This allows us to support this hardware and, in the future, use clocks
so they are enabled past the initial kernel boot process.
Reviewed by: ray
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D30103
Mostly mechanical changes, with some reworking in irdma_cm for iterating
over interfaces and addresses. Further rework by Bartosz Sobczak.
Reviewed by: bartosz.sobczak_intel.com
Tested by: mateusz.moga_intel.com
Sponsored by: Juniper Networks, Inc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D38960
The declarations for al_eth_lm_retimer_ds25_signal_detect() and
al_eth_lm_retimer_ds25_cdr_lock() say that these functions return
'al_bool', but the definitions actually return 'boolean_t'.
Make the definitions match the declarations.
Reviewed by: jhb, emaste
MFC after: 3 days
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D39759
A signed one-bit wide bit-field can take only the values 0 and -1. Clang
16 introduced a warning that "implicit truncation from 'int' to a
one-bit wide bit-field changes value from 1 to -1". Fix the warnings by
using C99 bool.
Reported by: Clang 16
Reviewed by: emaste, jhb
MFC after: 3 days
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D39705
The MT2 uses a compact report format, but otherwise is similar in many
ways to the internal trackpads, it even uses the same mode switching
commands.
Reviewed by: wulf
MFC after: 1 month
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D34437
Teach the pci host generic ACPI attachment about PCI_ID_OFW_IOMMU. This
will be used by the arm64 smmu IOMMU driver to read the xref and ID
this interface provides in a bus-agnostic way.
Sponsored by: Arm Ltd
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D39182
Add a n attachment to the pci_host_generic driver for the Arm DEN0115
PCI Configuration Space Access Firmware Interface [1]. This can be used
when PCI controllers need to implement quirks in the PCI root bus.
To handle this the firmware implements a SMCCC interface the driver can
use to read and write the configuration register.
This has been tested on a Raspberry Pi 4 booting with EDK2.
[1] https://developer.arm.com/documentation/den0115/latest
Sponsored by: Arm Ltd
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D39228
To allow for attachments that don't use memory mapped registers add
a flag they can set when the base driver shouldn't map them.
Sponsored by: Arm Ltd
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D39227
hid_input is equal to 0. It is leftover from NetBSD code.
Reviewed by: hselasky, wulf
MFC after: 1 month
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D28149
Also adds fixups and cleanups:
- apply the child's mode/speed
- implement suspend/resume support
- use RF_SHAREABLE interrupts
- use bus_delayed_attach_children since the transfer can use interrupts
- add support for newly added spibus features (cs_delay and flags)
Operation tested on Broadwell (Wildcat Point) MacBookPro12,1.
Attachment also tested on Kaby Lake (Sunrise Point) Pixelbook.
Reviewed by: wulf
MFC after: 1 month
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D29249
These feature are required for an upcoming Apple MacBook topcase
(HID over SPI) driver:
A delay after toggling CS is required to avoid anomalies like an extra
junk byte in front of the message. Keeping CS asserted is required to
be able to read a status report after writing a command. (The device
won't return the status if CS was deasserted.)
Sleep is not allowed in the interrupt context where the Apple input
driver runs its transactions. Use a flag to tell the SPI driver to
avoid mtx_sleep.
Reviewed by: manu (ok to SPI part of larger patch)
MFC afret: 1 month
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D29534
Before the commit 6cc44223cb the
field event_mask was fully copied to the EventMasks field.
After this commit the event_mask (uint8_t) is 4 times casted to
EventMask (uint32_t). Because of that 24 bits of each event_mask array
is lost.
This commits brings back simple copying of field, and after words
converting 32 bits field to the requested endian.
I don't think we need more sophisticated method,
as the array is of size 4 (for 32 bits version).
Reviewed by: imp
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Klara Inc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D39562
These are the changes since the last update (copy-pasted from the
release notes for Chelsio Unified Wire v3.18.0.0):
====================
Version : 1.27.3.0
Date : 04/07/2023
Fixes
-----
BASE:
- Fixed a hang if module eeprom reads gives invalid data.
- KR backlplane no-fec link problem fixed.
OFLD:
- iscsi ddp errors fixed.
- iwarp connection abort in rare cases causing NIC traffic hang fixed.
ENHANCEMENTS
------------
BASE:
- Cisco GLC-TE 1G modules support added.
====================
Version : 1.27.1.0
Date : 12/02/2022
Fixes
-----
BASE:
- memwrite dsgl cannot be used for T5.
OFLD:
- Enabled FCoE in SO adapters.
- TOE-TLS crash fixed.
- iscsi hang fixed.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Add DPAA2 console support for MC and AIOP (latter untested) for FDT
systems. ACPI systems are prepared but need some proper bus function
in order to get the address from MC (and likely a file splitup then).
This will come at a later stage once other ACPI/FDT bus parts are
cleared up.
The work was originally done in July 2022 and finally switched to
bus_space[1] lately to be ready for main.
Suggested by: andrew [1]
Reviewed by: dsl
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D38592
A one-bit wide bit-field can take only the values 0 and -1. Clang 16
introduced a warning that "implicit truncation from 'int' to a one-bit
wide bit-field changes value from 1 to -1". Fix by using c99 bool.
Reported by: Clang
Reviewed by: emaste, wulf
MFC after: 3 days
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D39665
t4_dump_stag to dump hw state for a known STAG.
t4_dump_all_stag to dump hw state for all valid STAGs. This routine
walks the entire STAG region looking for valid entries and this can take
a while for some configurations.
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
struct dpaa2_cmd is no longer malloc'ed, but can be allocated on stack
and initialized with DPAA2_CMD_INIT() on demand. Drivers stopped caching
their DPAA2 command objects (and associated tokens) in the software
contexts in order to avoid using them concurrently.
Reviewed by: bz
Approved by: bz (mentor)
MFC after: 3 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D39509
These bits are obsolete since 58aa35d429.
This change reverts part of 9ba2b298df as
well as effectively bd3d9826d7, i. e. the
SBus-related modifications. This also gets rid of a nasty hack required
as bus_{read,write}_N(9) doesn't really fit bus_space_subregion(9).
The original idea behind calling into the bridge driver was to have the
logic deciding whether tuning is actually required for a particular bus
timing in a given slot as well as doing the sanity checking only on the
controller layer which also generally is better suited for these due to
say SDHCI_SDR50_NEEDS_TUNING. On another thought, not every such driver
should need to check whether tuning is required at all, though, and not
everything is SDHCI in the first place.
Adjust sdhci{,_fsl_fdt}(4) accordingly, but keep sdhci_generic_tune() a
bit cautious still.
Failure to get mbufs may be transient.
Don't permanently fail to open the channels due to lack of mbufs.
This also makes modifying channel parameters faster.
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: NVIDIA Networking
Implement one CQ modify function supporting all firmware versions,
instead of having more variants of CQ modify.
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: NVIDIA Networking
When using hardware pacing, this value can be increased, because more SQ's
means more EQ events aswell. Make it tunable, hw.mlx5.comp_eq_size .
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: NVIDIA Networking
Expect that drivers call into the network stack with the net epoch
entered. This has already been the fact since early 2020. The net
interrupts, that are marked with INTR_TYPE_NET, were entering epoch
since 511d1afb6b. For the taskqueues there is NET_TASK_INIT() and
all drivers that were known back in 2020 we marked with it in
6c3e93cb5a. However in e87c494015 we took conservative approach
and preferred to opt-in rather than opt-out for the epoch.
This change not only reverts e87c494015 but adds a safety belt to
avoid panicing with INVARIANTS if there is a missed driver. With
INVARIANTS we will run in_epoch() check, print a warning and enter
the net epoch. A driver that prints can be quickly fixed with the
IFF_NEEDSEPOCH flag, but better be augmented to properly enter the
epoch itself.
Note on TCP LRO: it is a backdoor to enter the TCP stack bypassing
some layers of net stack, ignoring either old IFF_KNOWSEPOCH or the
new IFF_NEEDSEPOCH. But the tcp_lro_flush_all() asserts the presence
of network epoch. Indeed, all NIC drivers that support LRO already
provide the epoch, either with help of INTR_TYPE_NET or just running
NET_EPOCH_ENTER() in their code.
Reviewed by: zlei, gallatin, erj
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D39510
Ensure veriexec opens the file before doing any read operations.
When the MAC_VERIEXEC_CHECK_PATH_SYSCALL syscall is requested, veriexec
needs to open the file before calling mac_veriexec_check_vp. This is to
ensure any set up is done by the file system. Most file systems do not
explicitly need an open, but some (e.g. virtfs) require initialization
of access tokens (file identifiers, etc.) before doing any read or write
operations.
The evaluate_fingerprint() function needs to ensure it has an open file
for reading in order to evaluate the fingerprint. The ideal solution is
to have a hook after the VOP_OPEN call in vn_open. For now, we open the
file for reading, envaluate the fingerprint, and close the file. While
this leaves a potential hole that could possibly be taken advantage of
by a dedicated aversary, this code path is not typically visited often
in our use cases, as we primarily encounter verified mounts and not
individual files. This should be considered a temporary workaround until
discussions about the post-open hook have concluded and the hook becomes
available.
Add MAC_VERIEXEC_GET_PARAMS_PATH_SYSCALL and
MAC_VERIEXEC_GET_PARAMS_PID_SYSCALL to mac_veriexec_syscall so we can
fetch and check label contents in an unconstrained manner.
Add a check for PRIV_VERIEXEC_CONTROL to do ioctl on /dev/veriexec
Make it clear that trusted process cannot be debugged. Attempts to debug
a trusted process already fail, but the failure path is very obscure.
Add an explicit check for VERIEXEC_TRUSTED in
mac_veriexec_proc_check_debug.
We need mac_veriexec_priv_check to not block PRIV_KMEM_WRITE if
mac_priv_gant() says it is ok.
Reviewed by: sjg
Obtained from: Juniper Networks, Inc.
The event channel source code or equivalent is needed on all
architectures. Since much of this is viable to share, get this moved out
of x86-land. Each interrupt interface then needs a distinct back-end
implementation.
Reviewed by: royger
Submitted by: Elliott Mitchell <ehem+freebsd@m5p.com>
Original implementation: Julien Grall <julien@xen.org>, 2014-01-13 17:41:04
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D30236
Simply moving the interrupt allocation and release functions into files
which belong to the architecture. Since x86 interrupt handling is quite
distinct from other architectures, this is a crucial necessary step.
Identifying the border between x86 and architecture-independent is
actually quite tricky. Similarly, getting the prototypes for the
border right is also quite tricky.
Inspired by the work of Julien Grall <julien@xen.org>,
2015-10-20 09:14:56, but heavily adjusted.
Reviewed by: royger
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D30936
The x86 PIC interface is very much x86-specific and not used by other
architectures. Since most of xen_intr.c can be shared with other
architectures, the PIC interface needs to be broken off.
Introduce wrappers for calls into the architecture-dependent interrupt
layer. All architectures need roughly the same functionality, but the
interface is slightly different between architectures. Due to the
wrappers being so thin, all of them are implemented as inline in
arch-intr.h.
The original implementation was done by Julien Grall in 2015, but this
has required major updating.
Removal of PVHv1 meant substantial portions disappeared. The original
implementation took care of moving interrupt allocation to
xen_arch_intr.c, but this has required massive rework and was broken
off.
In the original implementation the wrappers were normal functions. Some
had empty stubs in xen_intr.c and were removed.
Reviewed by: royger
Submitted by: Elliott Mitchell <ehem+freebsd@m5p.com>
Original implementation: Julien Grall <julien@xen.org>, 2015-10-20 09:14:56
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D30909
The evtchn_type enum is only touched by the Xen interrupt code. Other
event channel uses no longer need the value, so that has been moved to
restrict its use.
Copyright note. The current evtchn_type was introduced at 76acc41fb7
by Justin T. Gibbs. This in turn appears to have been heavily inspired
by 30d1eefe39 done by Kip Macy.
Reviewed by: royger
Move the xenisrc structure which needs to be shared between the core Xen
interrupt code and architecture-dependent code into a separate header. A
similar situation exists for the NR_EVENT_CHANNELS constant.
Turn xi_intsrc into a type definition named xi_arch to reflect the new
purpose of being an architectural variable for the interrupt source.
This was originally implemented by Julien Grall, but has been heavily
modified. The core side was renamed "intr-internal.h" and is #include'd
by "arch-intr.h" instead of the other way around. This allows the
architecture to add function definitions which use struct xenisrc.
The original version only moved xi_intsrc into xen_arch_isrc_t. Moving
xi_vector was done by the submitter.
The submitter had also moved xi_activehi and xi_edgetrigger into
xen_arch_isrc_t. Those disappeared with the removal of PVHv1 support.
Copyright note. The current xenisrc structure was introduced at
76acc41fb7 by Justin T. Gibbs. Traces remain, but the strength of
Copyright claims from before 2013 seem pretty weak.
Reviewed by: royger
Submitted by: Elliott Mitchell <ehem+freebsd@m5p.com>, 2021-03-17 19:09:01
Original implementation: Julien Grall <julien@xen.org>, 2015-10-20 09:14:56
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D30648
[royger]
- Adjust some line lengths
- Fix comment about NR_EVENT_CHANNELS after movement.
- Use #include instead of symlinks.
xen_intr_handle_upcall() has two interfaces. It needs to be called by
the x86 assembly code invoked by the APIC. Second, it needs to be called
as a driver_filter_t for the XenPCI code and for architectures besides
x86.
Unfortunately the driver_filter_t interface was implemented as a wrapper
around the x86-APIC interface. Now create a simple wrapper for the
x86-APIC code, which calls an architecture-independent
xen_intr_handle_upcall().
When called via intr_event_handle(), driver_filter_t functions expect
preemption to be disabled. This removes the need for
critical_enter()/critical_exit() when called this way.
The lapic_eoi() call is only needed on x86 in some cases when invoked
directly as an APIC vector handler.
Additionally driver_filter_t functions have no need to handle interrupt
counters. The intrcnt_add() calling function was reworked to match the
current situation. intrcnt_add() is now only called via one path.
The increment/decrement of curthread->td_intr_nesting_level had
previously been left out. Appears this was mostly harmless, but this
was noticed during implementation and has been added.
CONFIG_X86 is a leftover from use with Linux. While the barrier isn't
needed for FreeBSD on x86, it will be needed for FreeBSD on other
architectures.
Copyright note. xen_intr_intrcnt_add() was introduced at 76acc41fb7
by Justin T. Gibbs. xen_intrcnt_init() was introduced at fd036deac1
by John Baldwin.
sys/x86/xen/xen_arch_intr.c was originally created by Julien Grall in
2015 for the purpose of holding the x86 interrupt interface. Later it
was found xen_intr_handle_upcall() was better earlier, and the x86
interrupt interface better later. As such the filename and header list
belong to Julien Grall, but what those were created for is later.
Reviewed by: royger
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D30006