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Fix #750 by maintaining the Rx tail pointer
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At its root, #750 is about a race condition between the DMA
engine and the STM32 Ethernet, and the host CPU.  We can
prevent this race by properly maintaining the Rx tail pointer.

Some background information to contextual this change:

The device and host participate in a simple protocol to drive
a state machine: the host gives descriptors to the device
that specify buffers to DMA incoming Ethernet frames into.
The host gives a descriptor to the device by setting the
ownership bit and setting the tail pointer: this driver
handles the former properly, but does not handle the latter
correctly.

The device consumes these descriptors as frames arrive and
it DMAs them host memory.  In turn, the device lets the host
know that it is done with a descriptor by doing two things:

1. Resetting the ownership bit in the descriptor, and
2. Sending an interrupt to the host.

Internally, the device _also_ increments its "head" pointer in
the Rx ring (modulo the size of the ring).  If the device hits
the end of the ring (as specified by the value in the Rx tail
pointer register), it goes into a "Suspended" state and stops
DMAing packets to the host; it nominally resumes when the Rx
tail pointer register is written again (if the newly written
tail register value is the same as the old value, it doesn't
appear to continue: note this implies it is not possible to
transition from a _full_ ring directly to an _empty_ ring).

Both device and host maintain (or, perhaps more precisely,
should maintain) two pointers into the ring: a producer pointer,
and a consumer pointer.

One may think of this as the host producing available
descriptors that are consumed by the device, and the device
producing received frames that are consumed by the host.
The tail pointer sets a demarkation point between the host
and device: descriptors before the tail pointer are owned by
the device, those after are owned by the host.  The ownership
bit is used to communicate to the host that the device is
done with a given descriptor.

Put another way, the tail pointer represents the host's producer
pointer; the host's consumer pointer is simply the next
descriptor in the ring after the last one that it processed.
The device's consumer pointer is whatever the host set the tail
pointer to, and it's producer pointer is its head pointer.  If
the device encounters a situation where _its_ head and tail
pointer are equal, the ring is full, and the DMA engine enters
the suspended state until the tail pointer is rewritten.

An invariant that both sides of the protocol must maintain is
that host software ensures that it's producer pointer (that
is, what it sets the tail pointer to) is always equal to or
(ie, the ring is full), or greater than (ie, there is space
available in the ring) to the devices's producer pointer
(that is, the devices's "head" pointer).

Of course, we talk about an ordering relationship here,
but all of this is happening modulo the size of the ring,
but that's a detail.

Note that there are two cases here:

1. The first time you write to the tail pointer to set
   things in motion at the beginning of time, and
2. Every other time.

For the first time, this change writes the address of the last
valid descriptor in the ring into the tail pointer register (not
one beyond the last!).  Then after consuming and resetting a
descriptor on the host, we write the address of the next valid
descriptor in the ring to the tail pointer, indicating that the
just-processed descriptor is available to the device.  As we do
this for every received frame, we can never starve the ring (at
least, not due to this).

In this scenario, the device will follows the host around
the ring; the problem with the first write is solved since,
after the first frame reception, the device's head pointer will
be somewhere beyond the first descriptor in the ring.  Thus,
writing the tail pointer to the address of (say) the 0'th
element is fine, since that won't be equal to the head pointer
on the peripheral.  Similarly, all available descriptors can
be consumed by the device.

Finally, this allows for some simplification with respect to
barriers: since the tail pointer indicates which descriptors
are owned by the device and which by the host, the host can
batch up updates to the descriptors and do a single flush
at the end of its processing, write before writing to the
tail pointer.  This was already done in `rx_notify`.

Note that something similar should probably be done for the
transmission ring, which I suspect is vulnerable to a similar
race between the DMA engine on the device and writes on the
host.

I have validated that, whereas I could reproduce this issue in
a demo branch prior to this change, I cannot reproduce it with
this change.
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dancrossnyc authored and Dan Cross committed Aug 15, 2023
1 parent 61d1d25 commit fa2f920
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Showing 2 changed files with 19 additions and 14 deletions.
9 changes: 5 additions & 4 deletions drv/stm32h7-eth/src/lib.rs
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
Expand Up @@ -157,8 +157,9 @@ impl Ethernet {
// above.
dma.dmactx_dtpr
.write(|w| unsafe { w.tdt().bits(tx_ring.tail_ptr() as u32 >> 2) });
dma.dmacrx_dtpr
.write(|w| unsafe { w.rdt().bits(rx_ring.tail_ptr() as u32 >> 2) });
dma.dmacrx_dtpr.write(|w| unsafe {
w.rdt().bits(rx_ring.first_tail_ptr() as u32 >> 2)
});

// Central DMA config:

Expand Down Expand Up @@ -320,9 +321,9 @@ impl Ethernet {
// room in the RX queue now. Poke it.
core::sync::atomic::fence(core::sync::atomic::Ordering::Release);
// Poke the tail pointer so the hardware knows to recheck (dropping two
// bottom bits because svd2rust)
// bottom bits because svd2rust).
self.dma.dmacrx_dtpr.write(|w| unsafe {
w.rdt().bits(self.rx_ring.tail_ptr() as u32 >> 2)
w.rdt().bits(self.rx_ring.next_tail_ptr() as u32 >> 2)
});
}

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24 changes: 14 additions & 10 deletions drv/stm32h7-eth/src/ring.rs
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
Expand Up @@ -448,12 +448,18 @@ impl RxRing {
self.storage.as_ptr()
}

/// Returns a pointer to the byte just past the end of the `RxDesc` ring.
/// This too gets loaded into the DMA controller, so that it knows what
/// section of the ring is initialized and can be read. (The answer is "all
/// of it.")
pub fn tail_ptr(&self) -> *const RxDesc {
self.storage.as_ptr_range().end
/// Returns a pointer to the last valid descriptor in the ring.
/// We load this into the DMA controller when we first start operation so
/// that it knows what section of the ring is initialized and can be read.
/// The answer is "all of it," but we can't exactly specify that.
pub fn first_tail_ptr(&self) -> *const RxDesc {
self.base_ptr().wrapping_add(self.len() - 1)
}

/// Returns a pointer to the "next" descriptor in the ring. We load this
/// into the device so that the DMA engine knows what descriptors are free.
pub fn next_tail_ptr(&self) -> *const RxDesc {
self.base_ptr().wrapping_add(self.next.get())
}

/// Returns the count of entries in the descriptor ring / buffers in the
Expand All @@ -468,12 +474,10 @@ impl RxRing {
fn set_descriptor(d: &RxDesc, buffer: *mut [u8; BUFSZ]) {
d.rdes[0].store(buffer as u32, Ordering::Relaxed);
d.rdes[1].store(0, Ordering::Relaxed);
d.rdes[2].store(0, Ordering::Release);
// See hubris#750 for why we need Ordering::Release and this delay
cortex_m::asm::delay(16);
d.rdes[2].store(0, Ordering::Relaxed);
let rdes3 =
1 << RDES3_OWN_BIT | 1 << RDES3_IOC_BIT | 1 << RDES3_BUF1_VALID_BIT;
d.rdes[3].store(rdes3, Ordering::Release); // <-- release
d.rdes[3].store(rdes3, Ordering::Relaxed);
}
}

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