Florian Fainelli <f.faine...@gmail.com> writes: > On 11/04/2016 08:22 AM, Måns Rullgård wrote: >> Andrew Lunn <and...@lunn.ch> writes: >> >>> On Fri, Nov 04, 2016 at 03:05:00PM +0000, Måns Rullgård wrote: >>>> Andrew Lunn <and...@lunn.ch> writes: >>>> >>>>>>> I agree with you. But fixing it is likely to break boards which >>>>>>> currently have "rgmii", but actually need the delay in order to work. >>>>>> >>>>>> Does the internal delay here refer to the PHY or the MAC? It's a >>>>>> property of the MAC node after all. >>>>> >>>>> It is the PHY which applies the delay. >>>> >>>> Says who? >>> >>> The source code. >> >> There's source code that disagrees with that. The Broadcom GENET >> driver, for instance. > > Correct, and in the case where the MAC adds the delay while transmitting > (because it supports that) the expectation is that the PHY would remove > such a delay internally, conversely, the PHY would introduce a delay > while transmitting back to the PHY, in order to produce the desired 90 > degrees shift on the RGMII signals, and get reproduce the correct clock > and data alignment internally. > >> >>>> Some MACs can do it too. >>> >>> I'm sure they can. But look at the code. Nearly none do, and those >>> that do are potentially broken. >> >> Those few drivers that do anything differently based on these values >> enable clock delay in the MAC. That's why I wrote the NB8800 driver the >> way I did. >> > > I don't really what is wrong with the nb8800 driver at the moment, so > maybe this is just a configuration issue with the Atheros PHY driver, > it's not like it has not given people headache judging by the recent > discussions...
We don't even know if the problems Mason is having are caused by incorrect clock skew in the first place. I'd suggest not patching anything at all until he gets it working. -- Måns Rullgård