[Intel-wired-lan] RX CRC errors on I219-V (6) 8086:15be

Bjorn Helgaas helgaas at kernel.org
Tue Jul 2 18:01:12 UTC 2019


On Tue, Jul 02, 2019 at 04:25:59PM +0800, Kai Heng Feng wrote:
> +linux-pci
> 
> Hi Sasha,
> 
> at 6:49 PM, Kai-Heng Feng <kai.heng.feng at canonical.com> wrote:
> 
> > at 14:26, Neftin, Sasha <sasha.neftin at intel.com> wrote:
> > 
> > > On 6/26/2019 09:14, Kai Heng Feng wrote:
> > > > Hi Sasha
> > > > at 5:09 PM, Kai-Heng Feng <kai.heng.feng at canonical.com> wrote:
> > > > > Hi Jeffrey,
> > > > > 
> > > > > We’ve encountered another issue, which causes multiple CRC
> > > > > errors and renders ethernet completely useless, here’s the
> > > > > network stats:
> > > > I also tried ignore_ltr for this issue, seems like it alleviates
> > > > the symptom a bit for a while, then the network still becomes
> > > > useless after some usage.
> > > > And yes, it’s also a Whiskey Lake platform. What’s the next step
> > > > to debug this problem?
> > > > Kai-Heng
> > > CRC errors not related to the LTR. Please, try to disable the ME on
> > > your platform. Hope you have this option in BIOS. Another way is to
> > > contact your PC vendor and ask to provide NVM without ME. Let's
> > > start debugging with these steps.
> > 
> > According to ODM, the ME can be physically disabled by a jumper.
> > But after disabling the ME the same issue can still be observed.
> 
> We’ve found that this issue doesn’t happen to SATA SSD, it only happens when
> NVMe SSD is in use.
> 
> Here are the steps:
> - Disable NVMe ASPM, issue persists
> - modprobe -r e1000e && modprobe e1000e, issue doesn’t happen
> - Enabling NVMe ASPM, issue doesn’t happen
> 
> As long as NVMe ASPM gets enabled after e1000e gets loaded, the issue
> doesn’t happen.

IIUC the problem happens with the mainline and dev-queue e1000e
driver, but not with the out-of-tree Intel driver.  Since there is a
working driver and there's the potential (at least in principle) for
unifying them or bisecting between them, I have limited interest in
debugging it from scratch.

If it turns out to be a PCI core problem, I would want to know: What's
the PCI topology?  "lspci -vv" output for the system?  Does it make a
difference if you boot with "pcie_aspm=off"?  Collect complete dmesg,
maybe attach it to a kernel.org bugzilla?

> > > > > /sys/class/net/eno1/statistics$ grep . *
> > > > > collisions:0
> > > > > multicast:95
> > > > > rx_bytes:1499851
> > > > > rx_compressed:0
> > > > > rx_crc_errors:1165
> > > > > rx_dropped:0
> > > > > rx_errors:2330
> > > > > rx_fifo_errors:0
> > > > > rx_frame_errors:0
> > > > > rx_length_errors:0
> > > > > rx_missed_errors:0
> > > > > rx_nohandler:0
> > > > > rx_over_errors:0
> > > > > rx_packets:4789
> > > > > tx_aborted_errors:0
> > > > > tx_bytes:864312
> > > > > tx_carrier_errors:0
> > > > > tx_compressed:0
> > > > > tx_dropped:0
> > > > > tx_errors:0
> > > > > tx_fifo_errors:0
> > > > > tx_heartbeat_errors:0
> > > > > tx_packets:7370
> > > > > tx_window_errors:0
> > > > > 
> > > > > Same behavior can be observed on both mainline kernel and on
> > > > > your dev-queue branch.
> > > > > OTOH, the same issue can’t be observed on out-of-tree e1000e.
> > > > > 
> > > > > Is there any plan to close the gap between upstream and
> > > > > out-of-tree version?
> > > > > 
> > > > > Kai-Heng
> 
> 


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