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Date:      Sat, 10 Jan 2009 19:10:05 GMT
From:      Sean Bruno <sean.bruno@dsl-only.net>
To:        freebsd-bugs@FreeBSD.org
Subject:   Re: kern/118093: [firewire] firewire bus reset hogs CPU, causing data to be lost
Message-ID:  <200901101910.n0AJA5cE096440@freefall.freebsd.org>

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The following reply was made to PR kern/118093; it has been noted by GNATS.

From: Sean Bruno <sean.bruno@dsl-only.net>
To: Dieter <freebsd@sopwith.solgatos.com>
Cc: bug-followup@FreeBSD.org, freebsd-firewire@FreeBSD.org
Subject: Re: kern/118093: [firewire] firewire bus reset hogs CPU, causing
 data to be lost
Date: Sat, 10 Jan 2009 10:54:37 -0800

 On Tue, 2009-01-06 at 09:33 +0000, Dieter wrote:
 > In message <1231222803.21260.17.camel@localhost.localdomain>, Sean Bruno writes:
 > 
 > > > >  	uint32_t fun;
 > > > >  
 > > > > +	FW_GLOCK(fc);
 > > > >  	device_printf(fc->dev, "Initiate bus reset\n");
 > > > >  	sc = (struct fwohci_softc *)fc;
 > > > >  
 > > > > @@ -2487,6 +2495,7 @@
 > > > >  	fun |= FW_PHY_ISBR | FW_PHY_RHB;
 > > > >  	fun = fwphy_wrdata(sc, FW_PHY_ISBR_REG, fun);
 > > > >  #endif
 > > > > +	FW_GUNLOCK(fc);
 > > > >  }
 > > > 
 > > > Does the lock need to protect the printf?
 > > 
 > > These are gross, overpowered, way to heavy handed locks that I'm playing
 > > with.  I need to prevent pre-emption of certain events while they are in
 > > progress.  One of these events is the firewire's assertion of "bus
 > > reset" on the firewire device.  I see the h/w interrupt firing before
 > > this code can actually complete, causing the driver to be confused on
 > > occasion.
 > 
 > I understand the basic concept of locking, or at least I did many many years
 > ago when spls really were levels.  Since then they changed spls to not be levels
 > (at least that's what the man page says) and later replaced with mutex.  I assume
 > these changes are at least in part to better support SMP.
 > 
 > What I don't understand is things like getting a lock and immediately releasing
 > it, which appears to me to protect nothing.  Or why the printf needs to be inside
 > the locked section of code.  I thought the goal was to hold a lock for as short a
 > time as possible, and it is not clear to me why the printf needs to be protected.
 
 The printf DOES NOT need protection at all.  You are absolutely correct.
 
 The lock should be moved lower in the function for sure.  This is just
 my attempt to see if I am looking at the same problem you are reporting.
 Conceptually, I am trying to keep the h/w interrupt which fires during a
 bus reset from preempting this function and executing before this
 function is finished.
 
 The acquisition of the lock and release keeps the interrupt handler from
 executing before the setting of bus reset is finished.  I hope to fine
 tune the locks after I have confirmed operational goodness.
 
 Sean
 



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