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author | Felix Fietkau <nbd@openwrt.org> | 2014-09-07 09:46:41 +0000 |
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committer | Felix Fietkau <nbd@openwrt.org> | 2014-09-07 09:46:41 +0000 |
commit | cb7697778d775acc60f0f30fa712c4e553188043 (patch) | |
tree | e3ed66170d6ab4d66defa6a1e4de1506dd4790c3 /target/linux/avr32 | |
parent | 96475a042ec3af58ba77cadf2a283e005038d27c (diff) | |
download | upstream-cb7697778d775acc60f0f30fa712c4e553188043.tar.gz upstream-cb7697778d775acc60f0f30fa712c4e553188043.tar.bz2 upstream-cb7697778d775acc60f0f30fa712c4e553188043.zip |
ath79: dev-eth: Don't advertise 1gbit in link code word on ar9331
While the AR9331 has a gigabit MAC towards the internal switch, the
integrated PHYs however are only 100-base-tx capable. The existing code
however advertieses gigabit capability in the link status word. If you
attach such a PHY to a gigabit capable switch on the remote end, with
some probability it attempts to negotiate gigabit and fails, falling
baco to the AR9331 assuming a 10mbit half-duplex link. This has been
observed quite frequently with the Carambola2 and gigabit capable
switches.
In ath79_register_eth(), "pdata->has_gbit = 1;" is set unconditionally
for both AR9331 ethernet ports. This is most likely wrong. Despite the
two MAC IP cores being gigabit MACs, the MAC for eth1 is connected to a
100base-T PHY via MII. The has_gbit attribute is used in the ethernet
driver to determine the supported link modes.
So either pdata->has_gbit is not set to 1 anymore, or the ethernet
driver needs to be modified to determine the advertised link code word
on another criteria than pdata->has_gbit. This patch implements the
former solution.
Signed-off-by: Harald Welte <laforge@gnumonks.org>
Backport of r42432
git-svn-id: svn://svn.openwrt.org/openwrt/branches/barrier_breaker@42434 3c298f89-4303-0410-b956-a3cf2f4a3e73
Diffstat (limited to 'target/linux/avr32')
0 files changed, 0 insertions, 0 deletions