The hardware must not see that is given ownership of a buffer until it is completely written, and when the driver receives ownership of a buffer, it must ensure that any other reads to the buffer reflect its final state. Thus, I/O barriers are added where required.
Without this patch, I have observed GCC reordering the setting of bdp->length and bdp->status in gfar_new_skb. Signed-off-by: Scott Wood <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> --- This is version 2 of this patch. I was told that eieio doesn't order loads from main memory, so a sync is used instead. Also, due to objectons that iobarrier_* shouldn't be used for main memory, I used eieio() instead (a wmb() would be unnecessarily heavy). drivers/net/gianfar.c | 3 +++ 1 files changed, 3 insertions(+), 0 deletions(-) diff --git a/drivers/net/gianfar.c b/drivers/net/gianfar.c index b666a0c..b014d27 100644 --- a/drivers/net/gianfar.c +++ b/drivers/net/gianfar.c @@ -1025,6 +1025,7 @@ static int gfar_start_xmit(struct sk_buff *skb, struct net_device *dev) dev->trans_start = jiffies; + eieio(); txbdp->status = status; /* If this was the last BD in the ring, the next one */ @@ -1301,6 +1302,7 @@ struct sk_buff * gfar_new_skb(struct net_device *dev, struct rxbd8 *bdp) bdp->length = 0; /* Mark the buffer empty */ + eieio(); bdp->status |= (RXBD_EMPTY | RXBD_INTERRUPT); return skb; @@ -1484,6 +1486,7 @@ int gfar_clean_rx_ring(struct net_device *dev, int rx_work_limit) bdp = priv->cur_rx; while (!((bdp->status & RXBD_EMPTY) || (--rx_work_limit < 0))) { + rmb(); skb = priv->rx_skbuff[priv->skb_currx]; if (!(bdp->status & -- 1.5.0.3 - To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe netdev" in the body of a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED] More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html