The driver of course "knows" that the chip's reset signal is active low,
so  it drives the GPIO to 0  to reset the PHY and to 1 otherwise; however
all this will only work iff the GPIO  is  specified as active-high in the
device tree!  I think both the driver and the device trees (if there are
any -- I was unable to find them) need to be fixed in this case...

Fixes: 13a56b449325 ("net: phy: at803x: Add support for hardware reset")
Signed-off-by: Sergei Shtylyov <sergei.shtyl...@cogentembedded.com>

---
The patch is against DaveM's 'net.git' repo.

 drivers/net/phy/at803x.c |    6 +++---
 1 file changed, 3 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-)

Index: net/drivers/net/phy/at803x.c
===================================================================
--- net.orig/drivers/net/phy/at803x.c
+++ net/drivers/net/phy/at803x.c
@@ -277,7 +277,7 @@ static int at803x_probe(struct phy_devic
        if (!priv)
                return -ENOMEM;
 
-       gpiod_reset = devm_gpiod_get_optional(dev, "reset", GPIOD_OUT_HIGH);
+       gpiod_reset = devm_gpiod_get_optional(dev, "reset", GPIOD_OUT_LOW);
        if (IS_ERR(gpiod_reset))
                return PTR_ERR(gpiod_reset);
 
@@ -362,10 +362,10 @@ static void at803x_link_change_notify(st
 
                                at803x_context_save(phydev, &context);
 
-                               gpiod_set_value(priv->gpiod_reset, 0);
-                               msleep(1);
                                gpiod_set_value(priv->gpiod_reset, 1);
                                msleep(1);
+                               gpiod_set_value(priv->gpiod_reset, 0);
+                               msleep(1);
 
                                at803x_context_restore(phydev, &context);
 

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