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Date:      Tue, 3 Apr 2012 08:51:43 -0400
From:      John Baldwin <jhb@freebsd.org>
To:        Doug Ambrisko <ambrisko@ambrisko.com>
Cc:        freebsd-stable@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: [stable-ish 9] Dell R815 ipmi(4) attach failure
Message-ID:  <201204030851.43785.jhb@freebsd.org>
In-Reply-To: <201204022327.q32NRDG7070099@ambrisko.com>
References:  <201204022327.q32NRDG7070099@ambrisko.com>

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On Monday, April 02, 2012 7:27:13 pm Doug Ambrisko wrote:
> Doug Ambrisko writes:
> | John Baldwin writes:
> | | On Saturday, March 31, 2012 3:25:48 pm Doug Ambrisko wrote:
> | | > Sean Bruno writes:
> | | > | Noting a failure to attach to the onboard IPMI controller with this 
dell
> | | > | R815.  Not sure what to start poking at and thought I'd though this 
over
> | | > | here for comment.
> | | > | 
> | | > | -bash-4.2$ dmesg |grep ipmi
> | | > | ipmi0: KCS mode found at io 0xca8 on acpi
> | | > | ipmi1: <IPMI System Interface> on isa0
> | | > | device_attach: ipmi1 attach returned 16
> | | > | ipmi1: <IPMI System Interface> on isa0
> | | > | device_attach: ipmi1 attach returned 16
> | | > | ipmi0: Timed out waiting for GET_DEVICE_ID
> | | > 
> | | > I've run into this recently.  A quick hack to fix it is:
> | | > 
> | | > Index: ipmi.c
> | | > ===================================================================
> | | > RCS file: /cvs/src/sys/dev/ipmi/ipmi.c,v
> | | > retrieving revision 1.14
> | | > diff -u -p -r1.14 ipmi.c
> | | > --- ipmi.c	14 Apr 2011 07:14:22 -0000	1.14
> | | > +++ ipmi.c	31 Mar 2012 19:18:35 -0000
> | | > @@ -695,7 +695,6 @@ ipmi_startup(void *arg)
> | | >  	if (error == EWOULDBLOCK) {
> | | >  		device_printf(dev, "Timed out waiting for GET_DEVICE_ID\n");
> | | >  		ipmi_free_request(req);
> | | > -		return;
> | | >  	} else if (error) {
> | | >  		device_printf(dev, "Failed GET_DEVICE_ID: %d\n", error);
> | | >  		ipmi_free_request(req);
> | | > 
> | | > The issue is that the wakeup doesn't actually wake up the msleep
> | | > in ipmi_submit_driver_request.  The error being reported is that
> | | > the msleep timed out.  This doesn't seem to be critical problem
> | | > since after this things seemed to work work.  I saw this on 9.X.
> | | > Haven't seen it on 8.2.  Not sure about -current.
> | | > 
> | | > It doesn't happen on all machines.
> | | 
> | | Hmm, are you seeing the KCS thread manage the request but the wakeup() 
is 
> | | lost?
> | 
> | It was a couple of weeks ago that I played with it.  I put printf's
> | around the msleep and wakeup.  I saw the wakeup called but the sleep
> | not get it.  I can try the test again later today.  Right now my main
> | work machine is recovering from a power outage.  This was with 9.0 
> | when I first saw it.  This issue seems to only happen at boot time.
> | If I kldload the module after the system is booted then it seems to work 
> | okay.  The KCS part was working fine and got the data okay from the
> | request.  I haven't seen or heard any issues with 8.2.
> 
> With -current I patched ipmi.c with:
> Index: ipmi.c
> ===================================================================
> --- ipmi.c      (revision 233806)
> +++ ipmi.c      (working copy)
> @@ -523,7 +523,11 @@
>          * waiter that we awaken.
>          */
>         if (req->ir_owner == NULL)
> +{
> +device_printf(sc->ipmi_dev, "DEBUG %s %d before wakeup 
%d\n",__FUNCTION__,__LINE__,ticks);
>                 wakeup(req);
> +device_printf(sc->ipmi_dev, "DEBUG %s %d after wakeup 
%d\n",__FUNCTION__,__LINE__,ticks);
> +}
>         else {
>                 dev = req->ir_owner;
>                 TAILQ_INSERT_TAIL(&dev->ipmi_completed_requests, req, 
ir_link);
> @@ -543,7 +547,11 @@
>         IPMI_LOCK(sc);
>         error = sc->ipmi_enqueue_request(sc, req);
>         if (error == 0)
> +{
> +device_printf(sc->ipmi_dev, "DEBUG %s %d before msleep 
%d\n",__FUNCTION__,__LINE__,ticks);
>                 error = msleep(req, &sc->ipmi_lock, 0, "ipmireq", timo);
> +device_printf(sc->ipmi_dev, "DEBUG %s %d after msleep 
%d\n",__FUNCTION__,__LINE__,ticks);
> +}
>         if (error == 0)
>                 error = req->ir_error;
>         IPMI_UNLOCK(sc);
> @@ -695,8 +703,11 @@
>         error = ipmi_submit_driver_request(sc, req, MAX_TIMEOUT);
>         if (error == EWOULDBLOCK) {
>                 device_printf(dev, "Timed out waiting for GET_DEVICE_ID\n");
> +               printf("DJA\n");
> +/*
>                 ipmi_free_request(req);
>                 return;
> +*/
>         } else if (error) {
>                 device_printf(dev, "Failed GET_DEVICE_ID: %d\n", error);
>                 ipmi_free_request(req);
> 
> and get
>   # dmesg | grep ipmi
>   ipmi0: KCS mode found at io 0xca8 on acpi
>   ipmi1: <IPMI System Interface> on isa0
>   device_attach: ipmi1 attach returned 16
>   ipmi1: <IPMI System Interface> on isa0
>   device_attach: ipmi1 attach returned 16
>   ipmi0: DEBUG ipmi_submit_driver_request 551 before msleep 2
>   ipmi0: DEBUG ipmi_complete_request 527 before wakeup 6201
>   ipmi0: DEBUG ipmi_complete_request 529 after wakeup 6263
>   ipmi0: DEBUG ipmi_submit_driver_request 553 after msleep 6323

Actually, can you compile with:

options  	KTR
options  	KTR_COMPILE=KTR_SCHED
options 	KTR_MASK=KTR_SCHED

and then add a temporary hack to ipmi.c to set ktr_mask to 0 after
ipmi_submit_driver_request() returns in ipmi_startup()?  You can
then use 'ktrdump -ct' after boot to capture a log of what the scheduler
did including if it timed out the sleep, etc.  I think this would be
useful for figuring out what went wrong.  It does seem that it timed
out after 3 seconds.

Also, it doesn't seem clear if pehaps the IPMI worker thread was
stalled behind another thread during boot.  The KTR traces would show
us that if so.

I don't think the ipmi1 probe can cause the problem (it bails out right
away and shouldn't be touching any hardware state).

-- 
John Baldwin



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