On 2/21/2018 9:14 AM, Daniel Drake wrote:
Hi,
We're working with the Weibu F3C MiniPC which includes BCM43455 SDIO
wifi chip 0x004345(17221) rev 0x000006 (AP6255 module).
We are seeing a strange issue where usually within an hour of usage,
the wifi connection becomes so unstable and lossy that it is unusable.
While investigating this my standard test is to send ICMP pings to the
IP address of the local access point. Normally the latency is 5-10ms,
but when this problem is seen it will go to 500ms and then increase up
towards 20s before completely timing out.
Sometimes it is possible to induce the problem on-demand by stressing
some combination of CPU, disk and/or USB. At this point, ping reply
latency increases from ~5ms to 500ms+ before increasing even further.
Killing the stress test, the pings immediately return to normal. This
is not concrete though - I also seem to have a lot of luck hitting the
problem in the morning when booting up the computer from stone cold
state, while it is idle.
When the problem is being reproduced (ping times are high or get no
response), touching the exposed metal on the antenna connector with my
finger makes ping times return to normal. Touching it with a piece of
plastic does not have the same effect - so it is some effect of body
capacitance or similar. Also, disconnecting the antenna makes ping
times return to normal, although outside of the simple pings,
bandwidth is much reduced.
Additionally, when the problem is being reproduced, if I move the
antenna outside of the case, ping times return to normal. When I move
the antenna back into the miniPC case vicinity, it goes slow and lossy
again.
I have used a separate monitoring station with wireshark to look at
the 802.11 traffic while this is happening. When the problem is
reproduced, the miniPC is mostly unable to TX anything, and the AP
sends frames and retries them but with no ACK visible from the miniPC.
Immediately when I touch the antenna connector with my finger, tx
frames from the miniPC appear and the conversation comes back to life.
Running Linux 4.15 but we believe all versions are affected.
This very much sounds like a hardware issue, but here is where things
get interesting: Windows 10 on the same unit has no such problem.
I set up 2 units side by side - one running Windows 10 and the other
running Linux, connected to the same AP. The top part of the MiniPC
case has been removed so I can see the motherboard. I free up the
antennas from the MiniPC casing and they are on a relatively long
cable, so they can be freely moved around in this test, allowing me to
dangle the antenna into the vicinity of the neighbouring unit miniPC
case.
If I place both antenna terminals inside the Linux MiniPC case, the
Linux pings are bad but the Windows pings are fine.
If I place both antenna terminals inside the Windows MiniPC case, it
is the same: Linux pings are bad, but the Windows pings are fine.
And when the Linux antenna is placed outside of both cases, the Linux
pings are fine. I've repeated these tests a handful of times in quick
succession to make sure that I'm not going crazy and that this is not
a case of the problem intermittency causing misleading results. These
findings appear very solid.
This suggests that regardless of the running OS, the MiniPC produces
some kind of interference that intermittently has an extremely
detrimental effect on wifi signal when you are running Linux. However,
Windows is somehow immune to this.
Any ideas for how to continue debugging this? How can we make the
Linux driver immune to this interference like the windows one is?
Hi Daniel,
Thanks. I forwarded your detailed report. My first hunch would be the
nvram file used. Are you using the same nvram file on Linux as the one
on Windows? If not can you compare them or better just sent them.
Regards,
Arend