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    {irq16: em1 ehci0} taking up 75% of cpu

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Hardware
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    • W
      wallabybob
      last edited by

      @Bai:

      @wallabybob:

      Please post the output of pfSense shell command: pciconf -l -v; vmstat -i and the names of a

      The names of a what?

      Sorry, just the output of the shell command pciconf -l -v; devinfo -r; vmstat -i will do.

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • B
        Bai Shen
        last edited by

        Well, I turned off Legacy USB and USB 3 in the BIOS, and the problem seems to have gone away.  It's now idling at a nice 39W. :)

        Will the output of the commands still be worthwhile?

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • W
          wallabybob
          last edited by

          @Bai:

          Will the output of the commands still be worthwhile?

          No - seems like a USB related problem.

          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • B
            Bai Shen
            last edited by

            @wallabybob:

            @Bai:

            Will the output of the commands still be worthwhile?

            No - seems like a USB related problem.

            Actually, it looks like it's not. :(  It just took a while before it came back. :(

            Here's the output.

            
            $ pciconf -l -v; devinfo -r; vmstat -i
            hostb0@pci0:0:0:0:	class=0x060000 card=0x20038086 chip=0x01008086 rev=0x09 hdr=0x00
                class      = bridge
                subclass   = HOST-PCI
            vgapci0@pci0:0:2:0:	class=0x030000 card=0x20038086 chip=0x01028086 rev=0x09 hdr=0x00
                class      = display
                subclass   = VGA
            none0@pci0:0:22:0:	class=0x078000 card=0x20038086 chip=0x1c3a8086 rev=0x04 hdr=0x00
                class      = simple comms
            em0@pci0:0:25:0:	class=0x020000 card=0x20038086 chip=0x15038086 rev=0x05 hdr=0x00
                class      = network
                subclass   = ethernet
            ehci0@pci0:0:26:0:	class=0x0c0320 card=0x20038086 chip=0x1c2d8086 rev=0x05 hdr=0x00
                class      = serial bus
                subclass   = USB
            none1@pci0:0:27:0:	class=0x040300 card=0x20038086 chip=0x1c208086 rev=0x05 hdr=0x00
                class      = multimedia
                subclass   = HDA
            pcib1@pci0:0:28:0:	class=0x060400 card=0x20038086 chip=0x1c108086 rev=0xb5 hdr=0x01
                class      = bridge
                subclass   = PCI-PCI
            ehci1@pci0:0:29:0:	class=0x0c0320 card=0x20038086 chip=0x1c268086 rev=0x05 hdr=0x00
                class      = serial bus
                subclass   = USB
            isab0@pci0:0:31:0:	class=0x060100 card=0x20038086 chip=0x1c4a8086 rev=0x05 hdr=0x00
                class      = bridge
                subclass   = PCI-ISA
            atapci0@pci0:0:31:2:	class=0x010601 card=0x20038086 chip=0x1c028086 rev=0x05 hdr=0x00
                class      = mass storage
                subclass   = SATA
            none2@pci0:0:31:3:	class=0x0c0500 card=0x20038086 chip=0x1c228086 rev=0x05 hdr=0x00
                class      = serial bus
                subclass   = SMBus
            pcib2@pci0:1:0:0:	class=0x060400 card=0x20038086 chip=0x88921283 rev=0x10 hdr=0x01
                class      = bridge
                subclass   = PCI-PCI
            em1@pci0:2:0:0:	class=0x020000 card=0x13768086 chip=0x107c8086 rev=0x05 hdr=0x00
                class      = network
                subclass   = ethernet
            em2@pci0:2:1:0:	class=0x020000 card=0x13768086 chip=0x107c8086 rev=0x05 hdr=0x00
                class      = network
                subclass   = ethernet
            em3@pci0:2:2:0:	class=0x020000 card=0x13768086 chip=0x107c8086 rev=0x05 hdr=0x00
                class      = network
                subclass   = ethernet
            nexus0
              cryptosoft0
              apic0
              ram0
                  I/O memory addresses:
                      0x0-0x9cfff
                      0x100000-0x1fffffff
                      0x20200000-0x3fffffff
                      0x40200000-0xda969fff
                      0xdabc9000-0xdabc9fff
                      0xdae8e000-0xdaffffff
              npx0
              acpi0
                  Interrupt request lines:
                      9
                  I/O ports:
                      0x10-0x1f
                      0x22-0x3f
                      0x44-0x5f
                      0x62-0x63
                      0x65-0x6f
                      0x72-0x7f
                      0x80
                      0x84-0x86
                      0x88
                      0x8c-0x8e
                      0x90-0x9f
                      0xa2-0xbf
                      0xe0-0xef
                      0x400-0x453
                      0x454-0x457
                      0x458-0x47f
                      0x4d0-0x4d1
                      0x500-0x57f
                      0x1180-0x119f
                  I/O memory addresses:
                      0xf8000000-0xfbffffff
                      0xfec00000-0xfecfffff
                      0xfed08000-0xfed08fff
                      0xfed10000-0xfed19fff
                      0xfed1c000-0xfed1ffff
                      0xfed20000-0xfed3ffff
                      0xfed90000-0xfed93fff
                      0xfee00000-0xfee0ffff
                      0xff000000-0xffffffff
                cpu0
                    ACPI I/O ports:
                        0x414
                        0x415
                  acpi_perf0
                  est0
                  p4tcc0
                  cpufreq0
                cpu1
                    ACPI I/O ports:
                        0x414
                        0x415
                  acpi_perf1
                  est1
                  p4tcc1
                  cpufreq1
                cpu2
                    ACPI I/O ports:
                        0x414
                        0x415
                  acpi_perf2
                  est2
                  p4tcc2
                  cpufreq2
                cpu3
                    ACPI I/O ports:
                        0x414
                        0x415
                  acpi_perf3
                  est3
                  p4tcc3
                  cpufreq3
                pcib0
                  pci0
                      I/O ports:
                          0xf000-0xf03f
                          0xf040-0xf05f
                          0xf080-0xf09f
                          0xf0a0-0xf0a3
                          0xf0b0-0xf0b7
                          0xf0c0-0xf0c3
                          0xf0d0-0xf0d7
                      I/O memory addresses:
                          0xe0000000-0xefffffff
                          0xfe000000-0xfe3fffff
                          0xfe720000-0xfe723fff
                          0xfe724000-0xfe7240ff
                          0xfe729000-0xfe72900f
                    hostb0
                    vgapci0
                    em0
                        Interrupt request lines:
                            256
                        I/O memory addresses:
                            0xfe700000-0xfe71ffff
                            0xfe728000-0xfe728fff
                    ehci0
                        Interrupt request lines:
                            16
                        I/O memory addresses:
                            0xfe727000-0xfe7273ff
                      usbus0
                        uhub0
                          uhub2
                    pcib1
                      pci1
                        pcib2
                          pci2
                              I/O memory addresses:
                                  0xfe420000-0xfe43ffff
                                  0xfe480000-0xfe49ffff
                                  0xfe4e0000-0xfe4fffff
                            em1
                                Interrupt request lines:
                                    16
                                I/O ports:
                                    0xe080-0xe0bf
                                I/O memory addresses:
                                    0xfe500000-0xfe51ffff
                            em2
                                Interrupt request lines:
                                    17
                                I/O ports:
                                    0xe040-0xe07f
                                I/O memory addresses:
                                    0xfe4a0000-0xfe4bffff
                            em3
                                Interrupt request lines:
                                    18
                                I/O ports:
                                    0xe000-0xe03f
                                I/O memory addresses:
                                    0xfe440000-0xfe45ffff
                    ehci1
                        Interrupt request lines:
                            23
                        I/O memory addresses:
                            0xfe726000-0xfe7263ff
                      usbus1
                        uhub1
                          uhub3
                    isab0
                      isa0
                        pmtimer0
                        sc0
                        vga0
                            I/O ports:
                                0x3c0-0x3df
                            I/O memory addresses:
                                0xa0000-0xbffff
                        ata0
                            Interrupt request lines:
                                14
                            I/O ports:
                                0x1f0-0x1f7
                                0x3f6
                        ata1
                            Interrupt request lines:
                                15
                            I/O ports:
                                0x170-0x177
                                0x376
                        atkbdc0
                            I/O ports:
                                0x60
                                0x64
                          atkbd0
                              Interrupt request lines:
                                  1
                    atapci0
                        Interrupt request lines:
                            19
                        I/O ports:
                            0xf060-0xf07f
                        I/O memory addresses:
                            0xfe725000-0xfe7257ff
                      ata2
                        ad4
                          subdisk4
                      ata3
                      ata4
                      ata5
                      ata6
                      ata7
                acpi_sysresource0
                acpi_sysresource1
                atpic0
                atdma0
                attimer0
                atrtc0
                    Interrupt request lines:
                        8
                    I/O ports:
                        0x70-0x71
                acpi_sysresource2
                npxisa0
                acpi_sysresource3
                acpi_sysresource4
                acpi_button0
                pci_link0
                pci_link1
                pci_link2
                pci_link3
                pci_link4
                pci_link5
                pci_link6
                pci_link7
                acpi_sysresource5
                acpi_sysresource6
                acpi_timer0
                    ACPI I/O ports:
                        0x408-0x40b
                acpi_hpet0
                    I/O memory addresses:
                        0xfed00000-0xfed003ff
            interrupt                          total       rate
            irq16: em1 ehci0               779815612      16681
            irq17: em2                         18172          0
            irq18: em3                          4435          0
            irq19: atapci0                     81729          1
            irq23: ehci1                       93211          1
            cpu0: timer                     93493755       2000
            irq256: em0                       604657         12
            cpu1: timer                     93493955       2000
            cpu2: timer                     93493973       2000
            cpu3: timer                     93494072       2000
            Total                         1154593571      24699
            
            
            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • W
              wallabybob
              last edited by

              I think Steve's suggestion was that you disable USB2 and USB3. From what you said you disabled USB1 and USB3. Please try Steve's suggestion. USB keyboard and mouse should work fine with USB1.

              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • stephenw10S
                stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
                last edited by

                I would try disabling 'high speed' with that loader tunable. You clearly don't need high speed, ehci, for a keyboard.

                Steve

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • B
                  Bai Shen
                  last edited by

                  @wallabybob:

                  I think Steve's suggestion was that you disable USB2 and USB3. From what you said you disabled USB1 and USB3. Please try Steve's suggestion. USB keyboard and mouse should work fine with USB1.

                  Those were the only options in the BIOS for USB.

                  @stephenw10:

                  I would try disabling 'high speed' with that loader tunable. You clearly don't need high speed, ehci, for a keyboard.

                  Steve

                  I'll give that a shot.  Which ones do you suggest?  All three or just the last one?

                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • stephenw10S
                    stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
                    last edited by

                    I would probably try no_hs first then lost interupt.
                    The sysctl OIDs are listed in the 8.1 source code, here, but I don't have them on my system. Perhaps because I'm not using USB.  :-\

                    Steve

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • B
                      Bai Shen
                      last edited by

                      @stephenw10:

                      I would probably try no_hs first then lost interupt.
                      The sysctl OIDs are listed in the 8.1 source code, here, but I don't have them on my system. Perhaps because I'm not using USB.  :-\

                      Steve

                      No luck with no_hs.  It ran fine for a little bit, but then quickly returned to it's previous state.  Is there a way to make sure that it's recognizing the loader.conf.local?

                      And I don't really have a choice on using USB.  I don't have any PS2 ports. :)

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • stephenw10S
                        stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
                        last edited by

                        I would expect to be able to see the sysctl OIDs but all I see is:

                        
                        [2.0-RC3][root@pfsense.fire.box]/root(1): sysctl hw.usb
                        hw.usb.no_boot_wait: 0
                        hw.usb.debug: 0
                        hw.usb.usb_lang_mask: 255
                        hw.usb.usb_lang_id: 9
                        hw.usb.template: 0
                        hw.usb.power_timeout: 30
                        hw.usb.uath.regdomain: 0
                        hw.usb.uath.countrycode: 0
                        hw.usb.urtw.preamble_mode: 2
                        hw.usb.urtw.debug: 0
                        hw.usb.ucom.cons_baud: 9600
                        hw.usb.ucom.cons_unit: -1
                        
                        

                        No EHCI at all.

                        Steve

                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • B
                          Bai Shen
                          last edited by

                          @stephenw10:

                          I would expect to be able to see the sysctl OIDs but all I see is:

                          
                          [2.0-RC3][root@pfsense.fire.box]/root(1): sysctl hw.usb
                          hw.usb.no_boot_wait: 0
                          hw.usb.debug: 0
                          hw.usb.usb_lang_mask: 255
                          hw.usb.usb_lang_id: 9
                          hw.usb.template: 0
                          hw.usb.power_timeout: 30
                          hw.usb.uath.regdomain: 0
                          hw.usb.uath.countrycode: 0
                          hw.usb.urtw.preamble_mode: 2
                          hw.usb.urtw.debug: 0
                          hw.usb.ucom.cons_baud: 9600
                          hw.usb.ucom.cons_unit: -1
                          
                          

                          No EHCI at all.

                          Steve

                          I get hw.usb.ehci.no_hs 1 when I do it.  So it's picking it up.  I guess it's time to try the others.

                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • B
                            Bai Shen
                            last edited by

                            None of them worked.

                            Also, my keyboard no longer works.

                            Any other suggestions?

                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • W
                              wallabybob
                              last edited by

                              @stephenw10:

                              The sysctl OIDs are listed in the 8.1 source code, here, but I don't have them on my system. Perhaps because I'm not using USB.  :-\

                              Some device drivers don't register sysctls until they have successfully attached at least one device. I don't know the specifics of the USB sysctls.

                              @Bai:

                              None of them worked.

                              Also, my keyboard no longer works.

                              Any other suggestions?

                              Suggestions:

                              • Use  a motherboard with a chipset that has been available for at least six months at the time of release of FreeBSD 8.1. (I recall that I saw an older pfSense release lock up on startup on a motherboard with AMD chipset if USB was enabled. The next version of pfSense which had a more recent FreeBSD worked fine on the same motherboard when USB was enabled.)

                              • Keep searching - maybe a FreeBSD user has found a solution for FreeBSD 8.1

                              • Ignore it, you still have three working cores which is probably much more than you need.

                              • Disable motherboard USB entirely and use a PCI USB 2.0 card (which almost certainly will have a  USB chipset that has been around for a while and consequently has well debugged drivers). I don't know if the BIOS will support this.

                              • Disable motherboard USB and set BIOS to ignore "no keyboard". What do you need the keyboard for once the system is configured.

                              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • stephenw10S
                                stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
                                last edited by

                                @wallabybob:

                                Some device drivers don't register sysctls until they have successfully attached at least one device. I don't know the specifics of the USB sysctls.

                                That's what I thought, and yet:

                                
                                [2.0-RC3][root@pfsense.fire.box]/root(2): sysctl -a | grep ehci
                                dev.usbus.2.%parent: ehci0
                                dev.ehci.0.%desc: Intel 6300ESB USB 2.0 controller
                                dev.ehci.0.%driver: ehci
                                dev.ehci.0.%location: slot=29 function=7
                                dev.ehci.0.%pnpinfo: vendor=0x8086 device=0x25ad subvendor=0x8086 subdevice=0x25ad class=0x0c0320
                                dev.ehci.0.%parent: pci0
                                
                                

                                Hmmm.  :-\

                                @Bai Shen. If it has disabled your keyboard it is clearly doing something. Do you still have Legacy USB disabled in the bios? Perhaps you have ended up disabling ehci when that is all that was left still functioning.

                                Steve

                                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • B
                                  Bai Shen
                                  last edited by

                                  @wallabybob:

                                  • Keep searching - maybe a FreeBSD user has found a solution for FreeBSD 8.1

                                  Not as far as I can tell.  There's a bug filed for it, but no resolution so far.

                                  @wallabybob:

                                  • Ignore it, you still have three working cores which is probably much more than you need.

                                  That's what I'm doing.  The biggest annoyance is that it prevents the processor from idling and therefore uses more power than it should.

                                  @wallabybob:

                                  • Disable motherboard USB entirely and use a PCI USB 2.0 card (which almost certainly will have a  USB chipset that has been around for a while and consequently has well debugged drivers). I don't know if the BIOS will support this.

                                  Maybe.  But right now I'm using all of the PCI slots for NICs.  I'll be picking up PCIe NICs later, but for now I'm using the ones I have.

                                  @wallabybob:

                                  • Disable motherboard USB and set BIOS to ignore "no keyboard". What do you need the keyboard for once the system is configured.

                                  I've thought about doing that.  But I've had instances before where I had to use the console on the actual box to reset/change configurations.  So I'm hesitant to do that atm.  Plus I'm not sure how it'll work to turn it back on as there's no other way to connect a keyboard.

                                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • B
                                    Bai Shen
                                    last edited by

                                    @stephenw10:

                                    @Bai Shen. If it has disabled your keyboard it is clearly doing something. Do you still have Legacy USB disabled in the bios? Perhaps you have ended up disabling ehci when that is all that was left still functioning.

                                    Steve

                                    No, I made sure to turn legacy and usb3 back on before messing with the loader.conf.local.

                                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                    • stephenw10S
                                      stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
                                      last edited by

                                      Serial console instead of keyboard?
                                      I would definitely leave USB3 disabled.
                                      Perhaps you can force one of the two devices onto a different IRQ.

                                      Steve

                                      Edit: Assuming you are still using the DH67CL, are you running the lastest bios?

                                      Edit: It seems (though I can't find detailed instruction) that you should be able to set IRQ 16 as unavailable to PCI auto configuration. That should force your LAN card onto a different IRQ.

                                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                      • B
                                        Bai Shen
                                        last edited by

                                        @stephenw10:

                                        Serial console instead of keyboard?

                                        I don't think it has a serial port, but I could be wrong.  I don't have any infrastructure to support that either.

                                        @stephenw10:

                                        I would definitely leave USB3 disabled.

                                        How come?

                                        @stephenw10:

                                        Perhaps you can force one of the two devices onto a different IRQ.

                                        Steve

                                        Edit: Assuming you are still using the DH67CL, are you running the lastest bios?

                                        Edit: It seems (though I can't find detailed instruction) that you should be able to set IRQ 16 as unavailable to PCI auto configuration. That should force your LAN card onto a different IRQ.

                                        Yep, I'm running the latest bios.

                                        I'll have to look through the bios at the PCI config.  I don't recall seeing anything like that before, but I wasn't looking for it.  How does setting the NIC to a different IRQ fix the problem?  Wouldn't I still get the interrupts from the ehci?

                                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                        • stephenw10S
                                          stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
                                          last edited by

                                          @Bai:

                                          @stephenw10:

                                          I would definitely leave USB3 disabled.

                                          How come?

                                          Because it's highly probable that FreeBSD didn't support it when 8.1 was released. Does it even support it now?

                                          @Bai:

                                          I'll have to look through the bios at the PCI config.  I don't recall seeing anything like that before, but I wasn't looking for it.  How does setting the NIC to a different IRQ fix the problem?  Wouldn't I still get the interrupts from the ehci?

                                          It may be an IRQ conflict causing the interrupt storm.

                                          @Technical:

                                          Any interrupts set to Available in Setup are considered to be available for
                                          use by the add-in card.

                                          Implies that you can set to unavailable.

                                          Steve

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                                            Bai Shen
                                            last edited by

                                            @stephenw10:

                                            Because it's highly probable that FreeBSD didn't support it when 8.1 was released. Does it even support it now?

                                            No idea.  I'm not using them, but figured I'd leave them on so I don't plug something in down the road and wonder why it's not working. :)

                                            @stephenw10:

                                            It may be an IRQ conflict causing the interrupt storm.

                                            Ah, gotcha.

                                            @stephenw10:

                                            @Technical:

                                            Any interrupts set to Available in Setup are considered to be available for
                                            use by the add-in card.

                                            Implies that you can set to unavailable.

                                            Steve

                                            -nods-  I'll take a look when I get home.

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