > Driver can hardly work out which one is working according to delay-ps.
> > 
> > Please correct me if any misunderstanding.
> 
> You are giving a lot of options for users of this Ethernet controller to
> shoot themselves in the feet and spend a good amount of time debugging
> why their RGMII connection is not reliable or have timing violations.
yes, since fine tune is more accurate, and can meet customer's
requirement, we'll remove the 'fine-tune' property in device tree,
enable fine-tune circuit by default in Ethernet driver, and abandon the
coarse delay mechanism. so customer will not be confused by the options.

I'll send a new patch to fix this issue.


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