This was a regression from r293328, which deferred allocation
of the controller's ioq array until after interrupts are enabled
during boot.
PR: 207432
Reported and tested by: Andy Carrel <wac@google.com>
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: Intel
nvme(4) issues a SET_NUM_QUEUES command during device
initialization to ensure enough I/O queues exists for each
of the MSI-X vectors we have allocated. The SET_NUM_QUEUES
command is then issued again during nvme_ctrlr_start(), to
ensure that is properly set after any controller reset.
At least one NVMe drive exists which fails this second
SET_NUM_QUEUES command during device initialization. So
change nvme_ctrlr_start() to only issue its SET_NUM_QUEUES
command when it is coming out of a reset - avoiding the
duplicate SET_NUM_QUEUES during device initialization.
Reported by: gallatin
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: Intel
Due to FreeBSD system-wide limits on number of MSI-X vectors
(https://bugs.freebsd.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=199321),
it may be desirable to allocate fewer than the maximum number
of vectors for an NVMe device, in order to save vectors for
other devices (usually Ethernet) that can take better
advantage of them and may be probed after NVMe.
This tunable is expressed in terms of minimum number of CPUs
per I/O queue instead of max number of queues per controller,
to allow for a more even distribution of CPUs per queue. This
avoids cases where some number of CPUs have a dedicated queue,
but other CPUs need to share queues. Ideally the PR referenced
above will eventually be fixed and the mechanism implemented
here becomes obsolete anyways.
While here, fix a bug in the CPUs per I/O queue calculation to
properly account for the admin queue's MSI-X vector.
Reviewed by: gallatin
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: Intel
Previously nvme(4) would revert to a signle I/O queue if it could not
allocate enought interrupt vectors or NVMe submission/completion queues
to have one I/O queue per core. This patch determines how to utilize a
smaller number of available interrupt vectors, and assigns (as closely
as possible) an equal number of cores to each associated I/O queue.
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: Intel
Instead just use num_io_queues to make this determination.
This prepares for some future changes enabling use of multiple
queues when we do not have enough queues or MSI-X vectors
for one queue per CPU.
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: Intel
- Use pointer assignment rather than a combination of pointers and
flags to switch buffers between unmapped and mapped. This eliminates
multiple flags and generally simplifies the logic.
- Eliminate b_saveaddr since it is only used with pager bufs which have
their b_data re-initialized on each allocation.
- Gather up some convenience routines in the buffer cache for
manipulating buf space and buf malloc space.
- Add an inline, buf_mapped(), to standardize checks around unmapped
buffers.
In collaboration with: mlaier
Reviewed by: kib
Tested by: pho (many small revisions ago)
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
Previously, if per-CPU MSI-X vectors could not be allocated,
nvme(4) would fall back to INTx with a single I/O queue pair.
This change will still fall back to a single I/O queue pair, but
allocate MSI-X vectors instead of reverting to INTx.
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Intel
controller initialization.
The spec says OS drivers should send this command after controller
initialization completes successfully, but other NVMe OS drivers are
not sending this command. This change will therefore reduce differences
between the FreeBSD and other OS drivers.
Sponsored by: Intel
MFC after: 3 days
the spoofed identify data into the user buffer rather than issuing the
command to the controller, since Chatham IDENTIFY data is always spoofed.
While here, fix a bug in the spoofed data for Chatham submission and
completion queue entry sizes.
Sponsored by: Intel
MFC after: 3 days
they occur.
This prevents repeated notifications of the same event.
Status of these events may be viewed at any time by viewing the
SMART/Health Info Page using nvmecontrol, whether or not asynchronous
events notifications for those events are enabled. This log page can
be viewed using:
nvmecontrol logpage -p 2 <ctrlr id>
Future enhancements may re-enable these notifications on a periodic basis
so that if the notified condition persists, it will continue to be logged.
Sponsored by: Intel
Reviewed by: carl
Approved by: re (hrs)
MFC after: 1 week
commands during controller initialization.
DELAY() does not work here during config_intrhook context - we need to
explicitly relinquish the CPU for the admin command completion to
get processed.
Sponsored by: Intel
Reported by: Adam Brooks <adam.j.brooks@intel.com>
Reviewed by: carl
MFC after: 3 days
max transfer size. This guards against rogue commands coming in from
userspace.
Also add KASSERTS for the virtual address and unmapped bio cases, if the
transfer size exceeds the controller's max transfer size.
Sponsored by: Intel
MFC after: 3 days
Also allow admin commands to transfer up to this maximum I/O size, rather
than the artificial limit previously imposed. The larger I/O size is very
beneficial for upcoming firmware download support. This has the added
benefit of simplifying the code since both admin and I/O commands now use
the same maximum I/O size.
Sponsored by: Intel
MFC after: 3 days
This includes a new IOCTL to support a generic method for nvmecontrol(8) to pass
IDENTIFY, GET_LOG_PAGE, GET_FEATURES and other commands to the controller, rather than
separate IOCTLs for each.
Sponsored by: Intel
NULL. This simplifies decisions around if/how requests are routed through
busdma. It also paves the way for supporting unmapped bios.
Sponsored by: Intel
later found to not be usable because the controller doesn't support the
same number of queues.
This is not the normal case, but does occur with the Chatham prototype
board.
Sponsored by: Intel
mechanism.
Now that all requests are timed, we are guaranteed to get a completion
notification, even if it is an abort status due to a timed out admin
command.
This has the effect of simplifying the controller and namespace setup
code, so that it reads straight through rather than broken up into
a bunch of different callback functions.
Sponsored by: Intel
Reviewed by: carl
start or reset. Also add a notifier for NVMe consumers for controller fail
conditions and plumb this notifier for nvd(4) to destroy the associated
GEOM disks when a failure occurs.
This requires a bit of work to cover the races when a consumer is sending
I/O requests to a controller that is transitioning to the failed state. To
help cover this condition, add a task to defer completion of I/Os submitted
to a failed controller, so that the consumer will still always receive its
completions in a different context than the submission.
Sponsored by: Intel
Reviewed by: carl
This is just as effective, and removes the need for a bunch of admin commands
to a controller that's going to be disabled shortly anyways.
Sponsored by: Intel
Reviewed by: carl
start process.
The spec indicates the OS driver should use Set Features (Software
Progress Marker) to set the pre-boot software load count to 0
after the OS driver has successfully been initialized. This allows
pre-boot software to determine if there have been any issues with the
OS loading.
Sponsored by: Intel
Reviewed by: carl
This flag was originally added to communicate to the sysctl code
which oids should be built, but there are easier ways to do this. This
needs to be cleaned up prior to adding new controller states - for example,
controller failure.
Sponsored by: Intel
Reviewed by: carl
The controller's IDENTIFY data contains MDTS (Max Data Transfer Size) to
allow the controller to specify the maximum I/O data transfer size. nvme(4)
already provides a default maximum, but make sure it does not exceed what
MDTS reports.
Sponsored by: Intel
Reviewed by: carl
that if a specific I/O repeatedly times out, we don't retry it indefinitely.
The default number of retries will be 4, but is adjusted using hw.nvme.retry_count.
Sponsored by: Intel
Reviewed by: carl
specified log page.
This satisfies the spec condition that future async events of the same type
will not be sent until the associated log page is fetched.
Sponsored by: Intel
Reviewed by: carl
NVMe error log entries include status, so breaking this out into
its own data structure allows it to be included in both the
nvme_completion data structure as well as error log entry data
structures.
While here, expose nvme_completion_is_error(), and change all of
the places that were explicitly looking at sc/sct bits to use this
macro instead.
Sponsored by: Intel
Reviewed by: carl
This protects against cases where a controller crashes with multiple
I/O outstanding, each timing out and requesting controller resets
simultaneously.
While here, remove a debugging printf from a previous commit, and add
more logging around I/O that need to be resubmitted after a controller
reset.
Sponsored by: Intel
Reviewed by: carl
While aborts are typically cleaner than a full controller reset, many times
an I/O timeout indicates other controller-level issues where aborts may not
work. NVMe drivers for other operating systems are also defaulting to
controller reset rather than aborts for timed out I/O.
Sponsored by: Intel
Reviewed by: carl