[Intel-wired-lan] [PATCH next-queue v3 3/3] igc: Add support for PTP getcrosststamp()
Vinicius Costa Gomes
vinicius.gomes at intel.com
Tue Mar 23 21:37:52 UTC 2021
Bjorn Helgaas <helgaas at kernel.org> writes:
> On Mon, Mar 22, 2021 at 09:18:22AM -0700, Vinicius Costa Gomes wrote:
>> i225 has support for PCIe PTM, which allows us to implement support
>> for the PTP_SYS_OFFSET_PRECISE ioctl(), implemented in the driver via
>> the getcrosststamp() function.
>
>> +static bool igc_is_ptm_supported(struct igc_adapter *adapter)
>> +{
>> +#if IS_ENABLED(CONFIG_X86_TSC) && IS_ENABLED(CONFIG_PCIE_PTM)
>> + return adapter->pdev->ptm_enabled;
>> +#endif
>
> It's not obvious why you make this x86-specific. Maybe a comment?
Sure. Will add a comment.
>
> You shouldn't have to test for CONFIG_PCIE_PTM, either. We probably
> should have a pdev->ptm_enabled() predicate with a stub that returns
> false when CONFIG_PCIE_PTM is not set.
Makes sense. Will add that predicate for next version.
>
>> + return false;
>> +}
>
>> +/* PCIe Registers */
>> +#define IGC_PTM_CTRL 0x12540 /* PTM Control */
>> +#define IGC_PTM_STAT 0x12544 /* PTM Status */
>> +#define IGC_PTM_CYCLE_CTRL 0x1254C /* PTM Cycle Control */
>> +
>> +/* PTM Time registers */
>> +#define IGC_PTM_T1_TIM0_L 0x12558 /* T1 on Timer 0 Low */
>> +#define IGC_PTM_T1_TIM0_H 0x1255C /* T1 on Timer 0 High */
>> +
>> +#define IGC_PTM_CURR_T2_L 0x1258C /* Current T2 Low */
>> +#define IGC_PTM_CURR_T2_H 0x12590 /* Current T2 High */
>> +#define IGC_PTM_PREV_T2_L 0x12584 /* Previous T2 Low */
>> +#define IGC_PTM_PREV_T2_H 0x12588 /* Previous T2 High */
>> +#define IGC_PTM_PREV_T4M1 0x12578 /* T4 Minus T1 on previous PTM Cycle */
>> +#define IGC_PTM_CURR_T4M1 0x1257C /* T4 Minus T1 on this PTM Cycle */
>> +#define IGC_PTM_PREV_T3M2 0x12580 /* T3 Minus T2 on previous PTM Cycle */
>> +#define IGC_PTM_TDELAY 0x12594 /* PTM PCIe Link Delay */
>> +
>> +#define IGC_PCIE_DIG_DELAY 0x12550 /* PCIe Digital Delay */
>> +#define IGC_PCIE_PHY_DELAY 0x12554 /* PCIe PHY Delay */
>
> I assume the above are device-specific registers, right? Nothing that
> would be found in the PCIe base spec?
Yeah, these registers control the corrections the NIC hardware make to
the timestamps based on the PCIe link delays from the NIC to its
upstream PCIe port.
I don't remember seeing anything like that on the PCIe base spec. Will
take another look to make sure.
Cheers,
--
Vinicius
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