On Fri, 2007-08-06 at 12:55 -0700, Waskiewicz Jr, Peter P wrote: > > I thought the correct use is to get this lock on clean_tx > > side which can get called on a different cpu on rx (which > > also cleans up slots for skbs that have finished xmit). Both > > TX and clean_tx uses the same tx_ring's head/tail ptrs and > > should be exclusive. But I don't find clean tx using this > > lock in the code, so I am confused :-) > > >From e1000_main.c, e1000_clean(): > > /* e1000_clean is called per-cpu. This lock protects > * tx_ring[0] from being cleaned by multiple cpus > * simultaneously. A failure obtaining the lock means > * tx_ring[0] is currently being cleaned anyway. */ > if (spin_trylock(&adapter->tx_queue_lock)) { > tx_cleaned = e1000_clean_tx_irq(adapter, > &adapter->tx_ring[0]); > spin_unlock(&adapter->tx_queue_lock); > }
Are you saying theres no problem because the adapter->tx_queue_lock is being held? > In a multi-ring implementation of the driver, this is wrapped with for > (i = 0; i < adapter->num_tx_queues; i++) and &adapter->tx_ring[i]. This > lock also prevents the clean routine from stomping on xmit_frame() when > transmitting. Also in the multi-ring implementation, the tx_lock is > pushed down into the individual tx_ring struct, not at the adapter > level. That sounds right - but the adapter lock is not related to tx_lock in current e1000, correct? cheers, jamal - 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