[etherlab-dev] [PATCH] My patchset roundup July 2015
Gavin Lambert
gavinl at compacsort.com
Thu Aug 6 09:42:27 CEST 2015
Hi Knud,
Thanks for sharing the updates.
Regarding the description of the update for patch 0008, though, this puzzles
me a little.
According to ETG1000.5 (specifically 6.2.1.3.8 "Stop Bootstrap Mode"
service, and also ETG1000.6 6.4.1.4 #51 and #57), a slave is not permitted
to refuse the transition from BOOT to INIT (this generally applies to all of
the other "upwards" transitions as well).
Of course the master still needs to be able to cope with it anyway (a
crashed slave may fail to respond to all transitions until power cycled,
although this is not the same as a refusal), but it's not something that's
supposed to happen.
I assume this is one of your own slaves? My reading of the standards
suggests that in the case of invalid firmware a more appropriate response
would be to allow the transition to INIT (and back to BOOT), but refuse
transition to PREOP with AL status 0x0014 ("no valid firmware").
Having said that, there's very little information in the standards (at least
that I've found) about how firmware updates are recommended to work
(presumably because this is very hardware-specific), so it wouldn't hurt to
ask about it on the ETG forums, if you haven't already.
Regards,
Gavin Lambert
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Knud Baastrup [mailto:kba at deif.com]
> Sent: Thursday, 6 August 2015 19:05
> To: Gavin Lambert
> Cc: etherlab-dev at etherlab.org
> Subject: RE: [etherlab-dev] [PATCH] My patchset roundup July 2015
>
> Hi Gavin,
>
> I look forward to try out the complete access support that you have
> implemented. We have several cases where we believe this feature can be
> very useful.
>
>
> I have done a few updates on some of the knud-xxxxxxx patches as well,
> which includes:
>
> Correction to 0003-Eoe-mac-address-now-derived-from-unique-mac.patch:
> Added new line to EC_SLAVE_INFO
>
> Correction to 0008-Clear-slave-mailboxes-after-a-re-scan.patch:
> Now assuming that the slaves mailbox data is valid even if the slave
scanning
> skipped the clear mailbox state, e.g. if the slave refused to enter state
INIT.
> This correct an introduced bug where invalid application firmware (that
> prevented the slave module to enter state INIT) could prevent mailbox
> communication (FoE) in state BOOT.
>
> New 0017-EoE-processing-is-now-only-allowed-in-state-PREOP-SA.patch
> The patch ensure that EoE fragments only is forwarded in state PREOP,
> SAFEOP and OP and not in state BOOT that is mainly (only?) intended for
> bootstrapping using FoE. The patch corrects an issue where EoE fragments
> can interrupt a successful FoE firmware upgrade in state BOOT despite that
> the slave code is restricted to only use FoE in state BOOT. In our case we
use
> a common bootloader for all I/O modules that only supports FoE. The
> bootloader will however still use mailbox buffer to receive EoE fragments
> (and additional to inform the Master that EoE is not supported), which in
> some cases can prevent the execution of a FoE request.
>
> Mvh. Knud
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: etherlab-dev [mailto:etherlab-dev-bounces at etherlab.org] On Behalf
> Of Gavin Lambert
> Sent: 10. juli 2015 09:14
> To: etherlab-dev at etherlab.org; Florian Pose
> Subject: [etherlab-dev] [PATCH] My patchset roundup July 2015
>
> Hi all,
>
> It's been a while since I last posted my current patchset for Etherlab, so
it
> seemed like a good time to share the newest ones.
>
> As with the last set, this is based on stable-1.5 (specifically
> 4b0b906df1b40a1b5610282117b2c22581890575) and contains both my own
> patches and patches from others in the community, and I'm sharing them in
> case people find them useful and that hopefully they'll make it into
mainline.
>
> Having said that, it appears that some of the patches in here have made it
> into the default branch already; I haven't had time yet to inspect them
and
> rebase my patchset onto that branch, but it's on my TODO list. :)
>
> The series file included in the archive shows the intended application
order
> (though you'll probably want to skip some of them if you're on default
> already).
>
> Short descriptions (commit notes) are at the top of each patch; detailed
> descriptions for the older patches can be found in previous emails, but
I'll
> give a bit more background on the newer patches below. The older patches
> are unchanged except for possible defuzzing.
>
> Before that though, just a reminder that patch 0006 "dc_sync_vs_sys_time"
> is only a partial fix; it works for slaves that have AssignActivate bits
0x3000
> set, and that don't mind the offset between SM events and SYNC events
> changing, but won't help other slaves -- they'll need a more comprehensive
> fix (fully recalculating the Sync Start Time). It's probably not
something I will
> do because my slaves do work with this, and I'm not sufficiently familiar
with
> the way DC sync is calculated in Etherlab.
>
> The new patches are the gavinl-2000 series, as follows:
>
> gavinl-2001-reg_readwrite:
> This adds an API "ecrt_reg_request_readwrite" and tool command
> "reg_readwrite" which will write register data and read back the values
> before the write in a single FPRW datagram. This can be useful to ensure
> that the data is coherent and you don't miss an update. It assumes Knud's
rt-
> mutex patch has been applied; if not you'll have to switch the locking
calls
> back.
>
> gavinl-2002-reg_req_info:
> This enhances some of the debug-level logging for register requests.
>
> gavinl-2003-sdo_complete_upload:
> This adds an API "ecrt_master_sdo_upload_complete" and extends
> tool command "upload" to support reading entire objects from a slave via
> SDO Complete Access (where supported by the slave). As with the existing
> download functionality only Complete Access from subindex 0 is supported;
> future extension might be to support access from index 1 as well. Note
that
> when using the tool "upload" it will default to the "octet_string" data
type, so
> you can use something like "ethercat upload -p0 INDEX | hd" to see the
data
> formatted nicely. It also assumes use of Knud's rt-mutex patch.
>
> gavinl-2004-sdo_write_size:
> This might be a little more controversial. :) This modifies the
> "ecrt_sdo_request_write" API (so it's a breaking change) to also include
the
> size of data to be written (this must be less than or equal to the size
specified
> at the time the request was created). Combined with the existing
> "ecrt_sdo_request_index" API, this allows you to re-use one request object
> for any SDO on the same slave, provided the initial size is large enough.
> Previously you had to use at least one object per different object size,
as
> there was no way to set the write size other than at creation time, and
the
> write size was also altered whenever you did a read. (Possible
non-breaking
> alternative would be to make "ecrt_sdo_request_set_data_size" or
> something, but that seems messier.)
>
> gavinl-2005-sdo_async_complete:
> This is another breaking API change, which adds a boolean
> "complete"
> parameter to "ecrt_slave_config_create_sdo_request" and
> "ecrt_sdo_request_index". This allows realtime requests to use Complete
> Access; prior to this patch this was only available to the non-realtime
API.
> (If this is judged to be *too* breaking, one possible breakage reduction
is to
> omit the change to the create function since that is more common than use
> of the index function. However this will require anyone that wants to
create
> a Complete Access request to make two API calls specifying the index and
> subindex twice, which seems uglier. Similar for adding a separate
> "ecrt_sdo_request_complete" API, which I also considered.)
>
> As before, note that these patches do not include a change to
> EC_IOCTL_VERSION_MAGIC, but you should change this if you apply any of
> them to reduce the risk of incompatibility (assuming that your app checks
the
> versions).
>
> Regards,
> Gavin Lambert
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