{irq16: em1 ehci0} taking up 75% of cpu
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None of them worked.
Also, my keyboard no longer works.
Any other suggestions?
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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:
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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.)
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Keep searching - maybe a FreeBSD user has found a solution for FreeBSD 8.1
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Ignore it, you still have three working cores which is probably much more than you need.
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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.
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Disable motherboard USB and set BIOS to ignore "no keyboard". What do you need the keyboard for once the system is configured.
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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
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- 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.
- 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.
- 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.
- 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.
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@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.
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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.
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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.
I would definitely leave USB3 disabled.
How come?
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?
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@Bai:
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.
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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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. :)
It may be an IRQ conflict causing the interrupt storm.
Ah, gotcha.
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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I ended up being sidetracked by other things and never messed with the box any more. This weekend, I shut it down to rearrange some cables. Since I brought it back up, I haven't seen the problem again. No idea what the difference is as I don't recall changing anything.
Just wanted to give y'all an update.
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Strange.
Perhaps something to do with the cable routing as you suggest.Steve
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Strange.
Perhaps something to do with the cable routing as you suggest.Steve
All I did was unplug the Kill-A-Watt from the power cable. Dunno.
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This looks like a problem I had on an i3 550 that went out the door. I believe the fix was to turn off USB legacy support in the BIOS.
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Well, I rebooted due to updating to 2.0-RELEASE and it's back. Only now it's irq11
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You are now seeing {irq11: em1 ehci0} taking a lot of CPU?
Please post output of pfSense shell command vmstat -i
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You are now seeing {irq11: em1 ehci0} taking a lot of CPU?
Yes.
Please post output of pfSense shell command vmstat -i
Okay. I'll do that when I get back to the machine.
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That the irq has changed from 16 to 11 suggests to me you have (possibly inadvertently) disabled multiprocessing in the BIOS or disabled the IOAPIC or disabled acpi.
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EHCI provides access for 'high speed' devices as opposed to low and full speed.
The ehci driver has some tunables you could add to /boot/loader.conf.local to try.
LOADER TUNABLES
Tunables can be set at the loader(8) prompt before booting the kernel or
stored in loader.conf(5).hw.usb.ehci.lostintrbug
This tunable enables the lost interrupt quirk. The default value
is 0 (off).hw.usb.ehci.iaadbug
This tunable enables the EHCI doorbell quirk. The default value
is 0 (off).hw.usb.ehci.no_hs
This tunable disables USB devices to attach like HIGH-speed ones
and will force all attached devices to attach to the FULL- or
LOW-speed companion controller. The default value is 0 (off).Steve
Steve I had a similar problem to the OP on my X9SCV build. {irq16: ehci0} was using ~50% of one cpu. I did as you suggested and added hw.usb.ehci.no_hs="1" to loader.conf and it seems to have fixed it. I'll keep an eye on it. Thanks
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Glad that worked for you and thanks for reporting back. :)
Steve
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Dear All, I've read this topic carefully and tried many ways to solve this problem. But there is no result till now.
I use pfsense 2.0.1 release (amd64) with ZOTACLGA 1155 Z68-ITX, Intel Celeron G530, Box, 2x2.4 GHz, 2 GB DDR3, HDD WD2500AAKX, 2 x onboard Realtek RTL8111E and AzureWave AR5B95. My ISP gives me 1 Gbps full duplex uplink and static IP. So everything good and I have realy 800-900 Mbps throughput, but only one bad. Last time I noticed interrupts on CPU 30-40%, and I saw this on irq16: ath0 ehci0. I disabled USB3, disabled Audio-controller and other unused things in BIOS. No result. Then I removed the WiFi card AR5B95 and CPU load slow down to 20-30%. I tried to change loader.conf with hw.usb.ehci.no_hs="1" and rebooted the system. But no result again. This is a link to RRD graphs.
Here is the output from $ vmstat -i and $ devinfo -v, to illustrate the problem:
interrupt total rate irq16: ehci0 6679556627 168445 ------> + approx. 450 000 every 1 second irq19: atapci0+ 57770 1 irq23: ehci1 79325 2 cpu0: timer 79305108 1999 irq256: re0 98275744 2478 irq257: re1 96862546 2442 cpu1: timer 79304926 1999 Total 7033442046 177370
$ devinfo -v nexus0 ....... acpi0 ....... pcib0 pnpinfo _HID=PNP0A08 _UID=0 at handle=\_SB_.PCI0 pci0 ....... ehci0 pnpinfo vendor=0x8086 device=0x1c2d subvendor=0x19da subdevice=0xa198 class=0x0c0320 at slot=26 function=0 handle=\_SB_.PCI0.USBE usbus0 uhub0 uhub2 pnpinfo vendor=0x8087 product=0x0024 devclass=0x09 devsubclass=0x00 sernum="" release=0x0000 intclass=0x09 intsubclass=0x00 at bus=1 hubaddr=1 port=0 devaddr=2 interface=0 ....... ehci1 pnpinfo vendor=0x8086 device=0x1c26 subvendor=0x19da subdevice=0xa198 class=0x0c0320 at slot=29 function=0 handle=\_SB_.PCI0.EUSB usbus1 uhub1 uhub3 pnpinfo vendor=0x8087 product=0x0024 devclass=0x09 devsubclass=0x00 sernum="" release=0x0000 intclass=0x09 intsubclass=0x00 at bus=1 hubaddr=1 port=1 devaddr=2 interface=0 .......
So may be anybody know what cause this problem, or what I have to do again to track down this? I'm not very experienced with FreeBSD so I don't know what to try next.