Date: Fri, 11 Jul 2008 21:07:26 -0400 From: "Alexandre \"Sunny\" Kovalenko" <alex.kovalenko@verizon.net> To: Sam Leffler <sam@freebsd.org> Cc: stable@freebsd.org Subject: Re: Hard(?) lock when reassociating ath with wpa_supplicant on RELENG_7 Message-ID: <1215824846.1074.23.camel@RabbitsDen> In-Reply-To: <482DB4FE.3010300@freebsd.org> References: <1210640542.1008.33.camel@RabbitsDen> <4828FDE5.8090409@freebsd.org> <1210696676.985.18.camel@RabbitsDen> <482DB4FE.3010300@freebsd.org>
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On Fri, 2008-05-16 at 12:23 -0400, Sam Leffler wrote: > Alexandre "Sunny" Kovalenko wrote: > > On Mon, 2008-05-12 at 19:33 -0700, Sam Leffler wrote: > >> Alexandre "Sunny" Kovalenko wrote: > >>> I seem to be able to lock my machine by going into wpa_cli and asking it > >>> to 'reassoc'. The reason for question mark after "hard" is that debug > >>> information (caused by wlandebug and athdebug) is being printed on the > >>> console. The only way to get machine's attention is to hold power button > >>> for 8 seconds. > >> So this is just livelock due to console debug msgs. > > I am not sure, I have parsed this well enough, so I will try to clarify: > > machine becomes unresponsive *without* any debugging turned on, to an > > extent that pressing the power button twice *does not* generate ACPI > > console message (something to the tune of "going into S5 already -- > > gimme a break"). If I turn ath debugging on, I do see those messages, > > and only them, scrolling on the console. > > Guess I misunderstood you. I have finally got enough time and equipment to investigate this further. Here are some conclusions: -- at this point (RELENG_7 as of July 9th around 15:30 EST) it is indeed a livelock. -- all system does, is executing ath_intr (if_ath.c) in the tight loop with the same status -- 0x1000 AKA HAL_INT_MIB. In order to eliminate possibility that I have caused livelock with the debug messages, I have put conditional panic() into ath_intr, as soon as sc->sc_stats.ast_mib reaches 10,000. Without any kind of the debug messages, it will be triggered within 40-60 seconds after starting of wpa_supplicant. -- I suspect that comment below, might not hold true on my equipment if (status & HAL_INT_MIB) { sc->sc_stats.ast_mib++; /* * Disable interrupts until we service the MIB * interrupt; otherwise it will continue to fire. */ ath_hal_intrset(ah, 0); /* * Let the hal handle the event. We assume it will <============ * clear whatever condition caused the interrupt. <============ */ ath_hal_mibevent(ah, &sc->sc_halstats); ath_hal_intrset(ah, sc->sc_imask); } My hardware is: ath_hal: 0.9.20.3 (AR5210, AR5211, AR5212, RF5111, RF5112, RF2413, RF5413) ath0: <Atheros 5212> mem 0xedf00000-0xedf0ffff irq 17 at device 0.0 on pci3 ath0: [ITHREAD] ath0: using obsoleted if_watchdog interface ath0: Ethernet address: 00:16:cf:26:2f:3f ath0: mac 10.3 phy 6.1 radio 10.2 My wpa_supplicant.conf is: ctrl_interface=/var/run/wpa_supplicant ctrl_interface_group=wheel eapol_version=2 network={ ssid="XXXXXXXXXXX" scan_ssid=1 priority=1 proto=WPA pairwise=TKIP group=TKIP key_mgmt=WPA-PSK psk="xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx" } Access point is Netgear WNDR3300-1B with 11N and 11G SSID set up to different values. Only 11G SSID is configured in wpa_supplicant.conf. In the test setup, AP is with 10' (3m) from the laptop. AP is successfully used by handful of Windows clients (including this same laptop) and iBook G4. Neither wpa_supplicant with '-d -d' nor wlandebug 0xFFFFFFFF show anything but normal scan. athdebug 0xFFFFFFFF loops with ath_intr: status 0x1000 until I power down my laptop. I would appreciate any suggestion on what I can investigate further -- at this point I have comfortable console setup and should be able to field requests for further information much better. -- Alexandre "Sunny" Kovalenko (Олександр Коваленко)
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