John Heenan <[email protected]> writes:
> The rtl8723bu wireless IC shows evidence of a more agressive approach to
> power saving, powering down its RF side when there is no wireless
> interfacing but leaving USB interfacing intact. This makes the wireless
> IC more suitable for use in devices which need to keep their power use
> as low as practical, such as tablets and Surface Pro type devices.
>
> In effect this means that a full initialisation must be performed
> whenever a wireless interface is brought up. It also means that
> interpretations of power status from general wireless registers should
> not be relied on to influence an init sequence.
>
> The patch works by forcing a fuller initialisation and forcing it to
> occur more often in code paths (such as occurs during a low level
> authentication that initiates wireless interfacing).
>
> The initialisation sequence is now more consistent with code based
> directly on vendor code. For example while the vendor derived code
> interprets a register as indcating a particular powered state, it does
> not use this information to influence its init sequence.
>
> Only devices that use the rtl8723bu driver are affected by this patch.
>
> With this patch wpa_supplicant reliably and consistently connects with
> an AP. Before a workaround such as executing rmmod and modprobe before
> each call to wpa_supplicant worked with some distributions.
>
> Signed-off-by: John Heenan <[email protected]>
> ---
> drivers/net/wireless/realtek/rtl8xxxu/rtl8xxxu_core.c | 16 ++++++++++++----
> 1 file changed, 12 insertions(+), 4 deletions(-)
>
I am at Linux Plumbers this week, so my response time is slow. Next week
I am on PTO, so I will not respond.
First of all, why do you keep CC'ing multiple mailing lists that do not
matter? This discussion belongs on linux-wireless not on netdev or lkml.
CC'ing Kalle directly is not going to get him to apply this broken patch
for you.
> diff --git a/drivers/net/wireless/realtek/rtl8xxxu/rtl8xxxu_core.c
> b/drivers/net/wireless/realtek/rtl8xxxu/rtl8xxxu_core.c
> index 04141e5..ab2f2ef 100644
> --- a/drivers/net/wireless/realtek/rtl8xxxu/rtl8xxxu_core.c
> +++ b/drivers/net/wireless/realtek/rtl8xxxu/rtl8xxxu_core.c
> @@ -3900,7 +3900,7 @@ static int rtl8xxxu_init_device(struct ieee80211_hw *hw)
> * Fix 92DU-VC S3 hang with the reason is that secondary mac is not
> * initialized. First MAC returns 0xea, second MAC returns 0x00
> */
> - if (val8 == 0xea)
> + if (val8 == 0xea || priv->fops == &rtl8723bu_fops)
> macpower = false;
> else
> macpower = true;
Why oh why do you insist on not using the *standard* way of coping with
this? 'priv-rtl_chip' is used everywhere else, but you just have to do
something awful like this?
> @@ -5779,6 +5779,12 @@ static int rtl8xxxu_start(struct ieee80211_hw *hw)
>
> ret = 0;
>
> + if(priv->fops == &rtl8723bu_fops) {
> + ret = rtl8xxxu_init_device(hw);
> + if (ret)
> + goto error_out;
> + }
> +
> init_usb_anchor(&priv->rx_anchor);
> init_usb_anchor(&priv->tx_anchor);
> init_usb_anchor(&priv->int_anchor);
Read Documentation/CodingStyle - as others already pointed you at.
> @@ -6080,9 +6086,11 @@ static int rtl8xxxu_probe(struct usb_interface
> *interface,
> goto exit;
> }
>
> - ret = rtl8xxxu_init_device(hw);
> - if (ret)
> - goto exit;
> + if(priv->fops != &rtl8723bu_fops) {
> + ret = rtl8xxxu_init_device(hw);
> + if (ret)
> + goto exit;
> + }
>
> hw->wiphy->max_scan_ssids = 1;
> hw->wiphy->max_scan_ie_len = IEEE80211_MAX_DATA_LEN;
Again coding style violation.
Second, I am NOT going to accept any patches that fundamentally changes
the init sequence of the code for just one device.
I already told you I want to find out *why* this matters, and what part
of rtl8xxxu_init_device() is the culprit. I want to understand the
actual problem, not just blindly move stuff around.
Jes