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[net-next,v10,13/13] Documentation: networking: document phy_link_topology

Message ID 20240304151011.1610175-14-maxime.chevallier@bootlin.com (mailing list archive)
State Changes Requested
Delegated to: Netdev Maintainers
Headers show
Series Introduce PHY listing and link_topology tracking | expand

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netdev/fixes_present success Fixes tag not required for -next series
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netdev/contest success net-next-2024-03-05--21-00 (tests: 892)

Commit Message

Maxime Chevallier March 4, 2024, 3:10 p.m. UTC
The newly introduced phy_link_topology tracks all ethernet PHYs that are
attached to a netdevice. Document the base principle, internal and
external APIs. As the phy_link_topology is expected to be extended, this
documentation will hold any further improvements and additions made
relative to topology handling.

Signed-off-by: Maxime Chevallier <maxime.chevallier@bootlin.com>
---
V10: No changes
V9: No changes
V8: No changes
V7: No changes
V6: No changes
V5: Fixed a lot of typos
V4: No changes
V3: New patch


 Documentation/networking/index.rst            |   1 +
 .../networking/phy-link-topology.rst          | 121 ++++++++++++++++++
 2 files changed, 122 insertions(+)
 create mode 100644 Documentation/networking/phy-link-topology.rst

Comments

Jakub Kicinski March 9, 2024, 5:27 a.m. UTC | #1
We should :ref: to this doc from the PHY_GET in the ethtool one as well?

On Mon,  4 Mar 2024 16:10:09 +0100 Maxime Chevallier wrote:
> +An Ethernet Interface from userspace's point of view is nothing but a

interface

> +:c:type:`struct net_device <net_device>`, which exposes configuration options
> +through the legacy ioctls and the ethool netlink commands. The base assumption

ethtool

> +when designing these configuration channels were that the link looked

nit: s/channels/APIs/ channels sometimes means IRQs/queues in netdev :S
s/looked/looks/

> +something like this ::

s/this//

> +  +-----------------------+        +----------+      +--------------+
> +  | Ethernet Controller / |        | Ethernet |      | Connector /  |
> +  |       MAC             | ------ |   PHY    | ---- |    Port      | ---... to LP
> +  +-----------------------+        +----------+      +--------------+
> +  struct net_device               struct phy_device
> +
> +Commands that needs to configure the PHY will go through the net_device.phydev
> +field to reach the PHY and perform the relevant configuration.
> +
> +This assumption falls apart in more complex topologies that can arise when,
> +for example, using SFP transceivers (although that's not the only specific case).

s/specific/such/

> +Here, we have 2 basic scenarios. Either the MAC is able to output a serialized
> +interface, that can directly be fed to an SFP cage, such as SGMII, 1000BaseX,
> +10GBaseR, etc.

The "Either" makes me expect and "or" at some state in this paragraph..

> +The link topology then looks like this (when an SFP module is inserted) ::
> +
> +  +-----+  SGMII  +------------+
> +  | MAC | ------- | SFP Module |
> +  +-----+         +------------+
> +
> +Knowing that some modules embed a PHY, the actual link is more like ::
> +
> +  +-----+  SGMII   +--------------+
> +  | MAC | -------- | PHY (on SFP) |
> +  +-----+          +--------------+
> +
> +In this case, the SFP PHY is handled by phylib, and registered by phylink through
> +its SFP upstream ops.
> +
> +Now some Ethernet controllers aren't able to output a serialized interface, so
> +we can't directly connect them to an SFP cage. However, some PHYs can be used

s/However, some/In such cases, certain/

> +as media-converters, to translate the non-serialized MAC MII interface to a
> +serialized MII interface fed to the SFP ::
> +
> +  +-----+  RGMII  +-----------------------+  SGMII  +--------------+
> +  | MAC | ------- | PHY (media converter) | ------- | PHY (on SFP) |
> +  +-----+         +-----------------------+         +--------------+
diff mbox series

Patch

diff --git a/Documentation/networking/index.rst b/Documentation/networking/index.rst
index 69f3d6dcd9fd..a2c45a75a4a6 100644
--- a/Documentation/networking/index.rst
+++ b/Documentation/networking/index.rst
@@ -88,6 +88,7 @@  Contents:
    operstates
    packet_mmap
    phonet
+   phy-link-topology
    pktgen
    plip
    ppp_generic
diff --git a/Documentation/networking/phy-link-topology.rst b/Documentation/networking/phy-link-topology.rst
new file mode 100644
index 000000000000..1fd8e904ef4b
--- /dev/null
+++ b/Documentation/networking/phy-link-topology.rst
@@ -0,0 +1,121 @@ 
+.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0
+
+=================
+PHY link topology
+=================
+
+Overview
+========
+
+The PHY link topology representation in the networking stack aims at representing
+the hardware layout for any given Ethernet link.
+
+An Ethernet Interface from userspace's point of view is nothing but a
+:c:type:`struct net_device <net_device>`, which exposes configuration options
+through the legacy ioctls and the ethool netlink commands. The base assumption
+when designing these configuration channels were that the link looked
+something like this ::
+
+  +-----------------------+        +----------+      +--------------+
+  | Ethernet Controller / |        | Ethernet |      | Connector /  |
+  |       MAC             | ------ |   PHY    | ---- |    Port      | ---... to LP
+  +-----------------------+        +----------+      +--------------+
+  struct net_device               struct phy_device
+
+Commands that needs to configure the PHY will go through the net_device.phydev
+field to reach the PHY and perform the relevant configuration.
+
+This assumption falls apart in more complex topologies that can arise when,
+for example, using SFP transceivers (although that's not the only specific case).
+
+Here, we have 2 basic scenarios. Either the MAC is able to output a serialized
+interface, that can directly be fed to an SFP cage, such as SGMII, 1000BaseX,
+10GBaseR, etc.
+
+The link topology then looks like this (when an SFP module is inserted) ::
+
+  +-----+  SGMII  +------------+
+  | MAC | ------- | SFP Module |
+  +-----+         +------------+
+
+Knowing that some modules embed a PHY, the actual link is more like ::
+
+  +-----+  SGMII   +--------------+
+  | MAC | -------- | PHY (on SFP) |
+  +-----+          +--------------+
+
+In this case, the SFP PHY is handled by phylib, and registered by phylink through
+its SFP upstream ops.
+
+Now some Ethernet controllers aren't able to output a serialized interface, so
+we can't directly connect them to an SFP cage. However, some PHYs can be used
+as media-converters, to translate the non-serialized MAC MII interface to a
+serialized MII interface fed to the SFP ::
+
+  +-----+  RGMII  +-----------------------+  SGMII  +--------------+
+  | MAC | ------- | PHY (media converter) | ------- | PHY (on SFP) |
+  +-----+         +-----------------------+         +--------------+
+
+This is where the model of having a single net_device.phydev pointer shows its
+limitations, as we now have 2 PHYs on the link.
+
+The phy_link topology framework aims at providing a way to keep track of every
+PHY on the link, for use by both kernel drivers and subsystems, but also to
+report the topology to userspace, allowing to target individual PHYs in configuration
+commands.
+
+API
+===
+
+The :c:type:`struct phy_link_topology <phy_link_topology>` is a per-netdevice
+resource, that gets initialized at netdevice creation. Once it's initialized,
+it is then possible to register PHYs to the topology through :
+
+:c:func:`phy_link_topo_add_phy`
+
+Besides registering the PHY to the topology, this call will also assign a unique
+index to the PHY, which can then be reported to userspace to refer to this PHY
+(akin to the ifindex). This index is a u32, ranging from 1 to U32_MAX. The value
+0 is reserved to indicate the PHY doesn't belong to any topology yet.
+
+The PHY can then be removed from the topology through
+
+:c:func:`phy_link_topo_del_phy`
+
+These function are already hooked into the phylib subsystem, so all PHYs that
+are linked to a net_device through :c:func:`phy_attach_direct` will automatically
+join the netdev's topology.
+
+PHYs that are on a SFP module will also be automatically registered IF the SFP
+upstream is phylink (so, no media-converter).
+
+PHY drivers that can be used as SFP upstream need to call :c:func:`phy_sfp_attach_phy`
+and :c:func:`phy_sfp_detach_phy`, which can be used as a
+.attach_phy / .detach_phy implementation for the
+:c:type:`struct sfp_upstream_ops <sfp_upstream_ops>`.
+
+UAPI
+====
+
+There exist a set of netlink commands to query the link topology from userspace,
+see ``Documentation/networking/ethtool-netlink.rst``.
+
+The whole point of having a topology representation is to assign the phyindex
+field in :c:type:`struct phy_device <phy_device>`. This index is reported to
+userspace using the ``ETHTOOL_MSG_PHY_GET`` ethtnl command. Performing a DUMP operation
+will result in all PHYs from all net_device being listed. The DUMP command
+accepts either a ``ETHTOOL_A_HEADER_DEV_INDEX`` or ``ETHTOOL_A_HEADER_DEV_NAME``
+to be passed in the request to filter the DUMP to a single net_device.
+
+The retrieved index can then be passed as a request parameter using the
+``ETHTOOL_A_HEADER_PHY_INDEX`` field in the following ethnl commands :
+
+* ``ETHTOOL_MSG_STRSET_GET`` to get the stats string set from a given PHY
+* ``ETHTOOL_MSG_CABLE_TEST_ACT`` and ``ETHTOOL_MSG_CABLE_TEST_ACT``, to perform
+  cable testing on a given PHY on the link (most likely the outermost PHY)
+* ``ETHTOOL_MSG_PSE_SET`` and ``ETHTOOL_MSG_PSE_GET`` for PHY-controlled PoE and PSE settings
+* ``ETHTOOL_MSG_PLCA_GET_CFG``, ``ETHTOOL_MSG_PLCA_SET_CFG`` and ``ETHTOOL_MSG_PLCA_GET_STATUS``
+  to set the PLCA (Physical Layer Collision Avoidance) parameters
+
+Note that the PHY index can be passed to other requests, which will silently
+ignore it if present and irrelevant.