* Re: Regression: at24 eeprom writing times out on sama5d3 [not found] <074b39c5-55fc-2bc1-072d-aef1070e284d@axentia.se> @ 2022-06-11 13:41 ` Thorsten Leemhuis [not found] ` <2bb4868b-90ab-887e-bf13-9de8b79231bd@microchip.com> 1 sibling, 0 replies; 4+ messages in thread From: Thorsten Leemhuis @ 2022-06-11 13:41 UTC (permalink / raw) To: linux-i2c, linux-arm-kernel, linux-kernel, devicetree, regressions [TLDR: I'm adding this regression report to the list of tracked regressions; all text from me you find below is based on a few templates paragraphs you might have encountered already already in similar form.] Hi, this is your Linux kernel regression tracker. On 09.06.22 16:28, Peter Rosin wrote: > Hi! > > I have not actually bisected this issue but reverting the effects of > patch a4bd8da893a3 ("ARM: dts: at91: sama5d3: add i2c gpio pinctrl") > makes the problem go away. To be sure below issue doesn't fall through the cracks unnoticed, I'm adding it to regzbot, my Linux kernel regression tracking bot: #regzbot ^introduced a4bd8da893a3 #regzbot title i2c: at24 eeprom writing times out on sama5d3 #regzbot ignore-activity #regzbot monitor: https://lore.kernel.org/all/20210727111554.1338832-1-codrin.ciubotariu@microchip.com/ This isn't a regression? This issue or a fix for it are already discussed somewhere else? It was fixed already? You want to clarify when the regression started to happen? Or point out I got the title or something else totally wrong? Then just reply -- ideally with also telling regzbot about it, as explained here: https://linux-regtracking.leemhuis.info/tracked-regression/ Reminder for developers: When fixing the issue, add 'Link:' tags pointing to the report (the mail this one replied to), as the kernel's documentation call for; above page explains why this is important for tracked regressions. Ciao, Thorsten (wearing his 'the Linux kernel's regression tracker' hat) P.S.: As the Linux kernel's regression tracker I deal with a lot of reports and sometimes miss something important when writing mails like this. If that's the case here, don't hesitate to tell me in a public reply, it's in everyone's interest to set the public record straight. > I.e. I need something like this in my dts > > &i2c2 { > status = "okay"; > > pinctrl-names = "default"; > /delete-property/ pinctrl-1; > /delete-property/ sda-gpios; > /delete-property/ scl-gpios; > > eeprom@50 { > compatible = "st,24c64", "atmel,24c64"; > reg = <0x50>; > wp-gpios = <&filter_gpio 7 GPIO_ACTIVE_HIGH>; > }; > }; > > for multi-page eeprom writes to not time out (a page is 32 bytes on this > eeprom). > > For reference, the current defaults for this SoC/I2C-bus, that I modify, > are: > > pinctrl-names = "default", "gpio"; > pinctrl-0 = <&pinctrl_i2c2>; > pinctrl-1 = <&pinctrl_i2c2_gpio>; > sda-gpios = <&pioA 18 GPIO_ACTIVE_HIGH>; > scl-gpios = <&pioA 19 (GPIO_ACTIVE_HIGH | GPIO_OPEN_DRAIN)>; > > I suspect that the underlying reason is that the bus recovery takes > too long and that the at24 eeprom driver gives up prematurely. I doubt > that this is chip specific, but I don't know that. > > I can work around the issue in user space with by writing in 4 byte > chunks, like so > > dd if=source.file of=/sys/bus/i2c/devices/2-0050/eeprom obs=4 > > but that is really ugly and gets slow too, about 20 seconds to program > the full 8kB eeprom. With the above in my dts it takes a second or > so (a bit more with dynamic debug active). > > > If I run > > dd if=source.file of=/sys/bus/i2c/devices/2-0050/eeprom > > with a source.file of 8kB and the upstream dts properties in place, I can > collect the following debug output from at24, i2c-core and i2c-at91: > > Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: at91_xfer: processing 1 messages: > Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer: write 34 bytes. > Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer complete > Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at24 2-0050: write 32@0 --> 0 (-23170) > Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: at91_xfer: processing 1 messages: > Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer: write 34 bytes. > Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: received nack > Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: Trying i2c bus recovery > Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at24 2-0050: write 32@32 --> -121 (-23169) > Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: at91_xfer: processing 1 messages: > Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer: write 34 bytes. > Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer complete > Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at24 2-0050: write 32@32 --> 0 (-23168) > Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: at91_xfer: processing 1 messages: > Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer: write 34 bytes. > Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: received nack > Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: Trying i2c bus recovery > Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at24 2-0050: write 32@64 --> -121 (-23168) > Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: at91_xfer: processing 1 messages: > Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer: write 34 bytes. > Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer complete > Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at24 2-0050: write 32@64 --> 0 (-23167) > Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: at91_xfer: processing 1 messages: > Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer: write 34 bytes. > Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: received nack > Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: Trying i2c bus recovery > Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at24 2-0050: write 32@96 --> -121 (-23167) > Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: at91_xfer: processing 1 messages: > Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer: write 34 bytes. > Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: controller timed out > Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: Trying i2c bus recovery > Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at24 2-0050: write 32@96 --> -110 (-23155) > Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: at91_xfer: processing 1 messages: > Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer: write 34 bytes. > Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: controller timed out > Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: Trying i2c bus recovery > Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at24 2-0050: write 32@96 --> -110 (-23143) > > And then there is no more action. I.e. only a couple of 32 byte pages > are written. > > With the above mentioned dts override in place I instead get this, which is > a lot more sensible: > > Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: at91_xfer: processing 1 messages: > Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer: write 34 bytes. > Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer complete > Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at24 2-0050: write 32@0 --> 0 (753629) > Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: at91_xfer: processing 1 messages: > Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer: write 34 bytes. > Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: received nack > Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at24 2-0050: write 32@32 --> -121 (753629) > Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: at91_xfer: processing 1 messages: > Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer: write 34 bytes. > Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer complete > Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at24 2-0050: write 32@32 --> 0 (753630) > Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: at91_xfer: processing 1 messages: > Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer: write 34 bytes. > Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: received nack > Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at24 2-0050: write 32@64 --> -121 (753630) > Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: at91_xfer: processing 1 messages: > Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer: write 34 bytes. > Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer complete > Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at24 2-0050: write 32@64 --> 0 (753631) > Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: at91_xfer: processing 1 messages: > Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer: write 34 bytes. > Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: received nack > Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at24 2-0050: write 32@96 --> -121 (753631) > Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: at91_xfer: processing 1 messages: > Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer: write 34 bytes. > Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer complete > Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at24 2-0050: write 32@96 --> 0 (753632) > Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: at91_xfer: processing 1 messages: > Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer: write 34 bytes. > Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: received nack > Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at24 2-0050: write 32@128 --> -121 (753632) > Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: at91_xfer: processing 1 messages: > Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer: write 34 bytes. > Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer complete > Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at24 2-0050: write 32@128 --> 0 (753633) > Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: at91_xfer: processing 1 messages: > Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer: write 34 bytes. > Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: received nack > Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at24 2-0050: write 32@160 --> -121 (753633) > Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: at91_xfer: processing 1 messages: > Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer: write 34 bytes. > Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer complete > Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at24 2-0050: write 32@160 --> 0 (753634) > ... snip ... > Jun 9 15:48:55 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: at91_xfer: processing 1 messages: > Jun 9 15:48:55 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer: write 34 bytes. > Jun 9 15:48:55 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: received nack > Jun 9 15:48:55 me20 kernel: at24 2-0050: write 32@8128 --> -121 (753883) > Jun 9 15:48:55 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: at91_xfer: processing 1 messages: > Jun 9 15:48:55 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer: write 34 bytes. > Jun 9 15:48:55 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer complete > Jun 9 15:48:55 me20 kernel: at24 2-0050: write 32@8128 --> 0 (753884) > Jun 9 15:48:55 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: at91_xfer: processing 1 messages: > Jun 9 15:48:55 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer: write 34 bytes. > Jun 9 15:48:55 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: received nack > Jun 9 15:48:55 me20 kernel: at24 2-0050: write 32@8160 --> -121 (753884) > Jun 9 15:48:55 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: at91_xfer: processing 1 messages: > Jun 9 15:48:55 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer: write 34 bytes. > Jun 9 15:48:55 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer complete > Jun 9 15:48:55 me20 kernel: at24 2-0050: write 32@8160 --> 0 (753885) > > Cheers, > Peter ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 4+ messages in thread
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* Re: Regression: at24 eeprom writing times out on sama5d3 [not found] ` <2fcfa811-ce5c-9fc8-9837-753299794560@axentia.se> @ 2022-12-15 17:53 ` Thorsten Leemhuis 2022-12-15 18:50 ` Conor.Dooley 0 siblings, 1 reply; 4+ messages in thread From: Thorsten Leemhuis @ 2022-12-15 17:53 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Peter Rosin, Codrin.Ciubotariu, linux-i2c, linux-arm-kernel, linux-kernel, devicetree Cc: kamel.bouhara, alexandre.belloni, wsa, Ludovic.Desroches, robh+dt, regressions Hi, this is your Linux kernel regression tracker. On 08.09.22 15:59, Peter Rosin wrote: > Hi! > > 2022-09-08 at 14:06, Thorsten Leemhuis wrote: >> Hi, this is your Linux kernel regression tracker. Top-posting for once, >> to make this easily accessible to everyone. >> >> Peter, Codrin, could you help me out here please: I still have the >> regression report from Peter that started this thread in the list of >> tracked issues. From Peter's last msg quoted below it seems the thread >> just faded out without the regression being fixed. Or was it? If not: >> what can we do to finally get this resolved? > > No, it is not resolved that I know of. We are only writing during > production, but are working around it by verifying and looping back. > Sometimes it takes surprisingly long for the loop to finish, but > it's not a huge deal. But it is of course not completely satisfying > either... > > Reading is never a problem, so post-production behavior is sane. I still have this regression that Peter reported in late July on my list. :-( Codrin (and maybe Wolfram), could you provide a update please? Afaics this is the state of things (please correct me if I'm wrong!): In an earlier mail (https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/38dedc92-62a2-7365-6fda-95d6404be749@axentia.se/ ) of this thread Peter stated that the following patch set Codrin posted mid 2021 helped: https://lore.kernel.org/all/20210727111554.1338832-1-codrin.ciubotariu@microchip.com/ There where a few review comments from Wolfram, but looks like then things stalled. Can we somehow get this rolling again to finally get this regression fixed? Ciao, Thorsten (wearing his 'the Linux kernel's regression tracker' hat) P.S.: As the Linux kernel's regression tracker I deal with a lot of reports and sometimes miss something important when writing mails like this. If that's the case here, don't hesitate to tell me in a public reply, it's in everyone's interest to set the public record straight. >> Ciao, Thorsten (wearing his 'the Linux kernel's regression tracker' hat) >> >> P.S.: As the Linux kernel's regression tracker I deal with a lot of >> reports and sometimes miss something important when writing mails like >> this. If that's the case here, don't hesitate to tell me in a public >> reply, it's in everyone's interest to set the public record straight. >> >> On 30.06.22 09:44, Peter Rosin wrote: >>> 2022-06-10 at 22:51, Peter Rosin wrote: >>>> 2022-06-10 at 09:35, Codrin.Ciubotariu@microchip.com wrote: >>>>> On 09.06.2022 17:28, Peter Rosin wrote: >>>>>> >>>>>> I have not actually bisected this issue but reverting the effects of >>>>>> patch a4bd8da893a3 ("ARM: dts: at91: sama5d3: add i2c gpio pinctrl") >>>>>> makes the problem go away. >>>>>> >>>>>> I.e. I need something like this in my dts >>>>>> >>>>>> &i2c2 { >>>>>> status = "okay"; >>>>>> >>>>>> pinctrl-names = "default"; >>>>>> /delete-property/ pinctrl-1; >>>>>> /delete-property/ sda-gpios; >>>>>> /delete-property/ scl-gpios; >>>>>> >>>>>> eeprom@50 { >>>>>> compatible = "st,24c64", "atmel,24c64"; >>>>>> reg = <0x50>; >>>>>> wp-gpios = <&filter_gpio 7 GPIO_ACTIVE_HIGH>; >>>>>> }; >>>>>> }; >>>>>> >>>>>> for multi-page eeprom writes to not time out (a page is 32 bytes on this >>>>>> eeprom). >>>>>> >>>>>> For reference, the current defaults for this SoC/I2C-bus, that I modify, >>>>>> are: >>>>>> >>>>>> pinctrl-names = "default", "gpio"; >>>>>> pinctrl-0 = <&pinctrl_i2c2>; >>>>>> pinctrl-1 = <&pinctrl_i2c2_gpio>; >>>>>> sda-gpios = <&pioA 18 GPIO_ACTIVE_HIGH>; >>>>>> scl-gpios = <&pioA 19 (GPIO_ACTIVE_HIGH | GPIO_OPEN_DRAIN)>; >>>>>> >>>>>> I suspect that the underlying reason is that the bus recovery takes >>>>>> too long and that the at24 eeprom driver gives up prematurely. I doubt >>>>>> that this is chip specific, but I don't know that. >>>>>> >>>>>> I can work around the issue in user space with by writing in 4 byte >>>>>> chunks, like so >>>>>> >>>>>> dd if=source.file of=/sys/bus/i2c/devices/2-0050/eeprom obs=4 >>>>>> >>>>>> but that is really ugly and gets slow too, about 20 seconds to program >>>>>> the full 8kB eeprom. With the above in my dts it takes a second or >>>>>> so (a bit more with dynamic debug active). >>>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>> If I run >>>>>> >>>>>> dd if=source.file of=/sys/bus/i2c/devices/2-0050/eeprom >>>>>> >>>>>> with a source.file of 8kB and the upstream dts properties in place, I can >>>>>> collect the following debug output from at24, i2c-core and i2c-at91: >>>>>> >>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: at91_xfer: processing 1 messages: >>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer: write 34 bytes. >>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer complete >>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at24 2-0050: write 32@0 --> 0 (-23170) >>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: at91_xfer: processing 1 messages: >>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer: write 34 bytes. >>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: received nack >>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: Trying i2c bus recovery >>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at24 2-0050: write 32@32 --> -121 (-23169) >>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: at91_xfer: processing 1 messages: >>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer: write 34 bytes. >>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer complete >>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at24 2-0050: write 32@32 --> 0 (-23168) >>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: at91_xfer: processing 1 messages: >>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer: write 34 bytes. >>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: received nack >>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: Trying i2c bus recovery >>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at24 2-0050: write 32@64 --> -121 (-23168) >>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: at91_xfer: processing 1 messages: >>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer: write 34 bytes. >>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer complete >>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at24 2-0050: write 32@64 --> 0 (-23167) >>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: at91_xfer: processing 1 messages: >>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer: write 34 bytes. >>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: received nack >>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: Trying i2c bus recovery >>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at24 2-0050: write 32@96 --> -121 (-23167) >>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: at91_xfer: processing 1 messages: >>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer: write 34 bytes. >>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: controller timed out >>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: Trying i2c bus recovery >>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at24 2-0050: write 32@96 --> -110 (-23155) >>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: at91_xfer: processing 1 messages: >>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer: write 34 bytes. >>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: controller timed out >>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: Trying i2c bus recovery >>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at24 2-0050: write 32@96 --> -110 (-23143) >>>>>> >>>>>> And then there is no more action. I.e. only a couple of 32 byte pages >>>>>> are written. >>>>>> >>>>>> With the above mentioned dts override in place I instead get this, which is >>>>>> a lot more sensible: >>>>>> >>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: at91_xfer: processing 1 messages: >>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer: write 34 bytes. >>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer complete >>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at24 2-0050: write 32@0 --> 0 (753629) >>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: at91_xfer: processing 1 messages: >>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer: write 34 bytes. >>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: received nack >>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at24 2-0050: write 32@32 --> -121 (753629) >>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: at91_xfer: processing 1 messages: >>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer: write 34 bytes. >>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer complete >>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at24 2-0050: write 32@32 --> 0 (753630) >>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: at91_xfer: processing 1 messages: >>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer: write 34 bytes. >>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: received nack >>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at24 2-0050: write 32@64 --> -121 (753630) >>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: at91_xfer: processing 1 messages: >>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer: write 34 bytes. >>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer complete >>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at24 2-0050: write 32@64 --> 0 (753631) >>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: at91_xfer: processing 1 messages: >>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer: write 34 bytes. >>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: received nack >>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at24 2-0050: write 32@96 --> -121 (753631) >>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: at91_xfer: processing 1 messages: >>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer: write 34 bytes. >>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer complete >>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at24 2-0050: write 32@96 --> 0 (753632) >>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: at91_xfer: processing 1 messages: >>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer: write 34 bytes. >>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: received nack >>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at24 2-0050: write 32@128 --> -121 (753632) >>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: at91_xfer: processing 1 messages: >>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer: write 34 bytes. >>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer complete >>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at24 2-0050: write 32@128 --> 0 (753633) >>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: at91_xfer: processing 1 messages: >>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer: write 34 bytes. >>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: received nack >>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at24 2-0050: write 32@160 --> -121 (753633) >>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: at91_xfer: processing 1 messages: >>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer: write 34 bytes. >>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer complete >>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at24 2-0050: write 32@160 --> 0 (753634) >>>>>> ... snip ... >>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:55 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: at91_xfer: processing 1 messages: >>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:55 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer: write 34 bytes. >>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:55 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: received nack >>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:55 me20 kernel: at24 2-0050: write 32@8128 --> -121 (753883) >>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:55 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: at91_xfer: processing 1 messages: >>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:55 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer: write 34 bytes. >>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:55 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer complete >>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:55 me20 kernel: at24 2-0050: write 32@8128 --> 0 (753884) >>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:55 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: at91_xfer: processing 1 messages: >>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:55 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer: write 34 bytes. >>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:55 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: received nack >>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:55 me20 kernel: at24 2-0050: write 32@8160 --> -121 (753884) >>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:55 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: at91_xfer: processing 1 messages: >>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:55 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer: write 34 bytes. >>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:55 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer complete >>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:55 me20 kernel: at24 2-0050: write 32@8160 --> 0 (753885) >>>>> >>>>> could you please apply this patch-set [1] and let us know if it >>>>> addresses your issue? >>>>> >>>>> Thanks and best regards, >>>>> Codrin >>>>> >>>>> https://patchwork.ozlabs.org/project/linux-i2c/list/?series=255408 >>>> >>>> That series does indeed help! I'll reply with a tested-by etc on the >>>> first two patches, I can't test patch 3/3 with my sama5d3 board... >>>> >>>> Thank you very much! >>> >>> Since replying to the actual patches do not work for me, I'm writing here >>> instead. Sorry about that. As stated above, it /seems/ to work much better >>> with these patches. But I fooled myself and there is still some remaining >>> trouble. It is not uncommon that the second (32-byte) page in the eeprom >>> is not written correctly for whatever reason. I do not know why it's >>> always the second page that gets corrupted, but this is a bad problem since >>> the failure is completely silent. >>> >>> Cheers, >>> Peter >> >> #regzbot poke > > _______________________________________________ > linux-arm-kernel mailing list > linux-arm-kernel@lists.infradead.org > http://lists.infradead.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-arm-kernel #regzbot poke ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 4+ messages in thread
* Re: Regression: at24 eeprom writing times out on sama5d3 2022-12-15 17:53 ` Thorsten Leemhuis @ 2022-12-15 18:50 ` Conor.Dooley 2023-03-15 11:07 ` Linux regression tracking (Thorsten Leemhuis) 0 siblings, 1 reply; 4+ messages in thread From: Conor.Dooley @ 2022-12-15 18:50 UTC (permalink / raw) To: regressions, peda, Codrin.Ciubotariu, Nicolas.Ferre, wsa Cc: kamel.bouhara, linux-i2c, alexandre.belloni, Ludovic.Desroches, linux-arm-kernel, devicetree, robh+dt, regressions, linux-kernel +CC Nicolas On 15/12/2022 17:53, Thorsten Leemhuis wrote: > EXTERNAL EMAIL: Do not click links or open attachments unless you know the content is safe > > Hi, this is your Linux kernel regression tracker. > > On 08.09.22 15:59, Peter Rosin wrote: >> Hi! >> >> 2022-09-08 at 14:06, Thorsten Leemhuis wrote: >>> Hi, this is your Linux kernel regression tracker. Top-posting for once, >>> to make this easily accessible to everyone. >>> >>> Peter, Codrin, could you help me out here please: I still have the >>> regression report from Peter that started this thread in the list of >>> tracked issues. From Peter's last msg quoted below it seems the thread >>> just faded out without the regression being fixed. Or was it? If not: >>> what can we do to finally get this resolved? >> >> No, it is not resolved that I know of. We are only writing during >> production, but are working around it by verifying and looping back. >> Sometimes it takes surprisingly long for the loop to finish, but >> it's not a huge deal. But it is of course not completely satisfying >> either... >> >> Reading is never a problem, so post-production behavior is sane. > > I still have this regression that Peter reported in late July on my > list. :-( > > Codrin (and maybe Wolfram), could you provide a update please? Afaics > this is the state of things (please correct me if I'm wrong!): In an > earlier mail > (https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/38dedc92-62a2-7365-6fda-95d6404be749@axentia.se/ > ) of this thread Peter stated that the following patch set Codrin posted > mid 2021 helped: > https://lore.kernel.org/all/20210727111554.1338832-1-codrin.ciubotariu@microchip.com/ IIRC (and I may well be wrong as it is not my neck of the woods) Codrin is no longer at Microchip. Nicolas, do you know who has taken over this driver? Thanks, Conor. > > There where a few review comments from Wolfram, but looks like then > things stalled. Can we somehow get this rolling again to finally get > this regression fixed? > > Ciao, Thorsten (wearing his 'the Linux kernel's regression tracker' hat) > > P.S.: As the Linux kernel's regression tracker I deal with a lot of > reports and sometimes miss something important when writing mails like > this. If that's the case here, don't hesitate to tell me in a public > reply, it's in everyone's interest to set the public record straight. > >>> Ciao, Thorsten (wearing his 'the Linux kernel's regression tracker' hat) >>> >>> P.S.: As the Linux kernel's regression tracker I deal with a lot of >>> reports and sometimes miss something important when writing mails like >>> this. If that's the case here, don't hesitate to tell me in a public >>> reply, it's in everyone's interest to set the public record straight. >>> >>> On 30.06.22 09:44, Peter Rosin wrote: >>>> 2022-06-10 at 22:51, Peter Rosin wrote: >>>>> 2022-06-10 at 09:35, Codrin.Ciubotariu@microchip.com wrote: >>>>>> On 09.06.2022 17:28, Peter Rosin wrote: >>>>>>> >>>>>>> I have not actually bisected this issue but reverting the effects of >>>>>>> patch a4bd8da893a3 ("ARM: dts: at91: sama5d3: add i2c gpio pinctrl") >>>>>>> makes the problem go away. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> I.e. I need something like this in my dts >>>>>>> >>>>>>> &i2c2 { >>>>>>> status = "okay"; >>>>>>> >>>>>>> pinctrl-names = "default"; >>>>>>> /delete-property/ pinctrl-1; >>>>>>> /delete-property/ sda-gpios; >>>>>>> /delete-property/ scl-gpios; >>>>>>> >>>>>>> eeprom@50 { >>>>>>> compatible = "st,24c64", "atmel,24c64"; >>>>>>> reg = <0x50>; >>>>>>> wp-gpios = <&filter_gpio 7 GPIO_ACTIVE_HIGH>; >>>>>>> }; >>>>>>> }; >>>>>>> >>>>>>> for multi-page eeprom writes to not time out (a page is 32 bytes on this >>>>>>> eeprom). >>>>>>> >>>>>>> For reference, the current defaults for this SoC/I2C-bus, that I modify, >>>>>>> are: >>>>>>> >>>>>>> pinctrl-names = "default", "gpio"; >>>>>>> pinctrl-0 = <&pinctrl_i2c2>; >>>>>>> pinctrl-1 = <&pinctrl_i2c2_gpio>; >>>>>>> sda-gpios = <&pioA 18 GPIO_ACTIVE_HIGH>; >>>>>>> scl-gpios = <&pioA 19 (GPIO_ACTIVE_HIGH | GPIO_OPEN_DRAIN)>; >>>>>>> >>>>>>> I suspect that the underlying reason is that the bus recovery takes >>>>>>> too long and that the at24 eeprom driver gives up prematurely. I doubt >>>>>>> that this is chip specific, but I don't know that. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> I can work around the issue in user space with by writing in 4 byte >>>>>>> chunks, like so >>>>>>> >>>>>>> dd if=source.file of=/sys/bus/i2c/devices/2-0050/eeprom obs=4 >>>>>>> >>>>>>> but that is really ugly and gets slow too, about 20 seconds to program >>>>>>> the full 8kB eeprom. With the above in my dts it takes a second or >>>>>>> so (a bit more with dynamic debug active). >>>>>>> >>>>>>> >>>>>>> If I run >>>>>>> >>>>>>> dd if=source.file of=/sys/bus/i2c/devices/2-0050/eeprom >>>>>>> >>>>>>> with a source.file of 8kB and the upstream dts properties in place, I can >>>>>>> collect the following debug output from at24, i2c-core and i2c-at91: >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: at91_xfer: processing 1 messages: >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer: write 34 bytes. >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer complete >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at24 2-0050: write 32@0 --> 0 (-23170) >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: at91_xfer: processing 1 messages: >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer: write 34 bytes. >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: received nack >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: Trying i2c bus recovery >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at24 2-0050: write 32@32 --> -121 (-23169) >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: at91_xfer: processing 1 messages: >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer: write 34 bytes. >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer complete >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at24 2-0050: write 32@32 --> 0 (-23168) >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: at91_xfer: processing 1 messages: >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer: write 34 bytes. >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: received nack >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: Trying i2c bus recovery >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at24 2-0050: write 32@64 --> -121 (-23168) >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: at91_xfer: processing 1 messages: >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer: write 34 bytes. >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer complete >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at24 2-0050: write 32@64 --> 0 (-23167) >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: at91_xfer: processing 1 messages: >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer: write 34 bytes. >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: received nack >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: Trying i2c bus recovery >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at24 2-0050: write 32@96 --> -121 (-23167) >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: at91_xfer: processing 1 messages: >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer: write 34 bytes. >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: controller timed out >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: Trying i2c bus recovery >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at24 2-0050: write 32@96 --> -110 (-23155) >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: at91_xfer: processing 1 messages: >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer: write 34 bytes. >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: controller timed out >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: Trying i2c bus recovery >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at24 2-0050: write 32@96 --> -110 (-23143) >>>>>>> >>>>>>> And then there is no more action. I.e. only a couple of 32 byte pages >>>>>>> are written. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> With the above mentioned dts override in place I instead get this, which is >>>>>>> a lot more sensible: >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: at91_xfer: processing 1 messages: >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer: write 34 bytes. >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer complete >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at24 2-0050: write 32@0 --> 0 (753629) >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: at91_xfer: processing 1 messages: >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer: write 34 bytes. >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: received nack >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at24 2-0050: write 32@32 --> -121 (753629) >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: at91_xfer: processing 1 messages: >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer: write 34 bytes. >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer complete >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at24 2-0050: write 32@32 --> 0 (753630) >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: at91_xfer: processing 1 messages: >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer: write 34 bytes. >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: received nack >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at24 2-0050: write 32@64 --> -121 (753630) >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: at91_xfer: processing 1 messages: >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer: write 34 bytes. >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer complete >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at24 2-0050: write 32@64 --> 0 (753631) >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: at91_xfer: processing 1 messages: >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer: write 34 bytes. >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: received nack >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at24 2-0050: write 32@96 --> -121 (753631) >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: at91_xfer: processing 1 messages: >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer: write 34 bytes. >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer complete >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at24 2-0050: write 32@96 --> 0 (753632) >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: at91_xfer: processing 1 messages: >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer: write 34 bytes. >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: received nack >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at24 2-0050: write 32@128 --> -121 (753632) >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: at91_xfer: processing 1 messages: >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer: write 34 bytes. >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer complete >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at24 2-0050: write 32@128 --> 0 (753633) >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: at91_xfer: processing 1 messages: >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer: write 34 bytes. >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: received nack >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at24 2-0050: write 32@160 --> -121 (753633) >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: at91_xfer: processing 1 messages: >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer: write 34 bytes. >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer complete >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at24 2-0050: write 32@160 --> 0 (753634) >>>>>>> ... snip ... >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:55 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: at91_xfer: processing 1 messages: >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:55 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer: write 34 bytes. >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:55 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: received nack >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:55 me20 kernel: at24 2-0050: write 32@8128 --> -121 (753883) >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:55 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: at91_xfer: processing 1 messages: >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:55 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer: write 34 bytes. >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:55 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer complete >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:55 me20 kernel: at24 2-0050: write 32@8128 --> 0 (753884) >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:55 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: at91_xfer: processing 1 messages: >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:55 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer: write 34 bytes. >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:55 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: received nack >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:55 me20 kernel: at24 2-0050: write 32@8160 --> -121 (753884) >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:55 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: at91_xfer: processing 1 messages: >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:55 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer: write 34 bytes. >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:55 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer complete >>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:55 me20 kernel: at24 2-0050: write 32@8160 --> 0 (753885) >>>>>> >>>>>> could you please apply this patch-set [1] and let us know if it >>>>>> addresses your issue? >>>>>> >>>>>> Thanks and best regards, >>>>>> Codrin >>>>>> >>>>>> https://patchwork.ozlabs.org/project/linux-i2c/list/?series=255408 >>>>> >>>>> That series does indeed help! I'll reply with a tested-by etc on the >>>>> first two patches, I can't test patch 3/3 with my sama5d3 board... >>>>> >>>>> Thank you very much! >>>> >>>> Since replying to the actual patches do not work for me, I'm writing here >>>> instead. Sorry about that. As stated above, it /seems/ to work much better >>>> with these patches. But I fooled myself and there is still some remaining >>>> trouble. It is not uncommon that the second (32-byte) page in the eeprom >>>> is not written correctly for whatever reason. I do not know why it's >>>> always the second page that gets corrupted, but this is a bad problem since >>>> the failure is completely silent. >>>> >>>> Cheers, >>>> Peter >>> >>> #regzbot poke >> >> _______________________________________________ >> linux-arm-kernel mailing list >> linux-arm-kernel@lists.infradead.org >> http://lists.infradead.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-arm-kernel > > #regzbot poke ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 4+ messages in thread
* Re: Regression: at24 eeprom writing times out on sama5d3 2022-12-15 18:50 ` Conor.Dooley @ 2023-03-15 11:07 ` Linux regression tracking (Thorsten Leemhuis) 0 siblings, 0 replies; 4+ messages in thread From: Linux regression tracking (Thorsten Leemhuis) @ 2023-03-15 11:07 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Conor.Dooley, peda, Codrin.Ciubotariu, Nicolas.Ferre, wsa Cc: kamel.bouhara, linux-i2c, alexandre.belloni, Ludovic.Desroches, linux-arm-kernel, devicetree, robh+dt, regressions, linux-kernel Hi, Thorsten here, the Linux kernel's regression tracker. Seems this regression is still unfixed (please correct me if I'm wrong), so I'm back with another comment: On 15.12.22 19:50, Conor.Dooley@microchip.com wrote: > On 15/12/2022 17:53, Thorsten Leemhuis wrote: >> On 08.09.22 15:59, Peter Rosin wrote: >>> 2022-09-08 at 14:06, Thorsten Leemhuis wrote: >>>> >>>> Peter, Codrin, could you help me out here please: I still have the >>>> regression report from Peter that started this thread in the list of >>>> tracked issues. From Peter's last msg quoted below it seems the thread >>>> just faded out without the regression being fixed. Or was it? If not: >>>> what can we do to finally get this resolved? >>> >>> No, it is not resolved that I know of. We are only writing during >>> production, but are working around it by verifying and looping back. >>> Sometimes it takes surprisingly long for the loop to finish, but >>> it's not a huge deal. But it is of course not completely satisfying >>> either... >>> >>> Reading is never a problem, so post-production behavior is sane. >> >> I still have this regression that Peter reported in late July on my >> list. :-( >> >> Codrin (and maybe Wolfram), could you provide a update please? Afaics >> this is the state of things (please correct me if I'm wrong!): In an >> earlier mail >> (https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/38dedc92-62a2-7365-6fda-95d6404be749@axentia.se/ >> ) of this thread Peter stated that the following patch set Codrin posted >> mid 2021 helped: >> https://lore.kernel.org/all/20210727111554.1338832-1-codrin.ciubotariu@microchip.com/ > > IIRC (and I may well be wrong as it is not my neck of the woods) Codrin is > no longer at Microchip. Nicolas, do you know who has taken over this driver? Nicolas didn't reply afaics, but I just found he in https://lore.kernel.org/all/176099e2-cbff-1987-f59a-2ca618a9c92a@microchip.com/ mentioned that Codrin left. Did anyone else take over his duties and that patchset? Or should I file this under "regressions that were bisected[1], but nevertheless fixed"? I'd hate to do that when patches to resolve it are actually available and got stuck in review... [1] to a change from Kamel Bouhara iirc Ciao, Thorsten (wearing his 'the Linux kernel's regression tracker' hat) -- Everything you wanna know about Linux kernel regression tracking: https://linux-regtracking.leemhuis.info/about/#tldr If I did something stupid, please tell me, as explained on that page. #regzbot poke >> There where a few review comments from Wolfram, but looks like then >> things stalled. Can we somehow get this rolling again to finally get >> this regression fixed? >> >> Ciao, Thorsten (wearing his 'the Linux kernel's regression tracker' hat) >> >> P.S.: As the Linux kernel's regression tracker I deal with a lot of >> reports and sometimes miss something important when writing mails like >> this. If that's the case here, don't hesitate to tell me in a public >> reply, it's in everyone's interest to set the public record straight. >> >>>> Ciao, Thorsten (wearing his 'the Linux kernel's regression tracker' hat) >>>> >>>> P.S.: As the Linux kernel's regression tracker I deal with a lot of >>>> reports and sometimes miss something important when writing mails like >>>> this. If that's the case here, don't hesitate to tell me in a public >>>> reply, it's in everyone's interest to set the public record straight. >>>> >>>> On 30.06.22 09:44, Peter Rosin wrote: >>>>> 2022-06-10 at 22:51, Peter Rosin wrote: >>>>>> 2022-06-10 at 09:35, Codrin.Ciubotariu@microchip.com wrote: >>>>>>> On 09.06.2022 17:28, Peter Rosin wrote: >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> I have not actually bisected this issue but reverting the effects of >>>>>>>> patch a4bd8da893a3 ("ARM: dts: at91: sama5d3: add i2c gpio pinctrl") >>>>>>>> makes the problem go away. >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> I.e. I need something like this in my dts >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> &i2c2 { >>>>>>>> status = "okay"; >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> pinctrl-names = "default"; >>>>>>>> /delete-property/ pinctrl-1; >>>>>>>> /delete-property/ sda-gpios; >>>>>>>> /delete-property/ scl-gpios; >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> eeprom@50 { >>>>>>>> compatible = "st,24c64", "atmel,24c64"; >>>>>>>> reg = <0x50>; >>>>>>>> wp-gpios = <&filter_gpio 7 GPIO_ACTIVE_HIGH>; >>>>>>>> }; >>>>>>>> }; >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> for multi-page eeprom writes to not time out (a page is 32 bytes on this >>>>>>>> eeprom). >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> For reference, the current defaults for this SoC/I2C-bus, that I modify, >>>>>>>> are: >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> pinctrl-names = "default", "gpio"; >>>>>>>> pinctrl-0 = <&pinctrl_i2c2>; >>>>>>>> pinctrl-1 = <&pinctrl_i2c2_gpio>; >>>>>>>> sda-gpios = <&pioA 18 GPIO_ACTIVE_HIGH>; >>>>>>>> scl-gpios = <&pioA 19 (GPIO_ACTIVE_HIGH | GPIO_OPEN_DRAIN)>; >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> I suspect that the underlying reason is that the bus recovery takes >>>>>>>> too long and that the at24 eeprom driver gives up prematurely. I doubt >>>>>>>> that this is chip specific, but I don't know that. >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> I can work around the issue in user space with by writing in 4 byte >>>>>>>> chunks, like so >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> dd if=source.file of=/sys/bus/i2c/devices/2-0050/eeprom obs=4 >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> but that is really ugly and gets slow too, about 20 seconds to program >>>>>>>> the full 8kB eeprom. With the above in my dts it takes a second or >>>>>>>> so (a bit more with dynamic debug active). >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> If I run >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> dd if=source.file of=/sys/bus/i2c/devices/2-0050/eeprom >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> with a source.file of 8kB and the upstream dts properties in place, I can >>>>>>>> collect the following debug output from at24, i2c-core and i2c-at91: >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: at91_xfer: processing 1 messages: >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer: write 34 bytes. >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer complete >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at24 2-0050: write 32@0 --> 0 (-23170) >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: at91_xfer: processing 1 messages: >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer: write 34 bytes. >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: received nack >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: Trying i2c bus recovery >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at24 2-0050: write 32@32 --> -121 (-23169) >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: at91_xfer: processing 1 messages: >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer: write 34 bytes. >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer complete >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at24 2-0050: write 32@32 --> 0 (-23168) >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: at91_xfer: processing 1 messages: >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer: write 34 bytes. >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: received nack >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: Trying i2c bus recovery >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at24 2-0050: write 32@64 --> -121 (-23168) >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: at91_xfer: processing 1 messages: >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer: write 34 bytes. >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer complete >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at24 2-0050: write 32@64 --> 0 (-23167) >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: at91_xfer: processing 1 messages: >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer: write 34 bytes. >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: received nack >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: Trying i2c bus recovery >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at24 2-0050: write 32@96 --> -121 (-23167) >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: at91_xfer: processing 1 messages: >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer: write 34 bytes. >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: controller timed out >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: Trying i2c bus recovery >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at24 2-0050: write 32@96 --> -110 (-23155) >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: at91_xfer: processing 1 messages: >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer: write 34 bytes. >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: controller timed out >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: Trying i2c bus recovery >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:56:34 me20 kernel: at24 2-0050: write 32@96 --> -110 (-23143) >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> And then there is no more action. I.e. only a couple of 32 byte pages >>>>>>>> are written. >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> With the above mentioned dts override in place I instead get this, which is >>>>>>>> a lot more sensible: >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: at91_xfer: processing 1 messages: >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer: write 34 bytes. >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer complete >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at24 2-0050: write 32@0 --> 0 (753629) >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: at91_xfer: processing 1 messages: >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer: write 34 bytes. >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: received nack >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at24 2-0050: write 32@32 --> -121 (753629) >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: at91_xfer: processing 1 messages: >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer: write 34 bytes. >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer complete >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at24 2-0050: write 32@32 --> 0 (753630) >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: at91_xfer: processing 1 messages: >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer: write 34 bytes. >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: received nack >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at24 2-0050: write 32@64 --> -121 (753630) >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: at91_xfer: processing 1 messages: >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer: write 34 bytes. >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer complete >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at24 2-0050: write 32@64 --> 0 (753631) >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: at91_xfer: processing 1 messages: >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer: write 34 bytes. >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: received nack >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at24 2-0050: write 32@96 --> -121 (753631) >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: at91_xfer: processing 1 messages: >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer: write 34 bytes. >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer complete >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at24 2-0050: write 32@96 --> 0 (753632) >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: at91_xfer: processing 1 messages: >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer: write 34 bytes. >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: received nack >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at24 2-0050: write 32@128 --> -121 (753632) >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: at91_xfer: processing 1 messages: >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer: write 34 bytes. >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer complete >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at24 2-0050: write 32@128 --> 0 (753633) >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: at91_xfer: processing 1 messages: >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer: write 34 bytes. >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: received nack >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at24 2-0050: write 32@160 --> -121 (753633) >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: at91_xfer: processing 1 messages: >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer: write 34 bytes. >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer complete >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:53 me20 kernel: at24 2-0050: write 32@160 --> 0 (753634) >>>>>>>> ... snip ... >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:55 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: at91_xfer: processing 1 messages: >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:55 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer: write 34 bytes. >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:55 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: received nack >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:55 me20 kernel: at24 2-0050: write 32@8128 --> -121 (753883) >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:55 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: at91_xfer: processing 1 messages: >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:55 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer: write 34 bytes. >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:55 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer complete >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:55 me20 kernel: at24 2-0050: write 32@8128 --> 0 (753884) >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:55 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: at91_xfer: processing 1 messages: >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:55 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer: write 34 bytes. >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:55 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: received nack >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:55 me20 kernel: at24 2-0050: write 32@8160 --> -121 (753884) >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:55 me20 kernel: i2c i2c-2: at91_xfer: processing 1 messages: >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:55 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer: write 34 bytes. >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:55 me20 kernel: at91_i2c f801c000.i2c: transfer complete >>>>>>>> Jun 9 15:48:55 me20 kernel: at24 2-0050: write 32@8160 --> 0 (753885) >>>>>>> >>>>>>> could you please apply this patch-set [1] and let us know if it >>>>>>> addresses your issue? >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Thanks and best regards, >>>>>>> Codrin >>>>>>> >>>>>>> https://patchwork.ozlabs.org/project/linux-i2c/list/?series=255408 >>>>>> >>>>>> That series does indeed help! I'll reply with a tested-by etc on the >>>>>> first two patches, I can't test patch 3/3 with my sama5d3 board... >>>>>> >>>>>> Thank you very much! >>>>> >>>>> Since replying to the actual patches do not work for me, I'm writing here >>>>> instead. Sorry about that. As stated above, it /seems/ to work much better >>>>> with these patches. But I fooled myself and there is still some remaining >>>>> trouble. It is not uncommon that the second (32-byte) page in the eeprom >>>>> is not written correctly for whatever reason. I do not know why it's >>>>> always the second page that gets corrupted, but this is a bad problem since >>>>> the failure is completely silent. >>>>> >>>>> Cheers, >>>>> Peter >>>> >>>> #regzbot poke >>> >>> _______________________________________________ >>> linux-arm-kernel mailing list >>> linux-arm-kernel@lists.infradead.org >>> http://lists.infradead.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-arm-kernel >> >> #regzbot poke > ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 4+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2023-03-15 11:07 UTC | newest] Thread overview: 4+ messages (download: mbox.gz / follow: Atom feed) -- links below jump to the message on this page -- [not found] <074b39c5-55fc-2bc1-072d-aef1070e284d@axentia.se> 2022-06-11 13:41 ` Regression: at24 eeprom writing times out on sama5d3 Thorsten Leemhuis [not found] ` <2bb4868b-90ab-887e-bf13-9de8b79231bd@microchip.com> [not found] ` <38dedc92-62a2-7365-6fda-95d6404be749@axentia.se> [not found] ` <3503471d-2d5e-572b-39e7-d715a909749d@axentia.se> [not found] ` <5800be99-3569-6edd-5c71-9e6f1498dc3b@leemhuis.info> [not found] ` <2fcfa811-ce5c-9fc8-9837-753299794560@axentia.se> 2022-12-15 17:53 ` Thorsten Leemhuis 2022-12-15 18:50 ` Conor.Dooley 2023-03-15 11:07 ` Linux regression tracking (Thorsten Leemhuis)
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