On Sun, 08 Aug 2004 23:04:06 +0200, Manfred Spraul wrote:
> Roger Luethi wrote:
> >>I know that PHYs go into isolate mode if the startup id is wired to 0,
> >
> >Wouldn't that be s/go/can go/ ?
> >
> I don't have the MII standard, my knowledge is from the DP83840A specs:
> The pin description contains a section about the phy ids:
> During power up five pins are latched to determine the initial phy address.
> Then the following sentence in bold: "An address selection of all zeros
> (00000) will result in a PHY isolation condition".
I suppose all PHYs do that. Even if they don't, though, I should be
safe as long as I de-isolate unconditionally (instead of testing for
phy_id==0).
> I've reread the DP specs and I now think that your current patch is
> sufficient:
> The isolate state is independant from the phy address - a non-zero phy
> can be in isolate mode and the phy zero can be non-isolated. The phy id
Stands to reason. A PHY that can't get out of isolation wouldn't be
very useful.
> If this is really true then handling phy 0 is trivial:
> First scan 1-31. If nothing found: try 0. If a phy is found: clear the
> isolate bit and then use phy 0.
Makes sense. The Rhine is actually pretty neat in that regard, I've
been able to drop the PHY scanning entirely.
Roger
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