freebsd-dev/sys/dev/mpr/mpr_user.c

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/*-
* Copyright (c) 2008 Yahoo!, Inc.
* All rights reserved.
* Written by: John Baldwin <jhb@FreeBSD.org>
*
* Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
* modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
* are met:
* 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
* notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
* 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
* notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
* documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
* 3. Neither the name of the author nor the names of any co-contributors
* may be used to endorse or promote products derived from this software
* without specific prior written permission.
*
* THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHOR AND CONTRIBUTORS ``AS IS'' AND
* ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE
* IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE
* ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE
* FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL
* DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS
* OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION)
* HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT
* LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY
* OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF
* SUCH DAMAGE.
*
The wrong commit message was given with r283632. This is the correct message. - Updated all files with 2015 Avago copyright, and updated LSI's copyright dates. - Changed all of the PCI device strings from LSI to Avago Technologies (LSI). - Added a sysctl variable to control how StartStopUnit behavior works. User can select to spin down disks based on if disk is SSD or HDD. - Inquiry data is required to tell if a disk will support SSU at shutdown or not. Due to the addition of mpssas_async, which gets Advanced Info but not Inquiry data, the setting of supports_SSU was moved to the mpssas_scsiio_complete function, which snoops for any Inquiry commands. And, since disks are shutdown as a target and not a LUN, this process was simplified by basing it on targets and not LUNs. - Added a sysctl variable that sets the amount of time to retry after sending a failed SATA ID command. This helps with some bad disks and large disks that require a lot of time to spin up. Part of this change was to add a callout to handle timeouts with the SATA ID command. The callout function is called mpssas_ata_id_timeout(). (Fixes PR 191348) - Changed the way resets work by allowing I/O to continue to devices that are not currently under a reset condition. This uses devq's instead of simq's and makes use of the MPSSAS_TARGET_INRESET flag. This change also adds a function called mpssas_prepare_tm(). - Some changes were made to reduce code duplication when getting a SAS address for a SATA disk. - Fixed some formatting and whitespace. - Bump version of mps driver to 9.255.01.00-fbsd PR: 191348 Reviewed by: ken, scottl Approved by: ken, scottl MFC after: 1 week
2015-05-28 18:24:22 +00:00
* Avago Technologies (LSI) MPT-Fusion Host Adapter FreeBSD userland interface
*/
/*-
The wrong commit message was given with r283632. This is the correct message. - Updated all files with 2015 Avago copyright, and updated LSI's copyright dates. - Changed all of the PCI device strings from LSI to Avago Technologies (LSI). - Added a sysctl variable to control how StartStopUnit behavior works. User can select to spin down disks based on if disk is SSD or HDD. - Inquiry data is required to tell if a disk will support SSU at shutdown or not. Due to the addition of mpssas_async, which gets Advanced Info but not Inquiry data, the setting of supports_SSU was moved to the mpssas_scsiio_complete function, which snoops for any Inquiry commands. And, since disks are shutdown as a target and not a LUN, this process was simplified by basing it on targets and not LUNs. - Added a sysctl variable that sets the amount of time to retry after sending a failed SATA ID command. This helps with some bad disks and large disks that require a lot of time to spin up. Part of this change was to add a callout to handle timeouts with the SATA ID command. The callout function is called mpssas_ata_id_timeout(). (Fixes PR 191348) - Changed the way resets work by allowing I/O to continue to devices that are not currently under a reset condition. This uses devq's instead of simq's and makes use of the MPSSAS_TARGET_INRESET flag. This change also adds a function called mpssas_prepare_tm(). - Some changes were made to reduce code duplication when getting a SAS address for a SATA disk. - Fixed some formatting and whitespace. - Bump version of mps driver to 9.255.01.00-fbsd PR: 191348 Reviewed by: ken, scottl Approved by: ken, scottl MFC after: 1 week
2015-05-28 18:24:22 +00:00
* Copyright (c) 2011-2015 LSI Corp.
* Copyright (c) 2013-2016 Avago Technologies
* All rights reserved.
*
* Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
* modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
* are met:
* 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
* notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
* 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
* notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
* documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
*
* THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHOR AND CONTRIBUTORS ``AS IS'' AND
* ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE
* IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE
* ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE
* FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL
* DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS
* OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION)
* HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT
* LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY
* OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF
* SUCH DAMAGE.
*
The wrong commit message was given with r283632. This is the correct message. - Updated all files with 2015 Avago copyright, and updated LSI's copyright dates. - Changed all of the PCI device strings from LSI to Avago Technologies (LSI). - Added a sysctl variable to control how StartStopUnit behavior works. User can select to spin down disks based on if disk is SSD or HDD. - Inquiry data is required to tell if a disk will support SSU at shutdown or not. Due to the addition of mpssas_async, which gets Advanced Info but not Inquiry data, the setting of supports_SSU was moved to the mpssas_scsiio_complete function, which snoops for any Inquiry commands. And, since disks are shutdown as a target and not a LUN, this process was simplified by basing it on targets and not LUNs. - Added a sysctl variable that sets the amount of time to retry after sending a failed SATA ID command. This helps with some bad disks and large disks that require a lot of time to spin up. Part of this change was to add a callout to handle timeouts with the SATA ID command. The callout function is called mpssas_ata_id_timeout(). (Fixes PR 191348) - Changed the way resets work by allowing I/O to continue to devices that are not currently under a reset condition. This uses devq's instead of simq's and makes use of the MPSSAS_TARGET_INRESET flag. This change also adds a function called mpssas_prepare_tm(). - Some changes were made to reduce code duplication when getting a SAS address for a SATA disk. - Fixed some formatting and whitespace. - Bump version of mps driver to 9.255.01.00-fbsd PR: 191348 Reviewed by: ken, scottl Approved by: ken, scottl MFC after: 1 week
2015-05-28 18:24:22 +00:00
* Avago Technologies (LSI) MPT-Fusion Host Adapter FreeBSD
*
* $FreeBSD$
*/
#include <sys/cdefs.h>
__FBSDID("$FreeBSD$");
/* TODO Move headers to mprvar */
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <sys/param.h>
#include <sys/systm.h>
#include <sys/kernel.h>
#include <sys/selinfo.h>
#include <sys/module.h>
#include <sys/bus.h>
#include <sys/conf.h>
#include <sys/bio.h>
#include <sys/malloc.h>
#include <sys/uio.h>
#include <sys/sysctl.h>
#include <sys/ioccom.h>
#include <sys/endian.h>
#include <sys/queue.h>
#include <sys/kthread.h>
#include <sys/taskqueue.h>
#include <sys/proc.h>
#include <sys/sysent.h>
#include <machine/bus.h>
#include <machine/resource.h>
#include <sys/rman.h>
#include <cam/cam.h>
The wrong commit message was given with r283632. This is the correct message. - Updated all files with 2015 Avago copyright, and updated LSI's copyright dates. - Changed all of the PCI device strings from LSI to Avago Technologies (LSI). - Added a sysctl variable to control how StartStopUnit behavior works. User can select to spin down disks based on if disk is SSD or HDD. - Inquiry data is required to tell if a disk will support SSU at shutdown or not. Due to the addition of mpssas_async, which gets Advanced Info but not Inquiry data, the setting of supports_SSU was moved to the mpssas_scsiio_complete function, which snoops for any Inquiry commands. And, since disks are shutdown as a target and not a LUN, this process was simplified by basing it on targets and not LUNs. - Added a sysctl variable that sets the amount of time to retry after sending a failed SATA ID command. This helps with some bad disks and large disks that require a lot of time to spin up. Part of this change was to add a callout to handle timeouts with the SATA ID command. The callout function is called mpssas_ata_id_timeout(). (Fixes PR 191348) - Changed the way resets work by allowing I/O to continue to devices that are not currently under a reset condition. This uses devq's instead of simq's and makes use of the MPSSAS_TARGET_INRESET flag. This change also adds a function called mpssas_prepare_tm(). - Some changes were made to reduce code duplication when getting a SAS address for a SATA disk. - Fixed some formatting and whitespace. - Bump version of mps driver to 9.255.01.00-fbsd PR: 191348 Reviewed by: ken, scottl Approved by: ken, scottl MFC after: 1 week
2015-05-28 18:24:22 +00:00
#include <cam/cam_ccb.h>
#include <dev/mpr/mpi/mpi2_type.h>
#include <dev/mpr/mpi/mpi2.h>
#include <dev/mpr/mpi/mpi2_ioc.h>
#include <dev/mpr/mpi/mpi2_cnfg.h>
#include <dev/mpr/mpi/mpi2_init.h>
#include <dev/mpr/mpi/mpi2_tool.h>
#include <dev/mpr/mpi/mpi2_pci.h>
#include <dev/mpr/mpr_ioctl.h>
#include <dev/mpr/mprvar.h>
#include <dev/mpr/mpr_table.h>
#include <dev/mpr/mpr_sas.h>
#include <dev/pci/pcivar.h>
#include <dev/pci/pcireg.h>
static d_open_t mpr_open;
static d_close_t mpr_close;
static d_ioctl_t mpr_ioctl_devsw;
static struct cdevsw mpr_cdevsw = {
.d_version = D_VERSION,
.d_flags = 0,
.d_open = mpr_open,
.d_close = mpr_close,
.d_ioctl = mpr_ioctl_devsw,
.d_name = "mpr",
};
typedef int (mpr_user_f)(struct mpr_command *, struct mpr_usr_command *);
static mpr_user_f mpi_pre_ioc_facts;
static mpr_user_f mpi_pre_port_facts;
static mpr_user_f mpi_pre_fw_download;
static mpr_user_f mpi_pre_fw_upload;
static mpr_user_f mpi_pre_sata_passthrough;
static mpr_user_f mpi_pre_smp_passthrough;
static mpr_user_f mpi_pre_config;
static mpr_user_f mpi_pre_sas_io_unit_control;
static int mpr_user_read_cfg_header(struct mpr_softc *,
struct mpr_cfg_page_req *);
static int mpr_user_read_cfg_page(struct mpr_softc *,
struct mpr_cfg_page_req *, void *);
static int mpr_user_read_extcfg_header(struct mpr_softc *,
struct mpr_ext_cfg_page_req *);
static int mpr_user_read_extcfg_page(struct mpr_softc *,
struct mpr_ext_cfg_page_req *, void *);
static int mpr_user_write_cfg_page(struct mpr_softc *,
struct mpr_cfg_page_req *, void *);
static int mpr_user_setup_request(struct mpr_command *,
struct mpr_usr_command *);
static int mpr_user_command(struct mpr_softc *, struct mpr_usr_command *);
static int mpr_user_pass_thru(struct mpr_softc *sc, mpr_pass_thru_t *data);
static void mpr_user_get_adapter_data(struct mpr_softc *sc,
mpr_adapter_data_t *data);
static void mpr_user_read_pci_info(struct mpr_softc *sc, mpr_pci_info_t *data);
static uint8_t mpr_get_fw_diag_buffer_number(struct mpr_softc *sc,
uint32_t unique_id);
static int mpr_post_fw_diag_buffer(struct mpr_softc *sc,
mpr_fw_diagnostic_buffer_t *pBuffer, uint32_t *return_code);
static int mpr_release_fw_diag_buffer(struct mpr_softc *sc,
mpr_fw_diagnostic_buffer_t *pBuffer, uint32_t *return_code,
uint32_t diag_type);
static int mpr_diag_register(struct mpr_softc *sc,
mpr_fw_diag_register_t *diag_register, uint32_t *return_code);
static int mpr_diag_unregister(struct mpr_softc *sc,
mpr_fw_diag_unregister_t *diag_unregister, uint32_t *return_code);
static int mpr_diag_query(struct mpr_softc *sc, mpr_fw_diag_query_t *diag_query,
uint32_t *return_code);
static int mpr_diag_read_buffer(struct mpr_softc *sc,
mpr_diag_read_buffer_t *diag_read_buffer, uint8_t *ioctl_buf,
uint32_t *return_code);
static int mpr_diag_release(struct mpr_softc *sc,
mpr_fw_diag_release_t *diag_release, uint32_t *return_code);
static int mpr_do_diag_action(struct mpr_softc *sc, uint32_t action,
uint8_t *diag_action, uint32_t length, uint32_t *return_code);
static int mpr_user_diag_action(struct mpr_softc *sc, mpr_diag_action_t *data);
static void mpr_user_event_query(struct mpr_softc *sc, mpr_event_query_t *data);
static void mpr_user_event_enable(struct mpr_softc *sc,
mpr_event_enable_t *data);
static int mpr_user_event_report(struct mpr_softc *sc,
mpr_event_report_t *data);
static int mpr_user_reg_access(struct mpr_softc *sc, mpr_reg_access_t *data);
static int mpr_user_btdh(struct mpr_softc *sc, mpr_btdh_mapping_t *data);
static MALLOC_DEFINE(M_MPRUSER, "mpr_user", "Buffers for mpr(4) ioctls");
/* Macros from compat/freebsd32/freebsd32.h */
#define PTRIN(v) (void *)(uintptr_t)(v)
#define PTROUT(v) (uint32_t)(uintptr_t)(v)
#define CP(src,dst,fld) do { (dst).fld = (src).fld; } while (0)
#define PTRIN_CP(src,dst,fld) \
do { (dst).fld = PTRIN((src).fld); } while (0)
#define PTROUT_CP(src,dst,fld) \
do { (dst).fld = PTROUT((src).fld); } while (0)
/*
* MPI functions that support IEEE SGLs for SAS3.
*/
static uint8_t ieee_sgl_func_list[] = {
MPI2_FUNCTION_SCSI_IO_REQUEST,
MPI2_FUNCTION_RAID_SCSI_IO_PASSTHROUGH,
MPI2_FUNCTION_SMP_PASSTHROUGH,
MPI2_FUNCTION_SATA_PASSTHROUGH,
MPI2_FUNCTION_FW_UPLOAD,
MPI2_FUNCTION_FW_DOWNLOAD,
MPI2_FUNCTION_TARGET_ASSIST,
MPI2_FUNCTION_TARGET_STATUS_SEND,
MPI2_FUNCTION_TOOLBOX
};
int
mpr_attach_user(struct mpr_softc *sc)
{
int unit;
unit = device_get_unit(sc->mpr_dev);
sc->mpr_cdev = make_dev(&mpr_cdevsw, unit, UID_ROOT, GID_OPERATOR, 0640,
"mpr%d", unit);
if (sc->mpr_cdev == NULL)
return (ENOMEM);
sc->mpr_cdev->si_drv1 = sc;
return (0);
}
void
mpr_detach_user(struct mpr_softc *sc)
{
/* XXX: do a purge of pending requests? */
if (sc->mpr_cdev != NULL)
destroy_dev(sc->mpr_cdev);
}
static int
mpr_open(struct cdev *dev, int flags, int fmt, struct thread *td)
{
return (0);
}
static int
mpr_close(struct cdev *dev, int flags, int fmt, struct thread *td)
{
return (0);
}
static int
mpr_user_read_cfg_header(struct mpr_softc *sc,
struct mpr_cfg_page_req *page_req)
{
MPI2_CONFIG_PAGE_HEADER *hdr;
struct mpr_config_params params;
int error;
hdr = &params.hdr.Struct;
params.action = MPI2_CONFIG_ACTION_PAGE_HEADER;
params.page_address = le32toh(page_req->page_address);
hdr->PageVersion = 0;
hdr->PageLength = 0;
hdr->PageNumber = page_req->header.PageNumber;
hdr->PageType = page_req->header.PageType;
params.buffer = NULL;
params.length = 0;
params.callback = NULL;
if ((error = mpr_read_config_page(sc, &params)) != 0) {
/*
* Leave the request. Without resetting the chip, it's
* still owned by it and we'll just get into trouble
* freeing it now. Mark it as abandoned so that if it
* shows up later it can be freed.
*/
mpr_printf(sc, "read_cfg_header timed out\n");
return (ETIMEDOUT);
}
page_req->ioc_status = htole16(params.status);
if ((page_req->ioc_status & MPI2_IOCSTATUS_MASK) ==
MPI2_IOCSTATUS_SUCCESS) {
bcopy(hdr, &page_req->header, sizeof(page_req->header));
}
return (0);
}
static int
mpr_user_read_cfg_page(struct mpr_softc *sc, struct mpr_cfg_page_req *page_req,
void *buf)
{
MPI2_CONFIG_PAGE_HEADER *reqhdr, *hdr;
struct mpr_config_params params;
int error;
reqhdr = buf;
hdr = &params.hdr.Struct;
hdr->PageVersion = reqhdr->PageVersion;
hdr->PageLength = reqhdr->PageLength;
hdr->PageNumber = reqhdr->PageNumber;
hdr->PageType = reqhdr->PageType & MPI2_CONFIG_PAGETYPE_MASK;
params.action = MPI2_CONFIG_ACTION_PAGE_READ_CURRENT;
params.page_address = le32toh(page_req->page_address);
params.buffer = buf;
params.length = le32toh(page_req->len);
params.callback = NULL;
if ((error = mpr_read_config_page(sc, &params)) != 0) {
mpr_printf(sc, "mpr_user_read_cfg_page timed out\n");
return (ETIMEDOUT);
}
page_req->ioc_status = htole16(params.status);
return (0);
}
static int
mpr_user_read_extcfg_header(struct mpr_softc *sc,
struct mpr_ext_cfg_page_req *ext_page_req)
{
MPI2_CONFIG_EXTENDED_PAGE_HEADER *hdr;
struct mpr_config_params params;
int error;
hdr = &params.hdr.Ext;
params.action = MPI2_CONFIG_ACTION_PAGE_HEADER;
hdr->PageVersion = ext_page_req->header.PageVersion;
hdr->PageType = MPI2_CONFIG_PAGETYPE_EXTENDED;
hdr->ExtPageLength = 0;
hdr->PageNumber = ext_page_req->header.PageNumber;
hdr->ExtPageType = ext_page_req->header.ExtPageType;
params.page_address = le32toh(ext_page_req->page_address);
The wrong commit message was given with r283632. This is the correct message. - Updated all files with 2015 Avago copyright, and updated LSI's copyright dates. - Changed all of the PCI device strings from LSI to Avago Technologies (LSI). - Added a sysctl variable to control how StartStopUnit behavior works. User can select to spin down disks based on if disk is SSD or HDD. - Inquiry data is required to tell if a disk will support SSU at shutdown or not. Due to the addition of mpssas_async, which gets Advanced Info but not Inquiry data, the setting of supports_SSU was moved to the mpssas_scsiio_complete function, which snoops for any Inquiry commands. And, since disks are shutdown as a target and not a LUN, this process was simplified by basing it on targets and not LUNs. - Added a sysctl variable that sets the amount of time to retry after sending a failed SATA ID command. This helps with some bad disks and large disks that require a lot of time to spin up. Part of this change was to add a callout to handle timeouts with the SATA ID command. The callout function is called mpssas_ata_id_timeout(). (Fixes PR 191348) - Changed the way resets work by allowing I/O to continue to devices that are not currently under a reset condition. This uses devq's instead of simq's and makes use of the MPSSAS_TARGET_INRESET flag. This change also adds a function called mpssas_prepare_tm(). - Some changes were made to reduce code duplication when getting a SAS address for a SATA disk. - Fixed some formatting and whitespace. - Bump version of mps driver to 9.255.01.00-fbsd PR: 191348 Reviewed by: ken, scottl Approved by: ken, scottl MFC after: 1 week
2015-05-28 18:24:22 +00:00
params.buffer = NULL;
params.length = 0;
params.callback = NULL;
if ((error = mpr_read_config_page(sc, &params)) != 0) {
/*
* Leave the request. Without resetting the chip, it's
* still owned by it and we'll just get into trouble
* freeing it now. Mark it as abandoned so that if it
* shows up later it can be freed.
*/
mpr_printf(sc, "mpr_user_read_extcfg_header timed out\n");
return (ETIMEDOUT);
}
ext_page_req->ioc_status = htole16(params.status);
if ((ext_page_req->ioc_status & MPI2_IOCSTATUS_MASK) ==
MPI2_IOCSTATUS_SUCCESS) {
ext_page_req->header.PageVersion = hdr->PageVersion;
ext_page_req->header.PageNumber = hdr->PageNumber;
ext_page_req->header.PageType = hdr->PageType;
ext_page_req->header.ExtPageLength = hdr->ExtPageLength;
ext_page_req->header.ExtPageType = hdr->ExtPageType;
}
return (0);
}
static int
mpr_user_read_extcfg_page(struct mpr_softc *sc,
struct mpr_ext_cfg_page_req *ext_page_req, void *buf)
{
MPI2_CONFIG_EXTENDED_PAGE_HEADER *reqhdr, *hdr;
struct mpr_config_params params;
int error;
reqhdr = buf;
hdr = &params.hdr.Ext;
params.action = MPI2_CONFIG_ACTION_PAGE_READ_CURRENT;
params.page_address = le32toh(ext_page_req->page_address);
hdr->PageVersion = reqhdr->PageVersion;
hdr->PageType = MPI2_CONFIG_PAGETYPE_EXTENDED;
The wrong commit message was given with r283632. This is the correct message. - Updated all files with 2015 Avago copyright, and updated LSI's copyright dates. - Changed all of the PCI device strings from LSI to Avago Technologies (LSI). - Added a sysctl variable to control how StartStopUnit behavior works. User can select to spin down disks based on if disk is SSD or HDD. - Inquiry data is required to tell if a disk will support SSU at shutdown or not. Due to the addition of mpssas_async, which gets Advanced Info but not Inquiry data, the setting of supports_SSU was moved to the mpssas_scsiio_complete function, which snoops for any Inquiry commands. And, since disks are shutdown as a target and not a LUN, this process was simplified by basing it on targets and not LUNs. - Added a sysctl variable that sets the amount of time to retry after sending a failed SATA ID command. This helps with some bad disks and large disks that require a lot of time to spin up. Part of this change was to add a callout to handle timeouts with the SATA ID command. The callout function is called mpssas_ata_id_timeout(). (Fixes PR 191348) - Changed the way resets work by allowing I/O to continue to devices that are not currently under a reset condition. This uses devq's instead of simq's and makes use of the MPSSAS_TARGET_INRESET flag. This change also adds a function called mpssas_prepare_tm(). - Some changes were made to reduce code duplication when getting a SAS address for a SATA disk. - Fixed some formatting and whitespace. - Bump version of mps driver to 9.255.01.00-fbsd PR: 191348 Reviewed by: ken, scottl Approved by: ken, scottl MFC after: 1 week
2015-05-28 18:24:22 +00:00
hdr->PageNumber = reqhdr->PageNumber;
hdr->ExtPageType = reqhdr->ExtPageType;
hdr->ExtPageLength = reqhdr->ExtPageLength;
params.buffer = buf;
params.length = le32toh(ext_page_req->len);
params.callback = NULL;
if ((error = mpr_read_config_page(sc, &params)) != 0) {
mpr_printf(sc, "mpr_user_read_extcfg_page timed out\n");
return (ETIMEDOUT);
}
ext_page_req->ioc_status = htole16(params.status);
return (0);
}
static int
mpr_user_write_cfg_page(struct mpr_softc *sc,
struct mpr_cfg_page_req *page_req, void *buf)
{
MPI2_CONFIG_PAGE_HEADER *reqhdr, *hdr;
struct mpr_config_params params;
u_int hdr_attr;
int error;
reqhdr = buf;
hdr = &params.hdr.Struct;
hdr_attr = reqhdr->PageType & MPI2_CONFIG_PAGEATTR_MASK;
if (hdr_attr != MPI2_CONFIG_PAGEATTR_CHANGEABLE &&
hdr_attr != MPI2_CONFIG_PAGEATTR_PERSISTENT) {
mpr_printf(sc, "page type 0x%x not changeable\n",
reqhdr->PageType & MPI2_CONFIG_PAGETYPE_MASK);
return (EINVAL);
}
/*
* There isn't any point in restoring stripped out attributes
* if you then mask them going down to issue the request.
*/
hdr->PageVersion = reqhdr->PageVersion;
hdr->PageLength = reqhdr->PageLength;
hdr->PageNumber = reqhdr->PageNumber;
hdr->PageType = reqhdr->PageType;
params.action = MPI2_CONFIG_ACTION_PAGE_WRITE_CURRENT;
params.page_address = le32toh(page_req->page_address);
params.buffer = buf;
params.length = le32toh(page_req->len);
params.callback = NULL;
if ((error = mpr_write_config_page(sc, &params)) != 0) {
mpr_printf(sc, "mpr_write_cfg_page timed out\n");
return (ETIMEDOUT);
}
page_req->ioc_status = htole16(params.status);
return (0);
}
void
mpr_init_sge(struct mpr_command *cm, void *req, void *sge)
{
int off, space;
space = (int)cm->cm_sc->reqframesz;
off = (uintptr_t)sge - (uintptr_t)req;
KASSERT(off < space, ("bad pointers %p %p, off %d, space %d",
req, sge, off, space));
cm->cm_sge = sge;
cm->cm_sglsize = space - off;
}
/*
* Prepare the mpr_command for an IOC_FACTS request.
*/
static int
mpi_pre_ioc_facts(struct mpr_command *cm, struct mpr_usr_command *cmd)
{
MPI2_IOC_FACTS_REQUEST *req = (void *)cm->cm_req;
MPI2_IOC_FACTS_REPLY *rpl;
if (cmd->req_len != sizeof *req)
return (EINVAL);
if (cmd->rpl_len != sizeof *rpl)
return (EINVAL);
cm->cm_sge = NULL;
cm->cm_sglsize = 0;
return (0);
}
/*
* Prepare the mpr_command for a PORT_FACTS request.
*/
static int
mpi_pre_port_facts(struct mpr_command *cm, struct mpr_usr_command *cmd)
{
MPI2_PORT_FACTS_REQUEST *req = (void *)cm->cm_req;
MPI2_PORT_FACTS_REPLY *rpl;
if (cmd->req_len != sizeof *req)
return (EINVAL);
if (cmd->rpl_len != sizeof *rpl)
return (EINVAL);
cm->cm_sge = NULL;
cm->cm_sglsize = 0;
return (0);
}
/*
* Prepare the mpr_command for a FW_DOWNLOAD request.
*/
static int
mpi_pre_fw_download(struct mpr_command *cm, struct mpr_usr_command *cmd)
{
MPI25_FW_DOWNLOAD_REQUEST *req = (void *)cm->cm_req;
MPI2_FW_DOWNLOAD_REPLY *rpl;
int error;
if (cmd->req_len != sizeof *req)
return (EINVAL);
if (cmd->rpl_len != sizeof *rpl)
return (EINVAL);
if (cmd->len == 0)
return (EINVAL);
error = copyin(cmd->buf, cm->cm_data, cmd->len);
if (error != 0)
return (error);
mpr_init_sge(cm, req, &req->SGL);
/*
* For now, the F/W image must be provided in a single request.
*/
if ((req->MsgFlags & MPI2_FW_DOWNLOAD_MSGFLGS_LAST_SEGMENT) == 0)
return (EINVAL);
if (req->TotalImageSize != cmd->len)
return (EINVAL);
req->ImageOffset = 0;
req->ImageSize = cmd->len;
cm->cm_flags |= MPR_CM_FLAGS_DATAOUT;
return (mpr_push_ieee_sge(cm, &req->SGL, 0));
}
/*
* Prepare the mpr_command for a FW_UPLOAD request.
*/
static int
mpi_pre_fw_upload(struct mpr_command *cm, struct mpr_usr_command *cmd)
{
MPI25_FW_UPLOAD_REQUEST *req = (void *)cm->cm_req;
MPI2_FW_UPLOAD_REPLY *rpl;
if (cmd->req_len != sizeof *req)
return (EINVAL);
if (cmd->rpl_len != sizeof *rpl)
return (EINVAL);
mpr_init_sge(cm, req, &req->SGL);
if (cmd->len == 0) {
/* Perhaps just asking what the size of the fw is? */
return (0);
}
req->ImageOffset = 0;
req->ImageSize = cmd->len;
The wrong commit message was given with r283632. This is the correct message. - Updated all files with 2015 Avago copyright, and updated LSI's copyright dates. - Changed all of the PCI device strings from LSI to Avago Technologies (LSI). - Added a sysctl variable to control how StartStopUnit behavior works. User can select to spin down disks based on if disk is SSD or HDD. - Inquiry data is required to tell if a disk will support SSU at shutdown or not. Due to the addition of mpssas_async, which gets Advanced Info but not Inquiry data, the setting of supports_SSU was moved to the mpssas_scsiio_complete function, which snoops for any Inquiry commands. And, since disks are shutdown as a target and not a LUN, this process was simplified by basing it on targets and not LUNs. - Added a sysctl variable that sets the amount of time to retry after sending a failed SATA ID command. This helps with some bad disks and large disks that require a lot of time to spin up. Part of this change was to add a callout to handle timeouts with the SATA ID command. The callout function is called mpssas_ata_id_timeout(). (Fixes PR 191348) - Changed the way resets work by allowing I/O to continue to devices that are not currently under a reset condition. This uses devq's instead of simq's and makes use of the MPSSAS_TARGET_INRESET flag. This change also adds a function called mpssas_prepare_tm(). - Some changes were made to reduce code duplication when getting a SAS address for a SATA disk. - Fixed some formatting and whitespace. - Bump version of mps driver to 9.255.01.00-fbsd PR: 191348 Reviewed by: ken, scottl Approved by: ken, scottl MFC after: 1 week
2015-05-28 18:24:22 +00:00
cm->cm_flags |= MPR_CM_FLAGS_DATAIN;
return (mpr_push_ieee_sge(cm, &req->SGL, 0));
}
/*
* Prepare the mpr_command for a SATA_PASSTHROUGH request.
*/
static int
mpi_pre_sata_passthrough(struct mpr_command *cm, struct mpr_usr_command *cmd)
{
MPI2_SATA_PASSTHROUGH_REQUEST *req = (void *)cm->cm_req;
MPI2_SATA_PASSTHROUGH_REPLY *rpl;
if (cmd->req_len != sizeof *req)
return (EINVAL);
if (cmd->rpl_len != sizeof *rpl)
return (EINVAL);
mpr_init_sge(cm, req, &req->SGL);
return (0);
}
/*
* Prepare the mpr_command for a SMP_PASSTHROUGH request.
*/
static int
mpi_pre_smp_passthrough(struct mpr_command *cm, struct mpr_usr_command *cmd)
{
MPI2_SMP_PASSTHROUGH_REQUEST *req = (void *)cm->cm_req;
MPI2_SMP_PASSTHROUGH_REPLY *rpl;
if (cmd->req_len != sizeof *req)
return (EINVAL);
if (cmd->rpl_len != sizeof *rpl)
return (EINVAL);
mpr_init_sge(cm, req, &req->SGL);
return (0);
}
/*
* Prepare the mpr_command for a CONFIG request.
*/
static int
mpi_pre_config(struct mpr_command *cm, struct mpr_usr_command *cmd)
{
MPI2_CONFIG_REQUEST *req = (void *)cm->cm_req;
MPI2_CONFIG_REPLY *rpl;
if (cmd->req_len != sizeof *req)
return (EINVAL);
if (cmd->rpl_len != sizeof *rpl)
return (EINVAL);
mpr_init_sge(cm, req, &req->PageBufferSGE);
return (0);
}
/*
* Prepare the mpr_command for a SAS_IO_UNIT_CONTROL request.
*/
static int
mpi_pre_sas_io_unit_control(struct mpr_command *cm,
struct mpr_usr_command *cmd)
{
cm->cm_sge = NULL;
cm->cm_sglsize = 0;
return (0);
}
/*
* A set of functions to prepare an mpr_command for the various
* supported requests.
*/
struct mpr_user_func {
U8 Function;
mpr_user_f *f_pre;
} mpr_user_func_list[] = {
{ MPI2_FUNCTION_IOC_FACTS, mpi_pre_ioc_facts },
{ MPI2_FUNCTION_PORT_FACTS, mpi_pre_port_facts },
{ MPI2_FUNCTION_FW_DOWNLOAD, mpi_pre_fw_download },
{ MPI2_FUNCTION_FW_UPLOAD, mpi_pre_fw_upload },
{ MPI2_FUNCTION_SATA_PASSTHROUGH, mpi_pre_sata_passthrough },
{ MPI2_FUNCTION_SMP_PASSTHROUGH, mpi_pre_smp_passthrough},
{ MPI2_FUNCTION_CONFIG, mpi_pre_config},
{ MPI2_FUNCTION_SAS_IO_UNIT_CONTROL, mpi_pre_sas_io_unit_control },
{ 0xFF, NULL } /* list end */
};
static int
mpr_user_setup_request(struct mpr_command *cm, struct mpr_usr_command *cmd)
{
MPI2_REQUEST_HEADER *hdr = (MPI2_REQUEST_HEADER *)cm->cm_req;
struct mpr_user_func *f;
for (f = mpr_user_func_list; f->f_pre != NULL; f++) {
if (hdr->Function == f->Function)
return (f->f_pre(cm, cmd));
}
return (EINVAL);
}
static int
mpr_user_command(struct mpr_softc *sc, struct mpr_usr_command *cmd)
{
MPI2_REQUEST_HEADER *hdr;
Changes to make mps(4) and mpr(4) handle reinit with reallocation. When the mps(4) and mpr(4) drivers need to reinitialize the firmware, they sometimes need to reallocate all of the memory allocated by the driver. The reallocation happens whenever the IOC Facts change. That should only happen after a firmware upgrade. If the reinitialization happens as a result of a timed out command sent to the card, the command that timed out and triggered the reinit may have been freed if iocfacts_allocate() reallocated all memory. If the caller attempts to access the command after that, the kernel will panic because the caller will be dereferencing freed memory. The solution is to set a flag in the softc when we reallocate, and avoid dereferencing the command strucure if we've reallocated. The changes are largely the same in both drivers, since mpr(4) is a derivative of mps(4). o In iocfacts_allocate(), if the IOC Facts have changed and we need to reallocate, set the REALLOCATED flag in the softc. o Change wait_command() to take a struct mps_command ** instead of a struct mps_command *. This allows us to NULL out the caller's command pointer if we have to reinit the controller and the data structures get reallocated. (The REALLOCATED flag will be set in the softc if that has happened.) o In every place that calls wait_command(), make sure we handle the case where the command is NULL after the call. o The mpr(4) driver has mpr_request_polled() which can also reinitialize the card. Also check for reallocation there. Reviewed by: scottl, slm MFC after: 1 week Sponsored by: Spectra Logic
2017-08-10 14:59:17 +00:00
MPI2_DEFAULT_REPLY *rpl = NULL;
void *buf = NULL;
struct mpr_command *cm = NULL;
int err = 0;
int sz;
mpr_lock(sc);
cm = mpr_alloc_command(sc);
if (cm == NULL) {
mpr_printf(sc, "%s: no mpr requests\n", __func__);
err = ENOMEM;
Changes to make mps(4) and mpr(4) handle reinit with reallocation. When the mps(4) and mpr(4) drivers need to reinitialize the firmware, they sometimes need to reallocate all of the memory allocated by the driver. The reallocation happens whenever the IOC Facts change. That should only happen after a firmware upgrade. If the reinitialization happens as a result of a timed out command sent to the card, the command that timed out and triggered the reinit may have been freed if iocfacts_allocate() reallocated all memory. If the caller attempts to access the command after that, the kernel will panic because the caller will be dereferencing freed memory. The solution is to set a flag in the softc when we reallocate, and avoid dereferencing the command strucure if we've reallocated. The changes are largely the same in both drivers, since mpr(4) is a derivative of mps(4). o In iocfacts_allocate(), if the IOC Facts have changed and we need to reallocate, set the REALLOCATED flag in the softc. o Change wait_command() to take a struct mps_command ** instead of a struct mps_command *. This allows us to NULL out the caller's command pointer if we have to reinit the controller and the data structures get reallocated. (The REALLOCATED flag will be set in the softc if that has happened.) o In every place that calls wait_command(), make sure we handle the case where the command is NULL after the call. o The mpr(4) driver has mpr_request_polled() which can also reinitialize the card. Also check for reallocation there. Reviewed by: scottl, slm MFC after: 1 week Sponsored by: Spectra Logic
2017-08-10 14:59:17 +00:00
goto RetFree;
}
mpr_unlock(sc);
hdr = (MPI2_REQUEST_HEADER *)cm->cm_req;
mpr_dprint(sc, MPR_USER, "%s: req %p %d rpl %p %d\n", __func__,
cmd->req, cmd->req_len, cmd->rpl, cmd->rpl_len);
if (cmd->req_len > (int)sc->reqframesz) {
err = EINVAL;
goto RetFreeUnlocked;
}
err = copyin(cmd->req, hdr, cmd->req_len);
if (err != 0)
goto RetFreeUnlocked;
mpr_dprint(sc, MPR_USER, "%s: Function %02X MsgFlags %02X\n", __func__,
hdr->Function, hdr->MsgFlags);
if (cmd->len > 0) {
buf = malloc(cmd->len, M_MPRUSER, M_WAITOK|M_ZERO);
cm->cm_data = buf;
cm->cm_length = cmd->len;
} else {
cm->cm_data = NULL;
cm->cm_length = 0;
}
cm->cm_flags = MPR_CM_FLAGS_SGE_SIMPLE;
cm->cm_desc.Default.RequestFlags = MPI2_REQ_DESCRIPT_FLAGS_DEFAULT_TYPE;
err = mpr_user_setup_request(cm, cmd);
if (err == EINVAL) {
mpr_printf(sc, "%s: unsupported parameter or unsupported "
"function in request (function = 0x%X)\n", __func__,
hdr->Function);
}
if (err != 0)
goto RetFreeUnlocked;
mpr_lock(sc);
Changes to make mps(4) and mpr(4) handle reinit with reallocation. When the mps(4) and mpr(4) drivers need to reinitialize the firmware, they sometimes need to reallocate all of the memory allocated by the driver. The reallocation happens whenever the IOC Facts change. That should only happen after a firmware upgrade. If the reinitialization happens as a result of a timed out command sent to the card, the command that timed out and triggered the reinit may have been freed if iocfacts_allocate() reallocated all memory. If the caller attempts to access the command after that, the kernel will panic because the caller will be dereferencing freed memory. The solution is to set a flag in the softc when we reallocate, and avoid dereferencing the command strucure if we've reallocated. The changes are largely the same in both drivers, since mpr(4) is a derivative of mps(4). o In iocfacts_allocate(), if the IOC Facts have changed and we need to reallocate, set the REALLOCATED flag in the softc. o Change wait_command() to take a struct mps_command ** instead of a struct mps_command *. This allows us to NULL out the caller's command pointer if we have to reinit the controller and the data structures get reallocated. (The REALLOCATED flag will be set in the softc if that has happened.) o In every place that calls wait_command(), make sure we handle the case where the command is NULL after the call. o The mpr(4) driver has mpr_request_polled() which can also reinitialize the card. Also check for reallocation there. Reviewed by: scottl, slm MFC after: 1 week Sponsored by: Spectra Logic
2017-08-10 14:59:17 +00:00
err = mpr_wait_command(sc, &cm, 30, CAN_SLEEP);
Changes to make mps(4) and mpr(4) handle reinit with reallocation. When the mps(4) and mpr(4) drivers need to reinitialize the firmware, they sometimes need to reallocate all of the memory allocated by the driver. The reallocation happens whenever the IOC Facts change. That should only happen after a firmware upgrade. If the reinitialization happens as a result of a timed out command sent to the card, the command that timed out and triggered the reinit may have been freed if iocfacts_allocate() reallocated all memory. If the caller attempts to access the command after that, the kernel will panic because the caller will be dereferencing freed memory. The solution is to set a flag in the softc when we reallocate, and avoid dereferencing the command strucure if we've reallocated. The changes are largely the same in both drivers, since mpr(4) is a derivative of mps(4). o In iocfacts_allocate(), if the IOC Facts have changed and we need to reallocate, set the REALLOCATED flag in the softc. o Change wait_command() to take a struct mps_command ** instead of a struct mps_command *. This allows us to NULL out the caller's command pointer if we have to reinit the controller and the data structures get reallocated. (The REALLOCATED flag will be set in the softc if that has happened.) o In every place that calls wait_command(), make sure we handle the case where the command is NULL after the call. o The mpr(4) driver has mpr_request_polled() which can also reinitialize the card. Also check for reallocation there. Reviewed by: scottl, slm MFC after: 1 week Sponsored by: Spectra Logic
2017-08-10 14:59:17 +00:00
if (err || (cm == NULL)) {
mpr_printf(sc, "%s: invalid request: error %d\n",
__func__, err);
Changes to make mps(4) and mpr(4) handle reinit with reallocation. When the mps(4) and mpr(4) drivers need to reinitialize the firmware, they sometimes need to reallocate all of the memory allocated by the driver. The reallocation happens whenever the IOC Facts change. That should only happen after a firmware upgrade. If the reinitialization happens as a result of a timed out command sent to the card, the command that timed out and triggered the reinit may have been freed if iocfacts_allocate() reallocated all memory. If the caller attempts to access the command after that, the kernel will panic because the caller will be dereferencing freed memory. The solution is to set a flag in the softc when we reallocate, and avoid dereferencing the command strucure if we've reallocated. The changes are largely the same in both drivers, since mpr(4) is a derivative of mps(4). o In iocfacts_allocate(), if the IOC Facts have changed and we need to reallocate, set the REALLOCATED flag in the softc. o Change wait_command() to take a struct mps_command ** instead of a struct mps_command *. This allows us to NULL out the caller's command pointer if we have to reinit the controller and the data structures get reallocated. (The REALLOCATED flag will be set in the softc if that has happened.) o In every place that calls wait_command(), make sure we handle the case where the command is NULL after the call. o The mpr(4) driver has mpr_request_polled() which can also reinitialize the card. Also check for reallocation there. Reviewed by: scottl, slm MFC after: 1 week Sponsored by: Spectra Logic
2017-08-10 14:59:17 +00:00
goto RetFree;
}
Changes to make mps(4) and mpr(4) handle reinit with reallocation. When the mps(4) and mpr(4) drivers need to reinitialize the firmware, they sometimes need to reallocate all of the memory allocated by the driver. The reallocation happens whenever the IOC Facts change. That should only happen after a firmware upgrade. If the reinitialization happens as a result of a timed out command sent to the card, the command that timed out and triggered the reinit may have been freed if iocfacts_allocate() reallocated all memory. If the caller attempts to access the command after that, the kernel will panic because the caller will be dereferencing freed memory. The solution is to set a flag in the softc when we reallocate, and avoid dereferencing the command strucure if we've reallocated. The changes are largely the same in both drivers, since mpr(4) is a derivative of mps(4). o In iocfacts_allocate(), if the IOC Facts have changed and we need to reallocate, set the REALLOCATED flag in the softc. o Change wait_command() to take a struct mps_command ** instead of a struct mps_command *. This allows us to NULL out the caller's command pointer if we have to reinit the controller and the data structures get reallocated. (The REALLOCATED flag will be set in the softc if that has happened.) o In every place that calls wait_command(), make sure we handle the case where the command is NULL after the call. o The mpr(4) driver has mpr_request_polled() which can also reinitialize the card. Also check for reallocation there. Reviewed by: scottl, slm MFC after: 1 week Sponsored by: Spectra Logic
2017-08-10 14:59:17 +00:00
if (cm != NULL)
rpl = (MPI2_DEFAULT_REPLY *)cm->cm_reply;
if (rpl != NULL)
sz = rpl->MsgLength * 4;
else
sz = 0;
if (sz > cmd->rpl_len) {
mpr_printf(sc, "%s: user reply buffer (%d) smaller than "
"returned buffer (%d)\n", __func__, cmd->rpl_len, sz);
sz = cmd->rpl_len;
}
mpr_unlock(sc);
copyout(rpl, cmd->rpl, sz);
if (buf != NULL)
copyout(buf, cmd->buf, cmd->len);
mpr_dprint(sc, MPR_USER, "%s: reply size %d\n", __func__, sz);
RetFreeUnlocked:
mpr_lock(sc);
Changes to make mps(4) and mpr(4) handle reinit with reallocation. When the mps(4) and mpr(4) drivers need to reinitialize the firmware, they sometimes need to reallocate all of the memory allocated by the driver. The reallocation happens whenever the IOC Facts change. That should only happen after a firmware upgrade. If the reinitialization happens as a result of a timed out command sent to the card, the command that timed out and triggered the reinit may have been freed if iocfacts_allocate() reallocated all memory. If the caller attempts to access the command after that, the kernel will panic because the caller will be dereferencing freed memory. The solution is to set a flag in the softc when we reallocate, and avoid dereferencing the command strucure if we've reallocated. The changes are largely the same in both drivers, since mpr(4) is a derivative of mps(4). o In iocfacts_allocate(), if the IOC Facts have changed and we need to reallocate, set the REALLOCATED flag in the softc. o Change wait_command() to take a struct mps_command ** instead of a struct mps_command *. This allows us to NULL out the caller's command pointer if we have to reinit the controller and the data structures get reallocated. (The REALLOCATED flag will be set in the softc if that has happened.) o In every place that calls wait_command(), make sure we handle the case where the command is NULL after the call. o The mpr(4) driver has mpr_request_polled() which can also reinitialize the card. Also check for reallocation there. Reviewed by: scottl, slm MFC after: 1 week Sponsored by: Spectra Logic
2017-08-10 14:59:17 +00:00
RetFree:
if (cm != NULL)
mpr_free_command(sc, cm);
mpr_unlock(sc);
if (buf != NULL)
free(buf, M_MPRUSER);
return (err);
}
static int
mpr_user_pass_thru(struct mpr_softc *sc, mpr_pass_thru_t *data)
{
MPI2_REQUEST_HEADER *hdr, tmphdr;
MPI2_DEFAULT_REPLY *rpl;
Mpi26NVMeEncapsulatedErrorReply_t *nvme_error_reply = NULL;
Mpi26NVMeEncapsulatedRequest_t *nvme_encap_request = NULL;
struct mpr_command *cm = NULL;
int i, err = 0, dir = 0, sz;
uint8_t tool, function = 0;
u_int sense_len;
struct mprsas_target *targ = NULL;
/*
* Only allow one passthru command at a time. Use the MPR_FLAGS_BUSY
* bit to denote that a passthru is being processed.
*/
mpr_lock(sc);
if (sc->mpr_flags & MPR_FLAGS_BUSY) {
mpr_dprint(sc, MPR_USER, "%s: Only one passthru command "
"allowed at a single time.", __func__);
mpr_unlock(sc);
return (EBUSY);
}
sc->mpr_flags |= MPR_FLAGS_BUSY;
mpr_unlock(sc);
/*
* Do some validation on data direction. Valid cases are:
* 1) DataSize is 0 and direction is NONE
* 2) DataSize is non-zero and one of:
* a) direction is READ or
* b) direction is WRITE or
* c) direction is BOTH and DataOutSize is non-zero
* If valid and the direction is BOTH, change the direction to READ.
* if valid and the direction is not BOTH, make sure DataOutSize is 0.
*/
if (((data->DataSize == 0) &&
(data->DataDirection == MPR_PASS_THRU_DIRECTION_NONE)) ||
((data->DataSize != 0) &&
((data->DataDirection == MPR_PASS_THRU_DIRECTION_READ) ||
(data->DataDirection == MPR_PASS_THRU_DIRECTION_WRITE) ||
((data->DataDirection == MPR_PASS_THRU_DIRECTION_BOTH) &&
(data->DataOutSize != 0))))) {
if (data->DataDirection == MPR_PASS_THRU_DIRECTION_BOTH)
data->DataDirection = MPR_PASS_THRU_DIRECTION_READ;
else
data->DataOutSize = 0;
} else
return (EINVAL);
mpr_dprint(sc, MPR_USER, "%s: req 0x%jx %d rpl 0x%jx %d "
"data in 0x%jx %d data out 0x%jx %d data dir %d\n", __func__,
data->PtrRequest, data->RequestSize, data->PtrReply,
data->ReplySize, data->PtrData, data->DataSize,
data->PtrDataOut, data->DataOutSize, data->DataDirection);
/*
* copy in the header so we know what we're dealing with before we
* commit to allocating a command for it.
*/
err = copyin(PTRIN(data->PtrRequest), &tmphdr, data->RequestSize);
if (err != 0)
goto RetFreeUnlocked;
if (data->RequestSize > (int)sc->reqframesz) {
err = EINVAL;
goto RetFreeUnlocked;
}
function = tmphdr.Function;
mpr_dprint(sc, MPR_USER, "%s: Function %02X MsgFlags %02X\n", __func__,
function, tmphdr.MsgFlags);
/*
* Handle a passthru TM request.
*/
if (function == MPI2_FUNCTION_SCSI_TASK_MGMT) {
MPI2_SCSI_TASK_MANAGE_REQUEST *task;
mpr_lock(sc);
cm = mprsas_alloc_tm(sc);
if (cm == NULL) {
err = EINVAL;
goto Ret;
}
/* Copy the header in. Only a small fixup is needed. */
task = (MPI2_SCSI_TASK_MANAGE_REQUEST *)cm->cm_req;
bcopy(&tmphdr, task, data->RequestSize);
task->TaskMID = cm->cm_desc.Default.SMID;
cm->cm_data = NULL;
The wrong commit message was given with r283632. This is the correct message. - Updated all files with 2015 Avago copyright, and updated LSI's copyright dates. - Changed all of the PCI device strings from LSI to Avago Technologies (LSI). - Added a sysctl variable to control how StartStopUnit behavior works. User can select to spin down disks based on if disk is SSD or HDD. - Inquiry data is required to tell if a disk will support SSU at shutdown or not. Due to the addition of mpssas_async, which gets Advanced Info but not Inquiry data, the setting of supports_SSU was moved to the mpssas_scsiio_complete function, which snoops for any Inquiry commands. And, since disks are shutdown as a target and not a LUN, this process was simplified by basing it on targets and not LUNs. - Added a sysctl variable that sets the amount of time to retry after sending a failed SATA ID command. This helps with some bad disks and large disks that require a lot of time to spin up. Part of this change was to add a callout to handle timeouts with the SATA ID command. The callout function is called mpssas_ata_id_timeout(). (Fixes PR 191348) - Changed the way resets work by allowing I/O to continue to devices that are not currently under a reset condition. This uses devq's instead of simq's and makes use of the MPSSAS_TARGET_INRESET flag. This change also adds a function called mpssas_prepare_tm(). - Some changes were made to reduce code duplication when getting a SAS address for a SATA disk. - Fixed some formatting and whitespace. - Bump version of mps driver to 9.255.01.00-fbsd PR: 191348 Reviewed by: ken, scottl Approved by: ken, scottl MFC after: 1 week
2015-05-28 18:24:22 +00:00
cm->cm_desc.HighPriority.RequestFlags =
MPI2_REQ_DESCRIPT_FLAGS_HIGH_PRIORITY;
cm->cm_complete = NULL;
cm->cm_complete_data = NULL;
The wrong commit message was given with r283632. This is the correct message. - Updated all files with 2015 Avago copyright, and updated LSI's copyright dates. - Changed all of the PCI device strings from LSI to Avago Technologies (LSI). - Added a sysctl variable to control how StartStopUnit behavior works. User can select to spin down disks based on if disk is SSD or HDD. - Inquiry data is required to tell if a disk will support SSU at shutdown or not. Due to the addition of mpssas_async, which gets Advanced Info but not Inquiry data, the setting of supports_SSU was moved to the mpssas_scsiio_complete function, which snoops for any Inquiry commands. And, since disks are shutdown as a target and not a LUN, this process was simplified by basing it on targets and not LUNs. - Added a sysctl variable that sets the amount of time to retry after sending a failed SATA ID command. This helps with some bad disks and large disks that require a lot of time to spin up. Part of this change was to add a callout to handle timeouts with the SATA ID command. The callout function is called mpssas_ata_id_timeout(). (Fixes PR 191348) - Changed the way resets work by allowing I/O to continue to devices that are not currently under a reset condition. This uses devq's instead of simq's and makes use of the MPSSAS_TARGET_INRESET flag. This change also adds a function called mpssas_prepare_tm(). - Some changes were made to reduce code duplication when getting a SAS address for a SATA disk. - Fixed some formatting and whitespace. - Bump version of mps driver to 9.255.01.00-fbsd PR: 191348 Reviewed by: ken, scottl Approved by: ken, scottl MFC after: 1 week
2015-05-28 18:24:22 +00:00
targ = mprsas_find_target_by_handle(sc->sassc, 0,
task->DevHandle);
if (targ == NULL) {
mpr_dprint(sc, MPR_INFO,
"%s %d : invalid handle for requested TM 0x%x \n",
__func__, __LINE__, task->DevHandle);
err = 1;
} else {
mprsas_prepare_for_tm(sc, cm, targ, CAM_LUN_WILDCARD);
Changes to make mps(4) and mpr(4) handle reinit with reallocation. When the mps(4) and mpr(4) drivers need to reinitialize the firmware, they sometimes need to reallocate all of the memory allocated by the driver. The reallocation happens whenever the IOC Facts change. That should only happen after a firmware upgrade. If the reinitialization happens as a result of a timed out command sent to the card, the command that timed out and triggered the reinit may have been freed if iocfacts_allocate() reallocated all memory. If the caller attempts to access the command after that, the kernel will panic because the caller will be dereferencing freed memory. The solution is to set a flag in the softc when we reallocate, and avoid dereferencing the command strucure if we've reallocated. The changes are largely the same in both drivers, since mpr(4) is a derivative of mps(4). o In iocfacts_allocate(), if the IOC Facts have changed and we need to reallocate, set the REALLOCATED flag in the softc. o Change wait_command() to take a struct mps_command ** instead of a struct mps_command *. This allows us to NULL out the caller's command pointer if we have to reinit the controller and the data structures get reallocated. (The REALLOCATED flag will be set in the softc if that has happened.) o In every place that calls wait_command(), make sure we handle the case where the command is NULL after the call. o The mpr(4) driver has mpr_request_polled() which can also reinitialize the card. Also check for reallocation there. Reviewed by: scottl, slm MFC after: 1 week Sponsored by: Spectra Logic
2017-08-10 14:59:17 +00:00
err = mpr_wait_command(sc, &cm, 30, CAN_SLEEP);
The wrong commit message was given with r283632. This is the correct message. - Updated all files with 2015 Avago copyright, and updated LSI's copyright dates. - Changed all of the PCI device strings from LSI to Avago Technologies (LSI). - Added a sysctl variable to control how StartStopUnit behavior works. User can select to spin down disks based on if disk is SSD or HDD. - Inquiry data is required to tell if a disk will support SSU at shutdown or not. Due to the addition of mpssas_async, which gets Advanced Info but not Inquiry data, the setting of supports_SSU was moved to the mpssas_scsiio_complete function, which snoops for any Inquiry commands. And, since disks are shutdown as a target and not a LUN, this process was simplified by basing it on targets and not LUNs. - Added a sysctl variable that sets the amount of time to retry after sending a failed SATA ID command. This helps with some bad disks and large disks that require a lot of time to spin up. Part of this change was to add a callout to handle timeouts with the SATA ID command. The callout function is called mpssas_ata_id_timeout(). (Fixes PR 191348) - Changed the way resets work by allowing I/O to continue to devices that are not currently under a reset condition. This uses devq's instead of simq's and makes use of the MPSSAS_TARGET_INRESET flag. This change also adds a function called mpssas_prepare_tm(). - Some changes were made to reduce code duplication when getting a SAS address for a SATA disk. - Fixed some formatting and whitespace. - Bump version of mps driver to 9.255.01.00-fbsd PR: 191348 Reviewed by: ken, scottl Approved by: ken, scottl MFC after: 1 week
2015-05-28 18:24:22 +00:00
}
if (err != 0) {
err = EIO;
mpr_dprint(sc, MPR_FAULT, "%s: task management failed",
__func__);
}
/*
* Copy the reply data and sense data to user space.
*/
Changes to make mps(4) and mpr(4) handle reinit with reallocation. When the mps(4) and mpr(4) drivers need to reinitialize the firmware, they sometimes need to reallocate all of the memory allocated by the driver. The reallocation happens whenever the IOC Facts change. That should only happen after a firmware upgrade. If the reinitialization happens as a result of a timed out command sent to the card, the command that timed out and triggered the reinit may have been freed if iocfacts_allocate() reallocated all memory. If the caller attempts to access the command after that, the kernel will panic because the caller will be dereferencing freed memory. The solution is to set a flag in the softc when we reallocate, and avoid dereferencing the command strucure if we've reallocated. The changes are largely the same in both drivers, since mpr(4) is a derivative of mps(4). o In iocfacts_allocate(), if the IOC Facts have changed and we need to reallocate, set the REALLOCATED flag in the softc. o Change wait_command() to take a struct mps_command ** instead of a struct mps_command *. This allows us to NULL out the caller's command pointer if we have to reinit the controller and the data structures get reallocated. (The REALLOCATED flag will be set in the softc if that has happened.) o In every place that calls wait_command(), make sure we handle the case where the command is NULL after the call. o The mpr(4) driver has mpr_request_polled() which can also reinitialize the card. Also check for reallocation there. Reviewed by: scottl, slm MFC after: 1 week Sponsored by: Spectra Logic
2017-08-10 14:59:17 +00:00
if ((cm != NULL) && (cm->cm_reply != NULL)) {
rpl = (MPI2_DEFAULT_REPLY *)cm->cm_reply;
sz = rpl->MsgLength * 4;
if (sz > data->ReplySize) {
mpr_printf(sc, "%s: user reply buffer (%d) "
"smaller than returned buffer (%d)\n",
__func__, data->ReplySize, sz);
}
mpr_unlock(sc);
copyout(cm->cm_reply, PTRIN(data->PtrReply),
data->ReplySize);
mpr_lock(sc);
}
mprsas_free_tm(sc, cm);
goto Ret;
}
mpr_lock(sc);
cm = mpr_alloc_command(sc);
if (cm == NULL) {
mpr_printf(sc, "%s: no mpr requests\n", __func__);
err = ENOMEM;
goto Ret;
}
mpr_unlock(sc);
hdr = (MPI2_REQUEST_HEADER *)cm->cm_req;
bcopy(&tmphdr, hdr, data->RequestSize);
/*
* Do some checking to make sure the IOCTL request contains a valid
* request. Then set the SGL info.
*/
mpr_init_sge(cm, hdr, (void *)((uint8_t *)hdr + data->RequestSize));
/*
* Set up for read, write or both. From check above, DataOutSize will
* be 0 if direction is READ or WRITE, but it will have some non-zero
* value if the direction is BOTH. So, just use the biggest size to get
* the cm_data buffer size. If direction is BOTH, 2 SGLs need to be set
* up; the first is for the request and the second will contain the
* response data. cm_out_len needs to be set here and this will be used
* when the SGLs are set up.
*/
cm->cm_data = NULL;
cm->cm_length = MAX(data->DataSize, data->DataOutSize);
cm->cm_out_len = data->DataOutSize;
cm->cm_flags = 0;
if (cm->cm_length != 0) {
cm->cm_data = malloc(cm->cm_length, M_MPRUSER, M_WAITOK |
M_ZERO);
cm->cm_flags = MPR_CM_FLAGS_DATAIN;
if (data->DataOutSize) {
cm->cm_flags |= MPR_CM_FLAGS_DATAOUT;
err = copyin(PTRIN(data->PtrDataOut),
cm->cm_data, data->DataOutSize);
} else if (data->DataDirection ==
MPR_PASS_THRU_DIRECTION_WRITE) {
cm->cm_flags = MPR_CM_FLAGS_DATAOUT;
err = copyin(PTRIN(data->PtrData),
cm->cm_data, data->DataSize);
}
if (err != 0)
mpr_dprint(sc, MPR_FAULT, "%s: failed to copy IOCTL "
"data from user space\n", __func__);
}
/*
* Set this flag only if processing a command that does not need an
* IEEE SGL. The CLI Tool within the Toolbox uses IEEE SGLs, so clear
* the flag only for that tool if processing a Toolbox function.
*/
cm->cm_flags |= MPR_CM_FLAGS_SGE_SIMPLE;
for (i = 0; i < sizeof (ieee_sgl_func_list); i++) {
if (function == ieee_sgl_func_list[i]) {
if (function == MPI2_FUNCTION_TOOLBOX)
{
tool = (uint8_t)hdr->FunctionDependent1;
if (tool != MPI2_TOOLBOX_DIAGNOSTIC_CLI_TOOL)
break;
}
cm->cm_flags &= ~MPR_CM_FLAGS_SGE_SIMPLE;
break;
}
}
cm->cm_desc.Default.RequestFlags = MPI2_REQ_DESCRIPT_FLAGS_DEFAULT_TYPE;
if (function == MPI2_FUNCTION_NVME_ENCAPSULATED) {
nvme_encap_request =
(Mpi26NVMeEncapsulatedRequest_t *)cm->cm_req;
cm->cm_desc.Default.RequestFlags =
MPI26_REQ_DESCRIPT_FLAGS_PCIE_ENCAPSULATED;
/*
* Get the Physical Address of the sense buffer.
* Save the user's Error Response buffer address and use that
* field to hold the sense buffer address.
* Clear the internal sense buffer, which will potentially hold
* the Completion Queue Entry on return, or 0 if no Entry.
* Build the PRPs and set direction bits.
* Send the request.
*/
cm->nvme_error_response =
(uint64_t *)(uintptr_t)(((uint64_t)nvme_encap_request->
ErrorResponseBaseAddress.High << 32) |
(uint64_t)nvme_encap_request->
ErrorResponseBaseAddress.Low);
nvme_encap_request->ErrorResponseBaseAddress.High =
htole32((uint32_t)((uint64_t)cm->cm_sense_busaddr >> 32));
nvme_encap_request->ErrorResponseBaseAddress.Low =
htole32(cm->cm_sense_busaddr);
memset(cm->cm_sense, 0, NVME_ERROR_RESPONSE_SIZE);
mpr_build_nvme_prp(sc, cm, nvme_encap_request, cm->cm_data,
data->DataSize, data->DataOutSize);
}
/*
* Set up Sense buffer and SGL offset for IO passthru. SCSI IO request
* uses SCSI IO or Fast Path SCSI IO descriptor.
*/
if ((function == MPI2_FUNCTION_SCSI_IO_REQUEST) ||
(function == MPI2_FUNCTION_RAID_SCSI_IO_PASSTHROUGH)) {
MPI2_SCSI_IO_REQUEST *scsi_io_req;
scsi_io_req = (MPI2_SCSI_IO_REQUEST *)hdr;
/*
* Put SGE for data and data_out buffer at the end of
* scsi_io_request message header (64 bytes in total).
* Following above SGEs, the residual space will be used by
* sense data.
*/
scsi_io_req->SenseBufferLength = (uint8_t)(data->RequestSize -
64);
scsi_io_req->SenseBufferLowAddress =
htole32(cm->cm_sense_busaddr);
/*
* Set SGLOffset0 value. This is the number of dwords that SGL
* is offset from the beginning of MPI2_SCSI_IO_REQUEST struct.
*/
scsi_io_req->SGLOffset0 = 24;
/*
* Setup descriptor info. RAID passthrough must use the
* default request descriptor which is already set, so if this
* is a SCSI IO request, change the descriptor to SCSI IO or
* Fast Path SCSI IO. Also, if this is a SCSI IO request,
* handle the reply in the mprsas_scsio_complete function.
*/
if (function == MPI2_FUNCTION_SCSI_IO_REQUEST) {
targ = mprsas_find_target_by_handle(sc->sassc, 0,
scsi_io_req->DevHandle);
if (!targ) {
printf("No Target found for handle %d\n",
scsi_io_req->DevHandle);
err = EINVAL;
goto RetFreeUnlocked;
}
if (targ->scsi_req_desc_type ==
MPI25_REQ_DESCRIPT_FLAGS_FAST_PATH_SCSI_IO) {
cm->cm_desc.FastPathSCSIIO.RequestFlags =
MPI25_REQ_DESCRIPT_FLAGS_FAST_PATH_SCSI_IO;
if (!sc->atomic_desc_capable) {
cm->cm_desc.FastPathSCSIIO.DevHandle =
scsi_io_req->DevHandle;
}
scsi_io_req->IoFlags |=
MPI25_SCSIIO_IOFLAGS_FAST_PATH;
} else {
cm->cm_desc.SCSIIO.RequestFlags =
MPI2_REQ_DESCRIPT_FLAGS_SCSI_IO;
if (!sc->atomic_desc_capable) {
cm->cm_desc.SCSIIO.DevHandle =
scsi_io_req->DevHandle;
}
}
/*
* Make sure the DevHandle is not 0 because this is a
* likely error.
*/
if (scsi_io_req->DevHandle == 0) {
err = EINVAL;
goto RetFreeUnlocked;
}
}
}
mpr_lock(sc);
Changes to make mps(4) and mpr(4) handle reinit with reallocation. When the mps(4) and mpr(4) drivers need to reinitialize the firmware, they sometimes need to reallocate all of the memory allocated by the driver. The reallocation happens whenever the IOC Facts change. That should only happen after a firmware upgrade. If the reinitialization happens as a result of a timed out command sent to the card, the command that timed out and triggered the reinit may have been freed if iocfacts_allocate() reallocated all memory. If the caller attempts to access the command after that, the kernel will panic because the caller will be dereferencing freed memory. The solution is to set a flag in the softc when we reallocate, and avoid dereferencing the command strucure if we've reallocated. The changes are largely the same in both drivers, since mpr(4) is a derivative of mps(4). o In iocfacts_allocate(), if the IOC Facts have changed and we need to reallocate, set the REALLOCATED flag in the softc. o Change wait_command() to take a struct mps_command ** instead of a struct mps_command *. This allows us to NULL out the caller's command pointer if we have to reinit the controller and the data structures get reallocated. (The REALLOCATED flag will be set in the softc if that has happened.) o In every place that calls wait_command(), make sure we handle the case where the command is NULL after the call. o The mpr(4) driver has mpr_request_polled() which can also reinitialize the card. Also check for reallocation there. Reviewed by: scottl, slm MFC after: 1 week Sponsored by: Spectra Logic
2017-08-10 14:59:17 +00:00
err = mpr_wait_command(sc, &cm, 30, CAN_SLEEP);
Changes to make mps(4) and mpr(4) handle reinit with reallocation. When the mps(4) and mpr(4) drivers need to reinitialize the firmware, they sometimes need to reallocate all of the memory allocated by the driver. The reallocation happens whenever the IOC Facts change. That should only happen after a firmware upgrade. If the reinitialization happens as a result of a timed out command sent to the card, the command that timed out and triggered the reinit may have been freed if iocfacts_allocate() reallocated all memory. If the caller attempts to access the command after that, the kernel will panic because the caller will be dereferencing freed memory. The solution is to set a flag in the softc when we reallocate, and avoid dereferencing the command strucure if we've reallocated. The changes are largely the same in both drivers, since mpr(4) is a derivative of mps(4). o In iocfacts_allocate(), if the IOC Facts have changed and we need to reallocate, set the REALLOCATED flag in the softc. o Change wait_command() to take a struct mps_command ** instead of a struct mps_command *. This allows us to NULL out the caller's command pointer if we have to reinit the controller and the data structures get reallocated. (The REALLOCATED flag will be set in the softc if that has happened.) o In every place that calls wait_command(), make sure we handle the case where the command is NULL after the call. o The mpr(4) driver has mpr_request_polled() which can also reinitialize the card. Also check for reallocation there. Reviewed by: scottl, slm MFC after: 1 week Sponsored by: Spectra Logic
2017-08-10 14:59:17 +00:00
if (err || (cm == NULL)) {
mpr_printf(sc, "%s: invalid request: error %d\n", __func__,
err);
Changes to make mps(4) and mpr(4) handle reinit with reallocation. When the mps(4) and mpr(4) drivers need to reinitialize the firmware, they sometimes need to reallocate all of the memory allocated by the driver. The reallocation happens whenever the IOC Facts change. That should only happen after a firmware upgrade. If the reinitialization happens as a result of a timed out command sent to the card, the command that timed out and triggered the reinit may have been freed if iocfacts_allocate() reallocated all memory. If the caller attempts to access the command after that, the kernel will panic because the caller will be dereferencing freed memory. The solution is to set a flag in the softc when we reallocate, and avoid dereferencing the command strucure if we've reallocated. The changes are largely the same in both drivers, since mpr(4) is a derivative of mps(4). o In iocfacts_allocate(), if the IOC Facts have changed and we need to reallocate, set the REALLOCATED flag in the softc. o Change wait_command() to take a struct mps_command ** instead of a struct mps_command *. This allows us to NULL out the caller's command pointer if we have to reinit the controller and the data structures get reallocated. (The REALLOCATED flag will be set in the softc if that has happened.) o In every place that calls wait_command(), make sure we handle the case where the command is NULL after the call. o The mpr(4) driver has mpr_request_polled() which can also reinitialize the card. Also check for reallocation there. Reviewed by: scottl, slm MFC after: 1 week Sponsored by: Spectra Logic
2017-08-10 14:59:17 +00:00
goto RetFree;
}
/*
* Sync the DMA data, if any. Then copy the data to user space.
*/
if (cm->cm_data != NULL) {
if (cm->cm_flags & MPR_CM_FLAGS_DATAIN)
dir = BUS_DMASYNC_POSTREAD;
else if (cm->cm_flags & MPR_CM_FLAGS_DATAOUT)
The wrong commit message was given with r283632. This is the correct message. - Updated all files with 2015 Avago copyright, and updated LSI's copyright dates. - Changed all of the PCI device strings from LSI to Avago Technologies (LSI). - Added a sysctl variable to control how StartStopUnit behavior works. User can select to spin down disks based on if disk is SSD or HDD. - Inquiry data is required to tell if a disk will support SSU at shutdown or not. Due to the addition of mpssas_async, which gets Advanced Info but not Inquiry data, the setting of supports_SSU was moved to the mpssas_scsiio_complete function, which snoops for any Inquiry commands. And, since disks are shutdown as a target and not a LUN, this process was simplified by basing it on targets and not LUNs. - Added a sysctl variable that sets the amount of time to retry after sending a failed SATA ID command. This helps with some bad disks and large disks that require a lot of time to spin up. Part of this change was to add a callout to handle timeouts with the SATA ID command. The callout function is called mpssas_ata_id_timeout(). (Fixes PR 191348) - Changed the way resets work by allowing I/O to continue to devices that are not currently under a reset condition. This uses devq's instead of simq's and makes use of the MPSSAS_TARGET_INRESET flag. This change also adds a function called mpssas_prepare_tm(). - Some changes were made to reduce code duplication when getting a SAS address for a SATA disk. - Fixed some formatting and whitespace. - Bump version of mps driver to 9.255.01.00-fbsd PR: 191348 Reviewed by: ken, scottl Approved by: ken, scottl MFC after: 1 week
2015-05-28 18:24:22 +00:00
dir = BUS_DMASYNC_POSTWRITE;
bus_dmamap_sync(sc->buffer_dmat, cm->cm_dmamap, dir);
bus_dmamap_unload(sc->buffer_dmat, cm->cm_dmamap);
if (cm->cm_flags & MPR_CM_FLAGS_DATAIN) {
mpr_unlock(sc);
err = copyout(cm->cm_data,
PTRIN(data->PtrData), data->DataSize);
mpr_lock(sc);
if (err != 0)
mpr_dprint(sc, MPR_FAULT, "%s: failed to copy "
"IOCTL data to user space\n", __func__);
}
}
/*
* Copy the reply data and sense data to user space.
*/
if (cm->cm_reply != NULL) {
rpl = (MPI2_DEFAULT_REPLY *)cm->cm_reply;
sz = rpl->MsgLength * 4;
if (sz > data->ReplySize) {
mpr_printf(sc, "%s: user reply buffer (%d) smaller "
"than returned buffer (%d)\n", __func__,
data->ReplySize, sz);
}
mpr_unlock(sc);
copyout(cm->cm_reply, PTRIN(data->PtrReply), data->ReplySize);
mpr_lock(sc);
if ((function == MPI2_FUNCTION_SCSI_IO_REQUEST) ||
(function == MPI2_FUNCTION_RAID_SCSI_IO_PASSTHROUGH)) {
if (((MPI2_SCSI_IO_REPLY *)rpl)->SCSIState &
MPI2_SCSI_STATE_AUTOSENSE_VALID) {
sense_len =
MIN((le32toh(((MPI2_SCSI_IO_REPLY *)rpl)->
SenseCount)), sizeof(struct
scsi_sense_data));
mpr_unlock(sc);
copyout(cm->cm_sense, cm->cm_req + 64,
sense_len);
mpr_lock(sc);
}
}
/*
* Copy out the NVMe Error Reponse to user. The Error Response
* buffer is given by the user, but a sense buffer is used to
* get that data from the IOC. The user's
* ErrorResponseBaseAddress is saved in the
* 'nvme_error_response' field before the command because that
* field is set to a sense buffer. When the command is
* complete, the Error Response data from the IOC is copied to
* that user address after it is checked for validity.
* Also note that 'sense' buffers are not defined for
* NVMe commands. Sense terminalogy is only used here so that
* the same IOCTL structure and sense buffers can be used for
* NVMe.
*/
if (function == MPI2_FUNCTION_NVME_ENCAPSULATED) {
if (cm->nvme_error_response == NULL) {
mpr_dprint(sc, MPR_INFO, "NVMe Error Response "
"buffer is NULL. Response data will not be "
"returned.\n");
mpr_unlock(sc);
goto RetFreeUnlocked;
}
nvme_error_reply =
(Mpi26NVMeEncapsulatedErrorReply_t *)cm->cm_reply;
sz = MIN(le32toh(nvme_error_reply->ErrorResponseCount),
NVME_ERROR_RESPONSE_SIZE);
mpr_unlock(sc);
copyout(cm->cm_sense, cm->nvme_error_response, sz);
mpr_lock(sc);
}
}
mpr_unlock(sc);
RetFreeUnlocked:
mpr_lock(sc);
Changes to make mps(4) and mpr(4) handle reinit with reallocation. When the mps(4) and mpr(4) drivers need to reinitialize the firmware, they sometimes need to reallocate all of the memory allocated by the driver. The reallocation happens whenever the IOC Facts change. That should only happen after a firmware upgrade. If the reinitialization happens as a result of a timed out command sent to the card, the command that timed out and triggered the reinit may have been freed if iocfacts_allocate() reallocated all memory. If the caller attempts to access the command after that, the kernel will panic because the caller will be dereferencing freed memory. The solution is to set a flag in the softc when we reallocate, and avoid dereferencing the command strucure if we've reallocated. The changes are largely the same in both drivers, since mpr(4) is a derivative of mps(4). o In iocfacts_allocate(), if the IOC Facts have changed and we need to reallocate, set the REALLOCATED flag in the softc. o Change wait_command() to take a struct mps_command ** instead of a struct mps_command *. This allows us to NULL out the caller's command pointer if we have to reinit the controller and the data structures get reallocated. (The REALLOCATED flag will be set in the softc if that has happened.) o In every place that calls wait_command(), make sure we handle the case where the command is NULL after the call. o The mpr(4) driver has mpr_request_polled() which can also reinitialize the card. Also check for reallocation there. Reviewed by: scottl, slm MFC after: 1 week Sponsored by: Spectra Logic
2017-08-10 14:59:17 +00:00
RetFree:
if (cm != NULL) {
if (cm->cm_data)
free(cm->cm_data, M_MPRUSER);
mpr_free_command(sc, cm);
}
Ret:
sc->mpr_flags &= ~MPR_FLAGS_BUSY;
mpr_unlock(sc);
return (err);
}
static void
mpr_user_get_adapter_data(struct mpr_softc *sc, mpr_adapter_data_t *data)
{
Mpi2ConfigReply_t mpi_reply;
Mpi2BiosPage3_t config_page;
/*
* Use the PCI interface functions to get the Bus, Device, and Function
* information.
*/
data->PciInformation.u.bits.BusNumber = pci_get_bus(sc->mpr_dev);
data->PciInformation.u.bits.DeviceNumber = pci_get_slot(sc->mpr_dev);
data->PciInformation.u.bits.FunctionNumber =
pci_get_function(sc->mpr_dev);
/*
* Get the FW version that should already be saved in IOC Facts.
*/
data->MpiFirmwareVersion = sc->facts->FWVersion.Word;
/*
* General device info.
*/
if (sc->mpr_flags & MPR_FLAGS_GEN35_IOC)
data->AdapterType = MPRIOCTL_ADAPTER_TYPE_SAS35;
else
data->AdapterType = MPRIOCTL_ADAPTER_TYPE_SAS3;
data->PCIDeviceHwId = pci_get_device(sc->mpr_dev);
data->PCIDeviceHwRev = pci_read_config(sc->mpr_dev, PCIR_REVID, 1);
data->SubSystemId = pci_get_subdevice(sc->mpr_dev);
data->SubsystemVendorId = pci_get_subvendor(sc->mpr_dev);
/*
* Get the driver version.
*/
strcpy((char *)&data->DriverVersion[0], MPR_DRIVER_VERSION);
/*
* Need to get BIOS Config Page 3 for the BIOS Version.
*/
data->BiosVersion = 0;
mpr_lock(sc);
if (mpr_config_get_bios_pg3(sc, &mpi_reply, &config_page))
printf("%s: Error while retrieving BIOS Version\n", __func__);
else
data->BiosVersion = config_page.BiosVersion;
mpr_unlock(sc);
}
static void
mpr_user_read_pci_info(struct mpr_softc *sc, mpr_pci_info_t *data)
{
int i;
/*
* Use the PCI interface functions to get the Bus, Device, and Function
* information.
*/
data->BusNumber = pci_get_bus(sc->mpr_dev);
data->DeviceNumber = pci_get_slot(sc->mpr_dev);
data->FunctionNumber = pci_get_function(sc->mpr_dev);
/*
* Now get the interrupt vector and the pci header. The vector can
* only be 0 right now. The header is the first 256 bytes of config
* space.
*/
data->InterruptVector = 0;
for (i = 0; i < sizeof (data->PciHeader); i++) {
data->PciHeader[i] = pci_read_config(sc->mpr_dev, i, 1);
}
}
static uint8_t
mpr_get_fw_diag_buffer_number(struct mpr_softc *sc, uint32_t unique_id)
{
uint8_t index;
for (index = 0; index < MPI2_DIAG_BUF_TYPE_COUNT; index++) {
if (sc->fw_diag_buffer_list[index].unique_id == unique_id) {
return (index);
}
}
return (MPR_FW_DIAGNOSTIC_UID_NOT_FOUND);
}
static int
mpr_post_fw_diag_buffer(struct mpr_softc *sc,
mpr_fw_diagnostic_buffer_t *pBuffer, uint32_t *return_code)
{
MPI2_DIAG_BUFFER_POST_REQUEST *req;
MPI2_DIAG_BUFFER_POST_REPLY *reply;
struct mpr_command *cm = NULL;
int i, status;
/*
* If buffer is not enabled, just leave.
*/
*return_code = MPR_FW_DIAG_ERROR_POST_FAILED;
if (!pBuffer->enabled) {
return (MPR_DIAG_FAILURE);
}
/*
* Clear some flags initially.
*/
pBuffer->force_release = FALSE;
pBuffer->valid_data = FALSE;
pBuffer->owned_by_firmware = FALSE;
/*
* Get a command.
*/
cm = mpr_alloc_command(sc);
if (cm == NULL) {
mpr_printf(sc, "%s: no mpr requests\n", __func__);
return (MPR_DIAG_FAILURE);
}
/*
* Build the request for releasing the FW Diag Buffer and send it.
*/
req = (MPI2_DIAG_BUFFER_POST_REQUEST *)cm->cm_req;
req->Function = MPI2_FUNCTION_DIAG_BUFFER_POST;
req->BufferType = pBuffer->buffer_type;
req->ExtendedType = pBuffer->extended_type;
req->BufferLength = pBuffer->size;
for (i = 0; i < (sizeof(req->ProductSpecific) / 4); i++)
req->ProductSpecific[i] = pBuffer->product_specific[i];
mpr_from_u64(sc->fw_diag_busaddr, &req->BufferAddress);
cm->cm_data = NULL;
cm->cm_length = 0;
cm->cm_desc.Default.RequestFlags = MPI2_REQ_DESCRIPT_FLAGS_DEFAULT_TYPE;
cm->cm_complete_data = NULL;
/*
* Send command synchronously.
*/
Changes to make mps(4) and mpr(4) handle reinit with reallocation. When the mps(4) and mpr(4) drivers need to reinitialize the firmware, they sometimes need to reallocate all of the memory allocated by the driver. The reallocation happens whenever the IOC Facts change. That should only happen after a firmware upgrade. If the reinitialization happens as a result of a timed out command sent to the card, the command that timed out and triggered the reinit may have been freed if iocfacts_allocate() reallocated all memory. If the caller attempts to access the command after that, the kernel will panic because the caller will be dereferencing freed memory. The solution is to set a flag in the softc when we reallocate, and avoid dereferencing the command strucure if we've reallocated. The changes are largely the same in both drivers, since mpr(4) is a derivative of mps(4). o In iocfacts_allocate(), if the IOC Facts have changed and we need to reallocate, set the REALLOCATED flag in the softc. o Change wait_command() to take a struct mps_command ** instead of a struct mps_command *. This allows us to NULL out the caller's command pointer if we have to reinit the controller and the data structures get reallocated. (The REALLOCATED flag will be set in the softc if that has happened.) o In every place that calls wait_command(), make sure we handle the case where the command is NULL after the call. o The mpr(4) driver has mpr_request_polled() which can also reinitialize the card. Also check for reallocation there. Reviewed by: scottl, slm MFC after: 1 week Sponsored by: Spectra Logic
2017-08-10 14:59:17 +00:00
status = mpr_wait_command(sc, &cm, 30, CAN_SLEEP);
if (status || (cm == NULL)) {
mpr_printf(sc, "%s: invalid request: error %d\n", __func__,
status);
status = MPR_DIAG_FAILURE;
goto done;
}
/*
* Process POST reply.
*/
reply = (MPI2_DIAG_BUFFER_POST_REPLY *)cm->cm_reply;
Diagnostic buffer fixes for the mps(4) and mpr(4) drivers. In mp{r,s}_diag_register(), which is used to register diagnostic buffers with the mp{r,s}(4) firmware, we allocate DMAable memory. There were several issues here: o No checking of the bus_dmamap_load() return value. If the load failed or got deferred, mp{r,s}_diag_register() continued on as if nothing had happened. We now check the return value and bail out if it fails. o No waiting for a deferred load callback. bus_dmamap_load() calls a supplied callback when the mapping is done. This is generally done immediately, but it can be deferred. mp{r,s}_diag_register() did not check to see whether the callback was already done before proceeding on. We now sleep until the callback is done if it is deferred. o No call to bus_dmamap_sync(... BUS_DMASYNC_PREREAD) after the memory is allocated and loaded. This is necessary on some platforms to synchronize host memory that is going to be updated by a device. Both drivers would also panic if the firmware was reinitialized while a diagnostic buffer operation was in progress. This fixes that problem as well. (The driver will reinitialize the firmware in various circumstances, but the problem I ran into was that the firmware would generate an IOC Fault due to a PCIe error.) mp{r,s}var.h: Add a new structure, struct mpr_busdma_context, that is used for deferred busdma load callbacks. Add a prototype for mp{r,s}_memaddr_wait_cb(). mp{r,s}.c: Add a new busdma callback function, mp{r,s}_memaddr_wait_cb(). This provides synchronization for callers that want to wait on a deferred bus_dmamap_load() callback. mp{r,s}_user.c: In bus_dmamap_register(), add a call to bus_dmamap_sync() with the BUS_DMASYNC_PREREAD flag set after an allocation is loaded. Also, check the return value of bus_dmamap_load(). If it fails, bail out. If it is EINPROGRESS, wait for the callback to happen. We use an interruptible sleep (msleep with PCATCH) and let the callback clean things up if we get interrupted. In mpr_diag_read_buffer() and mps_diag_read_buffer(), call bus_dmamap_sync(..., BUS_DMASYNC_POSTREAD) before copying the data out to make sure the data is in stable storage. In mp{r,s}_post_fw_diag_buffer() and mp{r,s}_release_fw_diag_buffer(), check the reply to see whether it is NULL. It can be NULL (and the command non-NULL) if the controller gets reinitialized while we're waiting for the command to complete but the driver structures aren't reallocated. The driver structures generally won't be reallocated unless there is a firmware upgrade that changes one of the IOCFacts. When freeing diagnostic buffers in mp{r,s}_diag_register() and mp{r,s}_diag_unregister(), zero/NULL out the buffer after freeing it. This will prevent a duplicate free in some situations. Sponsored by: Spectra Logic Reviewed by: mav, scottl MFC after: 1 week Differential Revision: D13453
2018-02-06 15:58:22 +00:00
if (reply == NULL) {
mpr_printf(sc, "%s: reply is NULL, probably due to "
"reinitialization", __func__);
status = MPR_DIAG_FAILURE;
goto done;
}
if ((le16toh(reply->IOCStatus) & MPI2_IOCSTATUS_MASK) !=
MPI2_IOCSTATUS_SUCCESS) {
status = MPR_DIAG_FAILURE;
mpr_dprint(sc, MPR_FAULT, "%s: post of FW Diag Buffer failed "
"with IOCStatus = 0x%x, IOCLogInfo = 0x%x and "
"TransferLength = 0x%x\n", __func__,
le16toh(reply->IOCStatus), le32toh(reply->IOCLogInfo),
le32toh(reply->TransferLength));
goto done;
}
/*
* Post was successful.
*/
pBuffer->valid_data = TRUE;
pBuffer->owned_by_firmware = TRUE;
*return_code = MPR_FW_DIAG_ERROR_SUCCESS;
status = MPR_DIAG_SUCCESS;
done:
Changes to make mps(4) and mpr(4) handle reinit with reallocation. When the mps(4) and mpr(4) drivers need to reinitialize the firmware, they sometimes need to reallocate all of the memory allocated by the driver. The reallocation happens whenever the IOC Facts change. That should only happen after a firmware upgrade. If the reinitialization happens as a result of a timed out command sent to the card, the command that timed out and triggered the reinit may have been freed if iocfacts_allocate() reallocated all memory. If the caller attempts to access the command after that, the kernel will panic because the caller will be dereferencing freed memory. The solution is to set a flag in the softc when we reallocate, and avoid dereferencing the command strucure if we've reallocated. The changes are largely the same in both drivers, since mpr(4) is a derivative of mps(4). o In iocfacts_allocate(), if the IOC Facts have changed and we need to reallocate, set the REALLOCATED flag in the softc. o Change wait_command() to take a struct mps_command ** instead of a struct mps_command *. This allows us to NULL out the caller's command pointer if we have to reinit the controller and the data structures get reallocated. (The REALLOCATED flag will be set in the softc if that has happened.) o In every place that calls wait_command(), make sure we handle the case where the command is NULL after the call. o The mpr(4) driver has mpr_request_polled() which can also reinitialize the card. Also check for reallocation there. Reviewed by: scottl, slm MFC after: 1 week Sponsored by: Spectra Logic
2017-08-10 14:59:17 +00:00
if (cm != NULL)
mpr_free_command(sc, cm);
return (status);
}
static int
mpr_release_fw_diag_buffer(struct mpr_softc *sc,
mpr_fw_diagnostic_buffer_t *pBuffer, uint32_t *return_code,
uint32_t diag_type)
{
MPI2_DIAG_RELEASE_REQUEST *req;
MPI2_DIAG_RELEASE_REPLY *reply;
struct mpr_command *cm = NULL;
int status;
/*
* If buffer is not enabled, just leave.
*/
*return_code = MPR_FW_DIAG_ERROR_RELEASE_FAILED;
if (!pBuffer->enabled) {
mpr_dprint(sc, MPR_USER, "%s: This buffer type is not "
"supported by the IOC", __func__);
return (MPR_DIAG_FAILURE);
}
/*
* Clear some flags initially.
*/
pBuffer->force_release = FALSE;
pBuffer->valid_data = FALSE;
pBuffer->owned_by_firmware = FALSE;
/*
* Get a command.
*/
cm = mpr_alloc_command(sc);
if (cm == NULL) {
mpr_printf(sc, "%s: no mpr requests\n", __func__);
return (MPR_DIAG_FAILURE);
}
/*
* Build the request for releasing the FW Diag Buffer and send it.
*/
req = (MPI2_DIAG_RELEASE_REQUEST *)cm->cm_req;
req->Function = MPI2_FUNCTION_DIAG_RELEASE;
req->BufferType = pBuffer->buffer_type;
cm->cm_data = NULL;
cm->cm_length = 0;
cm->cm_desc.Default.RequestFlags = MPI2_REQ_DESCRIPT_FLAGS_DEFAULT_TYPE;
cm->cm_complete_data = NULL;
/*
* Send command synchronously.
*/
Changes to make mps(4) and mpr(4) handle reinit with reallocation. When the mps(4) and mpr(4) drivers need to reinitialize the firmware, they sometimes need to reallocate all of the memory allocated by the driver. The reallocation happens whenever the IOC Facts change. That should only happen after a firmware upgrade. If the reinitialization happens as a result of a timed out command sent to the card, the command that timed out and triggered the reinit may have been freed if iocfacts_allocate() reallocated all memory. If the caller attempts to access the command after that, the kernel will panic because the caller will be dereferencing freed memory. The solution is to set a flag in the softc when we reallocate, and avoid dereferencing the command strucure if we've reallocated. The changes are largely the same in both drivers, since mpr(4) is a derivative of mps(4). o In iocfacts_allocate(), if the IOC Facts have changed and we need to reallocate, set the REALLOCATED flag in the softc. o Change wait_command() to take a struct mps_command ** instead of a struct mps_command *. This allows us to NULL out the caller's command pointer if we have to reinit the controller and the data structures get reallocated. (The REALLOCATED flag will be set in the softc if that has happened.) o In every place that calls wait_command(), make sure we handle the case where the command is NULL after the call. o The mpr(4) driver has mpr_request_polled() which can also reinitialize the card. Also check for reallocation there. Reviewed by: scottl, slm MFC after: 1 week Sponsored by: Spectra Logic
2017-08-10 14:59:17 +00:00
status = mpr_wait_command(sc, &cm, 30, CAN_SLEEP);
if (status || (cm == NULL)) {
mpr_printf(sc, "%s: invalid request: error %d\n", __func__,
status);
status = MPR_DIAG_FAILURE;
goto done;
}
/*
* Process RELEASE reply.
*/
reply = (MPI2_DIAG_RELEASE_REPLY *)cm->cm_reply;
Diagnostic buffer fixes for the mps(4) and mpr(4) drivers. In mp{r,s}_diag_register(), which is used to register diagnostic buffers with the mp{r,s}(4) firmware, we allocate DMAable memory. There were several issues here: o No checking of the bus_dmamap_load() return value. If the load failed or got deferred, mp{r,s}_diag_register() continued on as if nothing had happened. We now check the return value and bail out if it fails. o No waiting for a deferred load callback. bus_dmamap_load() calls a supplied callback when the mapping is done. This is generally done immediately, but it can be deferred. mp{r,s}_diag_register() did not check to see whether the callback was already done before proceeding on. We now sleep until the callback is done if it is deferred. o No call to bus_dmamap_sync(... BUS_DMASYNC_PREREAD) after the memory is allocated and loaded. This is necessary on some platforms to synchronize host memory that is going to be updated by a device. Both drivers would also panic if the firmware was reinitialized while a diagnostic buffer operation was in progress. This fixes that problem as well. (The driver will reinitialize the firmware in various circumstances, but the problem I ran into was that the firmware would generate an IOC Fault due to a PCIe error.) mp{r,s}var.h: Add a new structure, struct mpr_busdma_context, that is used for deferred busdma load callbacks. Add a prototype for mp{r,s}_memaddr_wait_cb(). mp{r,s}.c: Add a new busdma callback function, mp{r,s}_memaddr_wait_cb(). This provides synchronization for callers that want to wait on a deferred bus_dmamap_load() callback. mp{r,s}_user.c: In bus_dmamap_register(), add a call to bus_dmamap_sync() with the BUS_DMASYNC_PREREAD flag set after an allocation is loaded. Also, check the return value of bus_dmamap_load(). If it fails, bail out. If it is EINPROGRESS, wait for the callback to happen. We use an interruptible sleep (msleep with PCATCH) and let the callback clean things up if we get interrupted. In mpr_diag_read_buffer() and mps_diag_read_buffer(), call bus_dmamap_sync(..., BUS_DMASYNC_POSTREAD) before copying the data out to make sure the data is in stable storage. In mp{r,s}_post_fw_diag_buffer() and mp{r,s}_release_fw_diag_buffer(), check the reply to see whether it is NULL. It can be NULL (and the command non-NULL) if the controller gets reinitialized while we're waiting for the command to complete but the driver structures aren't reallocated. The driver structures generally won't be reallocated unless there is a firmware upgrade that changes one of the IOCFacts. When freeing diagnostic buffers in mp{r,s}_diag_register() and mp{r,s}_diag_unregister(), zero/NULL out the buffer after freeing it. This will prevent a duplicate free in some situations. Sponsored by: Spectra Logic Reviewed by: mav, scottl MFC after: 1 week Differential Revision: D13453
2018-02-06 15:58:22 +00:00
if (reply == NULL) {
mpr_printf(sc, "%s: reply is NULL, probably due to "
"reinitialization", __func__);
status = MPR_DIAG_FAILURE;
goto done;
}
if (((le16toh(reply->IOCStatus) & MPI2_IOCSTATUS_MASK) !=
MPI2_IOCSTATUS_SUCCESS) || pBuffer->owned_by_firmware) {
status = MPR_DIAG_FAILURE;
mpr_dprint(sc, MPR_FAULT, "%s: release of FW Diag Buffer "
"failed with IOCStatus = 0x%x and IOCLogInfo = 0x%x\n",
__func__, le16toh(reply->IOCStatus),
le32toh(reply->IOCLogInfo));
goto done;
}
/*
* Release was successful.
*/
*return_code = MPR_FW_DIAG_ERROR_SUCCESS;
status = MPR_DIAG_SUCCESS;
/*
* If this was for an UNREGISTER diag type command, clear the unique ID.
*/
if (diag_type == MPR_FW_DIAG_TYPE_UNREGISTER) {
pBuffer->unique_id = MPR_FW_DIAG_INVALID_UID;
}
done:
Changes to make mps(4) and mpr(4) handle reinit with reallocation. When the mps(4) and mpr(4) drivers need to reinitialize the firmware, they sometimes need to reallocate all of the memory allocated by the driver. The reallocation happens whenever the IOC Facts change. That should only happen after a firmware upgrade. If the reinitialization happens as a result of a timed out command sent to the card, the command that timed out and triggered the reinit may have been freed if iocfacts_allocate() reallocated all memory. If the caller attempts to access the command after that, the kernel will panic because the caller will be dereferencing freed memory. The solution is to set a flag in the softc when we reallocate, and avoid dereferencing the command strucure if we've reallocated. The changes are largely the same in both drivers, since mpr(4) is a derivative of mps(4). o In iocfacts_allocate(), if the IOC Facts have changed and we need to reallocate, set the REALLOCATED flag in the softc. o Change wait_command() to take a struct mps_command ** instead of a struct mps_command *. This allows us to NULL out the caller's command pointer if we have to reinit the controller and the data structures get reallocated. (The REALLOCATED flag will be set in the softc if that has happened.) o In every place that calls wait_command(), make sure we handle the case where the command is NULL after the call. o The mpr(4) driver has mpr_request_polled() which can also reinitialize the card. Also check for reallocation there. Reviewed by: scottl, slm MFC after: 1 week Sponsored by: Spectra Logic
2017-08-10 14:59:17 +00:00
if (cm != NULL)
mpr_free_command(sc, cm);
return (status);
}
static int
The wrong commit message was given with r283632. This is the correct message. - Updated all files with 2015 Avago copyright, and updated LSI's copyright dates. - Changed all of the PCI device strings from LSI to Avago Technologies (LSI). - Added a sysctl variable to control how StartStopUnit behavior works. User can select to spin down disks based on if disk is SSD or HDD. - Inquiry data is required to tell if a disk will support SSU at shutdown or not. Due to the addition of mpssas_async, which gets Advanced Info but not Inquiry data, the setting of supports_SSU was moved to the mpssas_scsiio_complete function, which snoops for any Inquiry commands. And, since disks are shutdown as a target and not a LUN, this process was simplified by basing it on targets and not LUNs. - Added a sysctl variable that sets the amount of time to retry after sending a failed SATA ID command. This helps with some bad disks and large disks that require a lot of time to spin up. Part of this change was to add a callout to handle timeouts with the SATA ID command. The callout function is called mpssas_ata_id_timeout(). (Fixes PR 191348) - Changed the way resets work by allowing I/O to continue to devices that are not currently under a reset condition. This uses devq's instead of simq's and makes use of the MPSSAS_TARGET_INRESET flag. This change also adds a function called mpssas_prepare_tm(). - Some changes were made to reduce code duplication when getting a SAS address for a SATA disk. - Fixed some formatting and whitespace. - Bump version of mps driver to 9.255.01.00-fbsd PR: 191348 Reviewed by: ken, scottl Approved by: ken, scottl MFC after: 1 week
2015-05-28 18:24:22 +00:00
mpr_diag_register(struct mpr_softc *sc, mpr_fw_diag_register_t *diag_register,
uint32_t *return_code)
{
mpr_fw_diagnostic_buffer_t *pBuffer;
Diagnostic buffer fixes for the mps(4) and mpr(4) drivers. In mp{r,s}_diag_register(), which is used to register diagnostic buffers with the mp{r,s}(4) firmware, we allocate DMAable memory. There were several issues here: o No checking of the bus_dmamap_load() return value. If the load failed or got deferred, mp{r,s}_diag_register() continued on as if nothing had happened. We now check the return value and bail out if it fails. o No waiting for a deferred load callback. bus_dmamap_load() calls a supplied callback when the mapping is done. This is generally done immediately, but it can be deferred. mp{r,s}_diag_register() did not check to see whether the callback was already done before proceeding on. We now sleep until the callback is done if it is deferred. o No call to bus_dmamap_sync(... BUS_DMASYNC_PREREAD) after the memory is allocated and loaded. This is necessary on some platforms to synchronize host memory that is going to be updated by a device. Both drivers would also panic if the firmware was reinitialized while a diagnostic buffer operation was in progress. This fixes that problem as well. (The driver will reinitialize the firmware in various circumstances, but the problem I ran into was that the firmware would generate an IOC Fault due to a PCIe error.) mp{r,s}var.h: Add a new structure, struct mpr_busdma_context, that is used for deferred busdma load callbacks. Add a prototype for mp{r,s}_memaddr_wait_cb(). mp{r,s}.c: Add a new busdma callback function, mp{r,s}_memaddr_wait_cb(). This provides synchronization for callers that want to wait on a deferred bus_dmamap_load() callback. mp{r,s}_user.c: In bus_dmamap_register(), add a call to bus_dmamap_sync() with the BUS_DMASYNC_PREREAD flag set after an allocation is loaded. Also, check the return value of bus_dmamap_load(). If it fails, bail out. If it is EINPROGRESS, wait for the callback to happen. We use an interruptible sleep (msleep with PCATCH) and let the callback clean things up if we get interrupted. In mpr_diag_read_buffer() and mps_diag_read_buffer(), call bus_dmamap_sync(..., BUS_DMASYNC_POSTREAD) before copying the data out to make sure the data is in stable storage. In mp{r,s}_post_fw_diag_buffer() and mp{r,s}_release_fw_diag_buffer(), check the reply to see whether it is NULL. It can be NULL (and the command non-NULL) if the controller gets reinitialized while we're waiting for the command to complete but the driver structures aren't reallocated. The driver structures generally won't be reallocated unless there is a firmware upgrade that changes one of the IOCFacts. When freeing diagnostic buffers in mp{r,s}_diag_register() and mp{r,s}_diag_unregister(), zero/NULL out the buffer after freeing it. This will prevent a duplicate free in some situations. Sponsored by: Spectra Logic Reviewed by: mav, scottl MFC after: 1 week Differential Revision: D13453
2018-02-06 15:58:22 +00:00
struct mpr_busdma_context *ctx;
uint8_t extended_type, buffer_type, i;
uint32_t buffer_size;
uint32_t unique_id;
int status;
Diagnostic buffer fixes for the mps(4) and mpr(4) drivers. In mp{r,s}_diag_register(), which is used to register diagnostic buffers with the mp{r,s}(4) firmware, we allocate DMAable memory. There were several issues here: o No checking of the bus_dmamap_load() return value. If the load failed or got deferred, mp{r,s}_diag_register() continued on as if nothing had happened. We now check the return value and bail out if it fails. o No waiting for a deferred load callback. bus_dmamap_load() calls a supplied callback when the mapping is done. This is generally done immediately, but it can be deferred. mp{r,s}_diag_register() did not check to see whether the callback was already done before proceeding on. We now sleep until the callback is done if it is deferred. o No call to bus_dmamap_sync(... BUS_DMASYNC_PREREAD) after the memory is allocated and loaded. This is necessary on some platforms to synchronize host memory that is going to be updated by a device. Both drivers would also panic if the firmware was reinitialized while a diagnostic buffer operation was in progress. This fixes that problem as well. (The driver will reinitialize the firmware in various circumstances, but the problem I ran into was that the firmware would generate an IOC Fault due to a PCIe error.) mp{r,s}var.h: Add a new structure, struct mpr_busdma_context, that is used for deferred busdma load callbacks. Add a prototype for mp{r,s}_memaddr_wait_cb(). mp{r,s}.c: Add a new busdma callback function, mp{r,s}_memaddr_wait_cb(). This provides synchronization for callers that want to wait on a deferred bus_dmamap_load() callback. mp{r,s}_user.c: In bus_dmamap_register(), add a call to bus_dmamap_sync() with the BUS_DMASYNC_PREREAD flag set after an allocation is loaded. Also, check the return value of bus_dmamap_load(). If it fails, bail out. If it is EINPROGRESS, wait for the callback to happen. We use an interruptible sleep (msleep with PCATCH) and let the callback clean things up if we get interrupted. In mpr_diag_read_buffer() and mps_diag_read_buffer(), call bus_dmamap_sync(..., BUS_DMASYNC_POSTREAD) before copying the data out to make sure the data is in stable storage. In mp{r,s}_post_fw_diag_buffer() and mp{r,s}_release_fw_diag_buffer(), check the reply to see whether it is NULL. It can be NULL (and the command non-NULL) if the controller gets reinitialized while we're waiting for the command to complete but the driver structures aren't reallocated. The driver structures generally won't be reallocated unless there is a firmware upgrade that changes one of the IOCFacts. When freeing diagnostic buffers in mp{r,s}_diag_register() and mp{r,s}_diag_unregister(), zero/NULL out the buffer after freeing it. This will prevent a duplicate free in some situations. Sponsored by: Spectra Logic Reviewed by: mav, scottl MFC after: 1 week Differential Revision: D13453
2018-02-06 15:58:22 +00:00
int error;
extended_type = diag_register->ExtendedType;
buffer_type = diag_register->BufferType;
buffer_size = diag_register->RequestedBufferSize;
unique_id = diag_register->UniqueId;
Diagnostic buffer fixes for the mps(4) and mpr(4) drivers. In mp{r,s}_diag_register(), which is used to register diagnostic buffers with the mp{r,s}(4) firmware, we allocate DMAable memory. There were several issues here: o No checking of the bus_dmamap_load() return value. If the load failed or got deferred, mp{r,s}_diag_register() continued on as if nothing had happened. We now check the return value and bail out if it fails. o No waiting for a deferred load callback. bus_dmamap_load() calls a supplied callback when the mapping is done. This is generally done immediately, but it can be deferred. mp{r,s}_diag_register() did not check to see whether the callback was already done before proceeding on. We now sleep until the callback is done if it is deferred. o No call to bus_dmamap_sync(... BUS_DMASYNC_PREREAD) after the memory is allocated and loaded. This is necessary on some platforms to synchronize host memory that is going to be updated by a device. Both drivers would also panic if the firmware was reinitialized while a diagnostic buffer operation was in progress. This fixes that problem as well. (The driver will reinitialize the firmware in various circumstances, but the problem I ran into was that the firmware would generate an IOC Fault due to a PCIe error.) mp{r,s}var.h: Add a new structure, struct mpr_busdma_context, that is used for deferred busdma load callbacks. Add a prototype for mp{r,s}_memaddr_wait_cb(). mp{r,s}.c: Add a new busdma callback function, mp{r,s}_memaddr_wait_cb(). This provides synchronization for callers that want to wait on a deferred bus_dmamap_load() callback. mp{r,s}_user.c: In bus_dmamap_register(), add a call to bus_dmamap_sync() with the BUS_DMASYNC_PREREAD flag set after an allocation is loaded. Also, check the return value of bus_dmamap_load(). If it fails, bail out. If it is EINPROGRESS, wait for the callback to happen. We use an interruptible sleep (msleep with PCATCH) and let the callback clean things up if we get interrupted. In mpr_diag_read_buffer() and mps_diag_read_buffer(), call bus_dmamap_sync(..., BUS_DMASYNC_POSTREAD) before copying the data out to make sure the data is in stable storage. In mp{r,s}_post_fw_diag_buffer() and mp{r,s}_release_fw_diag_buffer(), check the reply to see whether it is NULL. It can be NULL (and the command non-NULL) if the controller gets reinitialized while we're waiting for the command to complete but the driver structures aren't reallocated. The driver structures generally won't be reallocated unless there is a firmware upgrade that changes one of the IOCFacts. When freeing diagnostic buffers in mp{r,s}_diag_register() and mp{r,s}_diag_unregister(), zero/NULL out the buffer after freeing it. This will prevent a duplicate free in some situations. Sponsored by: Spectra Logic Reviewed by: mav, scottl MFC after: 1 week Differential Revision: D13453
2018-02-06 15:58:22 +00:00
ctx = NULL;
error = 0;
/*
* Check for valid buffer type
*/
if (buffer_type >= MPI2_DIAG_BUF_TYPE_COUNT) {
*return_code = MPR_FW_DIAG_ERROR_INVALID_PARAMETER;
return (MPR_DIAG_FAILURE);
}
/*
* Get the current buffer and look up the unique ID. The unique ID
* should not be found. If it is, the ID is already in use.
*/
i = mpr_get_fw_diag_buffer_number(sc, unique_id);
pBuffer = &sc->fw_diag_buffer_list[buffer_type];
if (i != MPR_FW_DIAGNOSTIC_UID_NOT_FOUND) {
*return_code = MPR_FW_DIAG_ERROR_INVALID_UID;
return (MPR_DIAG_FAILURE);
}
/*
* The buffer's unique ID should not be registered yet, and the given
* unique ID cannot be 0.
*/
if ((pBuffer->unique_id != MPR_FW_DIAG_INVALID_UID) ||
(unique_id == MPR_FW_DIAG_INVALID_UID)) {
*return_code = MPR_FW_DIAG_ERROR_INVALID_UID;
return (MPR_DIAG_FAILURE);
}
/*
* If this buffer is already posted as immediate, just change owner.
*/
if (pBuffer->immediate && pBuffer->owned_by_firmware &&
(pBuffer->unique_id == MPR_FW_DIAG_INVALID_UID)) {
pBuffer->immediate = FALSE;
pBuffer->unique_id = unique_id;
return (MPR_DIAG_SUCCESS);
}
/*
* Post a new buffer after checking if it's enabled. The DMA buffer
* that is allocated will be contiguous (nsegments = 1).
*/
if (!pBuffer->enabled) {
*return_code = MPR_FW_DIAG_ERROR_NO_BUFFER;
return (MPR_DIAG_FAILURE);
}
Diagnostic buffer fixes for the mps(4) and mpr(4) drivers. In mp{r,s}_diag_register(), which is used to register diagnostic buffers with the mp{r,s}(4) firmware, we allocate DMAable memory. There were several issues here: o No checking of the bus_dmamap_load() return value. If the load failed or got deferred, mp{r,s}_diag_register() continued on as if nothing had happened. We now check the return value and bail out if it fails. o No waiting for a deferred load callback. bus_dmamap_load() calls a supplied callback when the mapping is done. This is generally done immediately, but it can be deferred. mp{r,s}_diag_register() did not check to see whether the callback was already done before proceeding on. We now sleep until the callback is done if it is deferred. o No call to bus_dmamap_sync(... BUS_DMASYNC_PREREAD) after the memory is allocated and loaded. This is necessary on some platforms to synchronize host memory that is going to be updated by a device. Both drivers would also panic if the firmware was reinitialized while a diagnostic buffer operation was in progress. This fixes that problem as well. (The driver will reinitialize the firmware in various circumstances, but the problem I ran into was that the firmware would generate an IOC Fault due to a PCIe error.) mp{r,s}var.h: Add a new structure, struct mpr_busdma_context, that is used for deferred busdma load callbacks. Add a prototype for mp{r,s}_memaddr_wait_cb(). mp{r,s}.c: Add a new busdma callback function, mp{r,s}_memaddr_wait_cb(). This provides synchronization for callers that want to wait on a deferred bus_dmamap_load() callback. mp{r,s}_user.c: In bus_dmamap_register(), add a call to bus_dmamap_sync() with the BUS_DMASYNC_PREREAD flag set after an allocation is loaded. Also, check the return value of bus_dmamap_load(). If it fails, bail out. If it is EINPROGRESS, wait for the callback to happen. We use an interruptible sleep (msleep with PCATCH) and let the callback clean things up if we get interrupted. In mpr_diag_read_buffer() and mps_diag_read_buffer(), call bus_dmamap_sync(..., BUS_DMASYNC_POSTREAD) before copying the data out to make sure the data is in stable storage. In mp{r,s}_post_fw_diag_buffer() and mp{r,s}_release_fw_diag_buffer(), check the reply to see whether it is NULL. It can be NULL (and the command non-NULL) if the controller gets reinitialized while we're waiting for the command to complete but the driver structures aren't reallocated. The driver structures generally won't be reallocated unless there is a firmware upgrade that changes one of the IOCFacts. When freeing diagnostic buffers in mp{r,s}_diag_register() and mp{r,s}_diag_unregister(), zero/NULL out the buffer after freeing it. This will prevent a duplicate free in some situations. Sponsored by: Spectra Logic Reviewed by: mav, scottl MFC after: 1 week Differential Revision: D13453
2018-02-06 15:58:22 +00:00
if (bus_dma_tag_create( sc->mpr_parent_dmat, /* parent */
1, 0, /* algnmnt, boundary */
BUS_SPACE_MAXADDR_32BIT,/* lowaddr */
BUS_SPACE_MAXADDR, /* highaddr */
NULL, NULL, /* filter, filterarg */
buffer_size, /* maxsize */
1, /* nsegments */
buffer_size, /* maxsegsize */
0, /* flags */
NULL, NULL, /* lockfunc, lockarg */
&sc->fw_diag_dmat)) {
mpr_dprint(sc, MPR_ERROR,
"Cannot allocate FW diag buffer DMA tag\n");
Diagnostic buffer fixes for the mps(4) and mpr(4) drivers. In mp{r,s}_diag_register(), which is used to register diagnostic buffers with the mp{r,s}(4) firmware, we allocate DMAable memory. There were several issues here: o No checking of the bus_dmamap_load() return value. If the load failed or got deferred, mp{r,s}_diag_register() continued on as if nothing had happened. We now check the return value and bail out if it fails. o No waiting for a deferred load callback. bus_dmamap_load() calls a supplied callback when the mapping is done. This is generally done immediately, but it can be deferred. mp{r,s}_diag_register() did not check to see whether the callback was already done before proceeding on. We now sleep until the callback is done if it is deferred. o No call to bus_dmamap_sync(... BUS_DMASYNC_PREREAD) after the memory is allocated and loaded. This is necessary on some platforms to synchronize host memory that is going to be updated by a device. Both drivers would also panic if the firmware was reinitialized while a diagnostic buffer operation was in progress. This fixes that problem as well. (The driver will reinitialize the firmware in various circumstances, but the problem I ran into was that the firmware would generate an IOC Fault due to a PCIe error.) mp{r,s}var.h: Add a new structure, struct mpr_busdma_context, that is used for deferred busdma load callbacks. Add a prototype for mp{r,s}_memaddr_wait_cb(). mp{r,s}.c: Add a new busdma callback function, mp{r,s}_memaddr_wait_cb(). This provides synchronization for callers that want to wait on a deferred bus_dmamap_load() callback. mp{r,s}_user.c: In bus_dmamap_register(), add a call to bus_dmamap_sync() with the BUS_DMASYNC_PREREAD flag set after an allocation is loaded. Also, check the return value of bus_dmamap_load(). If it fails, bail out. If it is EINPROGRESS, wait for the callback to happen. We use an interruptible sleep (msleep with PCATCH) and let the callback clean things up if we get interrupted. In mpr_diag_read_buffer() and mps_diag_read_buffer(), call bus_dmamap_sync(..., BUS_DMASYNC_POSTREAD) before copying the data out to make sure the data is in stable storage. In mp{r,s}_post_fw_diag_buffer() and mp{r,s}_release_fw_diag_buffer(), check the reply to see whether it is NULL. It can be NULL (and the command non-NULL) if the controller gets reinitialized while we're waiting for the command to complete but the driver structures aren't reallocated. The driver structures generally won't be reallocated unless there is a firmware upgrade that changes one of the IOCFacts. When freeing diagnostic buffers in mp{r,s}_diag_register() and mp{r,s}_diag_unregister(), zero/NULL out the buffer after freeing it. This will prevent a duplicate free in some situations. Sponsored by: Spectra Logic Reviewed by: mav, scottl MFC after: 1 week Differential Revision: D13453
2018-02-06 15:58:22 +00:00
*return_code = MPR_FW_DIAG_ERROR_NO_BUFFER;
status = MPR_DIAG_FAILURE;
goto bailout;
}
if (bus_dmamem_alloc(sc->fw_diag_dmat, (void **)&sc->fw_diag_buffer,
BUS_DMA_NOWAIT, &sc->fw_diag_map)) {
mpr_dprint(sc, MPR_ERROR,
"Cannot allocate FW diag buffer memory\n");
Diagnostic buffer fixes for the mps(4) and mpr(4) drivers. In mp{r,s}_diag_register(), which is used to register diagnostic buffers with the mp{r,s}(4) firmware, we allocate DMAable memory. There were several issues here: o No checking of the bus_dmamap_load() return value. If the load failed or got deferred, mp{r,s}_diag_register() continued on as if nothing had happened. We now check the return value and bail out if it fails. o No waiting for a deferred load callback. bus_dmamap_load() calls a supplied callback when the mapping is done. This is generally done immediately, but it can be deferred. mp{r,s}_diag_register() did not check to see whether the callback was already done before proceeding on. We now sleep until the callback is done if it is deferred. o No call to bus_dmamap_sync(... BUS_DMASYNC_PREREAD) after the memory is allocated and loaded. This is necessary on some platforms to synchronize host memory that is going to be updated by a device. Both drivers would also panic if the firmware was reinitialized while a diagnostic buffer operation was in progress. This fixes that problem as well. (The driver will reinitialize the firmware in various circumstances, but the problem I ran into was that the firmware would generate an IOC Fault due to a PCIe error.) mp{r,s}var.h: Add a new structure, struct mpr_busdma_context, that is used for deferred busdma load callbacks. Add a prototype for mp{r,s}_memaddr_wait_cb(). mp{r,s}.c: Add a new busdma callback function, mp{r,s}_memaddr_wait_cb(). This provides synchronization for callers that want to wait on a deferred bus_dmamap_load() callback. mp{r,s}_user.c: In bus_dmamap_register(), add a call to bus_dmamap_sync() with the BUS_DMASYNC_PREREAD flag set after an allocation is loaded. Also, check the return value of bus_dmamap_load(). If it fails, bail out. If it is EINPROGRESS, wait for the callback to happen. We use an interruptible sleep (msleep with PCATCH) and let the callback clean things up if we get interrupted. In mpr_diag_read_buffer() and mps_diag_read_buffer(), call bus_dmamap_sync(..., BUS_DMASYNC_POSTREAD) before copying the data out to make sure the data is in stable storage. In mp{r,s}_post_fw_diag_buffer() and mp{r,s}_release_fw_diag_buffer(), check the reply to see whether it is NULL. It can be NULL (and the command non-NULL) if the controller gets reinitialized while we're waiting for the command to complete but the driver structures aren't reallocated. The driver structures generally won't be reallocated unless there is a firmware upgrade that changes one of the IOCFacts. When freeing diagnostic buffers in mp{r,s}_diag_register() and mp{r,s}_diag_unregister(), zero/NULL out the buffer after freeing it. This will prevent a duplicate free in some situations. Sponsored by: Spectra Logic Reviewed by: mav, scottl MFC after: 1 week Differential Revision: D13453
2018-02-06 15:58:22 +00:00
*return_code = MPR_FW_DIAG_ERROR_NO_BUFFER;
status = MPR_DIAG_FAILURE;
goto bailout;
}
bzero(sc->fw_diag_buffer, buffer_size);
ctx = malloc(sizeof(*ctx), M_MPR, M_WAITOK | M_ZERO);
if (ctx == NULL) {
device_printf(sc->mpr_dev, "%s: context malloc failed\n",
__func__);
*return_code = MPR_FW_DIAG_ERROR_NO_BUFFER;
status = MPR_DIAG_FAILURE;
goto bailout;
}
ctx->addr = &sc->fw_diag_busaddr;
ctx->buffer_dmat = sc->fw_diag_dmat;
ctx->buffer_dmamap = sc->fw_diag_map;
ctx->softc = sc;
error = bus_dmamap_load(sc->fw_diag_dmat, sc->fw_diag_map,
sc->fw_diag_buffer, buffer_size, mpr_memaddr_wait_cb,
ctx, 0);
if (error == EINPROGRESS) {
/* XXX KDM */
device_printf(sc->mpr_dev, "%s: Deferred bus_dmamap_load\n",
__func__);
/*
* Wait for the load to complete. If we're interrupted,
* bail out.
*/
mpr_lock(sc);
if (ctx->completed == 0) {
error = msleep(ctx, &sc->mpr_mtx, PCATCH, "mprwait", 0);
if (error != 0) {
/*
* We got an error from msleep(9). This is
* most likely due to a signal. Tell
* mpr_memaddr_wait_cb() that we've abandoned
* the context, so it needs to clean up when
* it is called.
*/
ctx->abandoned = 1;
/* The callback will free this memory */
ctx = NULL;
mpr_unlock(sc);
device_printf(sc->mpr_dev, "Cannot "
"bus_dmamap_load FW diag buffer, error = "
"%d returned from msleep\n", error);
*return_code = MPR_FW_DIAG_ERROR_NO_BUFFER;
status = MPR_DIAG_FAILURE;
goto bailout;
}
}
mpr_unlock(sc);
}
if ((error != 0) || (ctx->error != 0)) {
device_printf(sc->mpr_dev, "Cannot bus_dmamap_load FW diag "
"buffer, %serror = %d\n", error ? "" : "callback ",
error ? error : ctx->error);
*return_code = MPR_FW_DIAG_ERROR_NO_BUFFER;
status = MPR_DIAG_FAILURE;
goto bailout;
}
bus_dmamap_sync(sc->fw_diag_dmat, sc->fw_diag_map, BUS_DMASYNC_PREREAD);
pBuffer->size = buffer_size;
/*
* Copy the given info to the diag buffer and post the buffer.
*/
pBuffer->buffer_type = buffer_type;
pBuffer->immediate = FALSE;
if (buffer_type == MPI2_DIAG_BUF_TYPE_TRACE) {
for (i = 0; i < (sizeof (pBuffer->product_specific) / 4);
i++) {
pBuffer->product_specific[i] =
diag_register->ProductSpecific[i];
}
}
pBuffer->extended_type = extended_type;
pBuffer->unique_id = unique_id;
status = mpr_post_fw_diag_buffer(sc, pBuffer, return_code);
Diagnostic buffer fixes for the mps(4) and mpr(4) drivers. In mp{r,s}_diag_register(), which is used to register diagnostic buffers with the mp{r,s}(4) firmware, we allocate DMAable memory. There were several issues here: o No checking of the bus_dmamap_load() return value. If the load failed or got deferred, mp{r,s}_diag_register() continued on as if nothing had happened. We now check the return value and bail out if it fails. o No waiting for a deferred load callback. bus_dmamap_load() calls a supplied callback when the mapping is done. This is generally done immediately, but it can be deferred. mp{r,s}_diag_register() did not check to see whether the callback was already done before proceeding on. We now sleep until the callback is done if it is deferred. o No call to bus_dmamap_sync(... BUS_DMASYNC_PREREAD) after the memory is allocated and loaded. This is necessary on some platforms to synchronize host memory that is going to be updated by a device. Both drivers would also panic if the firmware was reinitialized while a diagnostic buffer operation was in progress. This fixes that problem as well. (The driver will reinitialize the firmware in various circumstances, but the problem I ran into was that the firmware would generate an IOC Fault due to a PCIe error.) mp{r,s}var.h: Add a new structure, struct mpr_busdma_context, that is used for deferred busdma load callbacks. Add a prototype for mp{r,s}_memaddr_wait_cb(). mp{r,s}.c: Add a new busdma callback function, mp{r,s}_memaddr_wait_cb(). This provides synchronization for callers that want to wait on a deferred bus_dmamap_load() callback. mp{r,s}_user.c: In bus_dmamap_register(), add a call to bus_dmamap_sync() with the BUS_DMASYNC_PREREAD flag set after an allocation is loaded. Also, check the return value of bus_dmamap_load(). If it fails, bail out. If it is EINPROGRESS, wait for the callback to happen. We use an interruptible sleep (msleep with PCATCH) and let the callback clean things up if we get interrupted. In mpr_diag_read_buffer() and mps_diag_read_buffer(), call bus_dmamap_sync(..., BUS_DMASYNC_POSTREAD) before copying the data out to make sure the data is in stable storage. In mp{r,s}_post_fw_diag_buffer() and mp{r,s}_release_fw_diag_buffer(), check the reply to see whether it is NULL. It can be NULL (and the command non-NULL) if the controller gets reinitialized while we're waiting for the command to complete but the driver structures aren't reallocated. The driver structures generally won't be reallocated unless there is a firmware upgrade that changes one of the IOCFacts. When freeing diagnostic buffers in mp{r,s}_diag_register() and mp{r,s}_diag_unregister(), zero/NULL out the buffer after freeing it. This will prevent a duplicate free in some situations. Sponsored by: Spectra Logic Reviewed by: mav, scottl MFC after: 1 week Differential Revision: D13453
2018-02-06 15:58:22 +00:00
bailout:
/*
* In case there was a failure, free the DMA buffer.
*/
if (status == MPR_DIAG_FAILURE) {
Diagnostic buffer fixes for the mps(4) and mpr(4) drivers. In mp{r,s}_diag_register(), which is used to register diagnostic buffers with the mp{r,s}(4) firmware, we allocate DMAable memory. There were several issues here: o No checking of the bus_dmamap_load() return value. If the load failed or got deferred, mp{r,s}_diag_register() continued on as if nothing had happened. We now check the return value and bail out if it fails. o No waiting for a deferred load callback. bus_dmamap_load() calls a supplied callback when the mapping is done. This is generally done immediately, but it can be deferred. mp{r,s}_diag_register() did not check to see whether the callback was already done before proceeding on. We now sleep until the callback is done if it is deferred. o No call to bus_dmamap_sync(... BUS_DMASYNC_PREREAD) after the memory is allocated and loaded. This is necessary on some platforms to synchronize host memory that is going to be updated by a device. Both drivers would also panic if the firmware was reinitialized while a diagnostic buffer operation was in progress. This fixes that problem as well. (The driver will reinitialize the firmware in various circumstances, but the problem I ran into was that the firmware would generate an IOC Fault due to a PCIe error.) mp{r,s}var.h: Add a new structure, struct mpr_busdma_context, that is used for deferred busdma load callbacks. Add a prototype for mp{r,s}_memaddr_wait_cb(). mp{r,s}.c: Add a new busdma callback function, mp{r,s}_memaddr_wait_cb(). This provides synchronization for callers that want to wait on a deferred bus_dmamap_load() callback. mp{r,s}_user.c: In bus_dmamap_register(), add a call to bus_dmamap_sync() with the BUS_DMASYNC_PREREAD flag set after an allocation is loaded. Also, check the return value of bus_dmamap_load(). If it fails, bail out. If it is EINPROGRESS, wait for the callback to happen. We use an interruptible sleep (msleep with PCATCH) and let the callback clean things up if we get interrupted. In mpr_diag_read_buffer() and mps_diag_read_buffer(), call bus_dmamap_sync(..., BUS_DMASYNC_POSTREAD) before copying the data out to make sure the data is in stable storage. In mp{r,s}_post_fw_diag_buffer() and mp{r,s}_release_fw_diag_buffer(), check the reply to see whether it is NULL. It can be NULL (and the command non-NULL) if the controller gets reinitialized while we're waiting for the command to complete but the driver structures aren't reallocated. The driver structures generally won't be reallocated unless there is a firmware upgrade that changes one of the IOCFacts. When freeing diagnostic buffers in mp{r,s}_diag_register() and mp{r,s}_diag_unregister(), zero/NULL out the buffer after freeing it. This will prevent a duplicate free in some situations. Sponsored by: Spectra Logic Reviewed by: mav, scottl MFC after: 1 week Differential Revision: D13453
2018-02-06 15:58:22 +00:00
if (sc->fw_diag_busaddr != 0) {
bus_dmamap_unload(sc->fw_diag_dmat, sc->fw_diag_map);
Diagnostic buffer fixes for the mps(4) and mpr(4) drivers. In mp{r,s}_diag_register(), which is used to register diagnostic buffers with the mp{r,s}(4) firmware, we allocate DMAable memory. There were several issues here: o No checking of the bus_dmamap_load() return value. If the load failed or got deferred, mp{r,s}_diag_register() continued on as if nothing had happened. We now check the return value and bail out if it fails. o No waiting for a deferred load callback. bus_dmamap_load() calls a supplied callback when the mapping is done. This is generally done immediately, but it can be deferred. mp{r,s}_diag_register() did not check to see whether the callback was already done before proceeding on. We now sleep until the callback is done if it is deferred. o No call to bus_dmamap_sync(... BUS_DMASYNC_PREREAD) after the memory is allocated and loaded. This is necessary on some platforms to synchronize host memory that is going to be updated by a device. Both drivers would also panic if the firmware was reinitialized while a diagnostic buffer operation was in progress. This fixes that problem as well. (The driver will reinitialize the firmware in various circumstances, but the problem I ran into was that the firmware would generate an IOC Fault due to a PCIe error.) mp{r,s}var.h: Add a new structure, struct mpr_busdma_context, that is used for deferred busdma load callbacks. Add a prototype for mp{r,s}_memaddr_wait_cb(). mp{r,s}.c: Add a new busdma callback function, mp{r,s}_memaddr_wait_cb(). This provides synchronization for callers that want to wait on a deferred bus_dmamap_load() callback. mp{r,s}_user.c: In bus_dmamap_register(), add a call to bus_dmamap_sync() with the BUS_DMASYNC_PREREAD flag set after an allocation is loaded. Also, check the return value of bus_dmamap_load(). If it fails, bail out. If it is EINPROGRESS, wait for the callback to happen. We use an interruptible sleep (msleep with PCATCH) and let the callback clean things up if we get interrupted. In mpr_diag_read_buffer() and mps_diag_read_buffer(), call bus_dmamap_sync(..., BUS_DMASYNC_POSTREAD) before copying the data out to make sure the data is in stable storage. In mp{r,s}_post_fw_diag_buffer() and mp{r,s}_release_fw_diag_buffer(), check the reply to see whether it is NULL. It can be NULL (and the command non-NULL) if the controller gets reinitialized while we're waiting for the command to complete but the driver structures aren't reallocated. The driver structures generally won't be reallocated unless there is a firmware upgrade that changes one of the IOCFacts. When freeing diagnostic buffers in mp{r,s}_diag_register() and mp{r,s}_diag_unregister(), zero/NULL out the buffer after freeing it. This will prevent a duplicate free in some situations. Sponsored by: Spectra Logic Reviewed by: mav, scottl MFC after: 1 week Differential Revision: D13453
2018-02-06 15:58:22 +00:00
sc->fw_diag_busaddr = 0;
}
if (sc->fw_diag_buffer != NULL) {
bus_dmamem_free(sc->fw_diag_dmat, sc->fw_diag_buffer,
sc->fw_diag_map);
Diagnostic buffer fixes for the mps(4) and mpr(4) drivers. In mp{r,s}_diag_register(), which is used to register diagnostic buffers with the mp{r,s}(4) firmware, we allocate DMAable memory. There were several issues here: o No checking of the bus_dmamap_load() return value. If the load failed or got deferred, mp{r,s}_diag_register() continued on as if nothing had happened. We now check the return value and bail out if it fails. o No waiting for a deferred load callback. bus_dmamap_load() calls a supplied callback when the mapping is done. This is generally done immediately, but it can be deferred. mp{r,s}_diag_register() did not check to see whether the callback was already done before proceeding on. We now sleep until the callback is done if it is deferred. o No call to bus_dmamap_sync(... BUS_DMASYNC_PREREAD) after the memory is allocated and loaded. This is necessary on some platforms to synchronize host memory that is going to be updated by a device. Both drivers would also panic if the firmware was reinitialized while a diagnostic buffer operation was in progress. This fixes that problem as well. (The driver will reinitialize the firmware in various circumstances, but the problem I ran into was that the firmware would generate an IOC Fault due to a PCIe error.) mp{r,s}var.h: Add a new structure, struct mpr_busdma_context, that is used for deferred busdma load callbacks. Add a prototype for mp{r,s}_memaddr_wait_cb(). mp{r,s}.c: Add a new busdma callback function, mp{r,s}_memaddr_wait_cb(). This provides synchronization for callers that want to wait on a deferred bus_dmamap_load() callback. mp{r,s}_user.c: In bus_dmamap_register(), add a call to bus_dmamap_sync() with the BUS_DMASYNC_PREREAD flag set after an allocation is loaded. Also, check the return value of bus_dmamap_load(). If it fails, bail out. If it is EINPROGRESS, wait for the callback to happen. We use an interruptible sleep (msleep with PCATCH) and let the callback clean things up if we get interrupted. In mpr_diag_read_buffer() and mps_diag_read_buffer(), call bus_dmamap_sync(..., BUS_DMASYNC_POSTREAD) before copying the data out to make sure the data is in stable storage. In mp{r,s}_post_fw_diag_buffer() and mp{r,s}_release_fw_diag_buffer(), check the reply to see whether it is NULL. It can be NULL (and the command non-NULL) if the controller gets reinitialized while we're waiting for the command to complete but the driver structures aren't reallocated. The driver structures generally won't be reallocated unless there is a firmware upgrade that changes one of the IOCFacts. When freeing diagnostic buffers in mp{r,s}_diag_register() and mp{r,s}_diag_unregister(), zero/NULL out the buffer after freeing it. This will prevent a duplicate free in some situations. Sponsored by: Spectra Logic Reviewed by: mav, scottl MFC after: 1 week Differential Revision: D13453
2018-02-06 15:58:22 +00:00
sc->fw_diag_buffer = NULL;
}
if (sc->fw_diag_dmat != NULL) {
bus_dma_tag_destroy(sc->fw_diag_dmat);
Diagnostic buffer fixes for the mps(4) and mpr(4) drivers. In mp{r,s}_diag_register(), which is used to register diagnostic buffers with the mp{r,s}(4) firmware, we allocate DMAable memory. There were several issues here: o No checking of the bus_dmamap_load() return value. If the load failed or got deferred, mp{r,s}_diag_register() continued on as if nothing had happened. We now check the return value and bail out if it fails. o No waiting for a deferred load callback. bus_dmamap_load() calls a supplied callback when the mapping is done. This is generally done immediately, but it can be deferred. mp{r,s}_diag_register() did not check to see whether the callback was already done before proceeding on. We now sleep until the callback is done if it is deferred. o No call to bus_dmamap_sync(... BUS_DMASYNC_PREREAD) after the memory is allocated and loaded. This is necessary on some platforms to synchronize host memory that is going to be updated by a device. Both drivers would also panic if the firmware was reinitialized while a diagnostic buffer operation was in progress. This fixes that problem as well. (The driver will reinitialize the firmware in various circumstances, but the problem I ran into was that the firmware would generate an IOC Fault due to a PCIe error.) mp{r,s}var.h: Add a new structure, struct mpr_busdma_context, that is used for deferred busdma load callbacks. Add a prototype for mp{r,s}_memaddr_wait_cb(). mp{r,s}.c: Add a new busdma callback function, mp{r,s}_memaddr_wait_cb(). This provides synchronization for callers that want to wait on a deferred bus_dmamap_load() callback. mp{r,s}_user.c: In bus_dmamap_register(), add a call to bus_dmamap_sync() with the BUS_DMASYNC_PREREAD flag set after an allocation is loaded. Also, check the return value of bus_dmamap_load(). If it fails, bail out. If it is EINPROGRESS, wait for the callback to happen. We use an interruptible sleep (msleep with PCATCH) and let the callback clean things up if we get interrupted. In mpr_diag_read_buffer() and mps_diag_read_buffer(), call bus_dmamap_sync(..., BUS_DMASYNC_POSTREAD) before copying the data out to make sure the data is in stable storage. In mp{r,s}_post_fw_diag_buffer() and mp{r,s}_release_fw_diag_buffer(), check the reply to see whether it is NULL. It can be NULL (and the command non-NULL) if the controller gets reinitialized while we're waiting for the command to complete but the driver structures aren't reallocated. The driver structures generally won't be reallocated unless there is a firmware upgrade that changes one of the IOCFacts. When freeing diagnostic buffers in mp{r,s}_diag_register() and mp{r,s}_diag_unregister(), zero/NULL out the buffer after freeing it. This will prevent a duplicate free in some situations. Sponsored by: Spectra Logic Reviewed by: mav, scottl MFC after: 1 week Differential Revision: D13453
2018-02-06 15:58:22 +00:00
sc->fw_diag_dmat = NULL;
}
}
Diagnostic buffer fixes for the mps(4) and mpr(4) drivers. In mp{r,s}_diag_register(), which is used to register diagnostic buffers with the mp{r,s}(4) firmware, we allocate DMAable memory. There were several issues here: o No checking of the bus_dmamap_load() return value. If the load failed or got deferred, mp{r,s}_diag_register() continued on as if nothing had happened. We now check the return value and bail out if it fails. o No waiting for a deferred load callback. bus_dmamap_load() calls a supplied callback when the mapping is done. This is generally done immediately, but it can be deferred. mp{r,s}_diag_register() did not check to see whether the callback was already done before proceeding on. We now sleep until the callback is done if it is deferred. o No call to bus_dmamap_sync(... BUS_DMASYNC_PREREAD) after the memory is allocated and loaded. This is necessary on some platforms to synchronize host memory that is going to be updated by a device. Both drivers would also panic if the firmware was reinitialized while a diagnostic buffer operation was in progress. This fixes that problem as well. (The driver will reinitialize the firmware in various circumstances, but the problem I ran into was that the firmware would generate an IOC Fault due to a PCIe error.) mp{r,s}var.h: Add a new structure, struct mpr_busdma_context, that is used for deferred busdma load callbacks. Add a prototype for mp{r,s}_memaddr_wait_cb(). mp{r,s}.c: Add a new busdma callback function, mp{r,s}_memaddr_wait_cb(). This provides synchronization for callers that want to wait on a deferred bus_dmamap_load() callback. mp{r,s}_user.c: In bus_dmamap_register(), add a call to bus_dmamap_sync() with the BUS_DMASYNC_PREREAD flag set after an allocation is loaded. Also, check the return value of bus_dmamap_load(). If it fails, bail out. If it is EINPROGRESS, wait for the callback to happen. We use an interruptible sleep (msleep with PCATCH) and let the callback clean things up if we get interrupted. In mpr_diag_read_buffer() and mps_diag_read_buffer(), call bus_dmamap_sync(..., BUS_DMASYNC_POSTREAD) before copying the data out to make sure the data is in stable storage. In mp{r,s}_post_fw_diag_buffer() and mp{r,s}_release_fw_diag_buffer(), check the reply to see whether it is NULL. It can be NULL (and the command non-NULL) if the controller gets reinitialized while we're waiting for the command to complete but the driver structures aren't reallocated. The driver structures generally won't be reallocated unless there is a firmware upgrade that changes one of the IOCFacts. When freeing diagnostic buffers in mp{r,s}_diag_register() and mp{r,s}_diag_unregister(), zero/NULL out the buffer after freeing it. This will prevent a duplicate free in some situations. Sponsored by: Spectra Logic Reviewed by: mav, scottl MFC after: 1 week Differential Revision: D13453
2018-02-06 15:58:22 +00:00
if (ctx != NULL)
free(ctx, M_MPR);
return (status);
}
static int
mpr_diag_unregister(struct mpr_softc *sc,
mpr_fw_diag_unregister_t *diag_unregister, uint32_t *return_code)
{
mpr_fw_diagnostic_buffer_t *pBuffer;
uint8_t i;
uint32_t unique_id;
int status;
unique_id = diag_unregister->UniqueId;
/*
* Get the current buffer and look up the unique ID. The unique ID
* should be there.
*/
i = mpr_get_fw_diag_buffer_number(sc, unique_id);
if (i == MPR_FW_DIAGNOSTIC_UID_NOT_FOUND) {
*return_code = MPR_FW_DIAG_ERROR_INVALID_UID;
return (MPR_DIAG_FAILURE);
}
pBuffer = &sc->fw_diag_buffer_list[i];
/*
* Try to release the buffer from FW before freeing it. If release
* fails, don't free the DMA buffer in case FW tries to access it
* later. If buffer is not owned by firmware, can't release it.
*/
if (!pBuffer->owned_by_firmware) {
status = MPR_DIAG_SUCCESS;
} else {
status = mpr_release_fw_diag_buffer(sc, pBuffer, return_code,
MPR_FW_DIAG_TYPE_UNREGISTER);
}
/*
* At this point, return the current status no matter what happens with
* the DMA buffer.
*/
pBuffer->unique_id = MPR_FW_DIAG_INVALID_UID;
if (status == MPR_DIAG_SUCCESS) {
Diagnostic buffer fixes for the mps(4) and mpr(4) drivers. In mp{r,s}_diag_register(), which is used to register diagnostic buffers with the mp{r,s}(4) firmware, we allocate DMAable memory. There were several issues here: o No checking of the bus_dmamap_load() return value. If the load failed or got deferred, mp{r,s}_diag_register() continued on as if nothing had happened. We now check the return value and bail out if it fails. o No waiting for a deferred load callback. bus_dmamap_load() calls a supplied callback when the mapping is done. This is generally done immediately, but it can be deferred. mp{r,s}_diag_register() did not check to see whether the callback was already done before proceeding on. We now sleep until the callback is done if it is deferred. o No call to bus_dmamap_sync(... BUS_DMASYNC_PREREAD) after the memory is allocated and loaded. This is necessary on some platforms to synchronize host memory that is going to be updated by a device. Both drivers would also panic if the firmware was reinitialized while a diagnostic buffer operation was in progress. This fixes that problem as well. (The driver will reinitialize the firmware in various circumstances, but the problem I ran into was that the firmware would generate an IOC Fault due to a PCIe error.) mp{r,s}var.h: Add a new structure, struct mpr_busdma_context, that is used for deferred busdma load callbacks. Add a prototype for mp{r,s}_memaddr_wait_cb(). mp{r,s}.c: Add a new busdma callback function, mp{r,s}_memaddr_wait_cb(). This provides synchronization for callers that want to wait on a deferred bus_dmamap_load() callback. mp{r,s}_user.c: In bus_dmamap_register(), add a call to bus_dmamap_sync() with the BUS_DMASYNC_PREREAD flag set after an allocation is loaded. Also, check the return value of bus_dmamap_load(). If it fails, bail out. If it is EINPROGRESS, wait for the callback to happen. We use an interruptible sleep (msleep with PCATCH) and let the callback clean things up if we get interrupted. In mpr_diag_read_buffer() and mps_diag_read_buffer(), call bus_dmamap_sync(..., BUS_DMASYNC_POSTREAD) before copying the data out to make sure the data is in stable storage. In mp{r,s}_post_fw_diag_buffer() and mp{r,s}_release_fw_diag_buffer(), check the reply to see whether it is NULL. It can be NULL (and the command non-NULL) if the controller gets reinitialized while we're waiting for the command to complete but the driver structures aren't reallocated. The driver structures generally won't be reallocated unless there is a firmware upgrade that changes one of the IOCFacts. When freeing diagnostic buffers in mp{r,s}_diag_register() and mp{r,s}_diag_unregister(), zero/NULL out the buffer after freeing it. This will prevent a duplicate free in some situations. Sponsored by: Spectra Logic Reviewed by: mav, scottl MFC after: 1 week Differential Revision: D13453
2018-02-06 15:58:22 +00:00
if (sc->fw_diag_busaddr != 0) {
bus_dmamap_unload(sc->fw_diag_dmat, sc->fw_diag_map);
Diagnostic buffer fixes for the mps(4) and mpr(4) drivers. In mp{r,s}_diag_register(), which is used to register diagnostic buffers with the mp{r,s}(4) firmware, we allocate DMAable memory. There were several issues here: o No checking of the bus_dmamap_load() return value. If the load failed or got deferred, mp{r,s}_diag_register() continued on as if nothing had happened. We now check the return value and bail out if it fails. o No waiting for a deferred load callback. bus_dmamap_load() calls a supplied callback when the mapping is done. This is generally done immediately, but it can be deferred. mp{r,s}_diag_register() did not check to see whether the callback was already done before proceeding on. We now sleep until the callback is done if it is deferred. o No call to bus_dmamap_sync(... BUS_DMASYNC_PREREAD) after the memory is allocated and loaded. This is necessary on some platforms to synchronize host memory that is going to be updated by a device. Both drivers would also panic if the firmware was reinitialized while a diagnostic buffer operation was in progress. This fixes that problem as well. (The driver will reinitialize the firmware in various circumstances, but the problem I ran into was that the firmware would generate an IOC Fault due to a PCIe error.) mp{r,s}var.h: Add a new structure, struct mpr_busdma_context, that is used for deferred busdma load callbacks. Add a prototype for mp{r,s}_memaddr_wait_cb(). mp{r,s}.c: Add a new busdma callback function, mp{r,s}_memaddr_wait_cb(). This provides synchronization for callers that want to wait on a deferred bus_dmamap_load() callback. mp{r,s}_user.c: In bus_dmamap_register(), add a call to bus_dmamap_sync() with the BUS_DMASYNC_PREREAD flag set after an allocation is loaded. Also, check the return value of bus_dmamap_load(). If it fails, bail out. If it is EINPROGRESS, wait for the callback to happen. We use an interruptible sleep (msleep with PCATCH) and let the callback clean things up if we get interrupted. In mpr_diag_read_buffer() and mps_diag_read_buffer(), call bus_dmamap_sync(..., BUS_DMASYNC_POSTREAD) before copying the data out to make sure the data is in stable storage. In mp{r,s}_post_fw_diag_buffer() and mp{r,s}_release_fw_diag_buffer(), check the reply to see whether it is NULL. It can be NULL (and the command non-NULL) if the controller gets reinitialized while we're waiting for the command to complete but the driver structures aren't reallocated. The driver structures generally won't be reallocated unless there is a firmware upgrade that changes one of the IOCFacts. When freeing diagnostic buffers in mp{r,s}_diag_register() and mp{r,s}_diag_unregister(), zero/NULL out the buffer after freeing it. This will prevent a duplicate free in some situations. Sponsored by: Spectra Logic Reviewed by: mav, scottl MFC after: 1 week Differential Revision: D13453
2018-02-06 15:58:22 +00:00
sc->fw_diag_busaddr = 0;
}
if (sc->fw_diag_buffer != NULL) {
bus_dmamem_free(sc->fw_diag_dmat, sc->fw_diag_buffer,
sc->fw_diag_map);
Diagnostic buffer fixes for the mps(4) and mpr(4) drivers. In mp{r,s}_diag_register(), which is used to register diagnostic buffers with the mp{r,s}(4) firmware, we allocate DMAable memory. There were several issues here: o No checking of the bus_dmamap_load() return value. If the load failed or got deferred, mp{r,s}_diag_register() continued on as if nothing had happened. We now check the return value and bail out if it fails. o No waiting for a deferred load callback. bus_dmamap_load() calls a supplied callback when the mapping is done. This is generally done immediately, but it can be deferred. mp{r,s}_diag_register() did not check to see whether the callback was already done before proceeding on. We now sleep until the callback is done if it is deferred. o No call to bus_dmamap_sync(... BUS_DMASYNC_PREREAD) after the memory is allocated and loaded. This is necessary on some platforms to synchronize host memory that is going to be updated by a device. Both drivers would also panic if the firmware was reinitialized while a diagnostic buffer operation was in progress. This fixes that problem as well. (The driver will reinitialize the firmware in various circumstances, but the problem I ran into was that the firmware would generate an IOC Fault due to a PCIe error.) mp{r,s}var.h: Add a new structure, struct mpr_busdma_context, that is used for deferred busdma load callbacks. Add a prototype for mp{r,s}_memaddr_wait_cb(). mp{r,s}.c: Add a new busdma callback function, mp{r,s}_memaddr_wait_cb(). This provides synchronization for callers that want to wait on a deferred bus_dmamap_load() callback. mp{r,s}_user.c: In bus_dmamap_register(), add a call to bus_dmamap_sync() with the BUS_DMASYNC_PREREAD flag set after an allocation is loaded. Also, check the return value of bus_dmamap_load(). If it fails, bail out. If it is EINPROGRESS, wait for the callback to happen. We use an interruptible sleep (msleep with PCATCH) and let the callback clean things up if we get interrupted. In mpr_diag_read_buffer() and mps_diag_read_buffer(), call bus_dmamap_sync(..., BUS_DMASYNC_POSTREAD) before copying the data out to make sure the data is in stable storage. In mp{r,s}_post_fw_diag_buffer() and mp{r,s}_release_fw_diag_buffer(), check the reply to see whether it is NULL. It can be NULL (and the command non-NULL) if the controller gets reinitialized while we're waiting for the command to complete but the driver structures aren't reallocated. The driver structures generally won't be reallocated unless there is a firmware upgrade that changes one of the IOCFacts. When freeing diagnostic buffers in mp{r,s}_diag_register() and mp{r,s}_diag_unregister(), zero/NULL out the buffer after freeing it. This will prevent a duplicate free in some situations. Sponsored by: Spectra Logic Reviewed by: mav, scottl MFC after: 1 week Differential Revision: D13453
2018-02-06 15:58:22 +00:00
sc->fw_diag_buffer = NULL;
}
if (sc->fw_diag_dmat != NULL) {
bus_dma_tag_destroy(sc->fw_diag_dmat);
Diagnostic buffer fixes for the mps(4) and mpr(4) drivers. In mp{r,s}_diag_register(), which is used to register diagnostic buffers with the mp{r,s}(4) firmware, we allocate DMAable memory. There were several issues here: o No checking of the bus_dmamap_load() return value. If the load failed or got deferred, mp{r,s}_diag_register() continued on as if nothing had happened. We now check the return value and bail out if it fails. o No waiting for a deferred load callback. bus_dmamap_load() calls a supplied callback when the mapping is done. This is generally done immediately, but it can be deferred. mp{r,s}_diag_register() did not check to see whether the callback was already done before proceeding on. We now sleep until the callback is done if it is deferred. o No call to bus_dmamap_sync(... BUS_DMASYNC_PREREAD) after the memory is allocated and loaded. This is necessary on some platforms to synchronize host memory that is going to be updated by a device. Both drivers would also panic if the firmware was reinitialized while a diagnostic buffer operation was in progress. This fixes that problem as well. (The driver will reinitialize the firmware in various circumstances, but the problem I ran into was that the firmware would generate an IOC Fault due to a PCIe error.) mp{r,s}var.h: Add a new structure, struct mpr_busdma_context, that is used for deferred busdma load callbacks. Add a prototype for mp{r,s}_memaddr_wait_cb(). mp{r,s}.c: Add a new busdma callback function, mp{r,s}_memaddr_wait_cb(). This provides synchronization for callers that want to wait on a deferred bus_dmamap_load() callback. mp{r,s}_user.c: In bus_dmamap_register(), add a call to bus_dmamap_sync() with the BUS_DMASYNC_PREREAD flag set after an allocation is loaded. Also, check the return value of bus_dmamap_load(). If it fails, bail out. If it is EINPROGRESS, wait for the callback to happen. We use an interruptible sleep (msleep with PCATCH) and let the callback clean things up if we get interrupted. In mpr_diag_read_buffer() and mps_diag_read_buffer(), call bus_dmamap_sync(..., BUS_DMASYNC_POSTREAD) before copying the data out to make sure the data is in stable storage. In mp{r,s}_post_fw_diag_buffer() and mp{r,s}_release_fw_diag_buffer(), check the reply to see whether it is NULL. It can be NULL (and the command non-NULL) if the controller gets reinitialized while we're waiting for the command to complete but the driver structures aren't reallocated. The driver structures generally won't be reallocated unless there is a firmware upgrade that changes one of the IOCFacts. When freeing diagnostic buffers in mp{r,s}_diag_register() and mp{r,s}_diag_unregister(), zero/NULL out the buffer after freeing it. This will prevent a duplicate free in some situations. Sponsored by: Spectra Logic Reviewed by: mav, scottl MFC after: 1 week Differential Revision: D13453
2018-02-06 15:58:22 +00:00
sc->fw_diag_dmat = NULL;
}
}
return (status);
}
static int
mpr_diag_query(struct mpr_softc *sc, mpr_fw_diag_query_t *diag_query,
uint32_t *return_code)
{
mpr_fw_diagnostic_buffer_t *pBuffer;
uint8_t i;
uint32_t unique_id;
unique_id = diag_query->UniqueId;
/*
* If ID is valid, query on ID.
* If ID is invalid, query on buffer type.
*/
if (unique_id == MPR_FW_DIAG_INVALID_UID) {
i = diag_query->BufferType;
if (i >= MPI2_DIAG_BUF_TYPE_COUNT) {
*return_code = MPR_FW_DIAG_ERROR_INVALID_UID;
return (MPR_DIAG_FAILURE);
}
} else {
i = mpr_get_fw_diag_buffer_number(sc, unique_id);
if (i == MPR_FW_DIAGNOSTIC_UID_NOT_FOUND) {
*return_code = MPR_FW_DIAG_ERROR_INVALID_UID;
return (MPR_DIAG_FAILURE);
}
}
/*
* Fill query structure with the diag buffer info.
*/
pBuffer = &sc->fw_diag_buffer_list[i];
diag_query->BufferType = pBuffer->buffer_type;
diag_query->ExtendedType = pBuffer->extended_type;
if (diag_query->BufferType == MPI2_DIAG_BUF_TYPE_TRACE) {
for (i = 0; i < (sizeof(diag_query->ProductSpecific) / 4);
i++) {
diag_query->ProductSpecific[i] =
pBuffer->product_specific[i];
}
}
diag_query->TotalBufferSize = pBuffer->size;
diag_query->DriverAddedBufferSize = 0;
diag_query->UniqueId = pBuffer->unique_id;
diag_query->ApplicationFlags = 0;
diag_query->DiagnosticFlags = 0;
/*
* Set/Clear application flags
*/
if (pBuffer->immediate) {
diag_query->ApplicationFlags &= ~MPR_FW_DIAG_FLAG_APP_OWNED;
} else {
diag_query->ApplicationFlags |= MPR_FW_DIAG_FLAG_APP_OWNED;
}
if (pBuffer->valid_data || pBuffer->owned_by_firmware) {
diag_query->ApplicationFlags |= MPR_FW_DIAG_FLAG_BUFFER_VALID;
} else {
diag_query->ApplicationFlags &= ~MPR_FW_DIAG_FLAG_BUFFER_VALID;
}
if (pBuffer->owned_by_firmware) {
diag_query->ApplicationFlags |=
MPR_FW_DIAG_FLAG_FW_BUFFER_ACCESS;
} else {
diag_query->ApplicationFlags &=
~MPR_FW_DIAG_FLAG_FW_BUFFER_ACCESS;
}
return (MPR_DIAG_SUCCESS);
}
static int
mpr_diag_read_buffer(struct mpr_softc *sc,
mpr_diag_read_buffer_t *diag_read_buffer, uint8_t *ioctl_buf,
uint32_t *return_code)
{
mpr_fw_diagnostic_buffer_t *pBuffer;
uint8_t i, *pData;
uint32_t unique_id;
int status;
unique_id = diag_read_buffer->UniqueId;
/*
* Get the current buffer and look up the unique ID. The unique ID
* should be there.
*/
i = mpr_get_fw_diag_buffer_number(sc, unique_id);
if (i == MPR_FW_DIAGNOSTIC_UID_NOT_FOUND) {
*return_code = MPR_FW_DIAG_ERROR_INVALID_UID;
return (MPR_DIAG_FAILURE);
}
pBuffer = &sc->fw_diag_buffer_list[i];
/*
* Make sure requested read is within limits
*/
if (diag_read_buffer->StartingOffset + diag_read_buffer->BytesToRead >
pBuffer->size) {
*return_code = MPR_FW_DIAG_ERROR_INVALID_PARAMETER;
return (MPR_DIAG_FAILURE);
}
Diagnostic buffer fixes for the mps(4) and mpr(4) drivers. In mp{r,s}_diag_register(), which is used to register diagnostic buffers with the mp{r,s}(4) firmware, we allocate DMAable memory. There were several issues here: o No checking of the bus_dmamap_load() return value. If the load failed or got deferred, mp{r,s}_diag_register() continued on as if nothing had happened. We now check the return value and bail out if it fails. o No waiting for a deferred load callback. bus_dmamap_load() calls a supplied callback when the mapping is done. This is generally done immediately, but it can be deferred. mp{r,s}_diag_register() did not check to see whether the callback was already done before proceeding on. We now sleep until the callback is done if it is deferred. o No call to bus_dmamap_sync(... BUS_DMASYNC_PREREAD) after the memory is allocated and loaded. This is necessary on some platforms to synchronize host memory that is going to be updated by a device. Both drivers would also panic if the firmware was reinitialized while a diagnostic buffer operation was in progress. This fixes that problem as well. (The driver will reinitialize the firmware in various circumstances, but the problem I ran into was that the firmware would generate an IOC Fault due to a PCIe error.) mp{r,s}var.h: Add a new structure, struct mpr_busdma_context, that is used for deferred busdma load callbacks. Add a prototype for mp{r,s}_memaddr_wait_cb(). mp{r,s}.c: Add a new busdma callback function, mp{r,s}_memaddr_wait_cb(). This provides synchronization for callers that want to wait on a deferred bus_dmamap_load() callback. mp{r,s}_user.c: In bus_dmamap_register(), add a call to bus_dmamap_sync() with the BUS_DMASYNC_PREREAD flag set after an allocation is loaded. Also, check the return value of bus_dmamap_load(). If it fails, bail out. If it is EINPROGRESS, wait for the callback to happen. We use an interruptible sleep (msleep with PCATCH) and let the callback clean things up if we get interrupted. In mpr_diag_read_buffer() and mps_diag_read_buffer(), call bus_dmamap_sync(..., BUS_DMASYNC_POSTREAD) before copying the data out to make sure the data is in stable storage. In mp{r,s}_post_fw_diag_buffer() and mp{r,s}_release_fw_diag_buffer(), check the reply to see whether it is NULL. It can be NULL (and the command non-NULL) if the controller gets reinitialized while we're waiting for the command to complete but the driver structures aren't reallocated. The driver structures generally won't be reallocated unless there is a firmware upgrade that changes one of the IOCFacts. When freeing diagnostic buffers in mp{r,s}_diag_register() and mp{r,s}_diag_unregister(), zero/NULL out the buffer after freeing it. This will prevent a duplicate free in some situations. Sponsored by: Spectra Logic Reviewed by: mav, scottl MFC after: 1 week Differential Revision: D13453
2018-02-06 15:58:22 +00:00
/* Sync the DMA map before we copy to userland. */
bus_dmamap_sync(sc->fw_diag_dmat, sc->fw_diag_map,
BUS_DMASYNC_POSTREAD);
/*
* Copy the requested data from DMA to the diag_read_buffer. The DMA
* buffer that was allocated is one contiguous buffer.
*/
pData = (uint8_t *)(sc->fw_diag_buffer +
diag_read_buffer->StartingOffset);
if (copyout(pData, ioctl_buf, diag_read_buffer->BytesToRead) != 0)
return (MPR_DIAG_FAILURE);
diag_read_buffer->Status = 0;
/*
* Set or clear the Force Release flag.
*/
if (pBuffer->force_release) {
diag_read_buffer->Flags |= MPR_FW_DIAG_FLAG_FORCE_RELEASE;
} else {
diag_read_buffer->Flags &= ~MPR_FW_DIAG_FLAG_FORCE_RELEASE;
}
/*
* If buffer is to be reregistered, make sure it's not already owned by
* firmware first.
*/
status = MPR_DIAG_SUCCESS;
if (!pBuffer->owned_by_firmware) {
if (diag_read_buffer->Flags & MPR_FW_DIAG_FLAG_REREGISTER) {
status = mpr_post_fw_diag_buffer(sc, pBuffer,
return_code);
}
}
return (status);
}
static int
mpr_diag_release(struct mpr_softc *sc, mpr_fw_diag_release_t *diag_release,
uint32_t *return_code)
{
mpr_fw_diagnostic_buffer_t *pBuffer;
uint8_t i;
uint32_t unique_id;
int status;
unique_id = diag_release->UniqueId;
/*
* Get the current buffer and look up the unique ID. The unique ID
* should be there.
*/
i = mpr_get_fw_diag_buffer_number(sc, unique_id);
if (i == MPR_FW_DIAGNOSTIC_UID_NOT_FOUND) {
*return_code = MPR_FW_DIAG_ERROR_INVALID_UID;
return (MPR_DIAG_FAILURE);
}
pBuffer = &sc->fw_diag_buffer_list[i];
/*
* If buffer is not owned by firmware, it's already been released.
*/
if (!pBuffer->owned_by_firmware) {
*return_code = MPR_FW_DIAG_ERROR_ALREADY_RELEASED;
return (MPR_DIAG_FAILURE);
}
/*
* Release the buffer.
*/
status = mpr_release_fw_diag_buffer(sc, pBuffer, return_code,
MPR_FW_DIAG_TYPE_RELEASE);
return (status);
}
static int
mpr_do_diag_action(struct mpr_softc *sc, uint32_t action, uint8_t *diag_action,
uint32_t length, uint32_t *return_code)
{
mpr_fw_diag_register_t diag_register;
mpr_fw_diag_unregister_t diag_unregister;
mpr_fw_diag_query_t diag_query;
mpr_diag_read_buffer_t diag_read_buffer;
mpr_fw_diag_release_t diag_release;
int status = MPR_DIAG_SUCCESS;
uint32_t original_return_code;
original_return_code = *return_code;
*return_code = MPR_FW_DIAG_ERROR_SUCCESS;
switch (action) {
case MPR_FW_DIAG_TYPE_REGISTER:
if (!length) {
*return_code =
MPR_FW_DIAG_ERROR_INVALID_PARAMETER;
status = MPR_DIAG_FAILURE;
break;
}
if (copyin(diag_action, &diag_register,
sizeof(diag_register)) != 0)
return (MPR_DIAG_FAILURE);
status = mpr_diag_register(sc, &diag_register,
return_code);
break;
case MPR_FW_DIAG_TYPE_UNREGISTER:
if (length < sizeof(diag_unregister)) {
*return_code =
MPR_FW_DIAG_ERROR_INVALID_PARAMETER;
status = MPR_DIAG_FAILURE;
break;
}
if (copyin(diag_action, &diag_unregister,
sizeof(diag_unregister)) != 0)
return (MPR_DIAG_FAILURE);
status = mpr_diag_unregister(sc, &diag_unregister,
return_code);
break;
case MPR_FW_DIAG_TYPE_QUERY:
if (length < sizeof (diag_query)) {
*return_code =
MPR_FW_DIAG_ERROR_INVALID_PARAMETER;
status = MPR_DIAG_FAILURE;
break;
}
if (copyin(diag_action, &diag_query, sizeof(diag_query))
!= 0)
return (MPR_DIAG_FAILURE);
status = mpr_diag_query(sc, &diag_query, return_code);
if (status == MPR_DIAG_SUCCESS)
if (copyout(&diag_query, diag_action,
sizeof (diag_query)) != 0)
return (MPR_DIAG_FAILURE);
break;
case MPR_FW_DIAG_TYPE_READ_BUFFER:
if (copyin(diag_action, &diag_read_buffer,
sizeof(diag_read_buffer)) != 0)
return (MPR_DIAG_FAILURE);
if (length < diag_read_buffer.BytesToRead) {
*return_code =
MPR_FW_DIAG_ERROR_INVALID_PARAMETER;
status = MPR_DIAG_FAILURE;
break;
}
status = mpr_diag_read_buffer(sc, &diag_read_buffer,
PTRIN(diag_read_buffer.PtrDataBuffer),
return_code);
if (status == MPR_DIAG_SUCCESS) {
if (copyout(&diag_read_buffer, diag_action,
sizeof(diag_read_buffer) -
sizeof(diag_read_buffer.PtrDataBuffer)) !=
0)
return (MPR_DIAG_FAILURE);
}
break;
case MPR_FW_DIAG_TYPE_RELEASE:
if (length < sizeof(diag_release)) {
*return_code =
MPR_FW_DIAG_ERROR_INVALID_PARAMETER;
status = MPR_DIAG_FAILURE;
break;
}
if (copyin(diag_action, &diag_release,
sizeof(diag_release)) != 0)
return (MPR_DIAG_FAILURE);
status = mpr_diag_release(sc, &diag_release,
return_code);
break;
default:
*return_code = MPR_FW_DIAG_ERROR_INVALID_PARAMETER;
status = MPR_DIAG_FAILURE;
break;
}
if ((status == MPR_DIAG_FAILURE) &&
(original_return_code == MPR_FW_DIAG_NEW) &&
(*return_code != MPR_FW_DIAG_ERROR_SUCCESS))
status = MPR_DIAG_SUCCESS;
return (status);
}
static int
mpr_user_diag_action(struct mpr_softc *sc, mpr_diag_action_t *data)
{
int status;
/*
* Only allow one diag action at one time.
*/
if (sc->mpr_flags & MPR_FLAGS_BUSY) {
mpr_dprint(sc, MPR_USER, "%s: Only one FW diag command "
"allowed at a single time.", __func__);
return (EBUSY);
}
sc->mpr_flags |= MPR_FLAGS_BUSY;
/*
* Send diag action request
*/
if (data->Action == MPR_FW_DIAG_TYPE_REGISTER ||
data->Action == MPR_FW_DIAG_TYPE_UNREGISTER ||
data->Action == MPR_FW_DIAG_TYPE_QUERY ||
data->Action == MPR_FW_DIAG_TYPE_READ_BUFFER ||
data->Action == MPR_FW_DIAG_TYPE_RELEASE) {
status = mpr_do_diag_action(sc, data->Action,
PTRIN(data->PtrDiagAction), data->Length,
&data->ReturnCode);
} else
status = EINVAL;
sc->mpr_flags &= ~MPR_FLAGS_BUSY;
return (status);
}
/*
* Copy the event recording mask and the event queue size out. For
* clarification, the event recording mask (events_to_record) is not the same
* thing as the event mask (event_mask). events_to_record has a bit set for
* every event type that is to be recorded by the driver, and event_mask has a
* bit cleared for every event that is allowed into the driver from the IOC.
* They really have nothing to do with each other.
*/
static void
mpr_user_event_query(struct mpr_softc *sc, mpr_event_query_t *data)
{
uint8_t i;
mpr_lock(sc);
data->Entries = MPR_EVENT_QUEUE_SIZE;
for (i = 0; i < 4; i++) {
data->Types[i] = sc->events_to_record[i];
}
mpr_unlock(sc);
}
/*
* Set the driver's event mask according to what's been given. See
* mpr_user_event_query for explanation of the event recording mask and the IOC
* event mask. It's the app's responsibility to enable event logging by setting
* the bits in events_to_record. Initially, no events will be logged.
*/
static void
mpr_user_event_enable(struct mpr_softc *sc, mpr_event_enable_t *data)
{
uint8_t i;
mpr_lock(sc);
for (i = 0; i < 4; i++) {
sc->events_to_record[i] = data->Types[i];
}
mpr_unlock(sc);
}
/*
* Copy out the events that have been recorded, up to the max events allowed.
*/
static int
mpr_user_event_report(struct mpr_softc *sc, mpr_event_report_t *data)
{
int status = 0;
uint32_t size;
mpr_lock(sc);
size = data->Size;
if ((size >= sizeof(sc->recorded_events)) && (status == 0)) {
mpr_unlock(sc);
if (copyout((void *)sc->recorded_events,
PTRIN(data->PtrEvents), size) != 0)
status = EFAULT;
mpr_lock(sc);
} else {
/*
* data->Size value is not large enough to copy event data.
*/
status = EFAULT;
}
/*
* Change size value to match the number of bytes that were copied.
*/
if (status == 0)
data->Size = sizeof(sc->recorded_events);
mpr_unlock(sc);
return (status);
}
/*
* Record events into the driver from the IOC if they are not masked.
*/
void
mprsas_record_event(struct mpr_softc *sc,
MPI2_EVENT_NOTIFICATION_REPLY *event_reply)
{
uint32_t event;
int i, j;
uint16_t event_data_len;
boolean_t sendAEN = FALSE;
event = event_reply->Event;
/*
* Generate a system event to let anyone who cares know that a
* LOG_ENTRY_ADDED event has occurred. This is sent no matter what the
* event mask is set to.
*/
if (event == MPI2_EVENT_LOG_ENTRY_ADDED) {
sendAEN = TRUE;
}
/*
* Record the event only if its corresponding bit is set in
* events_to_record. event_index is the index into recorded_events and
* event_number is the overall number of an event being recorded since
* start-of-day. event_index will roll over; event_number will never
* roll over.
*/
i = (uint8_t)(event / 32);
j = (uint8_t)(event % 32);
if ((i < 4) && ((1 << j) & sc->events_to_record[i])) {
i = sc->event_index;
sc->recorded_events[i].Type = event;
sc->recorded_events[i].Number = ++sc->event_number;
bzero(sc->recorded_events[i].Data, MPR_MAX_EVENT_DATA_LENGTH *
4);
event_data_len = event_reply->EventDataLength;
if (event_data_len > 0) {
/*
* Limit data to size in m_event entry
*/
if (event_data_len > MPR_MAX_EVENT_DATA_LENGTH) {
event_data_len = MPR_MAX_EVENT_DATA_LENGTH;
}
for (j = 0; j < event_data_len; j++) {
sc->recorded_events[i].Data[j] =
event_reply->EventData[j];
}
/*
* check for index wrap-around
*/
if (++i == MPR_EVENT_QUEUE_SIZE) {
i = 0;
}
sc->event_index = (uint8_t)i;
/*
* Set flag to send the event.
*/
sendAEN = TRUE;
}
}
/*
* Generate a system event if flag is set to let anyone who cares know
* that an event has occurred.
*/
if (sendAEN) {
//SLM-how to send a system event (see kqueue, kevent)
// (void) ddi_log_sysevent(mpt->m_dip, DDI_VENDOR_LSI, "MPT_SAS",
// "SAS", NULL, NULL, DDI_NOSLEEP);
}
}
static int
mpr_user_reg_access(struct mpr_softc *sc, mpr_reg_access_t *data)
{
int status = 0;
switch (data->Command) {
/*
* IO access is not supported.
*/
case REG_IO_READ:
case REG_IO_WRITE:
mpr_dprint(sc, MPR_USER, "IO access is not supported. "
"Use memory access.");
status = EINVAL;
break;
case REG_MEM_READ:
data->RegData = mpr_regread(sc, data->RegOffset);
break;
case REG_MEM_WRITE:
mpr_regwrite(sc, data->RegOffset, data->RegData);
break;
default:
status = EINVAL;
break;
}
return (status);
}
static int
mpr_user_btdh(struct mpr_softc *sc, mpr_btdh_mapping_t *data)
{
uint8_t bt2dh = FALSE;
uint8_t dh2bt = FALSE;
uint16_t dev_handle, bus, target;
bus = data->Bus;
target = data->TargetID;
dev_handle = data->DevHandle;
/*
* When DevHandle is 0xFFFF and Bus/Target are not 0xFFFF, use Bus/
* Target to get DevHandle. When Bus/Target are 0xFFFF and DevHandle is
* not 0xFFFF, use DevHandle to get Bus/Target. Anything else is
* invalid.
*/
if ((bus == 0xFFFF) && (target == 0xFFFF) && (dev_handle != 0xFFFF))
dh2bt = TRUE;
if ((dev_handle == 0xFFFF) && (bus != 0xFFFF) && (target != 0xFFFF))
bt2dh = TRUE;
if (!dh2bt && !bt2dh)
return (EINVAL);
/*
* Only handle bus of 0. Make sure target is within range.
*/
if (bt2dh) {
if (bus != 0)
return (EINVAL);
if (target > sc->max_devices) {
mpr_dprint(sc, MPR_XINFO, "Target ID is out of range "
"for Bus/Target to DevHandle mapping.");
return (EINVAL);
}
dev_handle = sc->mapping_table[target].dev_handle;
if (dev_handle)
data->DevHandle = dev_handle;
} else {
bus = 0;
target = mpr_mapping_get_tid_from_handle(sc, dev_handle);
data->Bus = bus;
data->TargetID = target;
}
return (0);
}
static int
mpr_ioctl(struct cdev *dev, u_long cmd, void *arg, int flag,
struct thread *td)
{
struct mpr_softc *sc;
struct mpr_cfg_page_req *page_req;
struct mpr_ext_cfg_page_req *ext_page_req;
void *mpr_page;
int error, msleep_ret;
mpr_page = NULL;
sc = dev->si_drv1;
page_req = (void *)arg;
ext_page_req = (void *)arg;
switch (cmd) {
case MPRIO_READ_CFG_HEADER:
mpr_lock(sc);
error = mpr_user_read_cfg_header(sc, page_req);
mpr_unlock(sc);
break;
case MPRIO_READ_CFG_PAGE:
mpr_page = malloc(page_req->len, M_MPRUSER, M_WAITOK | M_ZERO);
error = copyin(page_req->buf, mpr_page,
sizeof(MPI2_CONFIG_PAGE_HEADER));
if (error)
break;
mpr_lock(sc);
error = mpr_user_read_cfg_page(sc, page_req, mpr_page);
mpr_unlock(sc);
if (error)
break;
error = copyout(mpr_page, page_req->buf, page_req->len);
break;
case MPRIO_READ_EXT_CFG_HEADER:
mpr_lock(sc);
error = mpr_user_read_extcfg_header(sc, ext_page_req);
mpr_unlock(sc);
break;
case MPRIO_READ_EXT_CFG_PAGE:
mpr_page = malloc(ext_page_req->len, M_MPRUSER,
M_WAITOK | M_ZERO);
error = copyin(ext_page_req->buf, mpr_page,
sizeof(MPI2_CONFIG_EXTENDED_PAGE_HEADER));
if (error)
break;
mpr_lock(sc);
error = mpr_user_read_extcfg_page(sc, ext_page_req, mpr_page);
mpr_unlock(sc);
if (error)
break;
error = copyout(mpr_page, ext_page_req->buf, ext_page_req->len);
break;
case MPRIO_WRITE_CFG_PAGE:
mpr_page = malloc(page_req->len, M_MPRUSER, M_WAITOK|M_ZERO);
error = copyin(page_req->buf, mpr_page, page_req->len);
if (error)
break;
mpr_lock(sc);
error = mpr_user_write_cfg_page(sc, page_req, mpr_page);
mpr_unlock(sc);
break;
case MPRIO_MPR_COMMAND:
error = mpr_user_command(sc, (struct mpr_usr_command *)arg);
break;
case MPTIOCTL_PASS_THRU:
/*
* The user has requested to pass through a command to be
* executed by the MPT firmware. Call our routine which does
* this. Only allow one passthru IOCTL at one time.
*/
error = mpr_user_pass_thru(sc, (mpr_pass_thru_t *)arg);
break;
case MPTIOCTL_GET_ADAPTER_DATA:
/*
* The user has requested to read adapter data. Call our
* routine which does this.
*/
error = 0;
mpr_user_get_adapter_data(sc, (mpr_adapter_data_t *)arg);
break;
case MPTIOCTL_GET_PCI_INFO:
/*
* The user has requested to read pci info. Call
* our routine which does this.
*/
mpr_lock(sc);
error = 0;
mpr_user_read_pci_info(sc, (mpr_pci_info_t *)arg);
mpr_unlock(sc);
break;
case MPTIOCTL_RESET_ADAPTER:
mpr_lock(sc);
sc->port_enable_complete = 0;
uint32_t reinit_start = time_uptime;
error = mpr_reinit(sc);
/* Sleep for 300 second. */
msleep_ret = msleep(&sc->port_enable_complete, &sc->mpr_mtx,
PRIBIO, "mpr_porten", 300 * hz);
mpr_unlock(sc);
if (msleep_ret)
printf("Port Enable did not complete after Diag "
"Reset msleep error %d.\n", msleep_ret);
else
mpr_dprint(sc, MPR_USER, "Hard Reset with Port Enable "
"completed in %d seconds.\n",
(uint32_t)(time_uptime - reinit_start));
break;
case MPTIOCTL_DIAG_ACTION:
/*
* The user has done a diag buffer action. Call our routine
* which does this. Only allow one diag action at one time.
*/
mpr_lock(sc);
error = mpr_user_diag_action(sc, (mpr_diag_action_t *)arg);
mpr_unlock(sc);
break;
case MPTIOCTL_EVENT_QUERY:
/*
* The user has done an event query. Call our routine which does
* this.
*/
error = 0;
mpr_user_event_query(sc, (mpr_event_query_t *)arg);
break;
case MPTIOCTL_EVENT_ENABLE:
/*
* The user has done an event enable. Call our routine which
* does this.
*/
error = 0;
mpr_user_event_enable(sc, (mpr_event_enable_t *)arg);
break;
case MPTIOCTL_EVENT_REPORT:
/*
* The user has done an event report. Call our routine which
* does this.
*/
error = mpr_user_event_report(sc, (mpr_event_report_t *)arg);
break;
case MPTIOCTL_REG_ACCESS:
/*
* The user has requested register access. Call our routine
* which does this.
*/
mpr_lock(sc);
error = mpr_user_reg_access(sc, (mpr_reg_access_t *)arg);
mpr_unlock(sc);
break;
case MPTIOCTL_BTDH_MAPPING:
/*
* The user has requested to translate a bus/target to a
* DevHandle or a DevHandle to a bus/target. Call our routine
* which does this.
*/
error = mpr_user_btdh(sc, (mpr_btdh_mapping_t *)arg);
break;
default:
error = ENOIOCTL;
break;
}
if (mpr_page != NULL)
free(mpr_page, M_MPRUSER);
return (error);
}
#ifdef COMPAT_FREEBSD32
struct mpr_cfg_page_req32 {
MPI2_CONFIG_PAGE_HEADER header;
uint32_t page_address;
uint32_t buf;
int len;
uint16_t ioc_status;
};
struct mpr_ext_cfg_page_req32 {
MPI2_CONFIG_EXTENDED_PAGE_HEADER header;
uint32_t page_address;
uint32_t buf;
int len;
uint16_t ioc_status;
};
struct mpr_raid_action32 {
uint8_t action;
uint8_t volume_bus;
uint8_t volume_id;
uint8_t phys_disk_num;
uint32_t action_data_word;
uint32_t buf;
int len;
uint32_t volume_status;
uint32_t action_data[4];
uint16_t action_status;
uint16_t ioc_status;
uint8_t write;
};
struct mpr_usr_command32 {
uint32_t req;
uint32_t req_len;
uint32_t rpl;
uint32_t rpl_len;
uint32_t buf;
int len;
uint32_t flags;
};
#define MPRIO_READ_CFG_HEADER32 _IOWR('M', 200, struct mpr_cfg_page_req32)
#define MPRIO_READ_CFG_PAGE32 _IOWR('M', 201, struct mpr_cfg_page_req32)
#define MPRIO_READ_EXT_CFG_HEADER32 _IOWR('M', 202, struct mpr_ext_cfg_page_req32)
#define MPRIO_READ_EXT_CFG_PAGE32 _IOWR('M', 203, struct mpr_ext_cfg_page_req32)
#define MPRIO_WRITE_CFG_PAGE32 _IOWR('M', 204, struct mpr_cfg_page_req32)
#define MPRIO_RAID_ACTION32 _IOWR('M', 205, struct mpr_raid_action32)
#define MPRIO_MPR_COMMAND32 _IOWR('M', 210, struct mpr_usr_command32)
static int
mpr_ioctl32(struct cdev *dev, u_long cmd32, void *_arg, int flag,
struct thread *td)
{
struct mpr_cfg_page_req32 *page32 = _arg;
struct mpr_ext_cfg_page_req32 *ext32 = _arg;
struct mpr_raid_action32 *raid32 = _arg;
struct mpr_usr_command32 *user32 = _arg;
union {
struct mpr_cfg_page_req page;
struct mpr_ext_cfg_page_req ext;
struct mpr_raid_action raid;
struct mpr_usr_command user;
} arg;
u_long cmd;
int error;
switch (cmd32) {
case MPRIO_READ_CFG_HEADER32:
case MPRIO_READ_CFG_PAGE32:
case MPRIO_WRITE_CFG_PAGE32:
if (cmd32 == MPRIO_READ_CFG_HEADER32)
cmd = MPRIO_READ_CFG_HEADER;
else if (cmd32 == MPRIO_READ_CFG_PAGE32)
cmd = MPRIO_READ_CFG_PAGE;
else
cmd = MPRIO_WRITE_CFG_PAGE;
CP(*page32, arg.page, header);
CP(*page32, arg.page, page_address);
PTRIN_CP(*page32, arg.page, buf);
CP(*page32, arg.page, len);
CP(*page32, arg.page, ioc_status);
break;
case MPRIO_READ_EXT_CFG_HEADER32:
case MPRIO_READ_EXT_CFG_PAGE32:
if (cmd32 == MPRIO_READ_EXT_CFG_HEADER32)
cmd = MPRIO_READ_EXT_CFG_HEADER;
else
cmd = MPRIO_READ_EXT_CFG_PAGE;
CP(*ext32, arg.ext, header);
CP(*ext32, arg.ext, page_address);
PTRIN_CP(*ext32, arg.ext, buf);
CP(*ext32, arg.ext, len);
CP(*ext32, arg.ext, ioc_status);
break;
case MPRIO_RAID_ACTION32:
cmd = MPRIO_RAID_ACTION;
CP(*raid32, arg.raid, action);
CP(*raid32, arg.raid, volume_bus);
CP(*raid32, arg.raid, volume_id);
CP(*raid32, arg.raid, phys_disk_num);
CP(*raid32, arg.raid, action_data_word);
PTRIN_CP(*raid32, arg.raid, buf);
CP(*raid32, arg.raid, len);
CP(*raid32, arg.raid, volume_status);
bcopy(raid32->action_data, arg.raid.action_data,
sizeof arg.raid.action_data);
CP(*raid32, arg.raid, ioc_status);
CP(*raid32, arg.raid, write);
break;
case MPRIO_MPR_COMMAND32:
cmd = MPRIO_MPR_COMMAND;
PTRIN_CP(*user32, arg.user, req);
CP(*user32, arg.user, req_len);
PTRIN_CP(*user32, arg.user, rpl);
CP(*user32, arg.user, rpl_len);
PTRIN_CP(*user32, arg.user, buf);
CP(*user32, arg.user, len);
CP(*user32, arg.user, flags);
break;
default:
return (ENOIOCTL);
}
error = mpr_ioctl(dev, cmd, &arg, flag, td);
if (error == 0 && (cmd32 & IOC_OUT) != 0) {
switch (cmd32) {
case MPRIO_READ_CFG_HEADER32:
case MPRIO_READ_CFG_PAGE32:
case MPRIO_WRITE_CFG_PAGE32:
CP(arg.page, *page32, header);
CP(arg.page, *page32, page_address);
PTROUT_CP(arg.page, *page32, buf);
CP(arg.page, *page32, len);
CP(arg.page, *page32, ioc_status);
break;
case MPRIO_READ_EXT_CFG_HEADER32:
case MPRIO_READ_EXT_CFG_PAGE32:
CP(arg.ext, *ext32, header);
CP(arg.ext, *ext32, page_address);
PTROUT_CP(arg.ext, *ext32, buf);
CP(arg.ext, *ext32, len);
CP(arg.ext, *ext32, ioc_status);
break;
case MPRIO_RAID_ACTION32:
CP(arg.raid, *raid32, action);
CP(arg.raid, *raid32, volume_bus);
CP(arg.raid, *raid32, volume_id);
CP(arg.raid, *raid32, phys_disk_num);
CP(arg.raid, *raid32, action_data_word);
PTROUT_CP(arg.raid, *raid32, buf);
CP(arg.raid, *raid32, len);
CP(arg.raid, *raid32, volume_status);
bcopy(arg.raid.action_data, raid32->action_data,
sizeof arg.raid.action_data);
CP(arg.raid, *raid32, ioc_status);
CP(arg.raid, *raid32, write);
break;
case MPRIO_MPR_COMMAND32:
PTROUT_CP(arg.user, *user32, req);
CP(arg.user, *user32, req_len);
PTROUT_CP(arg.user, *user32, rpl);
CP(arg.user, *user32, rpl_len);
PTROUT_CP(arg.user, *user32, buf);
CP(arg.user, *user32, len);
CP(arg.user, *user32, flags);
break;
}
}
return (error);
}
#endif /* COMPAT_FREEBSD32 */
static int
mpr_ioctl_devsw(struct cdev *dev, u_long com, caddr_t arg, int flag,
struct thread *td)
{
#ifdef COMPAT_FREEBSD32
if (SV_CURPROC_FLAG(SV_ILP32))
return (mpr_ioctl32(dev, com, arg, flag, td));
#endif
return (mpr_ioctl(dev, com, arg, flag, td));
}