Message ID | CANUX_P1j9QNGQ2n02KpXsuMQcZo9uOsSN-zZ8yNS1e5+Y9bJOA@mail.gmail.com (mailing list archive) |
---|---|
State | New, archived |
Delegated to: | Bjorn Helgaas |
Headers | show |
2013/12/25 Emmanuel Grumbach <egrumbach@gmail.com>: > Back to you. > Can you please try not to do the setpci and add this: Glad to see you again :-) I've compiled Linux 3.12.5 with your patch, removed "setpci" trick and rebooted. During the boot of new kernel, I can see additional (error) messages among "systemd-fsck" lines but I was not fast enough to take photos for them before they disappeared (flushed away) by tty login interface. After logging in, I find that netcfg did not connect to dormitory's Wi-Fi as before. I run "lspci -vvxxx" and find that the interface is filled with "ff". I've attached the output of "lspci -vvxxx" and "dmesg". (And here is something "fun": I reverted my kernel to Arch's official 3.12.5 and rebooted, and the interface is totally missing! I mean, it disappeared from the output of "ip link". I cannot even see it in "lspci -vvxxx", not even "ff". The strange effect vanished after one more reboot and a cold boot.)
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Hi, yesterday a friend of mine told me that one can now install Windows 8/8.1 on a USB device natively. So I tried this so-called "Windows To Go" technology. Now I have successfully deployed a Windows 8.1 installation on my external USB HDD and booted my laptop up with it. That is to say, I can now observe how Intel 7260 acts under Windows.
(Sorry for sending this mail multiple times...) Hi, yesterday a friend of mine told me that one can now install Windows 8/8.1 on a USB device natively. So I tried this so-called "Windows To Go" technology. Now I have successfully deployed a Windows 8.1 installation on my external USB HDD and booted my laptop up with it. That is to say, I can now observe how Intel 7260 acts under Windows. Could you tell me what should I do to gather debugging information such as L1 mode etc in Windows? I will send them to you then. Maybe this could help, to figure out what the bug of iwlwifi is.
> Hi, > > yesterday a friend of mine told me that one can now install Windows > 8/8.1 on a USB device natively. So I tried this so-called "Windows To Go" > technology. > > Now I have successfully deployed a Windows 8.1 installation on my external > USB HDD and booted my laptop up with it. That is to say, I can now observe > how Intel 7260 acts under Windows. > > Could you tell me what should I do to gather debugging information such as > L1 mode etc in Windows? I will send them to you then. Maybe this could > help, to figure out what the bug of iwlwifi is. http://rweverything.com/
2013/12/29 Grumbach, Emmanuel <emmanuel.grumbach@intel.com>:
> http://rweverything.com/
Here are the output of "PCI" and "PCI Index" of Intel Wireless.
> > > Here are the output of "PCI" and "PCI Index" of Intel Wireless. > > looks like all the power features are enabled... including the ones I told you to disable. I am lost now... -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-pci" in the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
2013/12/29 Emmanuel Grumbach <egrumbach@gmail.com>: > looks like all the power features are enabled... including the ones I > told you to disable. > I am lost now... Oh... That sounds bad. But I thought both Windows and Linux driver for this NIC is written by Intel?
On Sun, Dec 29, 2013 at 2:23 AM, wzyboy <wzyboy@wzyboy.org> wrote: > 2013/12/29 Grumbach, Emmanuel <emmanuel.grumbach@intel.com>: >> http://rweverything.com/ > > > Here are the output of "PCI" and "PCI Index" of Intel Wireless. ASPM must be configured on both ends of the link, so for completeness, can you also collect the "PCI" output for the bridge leading to the 7260 device? Based on the Linux lspci output, this should be 0000:00:1c.1. And I assume the device works well with the Windows driver? Bjorn -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-pci" in the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
2014/1/3 Bjorn Helgaas <bhelgaas@google.com>: > ASPM must be configured on both ends of the link, so for completeness, > can you also collect the "PCI" output for the bridge leading to the > 7260 device? Based on the Linux lspci output, this should be > 0000:00:1c.1. > > And I assume the device works well with the Windows driver? Here are the "PCI" and "PCI Index" data for 0000:00:1c:1. And yes the NIC works nice in Windows.
> > ASPM must be configured on both ends of the link, so for completeness, > > can you also collect the "PCI" output for the bridge leading to the > > 7260 device? Based on the Linux lspci output, this should be > > 0000:00:1c.1. > > > > And I assume the device works well with the Windows driver? > > > Here are the "PCI" and "PCI Index" data for 0000:00:1c:1. > > And yes the NIC works nice in Windows. > Small update from the bugzilla (https://bugzilla.kernel.org/show_bug.cgi?id=64541). The bug is solved... There seem to be a hardware bug with the L1 OFF exit timer. To solve this bug we need *not* to rely on the internal clock and need to keep using the external clock. The internal clock isn't reliable enough and can lead to loss of synchronization between the bridge and the device upon L1 OFF transition. This issue has been seen in simulation and not on real hardware... until now... The windows driver has a workaround for this hardware bug, this is why the issue wasn't seen on Windows. I am porting the work around to the Linux driver. Thank you wzyboy for your patience... Then end.
2014/1/13 Grumbach, Emmanuel <emmanuel.grumbach@intel.com>: > Small update from the bugzilla (https://bugzilla.kernel.org/show_bug.cgi?id=64541). > The bug is solved... There seem to be a hardware bug with the L1 OFF exit timer. To solve this bug we need *not* to rely on the internal clock and need to keep using the external clock. The internal clock isn't reliable enough and can lead to loss of synchronization between the bridge and the device upon L1 OFF transition. > This issue has been seen in simulation and not on real hardware... until now... The windows driver has a workaround for this hardware bug, this is why the issue wasn't seen on Windows. I am porting the work around to the Linux driver. > > Thank you wzyboy for your patience... > > Then end. So this is a hardware bug instead of a driver bug? Oh... I'm glad this is finally solved since 2013-11-03. Thanks to all, providing me with wordarounds, without which I could only use wired network. :-) Cheers.
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diff --git a/drivers/net/wireless/iwlwifi/pcie/tx.c b/drivers/net/wireless/iwlwifi/pcie/tx.c index 079a511..e8a52f3 100644 --- a/drivers/net/wireless/iwlwifi/pcie/tx.c +++ b/drivers/net/wireless/iwlwifi/pcie/tx.c @@ -707,6 +707,8 @@ void iwl_pcie_tx_start(struct iwl_trans *trans, u32 scd_base_addr) iwl_write_direct32(trans, FH_TX_CHICKEN_BITS_REG, reg_val | FH_TX_CHICKEN_BITS_SCD_AUTO_RETRY_EN); + iwl_set_bits_prph(trans, 0xa04068, 0x8); + /* Enable L1-Active */ iwl_clear_bits_prph(trans, APMG_PCIDEV_STT_REG,