Re: [PATCH 09/16] tty: serial: 8250_dma: Add a TX trigger workaround for AM33xx
From: Sebastian Andrzej Siewior
Date: Sun Sep 21 2014 - 16:41:26 EST
* Frans Klaver | 2014-09-17 12:28:12 [+0200]:
>- Bone Black: Yocto poky, core-image-minimal
> Login, "less file" locks up, doesn't show anything. I can exit using
> Ctrl-C.
So I have the same with my and the serial-omap driver. No difference
here. The trace looks like this:
| <idle>-0 [000] d.h. 444.393585: serial8250_handle_irq: iir cc lsr 61
| <idle>-0 [000] d.h. 444.393605: serial8250_rx_chars: get 0d
received the enter key
| <idle>-0 [000] d.h. 444.393609: serial8250_rx_chars: insert d lsr 61
| <idle>-0 [000] d.h. 444.393614: uart_insert_char: 1
| <idle>-0 [000] d.h. 444.393617: uart_insert_char: 2
| <idle>-0 [000] dnh. 444.393636: serial8250_tx_chars: empty
| kworker/0:2-753 [000] d... 444.393686: serial8250_start_tx: empty?1
| kworker/0:2-753 [000] d.h. 444.393699: serial8250_handle_irq: iir c2 lsr 60
| kworker/0:2-753 [000] d.h. 444.393705: serial8250_tx_chars: empty
| sh-1042 [000] d... 444.393822: serial8250_start_tx: empty?1
| sh-1042 [000] d.h. 444.393836: serial8250_handle_irq: iir c2 lsr 60
| sh-1042 [000] d.h. 444.393842: serial8250_tx_chars: empty
| sh-1042 [000] d... 444.393855: serial8250_start_tx: empty?0
| sh-1042 [000] d.h. 444.393863: serial8250_handle_irq: iir c2 lsr 60
| sh-1042 [000] d.h. 444.393867: serial8250_tx_chars: put 0d
| sh-1042 [000] d.h. 444.393871: serial8250_tx_chars: put 0a
shell responded with "\r\n" which I see and then
| sh-1042 [000] d.h. 444.394057: serial8250_handle_irq: iir c2 lsr 60
| sh-1042 [000] d.h. 444.394065: serial8250_tx_chars: empty
nothing more. less isn't sending data for some reason. Exactly the same
thing happens in a Debian environment except that it continues:
â
| bash-2468 [000] d.h. 99.657899: serial8250_tx_chars: put 0a
| bash-2468 [000] d.h. 99.658089: serial8250_handle_irq: iir c2 lsr 60
| bash-2468 [000] d.h. 99.658095: serial8250_tx_chars: empty
=>
| less-2474 [000] d... 99.696038: serial8250_start_tx: empty?0
| less-2474 [000] d.h. 99.696069: serial8250_handle_irq: iir c2 lsr 60
| less-2474 [000] d.h. 99.696078: serial8250_tx_chars: put 1b
| less-2474 [000] d.h. 99.696082: serial8250_tx_chars: put 5b
| less-2474 [000] d.h. 99.696085: serial8250_tx_chars: put 3f
| less-2474 [000] d.h. 99.696087: serial8250_tx_chars: put 31
It has to be something about the environment. Booting Debian and chroot
into this RFS and less works perfectly. But since it behaves like that
with both drivers, I guess the problem is somewhere elseâ
> vi runs normally, only occupies part of the total screen estate in
> minicom. After quitting, a weird character shows up (typically I see
> Ã there), but minicom can use the rest of the screen estate again.
> If we disregard the odd character, this is much like the behavior we
> have on the omap-serial driver.
>- Custom board: Yocto poky, custom image
> Login, "less file" locks up, showing only "Ã" in the top left corner
> of the screen. Can get out of there by having something dumped through
> /dev/kmsg.
I managed to run into something like that with vi on dra7 and with
little more patience on am335x as well by "vi *" and then ":n".
This gets fixed indeed by writing. Hours of debugging and a lot of hair
less later: the yocto RFS calls set_termios quite a lot. This includes
changing the baudrate (not by yocto but the driver sets it to 0 and then
to the requested one) and this seems to be responsible for the "bad
bytes". I haven't figured out yet I don't see this with omap-serial.
Even worse: If this (set_termios()) happens while the DMA is still
active then it might stall it. A write into the FIFO seems to fix it and
this is where your "echo >/dev/kmsg" fixes things.
If I delay the restore_registers part of set_termios() until TX-DMA is
complete then it seems that the TX-DMA stall does not tall anymore.
>Having it summed up like this, I think we're back at ncurses and its
>interaction with the serial driver.
>
>Hope this helps. Thanks for your effort so far,
>Frans
Sebastian
--
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in
the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/