From 8d91c1e411f55d7ea91b1183a2e9f8088fb4d5be Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: André Fabian Silva Delgado Date: Tue, 15 Dec 2015 14:52:16 -0300 Subject: Linux-libre 4.3.2-gnu --- Documentation/networking/dsa/bcm_sf2.txt | 114 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 114 insertions(+) create mode 100644 Documentation/networking/dsa/bcm_sf2.txt (limited to 'Documentation/networking/dsa/bcm_sf2.txt') diff --git a/Documentation/networking/dsa/bcm_sf2.txt b/Documentation/networking/dsa/bcm_sf2.txt new file mode 100644 index 000000000..d999d0c1c --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/networking/dsa/bcm_sf2.txt @@ -0,0 +1,114 @@ +Broadcom Starfighter 2 Ethernet switch driver +============================================= + +Broadcom's Starfighter 2 Ethernet switch hardware block is commonly found and +deployed in the following products: + +- xDSL gateways such as BCM63138 +- streaming/multimedia Set Top Box such as BCM7445 +- Cable Modem/residential gateways such as BCM7145/BCM3390 + +The switch is typically deployed in a configuration involving between 5 to 13 +ports, offering a range of built-in and customizable interfaces: + +- single integrated Gigabit PHY +- quad integrated Gigabit PHY +- quad external Gigabit PHY w/ MDIO multiplexer +- integrated MoCA PHY +- several external MII/RevMII/GMII/RGMII interfaces + +The switch also supports specific congestion control features which allow MoCA +fail-over not to lose packets during a MoCA role re-election, as well as out of +band back-pressure to the host CPU network interface when downstream interfaces +are connected at a lower speed. + +The switch hardware block is typically interfaced using MMIO accesses and +contains a bunch of sub-blocks/registers: + +* SWITCH_CORE: common switch registers +* SWITCH_REG: external interfaces switch register +* SWITCH_MDIO: external MDIO bus controller (there is another one in SWITCH_CORE, + which is used for indirect PHY accesses) +* SWITCH_INDIR_RW: 64-bits wide register helper block +* SWITCH_INTRL2_0/1: Level-2 interrupt controllers +* SWITCH_ACB: Admission control block +* SWITCH_FCB: Fail-over control block + +Implementation details +====================== + +The driver is located in drivers/net/dsa/bcm_sf2.c and is implemented as a DSA +driver; see Documentation/networking/dsa/dsa.txt for details on the subsytem +and what it provides. + +The SF2 switch is configured to enable a Broadcom specific 4-bytes switch tag +which gets inserted by the switch for every packet forwarded to the CPU +interface, conversely, the CPU network interface should insert a similar tag for +packets entering the CPU port. The tag format is described in +net/dsa/tag_brcm.c. + +Overall, the SF2 driver is a fairly regular DSA driver; there are a few +specifics covered below. + +Device Tree probing +------------------- + +The DSA platform device driver is probed using a specific compatible string +provided in net/dsa/dsa.c. The reason for that is because the DSA subsystem gets +registered as a platform device driver currently. DSA will provide the needed +device_node pointers which are then accessible by the switch driver setup +function to setup resources such as register ranges and interrupts. This +currently works very well because none of the of_* functions utilized by the +driver require a struct device to be bound to a struct device_node, but things +may change in the future. + +MDIO indirect accesses +---------------------- + +Due to a limitation in how Broadcom switches have been designed, external +Broadcom switches connected to a SF2 require the use of the DSA slave MDIO bus +in order to properly configure them. By default, the SF2 pseudo-PHY address, and +an external switch pseudo-PHY address will both be snooping for incoming MDIO +transactions, since they are at the same address (30), resulting in some kind of +"double" programming. Using DSA, and setting ds->phys_mii_mask accordingly, we +selectively divert reads and writes towards external Broadcom switches +pseudo-PHY addresses. Newer revisions of the SF2 hardware have introduced a +configurable pseudo-PHY address which circumvents the initial design limitation. + +Multimedia over CoAxial (MoCA) interfaces +----------------------------------------- + +MoCA interfaces are fairly specific and require the use of a firmware blob which +gets loaded onto the MoCA processor(s) for packet processing. The switch +hardware contains logic which will assert/de-assert link states accordingly for +the MoCA interface whenever the MoCA coaxial cable gets disconnected or the +firmware gets reloaded. The SF2 driver relies on such events to properly set its +MoCA interface carrier state and properly report this to the networking stack. + +The MoCA interfaces are supported using the PHY library's fixed PHY/emulated PHY +device and the switch driver registers a fixed_link_update callback for such +PHYs which reflects the link state obtained from the interrupt handler. + + +Power Management +---------------- + +Whenever possible, the SF2 driver tries to minimize the overall switch power +consumption by applying a combination of: + +- turning off internal buffers/memories +- disabling packet processing logic +- putting integrated PHYs in IDDQ/low-power +- reducing the switch core clock based on the active port count +- enabling and advertising EEE +- turning off RGMII data processing logic when the link goes down + +Wake-on-LAN +----------- + +Wake-on-LAN is currently implemented by utilizing the host processor Ethernet +MAC controller wake-on logic. Whenever Wake-on-LAN is requested, an intersection +between the user request and the supported host Ethernet interface WoL +capabilities is done and the intersection result gets configured. During +system-wide suspend/resume, only ports not participating in Wake-on-LAN are +disabled. -- cgit v1.2.3-54-g00ecf