Message ID | 1489590033-4946-1-git-send-email-npcomplete13@gmail.com (mailing list archive) |
---|---|
State | Superseded, archived |
Headers | show |
Hi Vivek > - It has two switches in order to support 8 lan ports. Internal switch is > BCM53012. The external switch BCM53125 currently works as "dumb switch" Do you know how the second switch is connected? Is it cascaded off the internal switch? Or does it have a dedicated Ethernet interface? Thanks Andrew
Andrew, I'm not entirely sure. But here is what I observed. Bootloader sets up both the switches. And I can use all 8 ports of the router when I boot Lede. Only the internal switch is detected and configurable via swconfig tool Internal switch is connected to CPU via port 5 same as Netgear R8000. The other bit here is that I looked through the GPL source and gpio pin 10 is labeled as EA9500_RST2LANSW_GPIO10_PIN/ResetSwitch. So when I performed a robo reset of the pin and 5 ports (labeled 1 thru 5 on the unit) of the 8 physical ports stopped working (no packets). If the external switch were to be connect via dedicated ethernet interface it should have shown up during the probe. Is in't it? Unfortunately my understanding about network devices limits me to investigate this further. I'll be more than happy to perform any tests if needed. Thanks, Vivek P.S sorry for duplicate email if you did get this first time around. I've turned off HTML formatting. > > > On Wed, Mar 15, 2017 at 2:52 PM Andrew Lunn <andrew@lunn.ch> wrote: >> >> Hi Vivek >> >> > - It has two switches in order to support 8 lan ports. Internal switch is >> > BCM53012. The external switch BCM53125 currently works as "dumb switch" >> >> Do you know how the second switch is connected? Is it cascaded off the >> internal switch? Or does it have a dedicated Ethernet interface? >> >> Thanks >> Andrew
On 03/15/2017 12:34 PM, Vivek Unune wrote: > Andrew, > > I'm not entirely sure. But here is what I observed. > > Boot loader sets up both the switches. And I can use all 8 ports of the > router when I boot Lede. Only the internal swich is detected and > configurable via swconfig tool > Internal switch is connected to CPU via port 5 same as Netgear R8000. > The other bit here is that I looked through the GPL source and gpio pin > 10 is labeled as EA9500_RST2LANSW_GPIO10_PIN/ResetSwitch. So when I > performed a robo reset of the pin and 5 (labeled 1 thru 5 on the unit) > of the 8 physical ports stopped working (no packets). > > If the external switch were to be connect via dedicated ethernet > interface it should have shown up during the probe. Is in't it? Not necessarily, and probably not with LEDE which would treat the external 53125 as a dumb switch and not even see it. With a mainline kernel and the B53 DSA driver you would be able to represent both switches in Device Tree and describe how they are cascading from each other. The potential Device Tree changes could look like this (based on your explanation, but I am not sure) for your platform, assuming the 53125 is actually exposing the front panel ports and that we did introduce a "mdio" node which would be required to expose the external BCM53125 switch. /* There is no MDIO node, there should be one */ &mdio { status = "okay"; switch@30 { #address-cells = <1>; #size-cells = <0>; reset-gpios = <&gpio 10>; reset-names = "robo_reset"; ports { #address-cells = <1>; #size-cells = <0>; port@0 { reg = <0>; label = "lan1"; }; port@1 { reg = <1>; label = "lan2"; }; port@2 { reg = <2>; label = "lan3"; }; port@3 { reg = <3>; label = "lan1"; }; port@4 { reg = <4>; label = "wan"; }; port@5 { reg = <5>; label = "cpu"; ethernet = <&sw0port8>; fixed-link { speed = <1000>; full-duplex; }; }; }; }; }; &srab { status = "okay"; ports { #address-cells = <1>; #size-cells = <0>; port@5 { reg = <5>; label = "cpu"; ethernet = <&gmac0>; fixed-link { speed = <1000>; full-duplex; }; }; sw0port8: port@8 { reg = <8>; label = "extswitch"; fixed-link { speed = <1000>; full-duplex; }; }; }; }; > > Thanks, > > Vivek > > > On Wed, Mar 15, 2017 at 2:52 PM Andrew Lunn <andrew@lunn.ch > <mailto:andrew@lunn.ch>> wrote: > > Hi Vivek > > > - It has two switches in order to support 8 lan ports. Internal > switch is > > BCM53012. The external switch BCM53125 currently works as "dumb > switch" > > Do you know how the second switch is connected? Is it cascaded off the > internal switch? Or does it have a dedicated Ethernet interface? > > Thanks > Andrew >
Thanks Florian. Let me try this out. First I'll try to figure out how to add a mdio node. Over the weekend I was trying enable DSA driver, but did not see DSA under network. I'm using LEDE source with kernel 4.9. Nor did I see it when I tried 'make kernel_menuconfig' Thanks again. On Wed, Mar 15, 2017 at 3:49 PM, Florian Fainelli <florian.fainelli@broadcom.com> wrote: > On 03/15/2017 12:34 PM, Vivek Unune wrote: >> Andrew, >> >> I'm not entirely sure. But here is what I observed. >> >> Boot loader sets up both the switches. And I can use all 8 ports of the >> router when I boot Lede. Only the internal swich is detected and >> configurable via swconfig tool >> Internal switch is connected to CPU via port 5 same as Netgear R8000. >> The other bit here is that I looked through the GPL source and gpio pin >> 10 is labeled as EA9500_RST2LANSW_GPIO10_PIN/ResetSwitch. So when I >> performed a robo reset of the pin and 5 (labeled 1 thru 5 on the unit) >> of the 8 physical ports stopped working (no packets). >> >> If the external switch were to be connect via dedicated ethernet >> interface it should have shown up during the probe. Is in't it? > > Not necessarily, and probably not with LEDE which would treat the > external 53125 as a dumb switch and not even see it. With a mainline > kernel and the B53 DSA driver you would be able to represent both > switches in Device Tree and describe how they are cascading from each other. > > The potential Device Tree changes could look like this (based on your > explanation, but I am not sure) for your platform, assuming the 53125 is > actually exposing the front panel ports and that we did introduce a > "mdio" node which would be required to expose the external BCM53125 switch. > > > /* There is no MDIO node, there should be one */ > &mdio { > status = "okay"; > > switch@30 { > #address-cells = <1>; > #size-cells = <0>; > reset-gpios = <&gpio 10>; > reset-names = "robo_reset"; > > ports { > #address-cells = <1>; > #size-cells = <0>; > > port@0 { > reg = <0>; > label = "lan1"; > }; > > port@1 { > reg = <1>; > label = "lan2"; > }; > > port@2 { > reg = <2>; > label = "lan3"; > }; > > port@3 { > reg = <3>; > label = "lan1"; > }; > > port@4 { > reg = <4>; > label = "wan"; > }; > > port@5 { > reg = <5>; > label = "cpu"; > ethernet = <&sw0port8>; > fixed-link { > speed = <1000>; > full-duplex; > }; > }; > }; > }; > }; > > &srab { > status = "okay"; > > ports { > #address-cells = <1>; > #size-cells = <0>; > > port@5 { > reg = <5>; > label = "cpu"; > ethernet = <&gmac0>; > fixed-link { > speed = <1000>; > full-duplex; > }; > }; > > sw0port8: port@8 { > reg = <8>; > label = "extswitch"; > > fixed-link { > speed = <1000>; > full-duplex; > }; > }; > }; > }; > >> >> Thanks, >> >> Vivek >> >> >> On Wed, Mar 15, 2017 at 2:52 PM Andrew Lunn <andrew@lunn.ch >> <mailto:andrew@lunn.ch>> wrote: >> >> Hi Vivek >> >> > - It has two switches in order to support 8 lan ports. Internal >> switch is >> > BCM53012. The external switch BCM53125 currently works as "dumb >> switch" >> >> Do you know how the second switch is connected? Is it cascaded off the >> internal switch? Or does it have a dedicated Ethernet interface? >> >> Thanks >> Andrew >> > > > -- > Florian
On 03/15/2017 01:18 PM, Vivek Unune wrote: > Thanks Florian. > > Let me try this out. First I'll try to figure out how to add a mdio node. > > Over the weekend I was trying enable DSA driver, but did not see DSA > under network. I'm using LEDE source with kernel 4.9. Nor did I see it > when I tried 'make kernel_menuconfig' (please don't top post on public mailing lists) You need to enable SWITCHDEV to have DSA. AFAIR SWITCHDEV may depend on EXPERT/EXPERIMENTAL as of 4.9 (or that was before). > > Thanks again. > > On Wed, Mar 15, 2017 at 3:49 PM, Florian Fainelli > <florian.fainelli@broadcom.com> wrote: >> On 03/15/2017 12:34 PM, Vivek Unune wrote: >>> Andrew, >>> >>> I'm not entirely sure. But here is what I observed. >>> >>> Boot loader sets up both the switches. And I can use all 8 ports of the >>> router when I boot Lede. Only the internal swich is detected and >>> configurable via swconfig tool >>> Internal switch is connected to CPU via port 5 same as Netgear R8000. >>> The other bit here is that I looked through the GPL source and gpio pin >>> 10 is labeled as EA9500_RST2LANSW_GPIO10_PIN/ResetSwitch. So when I >>> performed a robo reset of the pin and 5 (labeled 1 thru 5 on the unit) >>> of the 8 physical ports stopped working (no packets). >>> >>> If the external switch were to be connect via dedicated ethernet >>> interface it should have shown up during the probe. Is in't it? >> >> Not necessarily, and probably not with LEDE which would treat the >> external 53125 as a dumb switch and not even see it. With a mainline >> kernel and the B53 DSA driver you would be able to represent both >> switches in Device Tree and describe how they are cascading from each other. >> >> The potential Device Tree changes could look like this (based on your >> explanation, but I am not sure) for your platform, assuming the 53125 is >> actually exposing the front panel ports and that we did introduce a >> "mdio" node which would be required to expose the external BCM53125 switch. >> >> >> /* There is no MDIO node, there should be one */ >> &mdio { >> status = "okay"; >> >> switch@30 { >> #address-cells = <1>; >> #size-cells = <0>; >> reset-gpios = <&gpio 10>; >> reset-names = "robo_reset"; >> >> ports { >> #address-cells = <1>; >> #size-cells = <0>; >> >> port@0 { >> reg = <0>; >> label = "lan1"; >> }; >> >> port@1 { >> reg = <1>; >> label = "lan2"; >> }; >> >> port@2 { >> reg = <2>; >> label = "lan3"; >> }; >> >> port@3 { >> reg = <3>; >> label = "lan1"; >> }; >> >> port@4 { >> reg = <4>; >> label = "wan"; >> }; >> >> port@5 { >> reg = <5>; >> label = "cpu"; >> ethernet = <&sw0port8>; >> fixed-link { >> speed = <1000>; >> full-duplex; >> }; >> }; >> }; >> }; >> }; >> >> &srab { >> status = "okay"; >> >> ports { >> #address-cells = <1>; >> #size-cells = <0>; >> >> port@5 { >> reg = <5>; >> label = "cpu"; >> ethernet = <&gmac0>; >> fixed-link { >> speed = <1000>; >> full-duplex; >> }; >> }; >> >> sw0port8: port@8 { >> reg = <8>; >> label = "extswitch"; >> >> fixed-link { >> speed = <1000>; >> full-duplex; >> }; >> }; >> }; >> }; >> >>> >>> Thanks, >>> >>> Vivek >>> >>> >>> On Wed, Mar 15, 2017 at 2:52 PM Andrew Lunn <andrew@lunn.ch >>> <mailto:andrew@lunn.ch>> wrote: >>> >>> Hi Vivek >>> >>> > - It has two switches in order to support 8 lan ports. Internal >>> switch is >>> > BCM53012. The external switch BCM53125 currently works as "dumb >>> switch" >>> >>> Do you know how the second switch is connected? Is it cascaded off the >>> internal switch? Or does it have a dedicated Ethernet interface? >>> >>> Thanks >>> Andrew >>> >> >> >> -- >> Florian
On Wed, Mar 15, 2017 at 5:19 PM, Florian Fainelli <florian.fainelli@broadcom.com> wrote: > On 03/15/2017 01:18 PM, Vivek Unune wrote: >> Thanks Florian. >> >> Let me try this out. First I'll try to figure out how to add a mdio node. >> >> Over the weekend I was trying enable DSA driver, but did not see DSA >> under network. I'm using LEDE source with kernel 4.9. Nor did I see it >> when I tried 'make kernel_menuconfig' > > (please don't top post on public mailing lists) > > You need to enable SWITCHDEV to have DSA. AFAIR SWITCHDEV may depend on > EXPERT/EXPERIMENTAL as of 4.9 (or that was before). > Florian, I have managed to use DSA driver and was able detect both internal and external switches. However, I only get packets flowing only through the internal switch. I have used the ip & bridge commands to setup the vlan 101 & 102 for lan and wan respectively. VLAN101 = lan1 lan2 lan3 lan4 lan5 lan6 lan7 lan8 eth0.101 VLAN102 = wan eth0.102 Reading configs from the factory firmware, I'm sure that sw0port0 and sw1port8 are connected. Excerpt from the same: port_numbers=0 2 4 2 1 3 1 3 port_switch_id=1 1 1 0 1 1 0 0 port_names=port0 port1 port2 port3 port4 port5 port6 port7 cpu_port_number=5 7 8 cpu_port_switch_id=0 0 0 hidden_port_numbers=0 8 hidden_port_switch_id=0 1 Below is my updated device tree. Thanks, Vivek &srab { compatible = "brcm,bcm53012-srab", "brcm,bcm5301x-srab"; status = "okay"; dsa,member = <0 0>; ports { #address-cells = <1>; #size-cells = <0>; port@1 { reg = <1>; label = "lan7"; }; port@2 { reg = <2>; label = "lan4"; }; port@3 { reg = <3>; label = "lan8"; }; port@4 { reg = <4>; label = "wan"; }; port@5 { reg = <5>; ethernet = <&gmac0>; label = "cpu"; fixed-link { speed = <1000>; full-duplex; }; }; sw0port0: port@0 { reg = <0>; label = "extswitch"; fixed-link { speed = <1000>; full-duplex; }; }; }; }; &mdiomux { mdio-slave@0 { reg = <0x00>; address-cells = <1>; size-cells = <0>; switch@0 { compatible = "brcm,bcm53125"; #address-cells = <1>; #size-cells = <0>; reset-gpios = <&chipcommon 10 GPIO_ACTIVE_LOW>; reset-names = "robo_reset"; reg = <0>; dsa,member = <1 0>; ports { #address-cells = <1>; #size-cells = <0>; port@0 { reg = <0>; label = "lan1"; }; port@1 { reg = <1>; label = "lan5"; }; port@2 { reg = <2>; label = "lan2"; }; port@3 { reg = <3>; label = "lan6"; }; port@4 { reg = <4>; label = "lan3"; }; sw1port8:port@8 { reg = <8>; ethernet = <&sw0port0>; label = "cpu"; phy-mode = "rgmii-txid"; fixed-link { speed = <1000>; full-duplex; }; }; }; }; }; };
Hi Vivek, On 06/27/2017 10:03 AM, Vivek Unune wrote: > On Wed, Mar 15, 2017 at 5:19 PM, Florian Fainelli > <florian.fainelli@broadcom.com> wrote: >> On 03/15/2017 01:18 PM, Vivek Unune wrote: >>> Thanks Florian. >>> >>> Let me try this out. First I'll try to figure out how to add a mdio node. >>> >>> Over the weekend I was trying enable DSA driver, but did not see DSA >>> under network. I'm using LEDE source with kernel 4.9. Nor did I see it >>> when I tried 'make kernel_menuconfig' >> >> (please don't top post on public mailing lists) >> >> You need to enable SWITCHDEV to have DSA. AFAIR SWITCHDEV may depend on >> EXPERT/EXPERIMENTAL as of 4.9 (or that was before). >> > > Florian, > > I have managed to use DSA driver and was able detect both internal and > external switches. However, I only get packets flowing only through the > internal switch. I have used the ip & bridge commands to setup the vlan > 101 & 102 for lan and wan respectively. > > VLAN101 = lan1 lan2 lan3 lan4 lan5 lan6 lan7 lan8 eth0.101 That looks reasonable although keep in mind that the IMP/CPU interfaces of the switch are configured with VLAN tags (see commit [1]), so you may need to make sure that port 0 of the internal switch is not accidentally configured back to untagged since that would cause problem when terminating the VLAN tag on the SW side. So here are a few things that you want to check: - read the MIB counters from the "extswitch" interface and see if packets flow through in both directions with no errors - check the "extswitch" VLAN configuration on both the internal switch side (port 0) and on the external switch side ("cpu", port 8, not visible) - see if you can get traffic end-to-end from eth0 all the way through one of the external switch port. If that's the case, that means that the configuration of internal switch port 0, internal switch CPU port, and external switch external port is working and operational [1]: https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/commit/?id=e47112d9d6009bf6b7438cedc0270316d6b0370d > VLAN102 = wan eth0.102 > > Reading configs from the factory firmware, I'm sure that sw0port0 and> sw1port8 are connected. Excerpt from the same: > > port_numbers=0 2 4 2 1 3 1 3 > port_switch_id=1 1 1 0 1 1 0 0 > port_names=port0 port1 port2 port3 port4 port5 port6 port7 Is 0 the identifier for the external or internal switch? If 0 is internal switch identifier and 1 is the external switch identifier, your mapping looks correct to me with one exception below: > cpu_port_number=5 7 8 > cpu_port_switch_id=0 0 0 > hidden_port_numbers=0 8 > hidden_port_switch_id=0 1 > > Below is my updated device tree. > > Thanks, > > Vivek > > &srab { > compatible = "brcm,bcm53012-srab", "brcm,bcm5301x-srab"; > status = "okay"; > dsa,member = <0 0>; > > ports { > #address-cells = <1>; > #size-cells = <0>; > > port@1 { > reg = <1>; > label = "lan7"; > }; > > port@2 { > reg = <2>; > label = "lan4"; > }; > > port@3 { > reg = <3>; > label = "lan8"; > }; > > port@4 { > reg = <4>; > label = "wan"; > }; > > port@5 { > reg = <5>; > ethernet = <&gmac0>; > label = "cpu"; > > fixed-link { > > speed = <1000>; > full-duplex; > }; > }; I think this is meant to be port 8 here based on the hidden_port_number value. This actually matters for VLAN configuration because B53 is not (unfortunately, to be fixed) consistently using dst->cpu_port (whatever is configured in Device Tree) vs. dev->cpu_port (hardcoded to 8 for this class of switch). PS: on that front, we will have to rework that when we bring multiple CPU port support in DSA/B53/bcm_sf2 and so for now what we could do is just check that the configured CPU port in Device Tree is a valid CPU port for that switch (typically 5, 7 or 8), and if not, just issue a warning. > > sw0port0: port@0 { > reg = <0>; > label = "extswitch"; > > fixed-link { > speed = <1000>; > full-duplex; > }; There might be some additional configuration needed here for this port, because by default, the port will most likely try to use its built-in PHY and maybe that's what they did, they wired the built-in PHY directly to the IMP port of the external switch. > }; > }; > }; > > &mdiomux { > mdio-slave@0 { > reg = <0x00>; > address-cells = <1>; > size-cells = <0>; > > switch@0 { > compatible = "brcm,bcm53125"; > #address-cells = <1>; > #size-cells = <0>; > reset-gpios = <&chipcommon 10 GPIO_ACTIVE_LOW>; > reset-names = "robo_reset"; > reg = <0>; > dsa,member = <1 0>; > > ports { > #address-cells = <1>; > #size-cells = <0>; > > port@0 { > reg = <0>; > label = "lan1"; > }; > > port@1 { > reg = <1>; > label = "lan5"; > }; > > port@2 { > reg = <2>; > label = "lan2"; > }; > > port@3 { > reg = <3>; > label = "lan6"; > }; > > port@4 { > reg = <4>; > label = "lan3"; > }; > > sw1port8:port@8 { > reg = <8>; > ethernet = <&sw0port0>; > label = "cpu"; > phy-mode = "rgmii-txid"; > > fixed-link { > speed = <1000>; > full-duplex; > }; > }; > }; > }; > }; > }; >
Florian, >> I have managed to use DSA driver and was able detect both internal and >> external switches. However, I only get packets flowing only through the >> internal switch. I have used the ip & bridge commands to setup the vlan >> 101 & 102 for lan and wan respectively. >> >> VLAN101 = lan1 lan2 lan3 lan4 lan5 lan6 lan7 lan8 eth0.101 > > That looks reasonable although keep in mind that the IMP/CPU interfaces > of the switch are configured with VLAN tags (see commit [1]), so you may > need to make sure that port 0 of the internal switch is not accidentally > configured back to untagged since that would cause problem when > terminating the VLAN tag on the SW side. > > So here are a few things that you want to check: > > - read the MIB counters from the "extswitch" interface and see if > packets flow through in both directions with no errors lan4 is on internal switch, lan1 on external. I cannot ping router from lan1 Inter- | Receive | Transmit face |bytes packets errs drop|bytes packets errs drop br-lan: 168590 1726 0 0 190542 753 0 0 extswitch: 0 0 0 0 101012 1221 0 0 lan1: 0 0 0 0 5382 111 0 0 lan4: 0 0 0 0 1306680 13909 0 0 eth0: 3276924 5539 0 0 1106135 5084 0 0 eth0.101: 169338 1732 0 0 190256 750 0 0 eth0.102: 2959522 3274 0 0 587248 1094 0 0 lo: 39390 502 0 0 39390 502 0 0 br-wan: 2956822 3254 0 0 587248 1094 0 0 > > - check the "extswitch" VLAN configuration on both the internal switch > side (port 0) and on the external switch side ("cpu", port 8, not visible) #bridge vlan show port vlan ids extswitch None extswitch lan7 101 PVID Egress Untagged lan7 101 PVID Egress Untagged lan4 101 PVID Egress Untagged lan4 101 PVID Egress Untagged lan8 101 PVID Egress Untagged lan8 101 PVID Egress Untagged wan 102 PVID Egress Untagged wan 102 PVID Egress Untagged lan1 101 PVID Egress Untagged lan1 101 PVID Egress Untagged lan5 101 PVID Egress Untagged lan5 101 PVID Egress Untagged lan2 101 PVID Egress Untagged lan2 101 PVID Egress Untagged lan6 101 PVID Egress Untagged lan6 101 PVID Egress Untagged lan3 101 PVID Egress Untagged lan3 101 PVID Egress Untagged br-lan None eth0.101 101 PVID Egress Untagged eth0.101 br-wan None eth0.102 102 PVID Egress Untagged eth0.102 > > - see if you can get traffic end-to-end from eth0 all the way through > one of the external switch port. If that's the case, that means that the > configuration of internal switch port 0, internal switch CPU port, and > external switch external port is working and operational > > [1]: > https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/commit/?id=e47112d9d6009bf6b7438cedc0270316d6b0370d > >> VLAN102 = wan eth0.102 >> >> Reading configs from the factory firmware, I'm sure that sw0port0 and> sw1port8 are connected. Excerpt from the same: >> >> port_numbers=0 2 4 2 1 3 1 3 >> port_switch_id=1 1 1 0 1 1 0 0 >> port_names=port0 port1 port2 port3 port4 port5 port6 port7 > > Is 0 the identifier for the external or internal switch? If 0 is > internal switch identifier and 1 is the external switch identifier, your > mapping looks correct to me with one exception below: 0 is internal here. > >> cpu_port_number=5 7 8 >> cpu_port_switch_id=0 0 0 >> hidden_port_numbers=0 8 >> hidden_port_switch_id=0 1 >> >> Below is my updated device tree. >> >> Thanks, >> >> Vivek >> >> &srab { >> compatible = "brcm,bcm53012-srab", "brcm,bcm5301x-srab"; >> status = "okay"; >> dsa,member = <0 0>; >> >> ports { >> #address-cells = <1>; >> #size-cells = <0>; >> >> port@1 { >> reg = <1>; >> label = "lan7"; >> }; >> >> port@2 { >> reg = <2>; >> label = "lan4"; >> }; >> >> port@3 { >> reg = <3>; >> label = "lan8"; >> }; >> >> port@4 { >> reg = <4>; >> label = "wan"; >> }; >> >> port@5 { >> reg = <5>; >> ethernet = <&gmac0>; >> label = "cpu"; >> >> fixed-link { >> >> speed = <1000>; >> full-duplex; >> }; >> }; > > I think this is meant to be port 8 here based on the hidden_port_number > value. This actually matters for VLAN configuration because B53 is not > (unfortunately, to be fixed) consistently using dst->cpu_port (whatever > is configured in Device Tree) vs. dev->cpu_port (hardcoded to 8 for this > class of switch). When I connect to port 8 I receive no packets on internal switch. > > PS: on that front, we will have to rework that when we bring multiple > CPU port support in DSA/B53/bcm_sf2 and so for now what we could do is > just check that the configured CPU port in Device Tree is a valid CPU > port for that switch (typically 5, 7 or 8), and if not, just issue a > warning. > >> >> sw0port0: port@0 { >> reg = <0>; >> label = "extswitch"; >> >> fixed-link { >> speed = <1000>; >> full-duplex; >> }; > > There might be some additional configuration needed here for this port, > because by default, the port will most likely try to use its built-in > PHY and maybe that's what they did, they wired the built-in PHY directly > to the IMP port of the external switch. Do you know what that configuration might be? Thanks, Vivek
Florian, On Thu, Jun 29, 2017 at 5:04 PM, Vivek Unune <npcomplete13@gmail.com> wrote: > Florian, > >>> I have managed to use DSA driver and was able detect both internal and >>> external switches. However, I only get packets flowing only through the >>> internal switch. I have used the ip & bridge commands to setup the vlan >>> 101 & 102 for lan and wan respectively. >>> >>> VLAN101 = lan1 lan2 lan3 lan4 lan5 lan6 lan7 lan8 eth0.101 >> >> That looks reasonable although keep in mind that the IMP/CPU interfaces >> of the switch are configured with VLAN tags (see commit [1]), so you may >> need to make sure that port 0 of the internal switch is not accidentally >> configured back to untagged since that would cause problem when >> terminating the VLAN tag on the SW side. >> >> So here are a few things that you want to check: >> >> - read the MIB counters from the "extswitch" interface and see if >> packets flow through in both directions with no errors > > lan4 is on internal switch, lan1 on external. I cannot ping router from lan1 > > Inter- | Receive | Transmit > face |bytes packets errs drop|bytes packets errs drop > br-lan: 168590 1726 0 0 190542 753 0 0 > extswitch: 0 0 0 0 101012 1221 0 0 > lan1: 0 0 0 0 5382 111 0 0 > lan4: 0 0 0 0 1306680 13909 0 0 > eth0: 3276924 5539 0 0 1106135 5084 0 0 > eth0.101: 169338 1732 0 0 190256 750 0 0 > eth0.102: 2959522 3274 0 0 587248 1094 0 0 > lo: 39390 502 0 0 39390 502 0 0 > br-wan: 2956822 3254 0 0 587248 1094 0 0 > Please ignore above mib counters. I noticed that I see lot of RxFCSErrors and RxSymbolErrors for extswitch. The count for both counters always remain same. root@LEDE:/# ethtool -S extswitch NIC statistics: tx_packets: 212 tx_bytes: 19179 rx_packets: 0 rx_bytes: 0 TxOctets: 14403 TxDropPkts: 0 TxBroadcastPkts: 24 TxMulticastPkts: 122 TxUnicastPkts: 0 TxCollisions: 0 TxSingleCollision: 0 TxMultipleCollision: 0 TxDeferredTransmit: 0 TxLateCollision: 0 TxExcessiveCollision: 0 TxPausePkts: 0 RxOctets: 3593 RxUndersizePkts: 0 RxPausePkts: 0 Pkts64Octets: 0 Pkts65to127Octets: 36 Pkts128to255Octets: 1 Pkts256to511Octets: 0 Pkts512to1023Octets: 0 Pkts1024to1522Octets: 0 RxOversizePkts: 0 RxJabbers: 0 RxAlignmentErrors: 0 RxFCSErrors: 37 RxGoodOctets: 0 RxDropPkts: 0 RxUnicastPkts: 0 RxMulticastPkts: 0 RxBroadcastPkts: 0 RxSAChanges: 0 RxFragments: 0 RxJumboPkts: 0 RxSymbolErrors: 37 RxDiscarded: 0 p08_TxOctets: 47537 p08_TxDropPkts: 0 p08_TxBroadcastPkts: 163 p08_TxMulticastPkts: 319 p08_TxUnicastPkts: 0 p08_TxCollisions: 0 p08_TxSingleCollision: 0 p08_TxMultipleCollision: 0 p08_TxDeferredTransmit: 0 p08_TxLateCollision: 0 p08_TxExcessiveCollision: 0 p08_TxPausePkts: 0 p08_RxOctets: 14403 p08_RxUndersizePkts: 0 p08_RxPausePkts: 0 p08_Pkts64Octets: 25 p08_Pkts65to127Octets: 102 p08_Pkts128to255Octets: 17 p08_Pkts256to511Octets: 2 p08_Pkts512to1023Octets: 0 p08_Pkts1024to1522Octets: 0 p08_RxOversizePkts: 0 p08_RxJabbers: 0 p08_RxAlignmentErrors: 0 p08_RxFCSErrors: 0 p08_RxGoodOctets: 14403 p08_RxDropPkts: 0 p08_RxUnicastPkts: 0 p08_RxMulticastPkts: 122 p08_RxBroadcastPkts: 24 p08_RxSAChanges: 40 p08_RxFragments: 0 p08_RxJumboPkts: 0 p08_RxSymbolErrors: 0 p08_RxDiscarded: 146 >> >> - check the "extswitch" VLAN configuration on both the internal switch >> side (port 0) and on the external switch side ("cpu", port 8, not visible) > > #bridge vlan show > port vlan ids > extswitch None > extswitch > lan7 101 PVID Egress Untagged > lan7 101 PVID Egress Untagged > lan4 101 PVID Egress Untagged > lan4 101 PVID Egress Untagged > lan8 101 PVID Egress Untagged > lan8 101 PVID Egress Untagged > wan 102 PVID Egress Untagged > wan 102 PVID Egress Untagged > lan1 101 PVID Egress Untagged > lan1 101 PVID Egress Untagged > lan5 101 PVID Egress Untagged > lan5 101 PVID Egress Untagged > lan2 101 PVID Egress Untagged > lan2 101 PVID Egress Untagged > lan6 101 PVID Egress Untagged > lan6 101 PVID Egress Untagged > lan3 101 PVID Egress Untagged > lan3 101 PVID Egress Untagged > br-lan None > eth0.101 101 PVID Egress Untagged > eth0.101 > br-wan None > eth0.102 102 PVID Egress Untagged > eth0.102 > >> >> - see if you can get traffic end-to-end from eth0 all the way through >> one of the external switch port. If that's the case, that means that the >> configuration of internal switch port 0, internal switch CPU port, and >> external switch external port is working and operational >> >> [1]: >> https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/commit/?id=e47112d9d6009bf6b7438cedc0270316d6b0370d >> >>> VLAN102 = wan eth0.102 >>> >>> Reading configs from the factory firmware, I'm sure that sw0port0 and> sw1port8 are connected. Excerpt from the same: >>> >>> port_numbers=0 2 4 2 1 3 1 3 >>> port_switch_id=1 1 1 0 1 1 0 0 >>> port_names=port0 port1 port2 port3 port4 port5 port6 port7 >> >> Is 0 the identifier for the external or internal switch? If 0 is >> internal switch identifier and 1 is the external switch identifier, your >> mapping looks correct to me with one exception below: > > 0 is internal here. > >> >>> cpu_port_number=5 7 8 >>> cpu_port_switch_id=0 0 0 >>> hidden_port_numbers=0 8 >>> hidden_port_switch_id=0 1 >>> >>> Below is my updated device tree. >>> >>> Thanks, >>> >>> Vivek >>> >>> &srab { >>> compatible = "brcm,bcm53012-srab", "brcm,bcm5301x-srab"; >>> status = "okay"; >>> dsa,member = <0 0>; >>> >>> ports { >>> #address-cells = <1>; >>> #size-cells = <0>; >>> >>> port@1 { >>> reg = <1>; >>> label = "lan7"; >>> }; >>> >>> port@2 { >>> reg = <2>; >>> label = "lan4"; >>> }; >>> >>> port@3 { >>> reg = <3>; >>> label = "lan8"; >>> }; >>> >>> port@4 { >>> reg = <4>; >>> label = "wan"; >>> }; >>> >>> port@5 { >>> reg = <5>; >>> ethernet = <&gmac0>; >>> label = "cpu"; >>> >>> fixed-link { >>> >>> speed = <1000>; >>> full-duplex; >>> }; >>> }; >> >> I think this is meant to be port 8 here based on the hidden_port_number >> value. This actually matters for VLAN configuration because B53 is not >> (unfortunately, to be fixed) consistently using dst->cpu_port (whatever >> is configured in Device Tree) vs. dev->cpu_port (hardcoded to 8 for this >> class of switch). > > When I connect to port 8 I receive no packets on internal switch. I'm able to now use sw0port8 <-> eth2 (i.e use cpu port 8 to connect to gmac2). For this I had to modify net/dsa/b53/b53_common.c (see below). This is how it is setup in net/phy/b53/b53_common.c. Also need to set cpu_port = B53_CPU_PORT for 53012 sw instead of B53_CPU_PORT_25 @@ -357,9 +357,11 @@ static void b53_enable_vlan(struct b53_d b53_read8(dev, B53_VLAN_PAGE, B53_VLAN_CTRL5, &vc5); } - mgmt &= ~SM_SW_FWD_MODE; if (enable) { + + mgmt |= SM_SW_FWD_MODE; + vc0 |= VC0_VLAN_EN | VC0_VID_CHK_EN | VC0_VID_HASH_VID; vc1 |= VC1_RX_MCST_UNTAG_EN | VC1_RX_MCST_FWD_EN; vc4 &= ~VC4_ING_VID_CHECK_MASK; > >> >> PS: on that front, we will have to rework that when we bring multiple >> CPU port support in DSA/B53/bcm_sf2 and so for now what we could do is >> just check that the configured CPU port in Device Tree is a valid CPU >> port for that switch (typically 5, 7 or 8), and if not, just issue a >> warning. >> >>> >>> sw0port0: port@0 { >>> reg = <0>; >>> label = "extswitch"; >>> >>> fixed-link { >>> speed = <1000>; >>> full-duplex; >>> }; >> >> There might be some additional configuration needed here for this port, >> because by default, the port will most likely try to use its built-in >> PHY and maybe that's what they did, they wired the built-in PHY directly >> to the IMP port of the external switch. > > Do you know what that configuration might be? Given that I see RxFCSErrors and RxSymbolErrors errors wrt extswitch. configuration definitely needs tweaking. I tried setting the phy-mode to rgmii and rgmii-txid but no go. Thanks, Vivek
On 08/13/2017 09:44 PM, Vivek Unune wrote: > Florian, > > On Thu, Jun 29, 2017 at 5:04 PM, Vivek Unune <npcomplete13@gmail.com> wrote: >> Florian, >> >>>> I have managed to use DSA driver and was able detect both internal and >>>> external switches. However, I only get packets flowing only through the >>>> internal switch. I have used the ip & bridge commands to setup the vlan >>>> 101 & 102 for lan and wan respectively. >>>> >>>> VLAN101 = lan1 lan2 lan3 lan4 lan5 lan6 lan7 lan8 eth0.101 >>> >>> That looks reasonable although keep in mind that the IMP/CPU interfaces >>> of the switch are configured with VLAN tags (see commit [1]), so you may >>> need to make sure that port 0 of the internal switch is not accidentally >>> configured back to untagged since that would cause problem when >>> terminating the VLAN tag on the SW side. >>> >>> So here are a few things that you want to check: >>> >>> - read the MIB counters from the "extswitch" interface and see if >>> packets flow through in both directions with no errors >> >> lan4 is on internal switch, lan1 on external. I cannot ping router from lan1 >> >> Inter- | Receive | Transmit >> face |bytes packets errs drop|bytes packets errs drop >> br-lan: 168590 1726 0 0 190542 753 0 0 >> extswitch: 0 0 0 0 101012 1221 0 0 >> lan1: 0 0 0 0 5382 111 0 0 >> lan4: 0 0 0 0 1306680 13909 0 0 >> eth0: 3276924 5539 0 0 1106135 5084 0 0 >> eth0.101: 169338 1732 0 0 190256 750 0 0 >> eth0.102: 2959522 3274 0 0 587248 1094 0 0 >> lo: 39390 502 0 0 39390 502 0 0 >> br-wan: 2956822 3254 0 0 587248 1094 0 0 >> > > Please ignore above mib counters. I noticed that I see lot of RxFCSErrors > and RxSymbolErrors for extswitch. The count for both counters always > remain same. Yes that is not exactly good, it means that the RGMII interface between the internal and external switches is not properly configured. > > root@LEDE:/# ethtool -S extswitch > NIC statistics: > tx_packets: 212 > tx_bytes: 19179 > rx_packets: 0 > rx_bytes: 0 > TxOctets: 14403 > TxDropPkts: 0 > TxBroadcastPkts: 24 > TxMulticastPkts: 122 > TxUnicastPkts: 0 > TxCollisions: 0 > TxSingleCollision: 0 > TxMultipleCollision: 0 > TxDeferredTransmit: 0 > TxLateCollision: 0 > TxExcessiveCollision: 0 > TxPausePkts: 0 > RxOctets: 3593 > RxUndersizePkts: 0 > RxPausePkts: 0 > Pkts64Octets: 0 > Pkts65to127Octets: 36 > Pkts128to255Octets: 1 > Pkts256to511Octets: 0 > Pkts512to1023Octets: 0 > Pkts1024to1522Octets: 0 > RxOversizePkts: 0 > RxJabbers: 0 > RxAlignmentErrors: 0 > RxFCSErrors: 37 > RxGoodOctets: 0 > RxDropPkts: 0 > RxUnicastPkts: 0 > RxMulticastPkts: 0 > RxBroadcastPkts: 0 > RxSAChanges: 0 > RxFragments: 0 > RxJumboPkts: 0 > RxSymbolErrors: 37 > RxDiscarded: 0 > p08_TxOctets: 47537 > p08_TxDropPkts: 0 > p08_TxBroadcastPkts: 163 > p08_TxMulticastPkts: 319 > p08_TxUnicastPkts: 0 > p08_TxCollisions: 0 > p08_TxSingleCollision: 0 > p08_TxMultipleCollision: 0 > p08_TxDeferredTransmit: 0 > p08_TxLateCollision: 0 > p08_TxExcessiveCollision: 0 > p08_TxPausePkts: 0 > p08_RxOctets: 14403 > p08_RxUndersizePkts: 0 > p08_RxPausePkts: 0 > p08_Pkts64Octets: 25 > p08_Pkts65to127Octets: 102 > p08_Pkts128to255Octets: 17 > p08_Pkts256to511Octets: 2 > p08_Pkts512to1023Octets: 0 > p08_Pkts1024to1522Octets: 0 > p08_RxOversizePkts: 0 > p08_RxJabbers: 0 > p08_RxAlignmentErrors: 0 > p08_RxFCSErrors: 0 > p08_RxGoodOctets: 14403 > p08_RxDropPkts: 0 > p08_RxUnicastPkts: 0 > p08_RxMulticastPkts: 122 > p08_RxBroadcastPkts: 24 > p08_RxSAChanges: 40 > p08_RxFragments: 0 > p08_RxJumboPkts: 0 > p08_RxSymbolErrors: 0 > p08_RxDiscarded: 146 > > >>> >>> - check the "extswitch" VLAN configuration on both the internal switch >>> side (port 0) and on the external switch side ("cpu", port 8, not visible) >> >> #bridge vlan show >> port vlan ids >> extswitch None >> extswitch >> lan7 101 PVID Egress Untagged >> lan7 101 PVID Egress Untagged >> lan4 101 PVID Egress Untagged >> lan4 101 PVID Egress Untagged >> lan8 101 PVID Egress Untagged >> lan8 101 PVID Egress Untagged >> wan 102 PVID Egress Untagged >> wan 102 PVID Egress Untagged >> lan1 101 PVID Egress Untagged >> lan1 101 PVID Egress Untagged >> lan5 101 PVID Egress Untagged >> lan5 101 PVID Egress Untagged >> lan2 101 PVID Egress Untagged >> lan2 101 PVID Egress Untagged >> lan6 101 PVID Egress Untagged >> lan6 101 PVID Egress Untagged >> lan3 101 PVID Egress Untagged >> lan3 101 PVID Egress Untagged >> br-lan None >> eth0.101 101 PVID Egress Untagged >> eth0.101 >> br-wan None >> eth0.102 102 PVID Egress Untagged >> eth0.102 >> >>> >>> - see if you can get traffic end-to-end from eth0 all the way through >>> one of the external switch port. If that's the case, that means that the >>> configuration of internal switch port 0, internal switch CPU port, and >>> external switch external port is working and operational >>> >>> [1]: >>> https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/commit/?id=e47112d9d6009bf6b7438cedc0270316d6b0370d >>> >>>> VLAN102 = wan eth0.102 >>>> >>>> Reading configs from the factory firmware, I'm sure that sw0port0 and> sw1port8 are connected. Excerpt from the same: >>>> >>>> port_numbers=0 2 4 2 1 3 1 3 >>>> port_switch_id=1 1 1 0 1 1 0 0 >>>> port_names=port0 port1 port2 port3 port4 port5 port6 port7 >>> >>> Is 0 the identifier for the external or internal switch? If 0 is >>> internal switch identifier and 1 is the external switch identifier, your >>> mapping looks correct to me with one exception below: >> >> 0 is internal here. >> >>> >>>> cpu_port_number=5 7 8 >>>> cpu_port_switch_id=0 0 0 >>>> hidden_port_numbers=0 8 >>>> hidden_port_switch_id=0 1 >>>> >>>> Below is my updated device tree. >>>> >>>> Thanks, >>>> >>>> Vivek >>>> >>>> &srab { >>>> compatible = "brcm,bcm53012-srab", "brcm,bcm5301x-srab"; >>>> status = "okay"; >>>> dsa,member = <0 0>; >>>> >>>> ports { >>>> #address-cells = <1>; >>>> #size-cells = <0>; >>>> >>>> port@1 { >>>> reg = <1>; >>>> label = "lan7"; >>>> }; >>>> >>>> port@2 { >>>> reg = <2>; >>>> label = "lan4"; >>>> }; >>>> >>>> port@3 { >>>> reg = <3>; >>>> label = "lan8"; >>>> }; >>>> >>>> port@4 { >>>> reg = <4>; >>>> label = "wan"; >>>> }; >>>> >>>> port@5 { >>>> reg = <5>; >>>> ethernet = <&gmac0>; >>>> label = "cpu"; >>>> >>>> fixed-link { >>>> >>>> speed = <1000>; >>>> full-duplex; >>>> }; >>>> }; >>> >>> I think this is meant to be port 8 here based on the hidden_port_number >>> value. This actually matters for VLAN configuration because B53 is not >>> (unfortunately, to be fixed) consistently using dst->cpu_port (whatever >>> is configured in Device Tree) vs. dev->cpu_port (hardcoded to 8 for this >>> class of switch). >> >> When I connect to port 8 I receive no packets on internal switch. > > I'm able to now use sw0port8 <-> eth2 (i.e use cpu port 8 to connect to gmac2). > For this I had to modify net/dsa/b53/b53_common.c (see below). This is how > it is setup in net/phy/b53/b53_common.c. Also need to set > cpu_port = B53_CPU_PORT for 53012 sw instead of B53_CPU_PORT_25 I actually plan to remove the use cpu_port entirely, or actually only use it as a "hint" of which CPU ports are capable of supporting Broadcom tags. A better change for now would be not to use dev->cpu_port, but instead use ds->dst->cpu_dp->index like what b53_br_join() does. > > @@ -357,9 +357,11 @@ static void b53_enable_vlan(struct b53_d > b53_read8(dev, B53_VLAN_PAGE, B53_VLAN_CTRL5, &vc5); > } > > - mgmt &= ~SM_SW_FWD_MODE; > > if (enable) { > + > + mgmt |= SM_SW_FWD_MODE; > + Humm, that I don't really understand because this is turning on managed mode which only influences how multicast addresses are processed, it should not make a different for non-MC traffic AFAICT. > vc0 |= VC0_VLAN_EN | VC0_VID_CHK_EN | VC0_VID_HASH_VID; > vc1 |= VC1_RX_MCST_UNTAG_EN | VC1_RX_MCST_FWD_EN; > vc4 &= ~VC4_ING_VID_CHECK_MASK; > >> >>> >>> PS: on that front, we will have to rework that when we bring multiple >>> CPU port support in DSA/B53/bcm_sf2 and so for now what we could do is >>> just check that the configured CPU port in Device Tree is a valid CPU >>> port for that switch (typically 5, 7 or 8), and if not, just issue a >>> warning. >>> >>>> >>>> sw0port0: port@0 { >>>> reg = <0>; >>>> label = "extswitch"; >>>> >>>> fixed-link { >>>> speed = <1000>; >>>> full-duplex; >>>> }; >>> >>> There might be some additional configuration needed here for this port, >>> because by default, the port will most likely try to use its built-in >>> PHY and maybe that's what they did, they wired the built-in PHY directly >>> to the IMP port of the external switch. >> >> Do you know what that configuration might be? > > Given that I see RxFCSErrors and RxSymbolErrors errors wrt extswitch. > configuration definitely needs tweaking. I tried setting the phy-mode to > rgmii and rgmii-txid but no go. Configuration may have to be tuned on both switches unfortunately because both RGMII interfaces would have the ability to configure delays. Do you have a way to dump what the original firmware settings for the register that b53_adjust_link() modifies such that we can see what was previous configured? Thanks!
On Mon, Aug 14, 2017 at 12:37 PM, Florian Fainelli <f.fainelli@gmail.com> wrote: >> >> Please ignore above mib counters. I noticed that I see lot of RxFCSErrors >> and RxSymbolErrors for extswitch. The count for both counters always >> remain same. > > Yes that is not exactly good, it means that the RGMII interface between > the internal and external switches is not properly configured. It appears that I do not need to set any phy-mode on internal sw's port 0 or external sw's port 8. Also, you were right about internal port 0 to be configured as tagged member of the vlan. It was indeed set to untagged! LEDE lacks aw way to configure this. But I can do this via a post script. After making above changes I was able to ping the router using physical port on external switch. However, the ping dies out after few seconds. I'm try to figure out the cause for this. Al least, I have some connectivity! > >> >> root@LEDE:/# ethtool -S extswitch >> NIC statistics: >> tx_packets: 212 >> tx_bytes: 19179 >> rx_packets: 0 >> rx_bytes: 0 >> TxOctets: 14403 >> TxDropPkts: 0 >> TxBroadcastPkts: 24 >> TxMulticastPkts: 122 >> TxUnicastPkts: 0 >> TxCollisions: 0 >> TxSingleCollision: 0 >> TxMultipleCollision: 0 >> TxDeferredTransmit: 0 >> TxLateCollision: 0 >> TxExcessiveCollision: 0 >> TxPausePkts: 0 >> RxOctets: 3593 >> RxUndersizePkts: 0 >> RxPausePkts: 0 >> Pkts64Octets: 0 >> Pkts65to127Octets: 36 >> Pkts128to255Octets: 1 >> Pkts256to511Octets: 0 >> Pkts512to1023Octets: 0 >> Pkts1024to1522Octets: 0 >> RxOversizePkts: 0 >> RxJabbers: 0 >> RxAlignmentErrors: 0 >> RxFCSErrors: 37 >> RxGoodOctets: 0 >> RxDropPkts: 0 >> RxUnicastPkts: 0 >> RxMulticastPkts: 0 >> RxBroadcastPkts: 0 >> RxSAChanges: 0 >> RxFragments: 0 >> RxJumboPkts: 0 >> RxSymbolErrors: 37 >> RxDiscarded: 0 >> p08_TxOctets: 47537 >> p08_TxDropPkts: 0 >> p08_TxBroadcastPkts: 163 >> p08_TxMulticastPkts: 319 >> p08_TxUnicastPkts: 0 >> p08_TxCollisions: 0 >> p08_TxSingleCollision: 0 >> p08_TxMultipleCollision: 0 >> p08_TxDeferredTransmit: 0 >> p08_TxLateCollision: 0 >> p08_TxExcessiveCollision: 0 >> p08_TxPausePkts: 0 >> p08_RxOctets: 14403 >> p08_RxUndersizePkts: 0 >> p08_RxPausePkts: 0 >> p08_Pkts64Octets: 25 >> p08_Pkts65to127Octets: 102 >> p08_Pkts128to255Octets: 17 >> p08_Pkts256to511Octets: 2 >> p08_Pkts512to1023Octets: 0 >> p08_Pkts1024to1522Octets: 0 >> p08_RxOversizePkts: 0 >> p08_RxJabbers: 0 >> p08_RxAlignmentErrors: 0 >> p08_RxFCSErrors: 0 >> p08_RxGoodOctets: 14403 >> p08_RxDropPkts: 0 >> p08_RxUnicastPkts: 0 >> p08_RxMulticastPkts: 122 >> p08_RxBroadcastPkts: 24 >> p08_RxSAChanges: 40 >> p08_RxFragments: 0 >> p08_RxJumboPkts: 0 >> p08_RxSymbolErrors: 0 >> p08_RxDiscarded: 146 >> >> >> >> I'm able to now use sw0port8 <-> eth2 (i.e use cpu port 8 to connect to gmac2). >> For this I had to modify net/dsa/b53/b53_common.c (see below). This is how >> it is setup in net/phy/b53/b53_common.c. Also need to set >> cpu_port = B53_CPU_PORT for 53012 sw instead of B53_CPU_PORT_25 > > I actually plan to remove the use cpu_port entirely, or actually only > use it as a "hint" of which CPU ports are capable of supporting Broadcom > tags. A better change for now would be not to use dev->cpu_port, but > instead use ds->dst->cpu_dp->index like what b53_br_join() does. This will be quite helpful as current implementation creates some confusion when there are more than one cpu ports. > >> >> @@ -357,9 +357,11 @@ static void b53_enable_vlan(struct b53_d >> b53_read8(dev, B53_VLAN_PAGE, B53_VLAN_CTRL5, &vc5); >> } >> >> - mgmt &= ~SM_SW_FWD_MODE; >> >> if (enable) { >> + >> + mgmt |= SM_SW_FWD_MODE; >> + > > Humm, that I don't really understand because this is turning on managed > mode which only influences how multicast addresses are processed, it > should not make a different for non-MC traffic AFAICT. I tried to remove setting of SM_SW_FWD_MODE but no go. Even GPL source sets it for 53012. For now I'll leave it until I get back to it. > Configuration may have to be tuned on both switches unfortunately > because both RGMII interfaces would have the ability to configure > delays. Do you have a way to dump what the original firmware settings > for the register that b53_adjust_link() modifies such that we can see > what was previous configured? > > Thanks! > -- > Florian Thanks for your time!! Vivek
diff --git a/arch/arm/boot/dts/bcm47094-linksys-panamera.dts b/arch/arm/boot/dts/bcm47094-linksys-panamera.dts index b6750f7..75537ed 100644 --- a/arch/arm/boot/dts/bcm47094-linksys-panamera.dts +++ b/arch/arm/boot/dts/bcm47094-linksys-panamera.dts @@ -7,7 +7,7 @@ /dts-v1/; #include "bcm47094.dtsi" -#include "bcm5301x-nand-cs0-bch8.dtsi" +#include "bcm5301x-nand-cs0-bch1.dtsi" / { compatible = "linksys,panamera", "brcm,bcm47094", "brcm,bcm4708"; @@ -32,5 +32,100 @@ linux,code = <KEY_WPS_BUTTON>; gpios = <&chipcommon 3 GPIO_ACTIVE_LOW>; }; + + rfkill { + label = "WiFi"; + linux,code = <KEY_RFKILL>; + gpios = <&chipcommon 16 GPIO_ACTIVE_LOW>; + }; + + reset { + label = "Reset"; + linux,code = <KEY_RESTART>; + gpios = <&chipcommon 17 GPIO_ACTIVE_LOW>; + }; + }; + + leds { + compatible = "gpio-leds"; + + wps { + label = "bcm53xx:white:wps"; + gpios = <&chipcommon 22 GPIO_ACTIVE_LOW>; + }; + + usb2 { + label = "bcm53xx:green:usb2"; + gpios = <&chipcommon 1 GPIO_ACTIVE_LOW>; + }; + + usb3 { + label = "bcm53xx:green:usb3"; + gpios = <&chipcommon 2 GPIO_ACTIVE_LOW>; + }; + + power { + label = "bcm53xx:white:power"; + gpios = <&chipcommon 4 GPIO_ACTIVE_HIGH>; + }; + + wifi-disabled { + label = "bcm53xx:amber:wifi-disabled"; + gpios = <&chipcommon 0 GPIO_ACTIVE_LOW>; + }; + + wifi-enabled { + label = "bcm53xx:white:wifi-enabled"; + gpios = <&chipcommon 5 GPIO_ACTIVE_HIGH>; + }; + + bluebar1 { + label = "bcm53xx:white:bluebar1"; + gpios = <&chipcommon 11 GPIO_ACTIVE_HIGH>; + }; + + bluebar2 { + label = "bcm53xx:white:bluebar2"; + gpios = <&chipcommon 12 GPIO_ACTIVE_HIGH>; + }; + + bluebar3 { + label = "bcm53xx:white:bluebar3"; + gpios = <&chipcommon 15 GPIO_ACTIVE_LOW>; + }; + + bluebar4 { + label = "bcm53xx:white:bluebar4"; + gpios = <&chipcommon 18 GPIO_ACTIVE_HIGH>; + }; + + bluebar5 { + label = "bcm53xx:white:bluebar5"; + gpios = <&chipcommon 19 GPIO_ACTIVE_HIGH>; + }; + + bluebar6 { + label = "bcm53xx:white:bluebar6"; + gpios = <&chipcommon 20 GPIO_ACTIVE_HIGH>; + }; + + bluebar7 { + label = "bcm53xx:white:bluebar7"; + gpios = <&chipcommon 21 GPIO_ACTIVE_HIGH>; + }; + + bluebar8 { + label = "bcm53xx:white:bluebar8"; + gpios = <&chipcommon 8 GPIO_ACTIVE_HIGH>; + }; + }; }; + +&usb2 { + vcc-gpio = <&chipcommon 13 GPIO_ACTIVE_HIGH>; +}; + +&usb3 { + vcc-gpio = <&chipcommon 14 GPIO_ACTIVE_HIGH>; +};
Hardware Info ------------- Processor - Broadcom BCM4709C0KFEBG dual-core @ 1.4 GHz Switch - BCM53012 in BCM4709C0KFEBG & external BCM53125 DDR3 RAM - 256 MB Flash - 128 MB (Toshiba TC58BVG0S3HTA00) 2.4GHz - BCM4366 4×4 2.4/5G single chip 802.11ac SoC Power Amp - Skyworks SE2623L 2.4 GHz power amp (x4) 5GHz x 2 - BCM4366 4×4 2.4/5G single chip 802.11ac SoC Power Amp - PLX Technology PEX8603 3-lane, 3-port PCIe switch Ports - 8 Ports, 1 WAN Ports Antennas - 8 Antennas Serial Port - @J6 [GND,TX,RX] (VCC NC) 115200 8n1 I was able to test this with Lede with following quirks. - Broadcom 4366c0 wireless chip is used and it's firmware package doesn't exist yet. I was able to test it with firmware that came buried in the router's dhd.ko - CPU is connected to port 5 - It has two switches in order to support 8 lan ports. Internal switch is BCM53012. The external switch BCM53125 currently works as "dumb switch" - Using 8 bit ECC gives errors, switching to 1 bit ECC solved the issue - It uses dual firmware (trx) copies for failsafe purposes. Installation ------------ Linksys gpg-signs their firmware for this router, hence it is not possible to install using Factory UI. This router needs serial cable hooked up to J6. Then interrupt the boot process by Ctrl+C to enter CFE prompt From there execute: `flash -noheader 192.168.1.10:/lede.trx nflash0.trx` where 192.168.1.10 is where your tftp server should is running. You may want to reset partial boots using `nvram set partialboot=0 && nvram commit' while at CFE prompt. TODO ---- - Add BCM53125 (secondary switch) to dts - Add robo_reset gpio (pin# 10 active low) to dts Signed-off-by: Vivek Unune <npcomplete13@gmail.com> --- arch/arm/boot/dts/bcm47094-linksys-panamera.dts | 97 ++++++++++++++++++++++++- 1 file changed, 96 insertions(+), 1 deletion(-)