diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'drivers/net/ethernet/sfc/farch.c')
-rw-r--r-- | drivers/net/ethernet/sfc/farch.c | 22 |
1 files changed, 22 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/drivers/net/ethernet/sfc/farch.c b/drivers/net/ethernet/sfc/farch.c index a08761360cdf..0537381cd2f6 100644 --- a/drivers/net/ethernet/sfc/farch.c +++ b/drivers/net/ethernet/sfc/farch.c @@ -741,6 +741,28 @@ int efx_farch_fini_dmaq(struct efx_nic *efx) return rc; } +/* Reset queue and flush accounting after FLR + * + * One possible cause of FLR recovery is that DMA may be failing (eg. if bus + * mastering was disabled), in which case we don't receive (RXQ) flush + * completion events. This means that efx->rxq_flush_outstanding remained at 4 + * after the FLR; also, efx->active_queues was non-zero (as no flush completion + * events were received, and we didn't go through efx_check_tx_flush_complete()) + * If we don't fix this up, on the next call to efx_realloc_channels() we won't + * flush any RX queues because efx->rxq_flush_outstanding is at the limit of 4 + * for batched flush requests; and the efx->active_queues gets messed up because + * we keep incrementing for the newly initialised queues, but it never went to + * zero previously. Then we get a timeout every time we try to restart the + * queues, as it doesn't go back to zero when we should be flushing the queues. + */ +void efx_farch_finish_flr(struct efx_nic *efx) +{ + atomic_set(&efx->rxq_flush_pending, 0); + atomic_set(&efx->rxq_flush_outstanding, 0); + atomic_set(&efx->active_queues, 0); +} + + /************************************************************************** * * Event queue processing |