On 18.12.2018 14:25, Chris Chiu wrote: > On Tue, Dec 18, 2018 at 3:08 AM Heiner Kallweit <hkallwe...@gmail.com> wrote: >> >> On 17.12.2018 14:25, Chris Chiu wrote: >>> On Fri, Dec 14, 2018 at 3:37 PM Heiner Kallweit <hkallwe...@gmail.com> >>> wrote: >>>> >>>> On 14.12.2018 04:33, Chris Chiu wrote: >>>>> On Thu, Dec 13, 2018 at 10:20 AM Chris Chiu <c...@endlessm.com> wrote: >>>>>> >>>>>> Hi, >>>>>> We got an acer laptop which has a problem with ethernet networking >>>>>> after >>>>>> resuming from S3. The ethernet is popular realtek r8168. The lspci shows >>>>>> as >>>>>> follows. >>>>>> 02:00.1 Ethernet controller [0200]: Realtek Semiconductor Co., Ltd. >>>>>> RTL8111/8168/8411 PCI Express Gigabit Ethernet Controller [10ec:8168] >>>>>> (rev 12) >>>>>> >>>> Helpful would be a "dmesg | grep r8169", especially chip name + XID. >>>> >>> [ 22.362774] r8169 0000:02:00.1 (unnamed net_device) >>> (uninitialized): mac_version = 0x2b >>> [ 22.365580] libphy: r8169: probed >>> [ 22.365958] r8169 0000:02:00.1 eth0: RTL8411, 00:e0:b8:1f:cb:83, >>> XID 5c800800, IRQ 38 >>> [ 22.365961] r8169 0000:02:00.1 eth0: jumbo features [frames: 9200 >>> bytes, tx checksumming: ko] >>> >> Thanks for the info. >> >>>>>> The problem is the ethernet is not accessible after resume. Pinging >>>>>> via >>>>>> ethernet always shows the response `Destination Host Unreachable`. >>>>>> However, >>>>>> the interesting part is, when I run tcpdump to monitor the problematic >>>>>> ethernet >>>>>> interface, the networking is back to alive. But it's dead again after >>>>>> I stop tcpdump. >>>>>> One more thing, if I ping the problematic machine from others, it >>>>>> achieves the >>>>>> same effect as above tcpdump. Maybe it's about the register setting for >>>>>> RX path? >>>>>> >>>> You could compare the register dumps (ethtool -d) before and after S3 sleep >>>> to find out whether there's a difference. >>>> >>> >>> Actually, I just found I lead the wrong direction. The S3 suspend does >>> help to reproduce, >>> but it's not necessary. All I need to do is ping around 5 mins and the >>> network connection >>> fails. And I also find one thing interesting, disabling the MSI-X >>> interrupt like commit >>> [d49c88d7677ba737e9d2759a87db0402d5ab2607] can fix this problem. >>> Although I don't >>> understand the root cause. Anything I can do to help? >>> >> This is indeed very, very weird. You say switching from MSI-X to MSI fixes >> the issue, but also pinging the machine from outside brings back the network. >> Both actions affect totally different corners. >> >> The commit and related issue you mention was a workaround in the driver, >> the root cause was a MSI-X-related issue with certain Intel chipsets deep >> in the PCI core. After this was fixed we removed the workaround again. >> This shouldn't be related to your issue. >> >> Hard to say for now is whether the issue is: >> - a driver issue >> - a hardware issue in the RTL8411 >> - an issue with the chipset on your mainboard >> >> According to your description it doesn't take a special scenario to trigger >> the issue, so most likely also other users of Acer notebooks with RTL8411 >> should be affected (after briefly checking this should be at least Aspire >> F15, V15, V7). Therefore I wonder why there aren't more reports. >> >> This commit added MSI-X support: 6c6aa15fdea5 ("r8169: improve interrupt >> handling") >> So you could test this revision and the one before. >> >> Eventually, if the issue really should be caused by a side effect of using >> MSI-X, then the question is whether we need to disable MSI-X for RTL8411 >> in general or just for RTL8411 and a certain subsystem id. >> > > I tried the kernel with the head on 6c6aa15fdea5 ("r8169: improve > interrupt handling"), > the problem still there. Then I revert to the previous revision, the > problem goes away. > So I think it's pretty much the side effect of MSI-X. However, as you > mentioned that > you didn't hit this problem, I'll ask the vendor to verify if this > problem also happens on > other machines with the same chip. Then we can determine to disable for > specific > mac version or just a certain subsystem id. > Thanks a lot for testing. OK, I have one more idea. AFAICS RTL8411 also has an integrated card reader controller which is driven by module rtsx_pci. Maybe if both components (card reader controller + ethernet) use different interrupt types, RTL8411 can't properly handle this. In case module rtsx_pci is loaded on your system, can you check whether not loading it (e.g. by blacklisting) or removing it makes a difference?
Can you provide the "lspci -v" output for the card reader part of RTL8411? >>>>>> I tried the latest 4.20 rc version but the problem still there. I >>>>>> also tried some >>>>>> hw_reset or init thing in the resume path but no effect. Any >>>>>> suggestion for this? >>>>>> Thanks >>>>>> >>>> Did previous kernel versions work? If it's a regression, a bisect would be >>>> appreciated, because with the chip versions I've got I can't reproduce the >>>> issue. >>>> >>>>>> Chris >>>>> >>>>> Gentle ping. Any additional information required? >>>>> >>>>> Chris >>>>> >>>> Heiner >>> >> >