Hello.
On 9/23/2016 3:13 AM, David Miller wrote:
Despite my comments? Sigh...
Sorry, I thought he had addressed your feedback in v2.
IIRC, I had only commented to v2, not v1.
I'll wait longer next time.
Thank you. :-)
MBR, Sergei
From: Sergei Shtylyov
Date: Thu, 22 Sep 2016 20:08:47 +0300
>Despite my comments? Sigh...
Sorry, I thought he had addressed your feedback in v2.
I'll wait longer next time.
Hello.
On 09/22/2016 03:22 PM, David Miller wrote:
By default, GMAC0 is connected to built-in switch called
MT7530 through the proprietary interface called Turbo RGMII
(TRGMII). TRGMII also supports well for RGMII as generic external
PHY uses but requires some slight changes to the setup of TRG
From:
Date: Thu, 22 Sep 2016 10:33:53 +0800
> By default, GMAC0 is connected to built-in switch called
> MT7530 through the proprietary interface called Turbo RGMII
> (TRGMII). TRGMII also supports well for RGMII as generic external
> PHY uses but requires some slight changes to the setup of TRGM
Le 21/09/2016 à 19:33, sean.w...@mediatek.com a écrit :
> From: Sean Wang
>
> By default, GMAC0 is connected to built-in switch called
> MT7530 through the proprietary interface called Turbo RGMII
> (TRGMII). TRGMII also supports well for RGMII as generic external
> PHY uses but requires some sli
From: Sean Wang
By default, GMAC0 is connected to built-in switch called
MT7530 through the proprietary interface called Turbo RGMII
(TRGMII). TRGMII also supports well for RGMII as generic external
PHY uses but requires some slight changes to the setup of TRGMII
and doesn't have well support on