From 6979d5dd96a4a4975ce240982436e92a3da23315 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Mark Brown Date: Wed, 1 Jun 2011 10:18:09 +0000 Subject: net: dm9000: Get the chip in a known good state before enabling interrupts Currently the DM9000 driver requests the primary interrupt before it resets the chip and puts it into a known good state. This means that if the chip is asserting interrupt for some reason we can end up with a screaming IRQ that the interrupt handler is unable to deal with. Avoid this by only requesting the interrupt after we've reset the chip so we know what state it's in. This started manifesting itself on one of my boards in the past month or so, I suspect as a result of some core infrastructure changes removing some form of mitigation against bad behaviour here, even when things boot it seems that the new code brings the interface up more quickly. Signed-off-by: Mark Brown Signed-off-by: David S. Miller --- drivers/net/dm9000.c | 6 +++--- 1 file changed, 3 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-) diff --git a/drivers/net/dm9000.c b/drivers/net/dm9000.c index fbaff3584bd4..ee597e676ee5 100644 --- a/drivers/net/dm9000.c +++ b/drivers/net/dm9000.c @@ -1157,9 +1157,6 @@ dm9000_open(struct net_device *dev) irqflags |= IRQF_SHARED; - if (request_irq(dev->irq, dm9000_interrupt, irqflags, dev->name, dev)) - return -EAGAIN; - /* GPIO0 on pre-activate PHY, Reg 1F is not set by reset */ iow(db, DM9000_GPR, 0); /* REG_1F bit0 activate phyxcer */ mdelay(1); /* delay needs by DM9000B */ @@ -1168,6 +1165,9 @@ dm9000_open(struct net_device *dev) dm9000_reset(db); dm9000_init_dm9000(dev); + if (request_irq(dev->irq, dm9000_interrupt, irqflags, dev->name, dev)) + return -EAGAIN; + /* Init driver variable */ db->dbug_cnt = 0; -- cgit v1.2.3