code. The primary client of this is probably going to be ZFS encryption.
Reviewed by: jhb, cem
Sponsored by: iXsystems Inc, Kithrup Enterprises
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19298
Prior to this revision, vtpci's BUS_READ_IVAR method on VIRTIO_IVAR_SUBVENDOR
accidentally returned the PCI subdevice.
The typo seems to have been introduced with the original commit adding
VIRTIO_IVAR_{{SUB,}DEVICE,{SUB,}VENDOR} to virtio_pci. The commit log and code
strongly suggest that the ivar was intended to return the subvendor rather than
the subdevice; it was likely just a copy/paste mistake.
Go ahead and rectify that.
operations already in its queue were not being properly drained.
The GEOM framework does the queue draining, but the module needs
to wait for the draining to happen. The waiting is done by adding
a g_nop_providergone() function to wait for the I/O operations to
finish up. This change is similar to change -r345758 made to the
memory-disk driver.
Submitted by: Chuck Silvers
Tested by: Chuck Silvers
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Netflix
The upper bound for the valid address from the large map used
LARGEMAP_MAX_ADDRESS instead of LARGEMAP_MIN_ADDRESS. Provide a
function-like macro for proper upper value.
Noted by: markj
Reviewed by: alc, markj
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20386
Similar to PG_FRAME and PG_PS_FRAME, it denotes the mask of the
physical address component of 1G superpage PDP entry.
Reviewed by: alc, markj
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20386
The ixl.4 manual page has documented that the threshold falsely detects
interrupt storms on 40Gbit NICs as long ago as 2015, and we have seen
similar false positives with the ioat(4) DMA device (which can push GB/s).
For example, synthetic load can be generated with tools/tools/ioat
'ioatcontrol 0 200 8192 1 1000' (allocate 200x8kB buffers, generate an
interrupt for each one, and do this for 1000 milliseconds). With
storm-detection disabled, the Broadwell-EP version of this device is capable
of generating ~350k real interrupts per second.
The following historical context comes from jhb@: Originally, the threshold
worked around incorrect routing of PCI INTx interrupts on single-CPU systems
which would end up in a hard hang during boot. Since the threshold was
added, our PCI interrupt routing was improved, most PCI interrupts use
edge-triggered MSI instead of level-triggered INTx, and typical systems have
multiple CPUs available to service interrupts.
On the off chance that the threshold is useful in the future, it remains
available as a tunable and sysctl.
Reviewed by: jhb
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20401
- Perform ifp mismatch checks (to determine if a send tag is allocated
for a different ifp than the one the packet is being output on), in
ip_output() and ip6_output(). This avoids sending packets with send
tags to ifnet drivers that don't support send tags.
Since we are now checking for ifp mismatches before invoking
if_output, we can now try to allocate a new tag before invoking
if_output sending the original packet on the new tag if allocation
succeeds.
To avoid code duplication for the fragment and unfragmented cases,
add ip_output_send() and ip6_output_send() as wrappers around
if_output and nd6_output_ifp, respectively. All of the logic for
setting send tags and dealing with send tag-related errors is done
in these wrapper functions.
For pseudo interfaces that wrap other network interfaces (vlan and
lagg), wrapper send tags are now allocated so that ip*_output see
the wrapper ifp as the ifp in the send tag. The if_transmit
routines rewrite the send tags after performing an ifp mismatch
check. If an ifp mismatch is detected, the transmit routines fail
with EAGAIN.
- To provide clearer life cycle management of send tags, especially
in the presence of vlan and lagg wrapper tags, add a reference count
to send tags managed via m_snd_tag_ref() and m_snd_tag_rele().
Provide a helper function (m_snd_tag_init()) for use by drivers
supporting send tags. m_snd_tag_init() takes care of the if_ref
on the ifp meaning that code alloating send tags via if_snd_tag_alloc
no longer has to manage that manually. Similarly, m_snd_tag_rele
drops the refcount on the ifp after invoking if_snd_tag_free when
the last reference to a send tag is dropped.
This also closes use after free races if there are pending packets in
driver tx rings after the socket is closed (e.g. from tcpdrop).
In order for m_free to work reliably, add a new CSUM_SND_TAG flag in
csum_flags to indicate 'snd_tag' is set (rather than 'rcvif').
Drivers now also check this flag instead of checking snd_tag against
NULL. This avoids false positive matches when a forwarded packet
has a non-NULL rcvif that was treated as a send tag.
- cxgbe was relying on snd_tag_free being called when the inp was
detached so that it could kick the firmware to flush any pending
work on the flow. This is because the driver doesn't require ACK
messages from the firmware for every request, but instead does a
kind of manual interrupt coalescing by only setting a flag to
request a completion on a subset of requests. If all of the
in-flight requests don't have the flag when the tag is detached from
the inp, the flow might never return the credits. The current
snd_tag_free command issues a flush command to force the credits to
return. However, the credit return is what also frees the mbufs,
and since those mbufs now hold references on the tag, this meant
that snd_tag_free would never be called.
To fix, explicitly drop the mbuf's reference on the snd tag when the
mbuf is queued in the firmware work queue. This means that once the
inp's reference on the tag goes away and all in-flight mbufs have
been queued to the firmware, tag's refcount will drop to zero and
snd_tag_free will kick in and send the flush request. Note that we
need to avoid doing this in the middle of ethofld_tx(), so the
driver grabs a temporary reference on the tag around that loop to
defer the free to the end of the function in case it sends the last
mbuf to the queue after the inp has dropped its reference on the
tag.
- mlx5 preallocates send tags and was using the ifp pointer even when
the send tag wasn't in use. Explicitly use the ifp from other data
structures instead.
- Sprinkle some assertions in various places to assert that received
packets don't have a send tag, and that other places that overwrite
rcvif (e.g. 802.11 transmit) don't clobber a send tag pointer.
Reviewed by: gallatin, hselasky, rgrimes, ae
Sponsored by: Netflix
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20117
This doesn't recognize any features yet, but does parse the features
string. It advertises an arbitrary packet size of 4k.
Reviewed by: markj, Scott Phillips <d.scott.phillips@intel.com>
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20308
vtruncbuf takes a "struct ucred*" argument. AFAICT, it's been unused ever
since that function was first added in r34611. Remove it. Also, remove some
"struct ucred" arguments from fuse and nfs functions that were only used by
vtruncbuf.
Reviewed by: cem
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20377
If the file is verified - do not allow write
otherwise do not allow read.
Add O_ACCMODE to stand.h
Reviewed by: stevek, mindal_semihalf.com
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: Juniper Networks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20387
Having this option enabled by default on PowerPC64 kernels makes
booting ISO images much easier when on PowerNV.
With it, the ISO may simply be given to the -i flag of kexec.
Better yet, the ISO may be loop mounted on PetitBoot and its
kernel may be used to load itself.
Without this option, booting ISOs on remote PPC64 machines usually
involve preparing a separate kernel, with this option enabled.
The point of r345008 was to reset the Command Reference Number (CRN)
in some situations where a device stayed in the topology, but had
changed somehow.
This can include moving from a switch connection to a direct
connection or vice versa, or a device that temporarily goes away
and comes back. (e.g. moving to a different switch port)
There were a couple of bugs in that change:
- We were reporting that a device had not changed whenever the
Establish Image Pair bit was not set. That is not quite correct.
Instead, if the Establish Image Pair bit stays the same (set or
not), the device hasn't changed in that way.
- We weren't setting PRLI Word0 in the port database when a new
device arrived, so comparisons with the old value for the
Establish Image Pair bit weren't really possible. So, make sure
PRLI Word0 is set in the port database for new devices.
- We were resetting the CRN whenever the Establish Image Pair bit
was set for a device, even when the device had stayed the same
and the value of the bit hadn't changed. Now, only reset the
CRN for devices that have changed, not devices that sayed the
same.
The result of all of this was that if we had a single FC device on
an FC port and it went away and came back, we would wind up
correctly resetting the CRN.
But, if we had multiple devices connected via a switch, and there
was any change in one or more of those devices, all of the devices
that stayed the same would also have their CRN values reset.
The result, from a user standpoint, is that the tape drives, etc.
would all start to time out commands and the initiator would send
aborts.
sys/dev/isp/isp.c:
In isp_pdb_add_update(), look at whether the Establish
Image Pair bit has changed as part of the check to
determine whether a device is still the same. This was
causing erroneous change notifications. Also, when
creating a new port database entry, initialize the
PRLI Word 0 values.
sys/dev/isp/isp_freebsd.c:
In isp_async(), in the changed/stayed case, instead of
looking at the Establish Image Pair bit to determine
whether to reset the CRN, look at the command value.
(Changed vs. Stayed.) Only reset the CRN for devices
that have changed.
Sponsored by: Spectra Logic
MFC after: 3 days
It is possible for the kernel mapping to be created with superpage by
directly installing pde using pmap_enter_2mpage() without filling the
corresponding page table page. This can happen e.g. if the range is
already backed by reservation and vm_fault_soft_fast() conditions are
satisfied, which was observed on the pipe_map.
In this case, demotion must fill the page obtained from the pmap
radix, same as if the page is newly allocated. Use PG_PROMOTED bit as
an indicator that the page is valid, instead of the wire count of the
page table page.
Since the PG_PROMOTED bit is set on pde when we leave TLB entries for
4k pages around, which in particular means that the ptes were filled,
it provides more correct indicator. Note that pmap_protect_pde()
clears PG_PROMOTED, which handles the case when protection was changed
on the superpage without adjusting ptes.
Reported by: pho
In collaboration with: alc
Tested by: alc, pho
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20380
It doesn't make sense to limit to -j12 anymore, build scalability
is better than it used to be. Fold the hint into the description
of the universe target.
Reviewed by: imp
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20342
Allow support of other VCSes. Note that two other nanobsd files already
had a similar case, excluding .git and .hg in addition to CVS and .svn.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
since r286195.
Do not forget results of route lookup and initialize rt and ifp pointers.
PR: 238098
Submitted by: Masse Nicolas <nicolas.masse at stormshield eu>
MFC after: 1 week
command to simplify firewall reloading.
The `missing` option suppresses EEXIST error code, but does check that
existing table has the same parameters as new one. The `or-flush` option
implies `missing` option and additionally does flush for table if it
is already exist.
Submitted by: lev
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D18339
That made, for example, gpioc -l output quite hard to read and parse.
Also, fix formatting of a nearby statement with too long lines.
MFC after: 2 weeks
For older versions of zlib, dummy was a workaround for compilers that do not
handle opaque type definition well; on FreeBSD, it's representing a value
that is not really useful for monitoring purposes, and the field would be gone
in newer zlib versions.
PR: 229763
Submitted by: Yoshihiro Ota <ota at j.email.ne.jp>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20222
Fixed by r348215, bectl ujail first attempts the trivial fetch of a jid by
passing the first argument to 'ujail' to jail_getid(3) in case a jid/name
have been passed in instead of a BE name. For numerically named BEs, this
was doing the wrong thing: instead of failing to locate the jid specified
and falling back to mountpath search, jail_getid(3) would return the input
as-is.
While here, I've fixed bectl_jail_cleanup which still used a hard-coded pool
name that was overlooked w.r.t. other work that was in-flight around the
same time.
MFC after: 3 days
Currently, if jail_getid(3) is passed in a numeric string, it assumes that
this is a jid string and passes it back converted to an int without checking
that it's a valid/existing jid. This breaks consumers that might use
jail_getid(3) to see if it can trivially grab a jid from a name if that name
happens to be numeric but not actually the name/jid of the jail. Instead of
returning -1 for the jail not existing, it'll return the int version of the
input and the consumer will not fallback to trying other methods.
Pass the numeric input to jail_get(2) as the jid for validation, rather than
the name. This works well- the kernel enforces that jid=name if name is
numeric, so doing the safe thing and checking numeric input as a jid will
still DTRT based on the description of jail_getid.
Reported by: Wes Maag
Reviewed by: jamie, Wes Maag
MFC after: 3 days
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20388
- Add a write_mem counterpart to read_mem to handle writes to MMIO.
- Add support for the GDB 'M' packet to write bytes to the guest's
memory. For MMIO writes, attempt to batch writes up into words.
This is imprecise, but if you write a single 2 or 4-byte aligned
word, it should be treated as a single MMIO write operation.
- While here, tidy up the parsing of the 'm' command used for reading
memory to match 'M'.
Reviewed by: markj, Scott Phillips <d.scott.phillips@intel.com>
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20307
- Triple DES has been formally deprecated in Kerberos (RFC 8429)
and is soon to be deprecated in IPsec (RFC 8221).
- Blowfish is deprecated. FreeBSD doesn't support its successor
(Twofish).
- MD5 is generally considered a weak digest that has known attacks.
geli refuses to create new volumes using these algorithms via 'geli
init'. It also warns when attaching to existing volumes or creating
temporary volumes via 'geli onetime' . The plan is to fully remove
support for these algorithms in FreeBSD 13.
Note that none of these algorithms have ever been the default
algorithm used by geli(8). Users would have had to explicitly select
these algorithms when creating volumes in the past.
Reviewed by: cem, delphij
MFC after: 3 days
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20344
All of these algorithms are either explicitly marked MUST NOT, or they
are implicitly MUST NOTs by virtue of not being included in IETF's
list of protocols at all despite having assignments from IANA.
Specifically, this adds warnings for the following ciphers:
- des-cbc
- blowfish-cbc
- cast128-cbc
- des-deriv
- des-32iv
- camellia-cbc
Warnings for the following authentication algorithms are also added:
- hmac-md5
- keyed-md5
- keyed-sha1
- hmac-ripemd160
Reviewed by: cem, gnn
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20340
Pull the responsibility for zeroing events, which is general to any
conceivable implementation of a random device algorithm, out of the
algorithm-specific Fortuna code and into the callers. Most callers
indirect through random_fortuna_process_event(), so add the logic there.
Most callers already explicitly bzeroed the events they provided, so the
logic in Fortuna was mostly redundant.
Add one missing bzero in randomdev_accumulate(). Also, remove a redundant
bzero in the same function -- randomdev_hash_finish() is obliged to bzero
the hash state.
Reviewed by: delphij
Approved by: secteam(delphij)
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20318
Add Chacha20 mode to Encrypted Kernel Crash Dumps.
Chacha20 does not require messages to be multiples of block size, so it is
valid to use the cipher on non-block-sized messages without the explicit
padding AES-CBC would require. Therefore, allow use with simultaneous dump
compression. (Continue to disallow use of AES-CBC EKCD with compression.)
dumpon(8) gains a -C cipher flag to select between chacha and aes-cbc.
It defaults to chacha if no -C option is provided. The man page documents this
behavior.
Relnotes: sure
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
This takes the SPCR code currently in uart_cpu_arm64.c, moves it into
a new uart_cpu_acpi.c (with some associated refactoring), and uses it
from both arm64 and x86.
An SPCR serial port address AccessWidth field value of 0 ("reserved")
is now treated as 1 ("byte access") in order to work around a buggy
SPCR table on Amazon EC2 i3.metal instances.
Reviewed by: manu, Greg V
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: https://www.patreon.com/cperciva
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20357
This adds some new commands to loader :
- pnpmatch
This takes a pnpinfo string as argument and tries to find a kernel module
associated with it. -v and -d option are available and are the same as in
devmatch (v is verbose, d dumps the hints).
- pnpload
This takes a pnpinfo string as argument and tries to load a kernel module
associated with it.
- pnpautoload
This will attempt to load every kernel module for each buses. Each buses are
probed, the probe function will generate pnpinfo string and load kernel module
associated with it if it exists.
Only simplebus for FDT system is implemented for now.
Since we need the dtb and overlays to be applied before searching the tree
fdt_devmatch_next will load and apply the dtb + overlays.
All the pnp parsing code comes from devmatch and is the same at 99%.
Reviewed by: imp, kevans
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19498
Use the .PATH mechanism instead so keep installing them from lib/libc/gen
While here revert 347961 and 347893 which are no longer needed
Discussed with: manu
Tested by: manu
ok manu@
Some clocks used the NM type but this clock is for the ones with the
formula "clk = clkin / n / m" and not "clk = clkin * n / m"
Use the new frac clock for them.