This is a driver for a pre-ATAPI ISA CD-ROM adapter. As noted in
the manpage, this driver is only useful as a backend to cdcontrol to
play audio CDs since it doesn't use DMA, so its data performance is
"abysmal" (and that was true in the mid 90's).
The module works together with ipfw(4) and implemented as its external
action module.
Stateless NAT64 registers external action with name nat64stl. This
keyword should be used to create NAT64 instance and to address this
instance in rules. Stateless NAT64 uses two lookup tables with mapped
IPv4->IPv6 and IPv6->IPv4 addresses to perform translation.
A configuration of instance should looks like this:
1. Create lookup tables:
# ipfw table T46 create type addr valtype ipv6
# ipfw table T64 create type addr valtype ipv4
2. Fill T46 and T64 tables.
3. Add rule to allow neighbor solicitation and advertisement:
# ipfw add allow icmp6 from any to any icmp6types 135,136
4. Create NAT64 instance:
# ipfw nat64stl NAT create table4 T46 table6 T64
5. Add rules that matches the traffic:
# ipfw add nat64stl NAT ip from any to table(T46)
# ipfw add nat64stl NAT ip from table(T64) to 64:ff9b::/96
6. Configure DNS64 for IPv6 clients and add route to 64:ff9b::/96
via NAT64 host.
Stateful NAT64 registers external action with name nat64lsn. The only
one option required to create nat64lsn instance - prefix4. It defines
the pool of IPv4 addresses used for translation.
A configuration of instance should looks like this:
1. Add rule to allow neighbor solicitation and advertisement:
# ipfw add allow icmp6 from any to any icmp6types 135,136
2. Create NAT64 instance:
# ipfw nat64lsn NAT create prefix4 A.B.C.D/28
3. Add rules that matches the traffic:
# ipfw add nat64lsn NAT ip from any to A.B.C.D/28
# ipfw add nat64lsn NAT ip6 from any to 64:ff9b::/96
4. Configure DNS64 for IPv6 clients and add route to 64:ff9b::/96
via NAT64 host.
Obtained from: Yandex LLC
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: Yandex LLC
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6434
* make interface cloner VNET-aware;
* simplify cloner code and use if_clone_simple();
* migrate LOGIF_LOCK() to rmlock;
* add ipfw_bpf_mtap2() function to pass mbuf to BPF;
* introduce new additional ipfwlog0 pseudo interface. It differs from
ipfw0 by DLT type used in bpfattach. This interface is intended to
used by ipfw modules to dump packets with additional info attached.
Currently pflog format is used. ipfw_bpf_mtap2() function uses second
argument to determine which interface use for dumping. If dlen is equal
to ETHER_HDR_LEN it uses old ipfw0 interface, if dlen is equal to
PFLOG_HDRLEN - ipfwlog0 will be used.
Obtained from: Yandex LLC
Sponsored by: Yandex LLC
The only difference between 3 and 3B is the size of the RJ45 port.
And now we have a uboot port that expect pcduino3.dts to be present.
Reported by: imp
CloudABI executables already provide support for passing in vDSOs. This
functionality is used by the emulator for OS X to inject system call
handlers. On FreeBSD, we could use it to optimize calls to
gettimeofday(), etc.
Though I don't have any plans to optimize any system calls right now,
let's go ahead and already pass in a vDSO. This will allow us to
simplify the executables, as the traditional "syscall" shims can be
removed entirely. It also means that we gain more flexibility with
regards to adding and removing system calls.
Reviewed by: kib
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7438
driver. This change significantly increases the overall RX aggregation
ratio for heavily loaded networks handling 10-80 thousand simultaneous
connections.
Remove the turbo LRO code and all references to it which has now been
superceeded by the tcp_lro_queue_mbuf() function.
Tested by: Netflix
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies
MFC after: 1 week
f/w for the other devices supported by this driver.
Patch linked in https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6967 but not actually
a part of the review.
Obtained from DragonflyBSD.
Submitted by: Kevin Bowling <kev009@kev009.com>
MFC after: 2 weeks
Relnotes: yes
Chelsio NICs are a bit unique compared to some other NICs in that they
expose different functionality on different physical functions. In
particular, PF4 is used to manage the NIC interfaces ('t4nex' and 't5nex').
However, PF4 is not able to create VF devices. Instead, VFs are only
supported by physical functions 0 through 3. This commit adds 't4iov'
and 't5iov' drivers that attach to PF0-3.
One extra wrinkle is that the iov devices cannot enable SR-IOV until the
firwmare has been initialized by the main PF4 driver. To handle this
case, a new t4_if kobj interface has been added to permit cross-calls
between the PF drivers. The PF4 driver notifies sibling drivers when it
is fully attached. It also requests sibling drivers to detach before it
detaches. Sibling drivers query the PF4 driver during their attach
routine to see if it is attached. If not, the sibling drivers defer
their attach actions until the PF4 driver informs them it is attached.
VF devices are associated with a single port on the NIC. VF devices
created from PF0 are associated with the first port on the NIC, VFs
from PF1 are associated with the second port, etc. VF devices can
only be created from a PF device that has an associated port. Thus,
on a 2-port card, VFs are only supported on PF0 and PF1.
Reviewed by: np (earlier versions)
MFC after: 1 month
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
* Add acpi_if.h to the SRC list in the uart module
* Only include new acpi headers when they are needed
Obtained from: ABT Systems Ltd
MFC after: 1 month
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
as defined in RFC 6296. The module works together with ipfw(4) and
implemented as its external action module. When it is loaded, it registers
as eaction and can be used in rules. The usage pattern is similar to
ipfw_nat(4). All matched by rule traffic goes to the NPT module.
Reviewed by: hrs
Obtained from: Yandex LLC
MFC after: 1 month
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: Yandex LLC
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6420
Instead of global variable, vmbus version is accessed through
a vmbus DEVMETHOD now.
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Microsoft OSTC
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6953
FreeBSD support NX bit on X86_64 processors out of the box, for i386 emulation
use READ_IMPLIES_EXEC flag, introduced in r302515.
While here move common part of mmap() and mprotect() code to the files in compat/linux
to reduce code dupcliation between Linuxulator's.
Reported by: Johannes Jost Meixner, Shawn Webb
MFC after: 1 week
XMFC with: r302515, r302516
This follows NTB subsystem modularization in Linux, tuning it to FreeBSD
native NewBus interfaces. This change allows to support different types
of hardware with different drivers, support multiple NTB instances in a
system, ntb_transport module use for needs other then if_ntb, etc.
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
default. At least initially, the feature to support multiple TCP stacks is
aimed at supporting advanced use cases and TCP development, but it is not
necessarily aimed at a wide audience. Therefore, there is no need to build
and install the extra TCP stacks by default. Instead, the people who are
using or developing this functionality can add the extra option to build/
install the extra TCP stacks.
However, we do want to build the extra TCP stacks as part of test builds
(e.g. LINT or tinderbox) to ensure that developers who are testing their
changes will know that their changes do not break the additional TCP
stack modules.
After this change, a user will need to add WITH_EXTRA_TCP_STACKS=1 to
make.conf or the kernel config in order to build the extra TCP modules.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6795
Reviewed by: sjg
Approved by: re (kib)
Support for compression has been available from July 2007 but it
was never imported due to concerns with patents once held by
STAC/HiFn. The issues have clearly been resolved so bring it
in now.
Special thanks to Brett Glass for preserving the code and
pointing documentation for the expiration case.
Obtained from: mav (through Brett Glass)
Relnotes: yes
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6739
This change is needed because 'opt_rss.h' is included by multiple source
files and RSS macro is defined as 1 within the file during build process
if option RSS is enabled in the kernel.
Submitted by: Ivan Malov <Ivan.Malov at oktetlabs.ru>
Reviewed by: gnn
Sponsored by: Solarflare Communications, Inc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6718
This is the initial framework to call into the MCI HAL routines and drive
the basic state engine.
The MCI bluetooth coex model uses a command channel between wlan and
bluetooth, rather than a 2-wire or 3-wire signaling protocol to control things.
This means the wlan and bluetooth chip exchange a lot more information and
signaling, even at the per-packet level. The NICs in question can share
the input LNA and output PA on the die, so they absolutely can't stomp
on each other in a silly fashion. It also allows for the bluetooth side
to signal when profiles come and go, so the driver can take appropriate
control. There's also the possibility of dynamic bluetooth/wlan duty cycle
control which I haven't yet really played with.
It configures things up with a static "wlan wins everything" coexistence,
configures up the available 2GHz channel map for bluetooth, sets a static
duty cycle for bluetooth/wifi traffic priority and drives the basics needed to
keep the MCI HAL code happy.
It doesn't do any actual coexistence except to default to "wlan wins everything",
which at least demonstrates that things do indeed work. Bluetooth inquiry frames
still trump wifi (including beacons), so that demonstrates things really do
indeed seem to work.
Tested:
* AR9462 (WB222), STA mode + bt
* QCA9565 (WB335), STA mode + bt
TODO:
* .. the rest of coexistence. yes, bluetooth, not people. That stuff's hard.
* It doesn't do the initial BT side calibration, which requires a WLAN chip
reset. I'll fix up the reset path a bit more first before I enable that.
* The 1-ant and 2-ant configuration bits aren't being set correctly in
if_ath_btcoex.c - I'll dig into that and fix it in a subsequent commit.
* It's not enabled by default for WB222/WB225 even though I believe it now
can be - I'll chase that up in a subsequent commit.
Obtained from: Qualcomm Atheros, Linux ath9k
Support for the new hashing algorithms in ZFS was introduced in r289422
However it was disconnected because FreeBSD lacked implementations of
SHA-512 (truncated to 256 bits), and Skein.
These implementations were introduced in r300921 and r300966 respectively
This commit connects them to ZFS and enabled these new checksum algorithms
This new algorithms are not supported by the boot blocks, so do not use them
on your root dataset if you boot from ZFS.
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: ScaleEngine Inc.
Connect it to userland (libmd, libcrypt, sbin/md5) and kernel (crypto.ko)
Support for skein as a ZFS checksum algorithm was introduced in r289422
but is disconnected because FreeBSD lacked a Skein implementation.
A further commit will enable it in ZFS.
Reviewed by: cem
Sponsored by: ScaleEngine Inc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6166
includes the FDT option. Use OPT_FDT to conditionally compile modules
that require FDT support.
In the past we've gotten away with using the arch name as a proxy for FDT
support in makefile conditional logic, but now mips has some platforms with
fdt support and some without and we need a more direct test.
Centre for Advanced Internet Architectures
Implementing AQM in FreeBSD
* Overview <http://caia.swin.edu.au/freebsd/aqm/index.html>
* Articles, Papers and Presentations
<http://caia.swin.edu.au/freebsd/aqm/papers.html>
* Patches and Tools <http://caia.swin.edu.au/freebsd/aqm/downloads.html>
Overview
Recent years have seen a resurgence of interest in better managing
the depth of bottleneck queues in routers, switches and other places
that get congested. Solutions include transport protocol enhancements
at the end-hosts (such as delay-based or hybrid congestion control
schemes) and active queue management (AQM) schemes applied within
bottleneck queues.
The notion of AQM has been around since at least the late 1990s
(e.g. RFC 2309). In recent years the proliferation of oversized
buffers in all sorts of network devices (aka bufferbloat) has
stimulated keen community interest in four new AQM schemes -- CoDel,
FQ-CoDel, PIE and FQ-PIE.
The IETF AQM working group is looking to document these schemes,
and independent implementations are a corner-stone of the IETF's
process for confirming the clarity of publicly available protocol
descriptions. While significant development work on all three schemes
has occured in the Linux kernel, there is very little in FreeBSD.
Project Goals
This project began in late 2015, and aims to design and implement
functionally-correct versions of CoDel, FQ-CoDel, PIE and FQ_PIE
in FreeBSD (with code BSD-licensed as much as practical). We have
chosen to do this as extensions to FreeBSD's ipfw/dummynet firewall
and traffic shaper. Implementation of these AQM schemes in FreeBSD
will:
* Demonstrate whether the publicly available documentation is
sufficient to enable independent, functionally equivalent implementations
* Provide a broader suite of AQM options for sections the networking
community that rely on FreeBSD platforms
Program Members:
* Rasool Al Saadi (developer)
* Grenville Armitage (project lead)
Acknowledgements:
This project has been made possible in part by a gift from the
Comcast Innovation Fund.
Submitted by: Rasool Al-Saadi <ralsaadi@swin.edu.au>
X-No objection: core
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6388
written by Sagi Grimberg <sagig at mellanox.com> and Max Gurtovoy
<maxg at mellanox.com>.
This code comes from https://github.com/sagigrimberg/iser-freebsd, branch
iser-rebase-11-current-r291993. It's not connected to the build just yet;
it still needs some tweaks to adapt to my changes to iSCSI infrastructure.
Big thanks to Mellanox for their support for FreeBSD!
Obtained from: Mellanox Technologies
MFC after: 1 month
Relnotes: yes
This patchset adds support to bhnd_chipc for sharing SYS_RES_MEMORY
resources with its children, allowing us to hang devices off of
bhnd_chipc that rely on access to a subset of the device register space
that bhnd_chipc itself must also allocate.
We could avoid most of this heavy lifting if RF_SHAREABLE+SYS_RES_MEMORY
wasn't limited to use with allocations at the same size/offset.
As a work-around, I implemented something similar to vga_pci.c, which
implements similar reference counting of of PCI BAR resources for its
children.
With these changes, chipc will use reference counting of SYS_RES_MEMORY
allocation/activation requests, to decide when to allocate/activate/
deactivate/release resources from the parent bhnd(4) bus.
The requesting child device is allocated a new resource from chipc's
rman, pointing to (possibly a subregion of) the refcounted bhnd resources
allocated by chipc.
Other resource types are just passed directly to the parent bhnd bus;
RF_SHAREABLE works just fine with IRQs.
I also lifted the SPROM device code out into a common driver, since this
now allows me to hang simple subclasses off of a common driver off of both
bhndb_pci and bhnd_chipc.
Tested:
* (landonf) Tested against BCM4331 and BCM4312, confirmed that SPROM still
attaches and can be queried.
Submitted by: Landon Fuller <landonf@landonf.org>
Reviewed by: mizkha@gmail.com
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6471
This adds a BHND_BUS_GET_ATTACH_TYPE(); the primary use-case is to let
chipc make a coarse-grained determination as to whether UART, SPI, etc
drivers ought to be attached, and on fullmac devices, whether a real
CPU driver ought to be skipped for the ARM core, etc.
Tested:
* BCM4331 (BHND)
* BCM4312 (SIBA)
Submitted by: Landon Fuller <landonf@landonf.org>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6492
Add directory structure and fix dependencies to be able to
build and use Cavium VNIC driver as a module.
Reviewed by: zbb
Obtained from: Semihalf
Sponsored by: Cavium
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6345
* The default kernel and options won't build the GPL PHY bits;
* bwn(4) defaults to building as a module anyway!;
* If BWN_GPL_PHY is specified in the config file, and you uncomment
the GPL PHY bits in the module Makefile, you'll get a working
N-PHY.
This is specifically designed to be obtuse for now, as I don't want
to flip it on by default. It's easy enough for people to flip on
and build, and it's a module so the default GENERIC kernel won't be
GPL tainted.
I'll have to add an actual HAL layer that allows the GPL PHY to be loaded
before if_bwn so it can be "magic", but that'll come later.
Tested:
* BCM4321 11abg NIC, STA mode
Now that we've got access to SPROM and can access board identification,
this implements all known remaining hardware work-arounds for the bhnd(4)
PCI and PCIe-G1 cores operating endpoint mode.
Additionally, this adds an initial set of skeleton PCIe-G2 hostb and pcib
drivers, required by fullmac and newer softmac devices.
Submitted by: Landon Fuller <landonf@landonf.org>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6377
These firmwares were obtained from the "Chelsio T5/T4 Unified Wire
v2.12.0.3 for Linux" release. Changes since 1.14.4.0 (which is the
firmware in -STABLE branches) are in the "Release Notes" accompanying
the Unified Wire release and are copy-pasted here as well.
22.1. T5 Firmware
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Version : 1.15.37.0
Date : 04/27/2016
================================================================================
FIXES
-----
BASE:
- Fixed an issue in FW_RSS_VI_CONFIG_CMD handling where the default ingress
queue was ignored.
- Fixed an issue where adapter failed to load fw by adjusting DRAM frequency.
- Fixed an issue in watchdog which was causing VM bring-up failure after reboot.
- Fixed 40G link failures with some switches when auto-negotiation enabled.
- Fixed to improve on link bring-up time.
- Per port buffer groups size doubled to improve performance.
- Fixed an issue where bogus d3hot bits were set causing traffic stall.
- Fixed an issue where sometimes adapter was not seen after reboot.
- Fixed an issue where iWARP was crashing in conjunction with traffic management.
- Fixed an issue where link failed to come up after removing twinax cable and
inserting optical module.
ETH
- Fixed a link flap issue on T580-CR.
OFLD
- Fixed a potential iSCSI data corruption issue by disabling RxFragEn flag.
FOiSCSI
- Fixed an issue in recovery path where connection was getting closed before
recovery processing was done.
- Fixed an issue in TCP port reuse.
- Fixed an issue in recovery path when large number (>64) of iSCSI connections
were in use.
- Returned ENETUNREACH if IP was not been provisioned yet and driver tried to
use given inerface.
- Fixed an issue where fw was sending ENETUNREACH event for normal tcp
disconnection.
DCBX
- Fixed an issue where iscsi tlv is sent incorrectly to host. (DCBX CEE)
- Fixed an issue where apply bit set for APP id was affecting the ETS and PFC
settings.(DCBX IEEE)
- Fixed an issue where app priority values are not handled correctly in fw.
(DCBX IEEE)
- Fixed an issue where enable/disable dcbx can cause crash. (DCBX CEE,DCBX IEEE)
FOFCoE
- Removed BB6 support.
ENHANCEMENTS
------------
BASE:
- Added new interface to program DCA settings in SGE contexts; allow 32-byte
IQE size
- Added PTP interface fw_ptp_ts to support PTP Frequeny and Offset adjustment.
- Added MPS raw interface.
ETH:
- New mailbox command FW_DCB_IEEE_CMD api added for IEEE dcbx.
OFLD:
- WR opcode is returned to host in cqe error response.
22.2. T4 Firmware
+++++++++++++++++
Version : 1.15.37.0
Date : 04/27/2016
================================================================================
FIXES
-----
BASE:
- Fixed an issue in FW_RSS_VI_CONFIG_CMD handling where default ingress queue
was ignored.
- Fixed an issue in watchdog which was causing VM bring-up failure after reboot.
- Per port buffer groups size doubled to improve performance.
- Fixed an issue where iWARP was crashing in conjunction with traffic management.
FOiSCSI:
- Fixed an issue in recovery path where connection was getting closed before
recovery processing was done.
- Fixed an issue in TCP port reuse.
- Fixed an issue in recovery path when large number (>64) of iSCSI connections
were in use.
- Returned ENETUNREACH if IP had not been provisioned yet and driver tried to
use given inerface.
DCBX
- Fixed an issue where iscsi tlv is sent incorrectly to host.(DCBX CEE)
- Fixed an issue where enable/disable dcbx can cause crash in firmware.(DCBX CEE)
FOiSCSI
- Fixes an issue where fw was sending ENETUNREACH event for normal tcp
disconnection.
FOFCoE
- Removed BB6 support.
ENHANCEMENTS
------------
BASE:
- Added MPS raw interface.
ETH:
- New mailbox command FW_DCB_IEEE_CMD api added for IEEE dcbx.
================================================================================
Obtained from: Chelsio Communications
MFC after: 6 weeks
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
This adds support for the NVRAM handling and the basic SPROM
hardware used on siba(4) and bcma(4) devices, including:
* SPROM directly attached to the PCI core, accessible via PCI configuration
space.
* SPROM attached to later ChipCommon cores.
* SPROM variables vended from the parent SoC bus (e.g. via a directly-attached
flash device).
Additional improvements to the NVRAM/SPROM interface will
be required, but this changeset stands alone as working
checkpoint.
Submitted by: Landon Fuller <landonf@landonf.org>
Reviewed by: Michael Zhilin <mizkha@gmail.com> (Broadcom MIPS support)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6196
This is an initial work in progress to use the replacement bhnd
bus code for devices which support it.
* Add manpage updates for bhnd, bhndb, siba
* Add kernel options for bhnd, bhndbus, etc
* Add initial support in if_bwn_pci / if_bwn_mac for using bhnd
as the bus transport for suppoted NICs
* if_bwn_pci will eventually be the PCI bus glue to interface to bwn,
which will use the right backend bus to attach to, versus direct
nexus/bhnd attachments (as found in embedded broadcom devices.)
The PCI glue defaults to probing at a lower level than the bwn glue,
so bwn should still attach as per normal without a boot time tunable set.
It's also not fully fleshed out - the bwn probe/attach code needs to be
broken out into platform and bus specific things (just like ath, ath_pci,
ath_ahb) before we can shift the driver over to using this.
Tested:
* BCM4311, STA mode
* BCM4312, STA mode
Submitted by: Landon Fuller <landonf@landonf.org>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D6191
after r298107
Summary of changes:
- Replace all instances of FILES/TESTS with ${PACKAGE}FILES. This ensures that
namespacing is kept with FILES appropriately, and that this shouldn't need
to be repeated if the namespace changes -- only the definition of PACKAGE
needs to be changed
- Allow PACKAGE to be overridden by callers instead of forcing it to always be
`tests`. In the event we get to the point where things can be split up
enough in the base system, it would make more sense to group the tests
with the blocks they're a part of, e.g. byacc with byacc-tests, etc
- Remove PACKAGE definitions where possible, i.e. where FILES wasn't used
previously.
- Remove unnecessary TESTSPACKAGE definitions; this has been elided into
bsd.tests.mk
- Remove unnecessary BINDIRs used previously with ${PACKAGE}FILES;
${PACKAGE}FILESDIR is now automatically defined in bsd.test.mk.
- Fix installation of files under data/ subdirectories in lib/libc/tests/hash
and lib/libc/tests/net/getaddrinfo
- Remove unnecessary .include <bsd.own.mk>s (some opportunistic cleanup)
Document the proposed changes in share/examples/tests/tests/... via examples
so it's clear that ${PACKAGES}FILES is the suggested way forward in terms of
replacing FILES. share/mk/bsd.README didn't seem like the appropriate method
of communicating that info.
MFC after: never probably
X-MFC with: r298107
PR: 209114
Relnotes: yes
Tested with: buildworld, installworld, checkworld; buildworld, packageworld
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
* Break out the 'g' phy code;
* Break out the debugging bits into a separate source file, since
some debugging prints are done in the phy code;
* Make some more chip methods in if_bwn.c public.
This brings the size of if_bwn.c down to 6,805 lines which is now
approaching managable.
This (and eventually migrating the other PHY code out) is in preparation
for adding the 11n PHY. No, the 11ac PHY (for the BCM4260 softmac part) isn't
yet open source, so we can't grow that. Yet.
This trims ~3,700 lines of code from if_bwn.c, bringing it down to a slightly
less crazy sounding 10,446 lines of code.
It seems that the only way to supply dtb to loader on Zynq-based
SoCs is to manually generate dtb and place it to pre-defined location
on SD card or TFTP server where loader can pick it up. More modern
approach is to add modules/dtb/%soc% module and let installworld
target generate dtb and copy them to /boot/dtb/ where they can be
loaded by ubldr
undefined symbol svr4_delete_socket which was moved from streams to the svr4 module
in r160558 that created a two-way dependency between them.
PR: 208464
Submitted by: Kristoffer Eriksson
Reported by: Kristoffer Eriksson
MFC after: 2 week
This extracts common code from bhndb_pci, bhnd_pcib, and bhnd_pci_hostb into a
simpler shared bhnd_pci base driver, and should enable SoC-side implementation
of bhnd_pcib root complex support.
Submitted by: Landon Fuller <landonf@landonf.org>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D5763
Submitted by: Jun Su <junsu microsoft com>
Reviewed by: jhb, kib, sephe
Sponsored by: Microsoft OSTC
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D5910
It allows implementing loadable kernel modules with new actions and
without needing to modify kernel headers and ipfw(8). The module
registers its action handler and keyword string, that will be used
as action name. Using generic syntax user can add rules with this
action. Also ipfw(8) can be easily modified to extend basic syntax
for external actions, that become a part base system.
Sample modules will coming soon.
Obtained from: Yandex LLC
Sponsored by: Yandex LLC
Make it compile only for i386/amd64 for now as it's been tested there.
It's quite possible it'll show up elsewhere and we can enable it
for other architectures later.
Tested:
* PC Engines APU1C4
Submitted by: Daniel Wyatt <daniel@dewyatt.com>
Reviewed by: adrian, loos
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D5389
There's some upcoming work to add new chipset support here and I'd
like to only add 802.11n support to one driver, instead of both
urtwn and rtwn.
There's also missing support for things like 802.11n, some powersave
work, bluetooth integration/coexistence, etc, and also newer parts
(like 8192EU, maybe some 11ac parts, not sure yet.)
So, this is hopefully the first step in a longer set of steps to unify
rtwn/urtwn and extend it with more interesting chipset and functionality
support.
Reviewed by: kevlo
is defined explicitly. It's kinda pointless and results in extra step in
boot sequence which is not really needed, i.e.:
md0: Embedded image 1331200 bytes at 0x8038b7b4
Trying to mount root from ufs:/dev/md0 []...
Mounting from ufs:/dev/md0 failed with error 22.
Trying to mount root from ufs:md0.uzip []...
warning: no time-of-day clock registered, system time will not be set accurately
start_init: trying /sbin/init
This update brings initial support for Haswell GPUs.
Tested by: Many users of FreeBSD, PC-BSD and HardenedBSD
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D5554
improve cancellation robustness.
Introduce a new file operation, fo_aio_queue, which is responsible for
queueing and completing an asynchronous I/O request for a given file.
The AIO subystem now exports library of routines to manipulate AIO
requests as well as the ability to run a handler function in the
"default" pool of AIO daemons to service a request.
A default implementation for file types which do not include an
fo_aio_queue method queues requests to the "default" pool invoking the
fo_read or fo_write methods as before.
The AIO subsystem permits file types to install a private "cancel"
routine when a request is queued to permit safe dequeueing and cleanup
of cancelled requests.
Sockets now use their own pool of AIO daemons and service per-socket
requests in FIFO order. Socket requests will not block indefinitely
permitting timely cancellation of all requests.
Due to the now-tight coupling of the AIO subsystem with file types,
the AIO subsystem is now a standard part of all kernels. The VFS_AIO
kernel option and aio.ko module are gone.
Many file types may block indefinitely in their fo_read or fo_write
callbacks resulting in a hung AIO daemon. This can result in hung
user processes (when processes attempt to cancel all outstanding
requests during exit) or a hung system. To protect against this, AIO
requests are only permitted for known "safe" files by default. AIO
requests for all file types can be enabled by setting the new
vfs.aio.enable_usafe sysctl to a non-zero value. The AIO tests have
been updated to skip operations on unsafe file types if the sysctl is
zero.
Currently, AIO requests on sockets and raw disks are considered safe
and are enabled by default. aio_mlock() is also enabled by default.
Reviewed by: cem, jilles
Discussed with: kib (earlier version)
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D5289
These firmwares were obtained from the beta "Chelsio T5/T4 Unified Wire
v2.12.0.2 for Linux" release. Changes since last release are listed in the
"Release Notes" accompanying the beta release and are copy-pasted here as well.
The plan is to have only GA'd firmwares in any -STABLE FreeBSD branch so I'll
MFC this (after 2 months) only if it ends up in a GA release.
================================================================================
================================================================================
22.1. T5 Firmware
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Version : 1.15.28.0
Date : 02/29/2016
================================================================================
FIXES
-----
BASE:
- Fixed an issue in FW_RSS_VI_CONFIG_CMD handling where the default ingress
queue was ignored.
- Fixed an issue where adapter failed to load fw by adjusting DRAM frequency.
- Fixed an issue in watchdog which was causing VM bring-up failure after
reboot.
- Fixed 40G link failures with some switches when auto-negotiation enabled.
- Fixed to improve on link bring-up time.
- Per port buffer groups size doubled to improve performance.
- Fixed an issue where bogus d3hot bits were set causing traffic stall.
- Fixed an issue where sometimes adapter was not seen after reboot.
- Fixed an issue where iWARP was crashing in conjunction with traffic
management.
- Fixed an issue where link failed to come up after removing twinax cable and
inserting optical module.
OFLD
- Fixed a potential iSCSI data corruption issue by disabling RxFragEn flag.
FOiSCSI
- Fixed an issue in recovery path where connection was getting closed before
recovery processing was done.
- Fixed an issue in TCP port reuse.
- Fixed an issue in recovery path when large number (>64) of iSCSI connections
were in use.
- Returned ENETUNREACH if IP was not been provisioned yet and driver tried to
use given inerface.
ENHANCEMENTS
------------
BASE:
- Added new interface to program DCA settings in SGE contexts; allow 32-byte
IQE size
- Added PTP interface fw_ptp_ts to support PTP Frequeny and Offset adjustment.
- Added MPS raw interface.
ETH:
- New mailbox command FW_DCB_IEEE_CMD api added for IEEE dcbx.
OFLD:
- WR opcode is returned to host in cqe error response.
================================================================================
================================================================================
22.2. T4 Firmware
+++++++++++++++++
Version : 1.15.28.0
Date : 02/29/2016
================================================================================
FIXES
-----
BASE:
- Fixed an issue in FW_RSS_VI_CONFIG_CMD handling where default ingress queue
was ignored.
- Fixed an issue in watchdog which was causing VM bring-up failure after
reboot.
- Per port buffer groups size doubled to improve performance.
- Fixed an issue where iWARP was crashing in conjunction with traffic
management.
FOiSCSI:
- Fixed an issue in recovery path where connection was getting closed before
recovery processing was done.
- Fixed an issue in TCP port reuse.
- Fixed an issue in recovery path when large number (>64) of iSCSI connections
were in use.
- Returned ENETUNREACH if IP had not been provisioned yet and driver tried to
use given inerface.
ENHANCEMENTS
------------
BASE:
- Added MPS raw interface.
ETH:
- New mailbox command FW_DCB_IEEE_CMD api added for IEEE dcbx.
================================================================================
Obtained from: Chelsio Communications
MFC after: 2 months
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
-fPIC has no effect on linking although it seems to be ignored by
GNU ld.bfd. However, it causes ld.lld to terminate with an invalid
argument error.
Reviewed by: dchagin, kib
MFC after: 1 month
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D5444
These are no longer needed after the recent 'beforebuild: depend' changes
and hooking DIRDEPS_BUILD into a subset of FAST_DEPEND which supports
skipping 'make depend'.
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
Split heartbeat, shutdown and timesync out of utils code
and name them properly.
Submitted by: Jun Su <junsu microsoft com>
Reviewed by: adrian, sephe, Hongjiang Zhang <honzhan microsoft com>
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Microsoft OSTC
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D5216
and geom_uncompress(4):
1. mkuzip(8):
- Proper support for eliminating all-zero blocks when compressing an
image. This feature is already supported by the geom_uzip(4) module
and CLOOP format in general, so it's just a matter of making mkuzip(8)
match. It should be noted, however that this feature while it sounds
great, results in very slight improvement in the overall compression
ratio, since compressing default 16k all-zero block produces only 39
bytes compressed output block, which is 99.8% compression ratio. With
typical average compression ratio of amd64 binaries and data being
around 60-70% the difference between 99.8% and 100.0% is not that
great further diluted by the ratio of number of zero blocks in the
uncompressed image to the overall number of blocks being less than
0.5 (typically). However, this may be important from performance
standpoint, so that kernel are not spinning its wheels decompressing
those empty blocks every time this zero region is read. It could also
be important when you create huge image mostly filled with zero
blocks for testing purposes.
- New feature allowing to de-duplicate output image. It turns out that
if you twist CLOOP format a bit you can do that as well. And unlike
zero-blocks elimination, this gives a noticeable improvement in the
overall compression ratio, reducing output image by something like
3-4% on my test UFS2 3GB image consisting of full FreeBSD base system
plus some of the packages (openjdk, apache etc), about 2.3GB worth of
file data (800+MB compressed). The only caveat is that images created
with this feature "on" would not work on older versions of FeeBSDxi
kernel, hence it's turned off by default.
- provide options to control both features and document them in manual
page.
- merge in all relevant LZMA compression support from the mkulzma(8),
add new option to select between both.
- switch license from ad-hoc beerware into standard 2-clause BSD.
2. geom_uzip(4):
- implement support for de-duplicated images;
- optimize some code paths to handle "all-zero" blocks without reading
any compressed data;
- beef up manual page to explain that geom_uzip(4) is not limited only
to md(4) images. The compressed data can be written to the block
device and accessed directly via magic of GEOM(4) and devfs(4),
including to mount root fs from a compressed drive.
- convert debug log code from being compiled in conditionally into
being present all the time and provide two sysctls to turn it on or
off. Due to intended use of the module, it can be used in
environments where there may not be a luxury to put new kernel with
debug code enabled. Having those options handy allows debug issues
without as much problem by just having access to serial console or
network shell access to a box/appliance. The resulting additional
CPU cycles are just few int comparisons and branches, and those are
minuscule when compared to data decompression which is the main
feature of the module.
- hopefully improve robustness and resiliency of the geom_uzip(4) by
performing some of the data validation / range checking on the TOC
entries and rejecting to attach to an image if those checks fail.
- merge in all relevant LZMA decompression support from the
geom_uncompress(4), enable automatically when appropriate format is
indicated in the header.
- move compilation work into its own worker thread so that it does not
clog g_up. This allows multiple instances work in parallel utilizing
smp cores.
- document new knobs in the manual page.
Reviewed by: adrian
MFC after: 1 month
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D5333
- Add URTWN_WITHOUT_UCODE option (will disable any firmware specific code
when set).
- Do not exclude the driver from build when MK_SOURCELESS_UCODE is set
(URTWN_WITHOUT_UCODE will be enforced unconditionally).
- Do not abort initialization when firmware cannot be loaded;
behave like the URTWN_WITHOUT_UCODE option was set.
- Drop some unused variables from urtwn_softc structure.
Tested with RTL8188EU and RTL8188CUS in HOSTAP and STA modes.
Reviewed by: kevlo
Approved by: adrian (mentor)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4849
* Use the Linux compat string
* Use EARLY_DRIVER_MODULE to attach at the right time
* Add a generic A10 kernel config file
* A20 now use generic_timer
* Add two new dts files for Olimex boards
* Update our custom DTS file for A10 and A20 to use the same compatible
property names as the vendor ones.
Submitted by: Emmanuel Vadot <manu@bidouilliste.com>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4792
The htree dir_index is perhaps one of the most characteristic
features of the linux ext3 implementation. It was removed
in r281670, due to repeated bug reports.
Damjan Jovanic detected and fixed three bugs and did some
stress testing by building Apache OpenOffice on top of it
so it is now in good shape to bring back.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D5007
Submitted by: Damjan Jovanovic
Reviewed by: pfg
Tested by: pho
Relnotes: Yes
MFC after: 2 months (only 10.x)
Add support for Huntington MCDI licensing interface to common code.
Ported from Linux net driver IOCTL functions with restructuring for
initial support for V3 licensing API.
Submitted by: Richard Houldsworth <rhouldsworth at solarflare.com>
Reviewed by: gnn
Sponsored by: Solarflare Communications, Inc.
MFC after: 2 days
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4918
Submitted by: Howard Su <howard0su@gmail.com>
Reviewed by: delphij, royger, adrian
Approved by: adrian (mentor)
Sponsored by: Microsoft OSTC
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4676
Creating some files together to do the build system changes in one go.
Submitted by: Mark Spender <mspender at solarflare.com>
Sponsored by: Solarflare Communications, Inc.
MFC after: 2 days
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4859
The upcoming GELI support in the loader reuses parts of this code
Some ifdefs are added, and some code is moved outside of existing ifdefs
The HMAC parts of GELI are broken out into their own file, to separate
them from the kernel crypto/openssl dependant parts that are replaced
in the boot code.
Passed the GELI regression suite (tools/regression/geom/eli)
Files=20 Tests=14996
Result: PASS
Reviewed by: pjd, delphij
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: ScaleEngine Inc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4699
rtwnfw got added in r293009 and depends on source-less and
non-free microcode in sys/contrib/dev/rtwn.
PR: 205874
Submitted by: Fabian Keil
Obtained from: ElectroBSD
cperciva's libmd implementation is 5-30% faster
The same was done for SHA256 previously in r263218
cperciva's implementation was lacking SHA-384 which I implemented, validated against OpenSSL and the NIST documentation
Extend sbin/md5 to create sha384(1)
Chase dependancies on sys/crypto/sha2/sha2.{c,h} and replace them with sha512{c.c,.h}
Reviewed by: cperciva, des, delphij
Approved by: secteam, bapt (mentor)
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: ScaleEngine Inc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3929
The licence grant says something exactly the same as the atheros patent
grant, which is "As long as you use this firmware on our chips, everything
is totally okay." Now, I'm pretty sure if that we /have/ to have this,
we're going to have to have it for every other firmware for every other
device in the tree.
So, I'll flip this off in -HEAD for now so people stop asking about
why rsu/urtwn don't work out of the box, and I'll kick off a larger
discussion about this in the new year.
cards supported by cxgbe(4).
On the host side this driver interfaces with the storage stack via the
ICL (iSCSI Common Layer) in the kernel. On the wire the traffic is
standard iSCSI (SCSI over TCP as per RFC 3720/7143 etc.) that
interoperates with all other standards compliant implementations. The
driver is layered on top of the TOE driver (t4_tom) and promotes
connections being handled by t4_tom to iSCSI ULP (Upper Layer Protocol)
mode. Hardware assistance in this mode includes:
- Full TCP processing.
- iSCSI PDU identification and recovery within the TCP stream.
- Header and/or data digest insertion (tx) and verification (rx).
- Zero copy (both tx and rx).
Man page will follow in a separate commit in a couple of weeks.
Relnotes: Yes
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
The mdio driver interface is generally useful for devices that require
MDIO without the full MII bus interface. This lifts the driver/interface
out of etherswitch(4), and adds a mdio(4) man page.
Submitted by: Landon Fuller <landon@landonf.org>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4606
Add support for two new devices: X552 SFP+ 10 GbE, and the single port
version of X550T.
Submitted by: erj
Reviewed by: gnn
Sponsored by: Intel Corporation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4186
to do is to clean up the timer handling using the async-drain.
Other optimizations may be coming to go with this. Whats here
will allow differnet tcp implementations (one included).
Reviewed by: jtl, hiren, transports
Sponsored by: Netflix Inc.
Differential Revision: D4055
include the following list of changes:
- Added eswitch ACL table management
Introduce API for managing ACL table.
This API include the following features:
1) vlan filter - for VST/VGT+ support.
2) spoofcheck.
3) robust functionality to allow/drop general untagged/tagged traffic.
4) support for both ingress and egress ACL types.
- Added loopback filter to the vacl table.
- Added multicast list set in the vPort context
- Added promiscuous mode set in the vPort context
- Set the vlan list in vPort context
1) Check caps if VLAN list is not longer than FW supports
2) Set MODIFY_NIC_VPORT_CONTEXT command
- Changed MLX5_EEPROM_MAX_BYTES from 48 to 32 so that a single EEPROM
reading cannot cross the 128-byte boundary. Previously reading the
MCIA register was done in batches of 48 bytes. The third reading
would then by-pass the 127th byte, which means that part of the low
page and part of the high page would be read at the same time, which
created a bug:
1st: 0-47 bytes
2nd: 48-95 bytes
3rd: 96-143 bytes
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4411
driver. This includes binding all interrupt and worker threads
according to the RSS configuration, setting up correct Toeplitz
hashing keys as given by RSS and setting the correct mbuf
hashtype for all received traffic.
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4410
vtophys() when loading mbufs for transmission and reception. While at
it all pointer arithmetic and cast qualifier issues were fixed, mostly
related to transmission and reception.
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4284
IPv4/IPv6 checksum offloading and VLAN tag insertion/stripping.
Since uether doesn't provide a way to announce driver specific offload
capabilities to upper stack, checksum offloading support needs more work
and will be done in the future.
Special thanks to Hayes Wang from RealTek who gave input.
Use hhook(9) framework to achieve ability of loading and unloading
if_enc(4) kernel module. INET and INET6 code on initialization registers
two helper hooks points in the kernel. if_enc(4) module uses these helper
hook points and registers its hooks. IPSEC code uses these hhook points
to call helper hooks implemented in if_enc(4).
This should be a big no-op pass; and reduces the size of if_ath.c.
I'm hopefully soon going to take a whack at the USB support for ath(4)
and this'll require some reuse of the busdma memory code.
Hacks to enable target mode there complicated code, while didn't really
work. And for outdated hardware fixing it is not really interesting.
Initiator mode tested with Qlogic 1080 adapter is still working fine.
default and add a manual page for mlx5en. The mlx5 module contains
shared code for both infiniband and ethernet. The mlx5en module
contains specific code for ethernet functionality only. A mlx5ib
module is in the works for infiniband support.
Supported hardware:
- ConnectX-4: 10/20/25/40/50/56/100Gb/s speeds.
- ConnectX-4 LX: 10/25/40/50Gb/s speeds (low power consumption)
Refer to the mlx5en(4) manual page for a comprehensive list.
The team porting the mlx5 driver(s) to FreeBSD:
- Hans Petter Selasky <hselasky@freebsd.org>
- Oded Shanoon <odeds@mellanox.com>
- Meny Yossefi <menyy@mellanox.com>
- Shany Michaely <shanim@mellanox.com>
- Shahar Klein <shahark@mellanox.com>
- Daria Genzel <dariaz@mellanox.com>
- Mark Bloch <markb@mellanox.com>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4163
Submitted by: Mark Block <markb@mellanox.com>
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies
Reviewed by: gnn @
MFC after: 3 days
work with the upcoming async-drain functionality. Tests can be added
to the tests directory and then the framework can be used to launch
those tests.
MFC after: 1 month
Sponsored by: Netflix Inc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1755
from Mellanox Technologies. The current driver supports ethernet
speeds up to and including 100 GBit/s. Infiniband support will be
done later.
The code added is not compiled by default, which will be done by a
separate commit.
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies
MFC after: 2 weeks
- Move all files related to the LinuxKPI into sys/compat/linuxkpi and
its subfolders.
- Update sys/conf/files and some Makefiles to use new file locations.
- Added description of COMPAT_LINUXKPI to sys/conf/NOTES which in turn
adds the LinuxKPI to all LINT builds.
- The LinuxKPI can be added to the kernel by setting the
COMPAT_LINUXKPI option. The OFED kernel option no longer builds the
LinuxKPI into the kernel. This was done to keep the build rules for
the LinuxKPI in sys/conf/files simple.
- Extend the LinuxKPI module to include support for USB by moving the
Linux USB compat from usb.ko to linuxkpi.ko.
- Bump the FreeBSD_version.
- A universe kernel build has been done.
Reviewed by: np @ (cxgb and cxgbe related changes only)
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies
These are not target-specific modules, so the logic to build them should
be common. This also enables them for arm64.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
linux_syscallnames[] from linux_* to linux32_* to avoid conflicts with
linux64.ko. While here, add support for linux64 binaries to systrace.
- Update NOPROTO entries in amd64/linux/syscalls.master to match the
main table to fix systrace build.
- Add a special case for union l_semun arguments to the systrace
generation.
- The systrace_linux32 module now only builds the systrace_linux32.ko.
module on amd64.
- Add a new systrace_linux module that builds on both i386 and amd64.
For i386 it builds the existing systrace_linux.ko. For amd64 it
builds a systrace_linux.ko for 64-bit binaries.
Reviewed by: markj
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3954
It turns out that it is pretty easy to make CloudABI work on ARM64. We
essentially only need to copy over the sysvec from AMD64 and ensure that
we use ARM64 specific registers.
As there is an overlap between function argument and return registers,
we do need to extend cloudabi64_schedtail() to only set its values if
we're actually forking. Not when we're creating a new thread.
Reviewed by: kib
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3917
In order to make it easier to support CloudABI on ARM64, move out all of
the bits from the AMD64 cloudabi_sysvec.c into a new file
cloudabi_module.c that would otherwise remain identical. This reduces
the AMD64 specific code to just ~160 lines.
Reviewed by: kib
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3974
MACHINE_CPUARCH expands to aarch64 for arm64, whereas MACHINE always
corresponds to the directory name under sys/ that contains the sources
for that architecture.