Commit c585ea42 authored by Brett Creeley's avatar Brett Creeley Committed by Jeff Kirsher

ice: Fix tx_timeout in PF driver

Prior to this commit the driver was running into tx_timeouts when a
queue was stressed enough. This was happening because the HW tail
and SW tail (NTU) were incorrectly out of sync. Consequently this was
causing the HW head to collide with the HW tail, which to the hardware
means that all descriptors posted for Tx have been processed.

Due to the Tx logic used in the driver SW tail and HW tail are allowed
to be out of sync. This is done as an optimization because it allows the
driver to write HW tail as infrequently as possible, while still
updating the SW tail index to keep track. However, there are situations
where this results in the tail never getting updated, resulting in Tx
timeouts.

Tx HW tail write condition:
	if (netif_xmit_stopped(txring_txq(tx_ring) || !skb->xmit_more)
		writel(sw_tail, tx_ring->tail);

An issue was found in the Tx logic that was causing the afore mentioned
condition for updating HW tail to never happen, causing tx_timeouts.

In ice_xmit_frame_ring we calculate how many descriptors we need for the
Tx transaction based on the skb the kernel hands us. This is then passed
into ice_maybe_stop_tx along with some extra padding to determine if we
have enough descriptors available for this transaction. If we don't then
we return -EBUSY to the stack, otherwise we move on and eventually
prepare the Tx descriptors accordingly in ice_tx_map and set
next_to_watch. In ice_tx_map we make another call to ice_maybe_stop_tx
with a value of MAX_SKB_FRAGS + 4. The key here is that this value is
possibly less than the value we sent in the first call to
ice_maybe_stop_tx in ice_xmit_frame_ring. Now, if the number of unused
descriptors is between MAX_SKB_FRAGS + 4 and the value used in the first
call to ice_maybe_stop_tx in ice_xmit_frame_ring then we do not update
the HW tail because of the "Tx HW tail write condition" above. This is
because in ice_maybe_stop_tx we return success from ice_maybe_stop_tx
instead of calling __ice_maybe_stop_tx and subsequently calling
netif_stop_subqueue, which sets the __QUEUE_STATE_DEV_XOFF bit. This
bit is then checked in the "Tx HW tail write condition" by calling
netif_xmit_stopped and subsequently updating HW tail if the
afore mentioned bit is set.

In ice_clean_tx_irq, if next_to_watch is not NULL, we end up cleaning
the descriptors that HW sets the DD bit on and we have the budget. The
HW head will eventually run into the HW tail in response to the
description in the paragraph above.

The next time through ice_xmit_frame_ring we make the initial call to
ice_maybe_stop_tx with another skb from the stack. This time we do not
have enough descriptors available and we return NETDEV_TX_BUSY to the
stack and end up setting next_to_watch to NULL.

This is where we are stuck. In ice_clean_tx_irq we never clean anything
because next_to_watch is always NULL and in ice_xmit_frame_ring we never
update HW tail because we already return NETDEV_TX_BUSY to the stack and
eventually we hit a tx_timeout.

This issue was fixed by making sure that the second call to
ice_maybe_stop_tx in ice_tx_map is passed a value that is >= the value
that was used on the initial call to ice_maybe_stop_tx in
ice_xmit_frame_ring. This was done by adding the following defines to
make the logic more clear and to reduce the chance of mucking this up
again:

ICE_CACHE_LINE_BYTES		64
ICE_DESCS_PER_CACHE_LINE	(ICE_CACHE_LINE_BYTES / \
				 sizeof(struct ice_tx_desc))
ICE_DESCS_FOR_CTX_DESC		1
ICE_DESCS_FOR_SKB_DATA_PTR	1

The ICE_CACHE_LINE_BYTES being 64 is an assumption being made so we
don't have to figure this out on every pass through the Tx path. Instead
I added a sanity check in ice_probe to verify cache line size and print
a message if it's not 64 Bytes. This will make it easier to file issues
if they are seen when the cache line size is not 64 Bytes when reading
from the GLPCI_CNF2 register.
Signed-off-by: default avatarBrett Creeley <brett.creeley@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: default avatarAnirudh Venkataramanan <anirudh.venkataramanan@intel.com>
Tested-by: default avatarAndrew Bowers <andrewx.bowers@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: default avatarJeff Kirsher <jeffrey.t.kirsher@intel.com>
parent 25525b69
......@@ -242,6 +242,8 @@
#define GLNVM_ULD 0x000B6008
#define GLNVM_ULD_CORER_DONE_M BIT(3)
#define GLNVM_ULD_GLOBR_DONE_M BIT(4)
#define GLPCI_CNF2 0x000BE004
#define GLPCI_CNF2_CACHELINE_SIZE_M BIT(1)
#define PF_FUNC_RID 0x0009E880
#define PF_FUNC_RID_FUNC_NUM_S 0
#define PF_FUNC_RID_FUNC_NUM_M ICE_M(0x7, 0)
......
......@@ -1994,6 +1994,22 @@ static int ice_init_interrupt_scheme(struct ice_pf *pf)
return 0;
}
/**
* ice_verify_cacheline_size - verify driver's assumption of 64 Byte cache lines
* @pf: pointer to the PF structure
*
* There is no error returned here because the driver should be able to handle
* 128 Byte cache lines, so we only print a warning in case issues are seen,
* specifically with Tx.
*/
static void ice_verify_cacheline_size(struct ice_pf *pf)
{
if (rd32(&pf->hw, GLPCI_CNF2) & GLPCI_CNF2_CACHELINE_SIZE_M)
dev_warn(&pf->pdev->dev,
"%d Byte cache line assumption is invalid, driver may have Tx timeouts!\n",
ICE_CACHE_LINE_BYTES);
}
/**
* ice_probe - Device initialization routine
* @pdev: PCI device information struct
......@@ -2144,6 +2160,8 @@ static int ice_probe(struct pci_dev *pdev,
/* since everything is good, start the service timer */
mod_timer(&pf->serv_tmr, round_jiffies(jiffies + pf->serv_tmr_period));
ice_verify_cacheline_size(pf);
return 0;
err_alloc_sw_unroll:
......
......@@ -1556,15 +1556,15 @@ int ice_tso(struct ice_tx_buf *first, struct ice_tx_offload_params *off)
* magnitude greater than our largest possible GSO size.
*
* This would then be implemented as:
* return (((size >> 12) * 85) >> 8) + 1;
* return (((size >> 12) * 85) >> 8) + ICE_DESCS_FOR_SKB_DATA_PTR;
*
* Since multiplication and division are commutative, we can reorder
* operations into:
* return ((size * 85) >> 20) + 1;
* return ((size * 85) >> 20) + ICE_DESCS_FOR_SKB_DATA_PTR;
*/
static unsigned int ice_txd_use_count(unsigned int size)
{
return ((size * 85) >> 20) + 1;
return ((size * 85) >> 20) + ICE_DESCS_FOR_SKB_DATA_PTR;
}
/**
......@@ -1706,7 +1706,8 @@ ice_xmit_frame_ring(struct sk_buff *skb, struct ice_ring *tx_ring)
* + 1 desc for context descriptor,
* otherwise try next time
*/
if (ice_maybe_stop_tx(tx_ring, count + 4 + 1)) {
if (ice_maybe_stop_tx(tx_ring, count + ICE_DESCS_PER_CACHE_LINE +
ICE_DESCS_FOR_CTX_DESC)) {
tx_ring->tx_stats.tx_busy++;
return NETDEV_TX_BUSY;
}
......
......@@ -22,8 +22,21 @@
#define ICE_RX_BUF_WRITE 16 /* Must be power of 2 */
#define ICE_MAX_TXQ_PER_TXQG 128
/* Tx Descriptors needed, worst case */
#define DESC_NEEDED (MAX_SKB_FRAGS + 4)
/* We are assuming that the cache line is always 64 Bytes here for ice.
* In order to make sure that is a correct assumption there is a check in probe
* to print a warning if the read from GLPCI_CNF2 tells us that the cache line
* size is 128 bytes. We do it this way because we do not want to read the
* GLPCI_CNF2 register or a variable containing the value on every pass through
* the Tx path.
*/
#define ICE_CACHE_LINE_BYTES 64
#define ICE_DESCS_PER_CACHE_LINE (ICE_CACHE_LINE_BYTES / \
sizeof(struct ice_tx_desc))
#define ICE_DESCS_FOR_CTX_DESC 1
#define ICE_DESCS_FOR_SKB_DATA_PTR 1
/* Tx descriptors needed, worst case */
#define DESC_NEEDED (MAX_SKB_FRAGS + ICE_DESCS_FOR_CTX_DESC + \
ICE_DESCS_PER_CACHE_LINE + ICE_DESCS_FOR_SKB_DATA_PTR)
#define ICE_DESC_UNUSED(R) \
((((R)->next_to_clean > (R)->next_to_use) ? 0 : (R)->count) + \
(R)->next_to_clean - (R)->next_to_use - 1)
......
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