Changes since 1.25.6.0 are listed here. This list comes from the
Release Notes for "Chelsio Unified Wire 3.14.0.4 for Linux" dated
2021-07-08.
Fixes
-----
BASE:
- Wait 5ms before and after the i2c command that clears the mod_select.
This fixes incorrect port module type read from i2c.
Obtained from: Chelsio Communications
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
This controller supports 2.5G/1G/100MB/10MB speeds, and allows
tx/rx checksum offload, TSO, LRO, and multi-queue operation.
The driver was derived from code contributed by Intel, and modified
by Netgate to fit into the iflib framework.
Thanks to Mike Karels for testing and feedback on the driver.
Reviewed by: bcr (manpages), kbowling, scottl, erj
MFC after: 1 month
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: Rubicon Communications, LLC ("Netgate")
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D30668
Rather than extending syr827 for syr828 (as initially done in D31103)
switch to the Fairchild Semiconductor Corporation fan53555 implementation
which is in-tree but was not attached to the build. The fan53555
implementation also supports syr827/syr8278 already. [1]
Update NOTES and the arm64 GENERIC configuration for the switch.
syr827 for now stays in the tree but is not used by any
kernel configuration.
Suggested by: mmel [1]
Reviewed by: mmel, manu
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D31112
The r intc interrupt controller seems to do a lot of things :
- It can handle the NMI interrupt
- It have local interrupts for some device that also can be muxed with GIC
- It can serve as an forwarder for the GIC
It's mostly used for deepsleep/wakeup if I understood correctly and we do not
support this on arm64.
For now just forward everything to the GIC so interrupts works again for device
which now have this interrupts controller set since dts v5.12
Sponsored by: Diablotin Systems
This version is intended to be used with the 0.29.4 version of the
ice(4) driver, which will be be committed afterwards.
Signed-off-by: Eric Joyner <erj@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed by: stallamr_netapp.com
Sponsored by: Intel Corporation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D30887
Implement support for the NXP LS1028A SoC MDIO controller.
It is attached to the internal PCI root complex.
The controller is used to communicate with PHYs of ports connected
to the internal switch.
Submitted by: Lukasz Hajec <lha@semihalf.com>
Reviewed by: manu
Obtained from: Semihalf
Sponsored by: Alstom Group
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D30731
ENETC it a gigabit Ethernet controller found on the LS1028A board.
It supports basic VLAN offloads - tag extraction, injection and hardware
filtering. Inband MDIO connectivity is used for link status
monitoring through the miibus interface. Fixed-link mode is also
supported, which allows for operation of internal cpu to switch port.
Since no admin interrupts are present in hardware, link status polling
has to be used.
Due to a hardware bug software reset of the NIC results in a external
abort. Because of that most of the hardware initialization is done
during attach. This also means that in the case of an fatal error full
board reset is required.
The enetc_hw.h header was imporoted from Linux. It is dual licensed.
Submitted by: Kornel Duleba <mindal@semihalf.com>
Obtained from: Semihalf
Sponsored by: Alstom Group
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D30729
Stop confusing people, retire COMPAT_LINUX and COMPAT_LINUX32 kernel
build options. Since we have 32 and 64 bit Linux emulators, we can't build both
emulators together into the kernel. I don't think it matters, Linux emulation
depends on loadable modules (via rc).
Cut LINPROCFS and LINSYSFS for consistency.
PR: 215061
Reviewed by: bcr (manpages), trasz
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D30751
MFC after: 2 weeks
jhb@ pointed out an extra plural in this phrase and a gramatical error,
so reword a little to be less awkward to fix both issues.
Sponsored by: Netflix
Last an(4) devices have been End Of Life and End Of Sale in 2007.
Time to remove this driver.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D30679
Reviewed by: imp (earlier version), emaste (earlier version)
Sponsored by: Diablotin Systems
This framework is initial implementation of the simple-audio-card compatible
audio driver framework. It provides glue for CPU/codec/aux device.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27830
Some arm64 SoCs have nodes in their fdts that describe devices
connected to the internal PCI bus. One such SoC is Freescale LS1028A.
In order to access information stored in them we need to add ofw bus
support to pci. Pass devinfo request up to our parent, which
is responsible for parsing all the information.
It allows to use ofw interface on PCI devices that support it.
This method is similar to sys/dev/acpica/acpi_pci.c.
Submitted by: Kornel Duleba <mindal@semihalf.com>
Reviewed by: andrew
Obtained from: Semihalf
Sponsored by: Alstom Group
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D30181
The vmbus ISR needs to live in a trampoline. Dynamically allocating a
trampoline at driver initialization time poses some difficulties due to
the fact that the KENTER macro assumes that the offset relative to
tramp_idleptd is fixed at static link time. Another problem is that
native_lapic_ipi_alloc() uses setidt(), which assumes a fixed trampoline
offset.
Rather than fight this, move the Hyper-V ISR to i386/exception.s. Add a
new HYPERV kernel option to make this optional, and configure it by
default on i386. This is sufficient to make use of vmbus(4) after the
4/4 split. Note that vmbus cannot be loaded dynamically and both the
HYPERV option and device must be configured together. I think this is
not too onerous a requirement, since vmbus(4) was previously
non-functional.
Reported by: Harry Schmalzbauer <freebsd@omnilan.de>
Tested by: Harry Schmalzbauer <freebsd@omnilan.de>
Reviewed by: whu, kib
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D30577
OBJS are automatically added to CLEANFILES. For pre-built objects, this
is not desirable since it will delete the object from the source
tree. Introduce EXTRA_OBJS which list these object files, but aren't
added to clean files.
Sponsored by: Netflix
Reviewed by: emaste@
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D30615
The KCSAN_ENABLED variable is non-empty when the kernel is being built
with KCSAN. This allows us to disable modules that are known to be
broken.
There was a bug where we would check if it was defined. As this is
always the case the KCSAN_ENABLED variable would be set when building
modules so we would never build such a module. Fix this by checking
if the value is empty before passing it on to the module stage.
This doesn't affect how modules are built as the CFLAGS passed to
modules has the correct check.
Reported by: rstone
Sponsored by: Innovate UK
Changes since 1.25.0.0 are listed here. This list comes from the
Release Notes for the "Chelsio Unified Wire v3.14.0.3 for Linux"
release dated 2021-05-21.
Fixes
-----
BASE:
- Fixed Back to back T6 100G-CR4 link coming up with NO FEC sometimes.
- [T5] Try to bring up link in 1G speed if link doesn't come up on 10G.
- Fixed a bug to not allow BaseR fec in 100G speed.
- Fixed linkup issues on BT adapter in 1G and 100M speed.
- Fixed an issue to allow driver to send VI_ENABLE multiple times (once
with rx disable and then later rx enable).
- Fixed rate limiting not working on class number 16 to 30.
- Fixed backward compatibility issue in port type interpretation with vpd
version 0x80.
ETH:
- Fixed a case when firmware failed to deliver NIC WR completion to host.
- No rate limit support for WR ETH_TX_PKTS2 due to performance reasons.
OFLD
- Fixed a connection hang in SO adapters when tp_plen_max (set by driver)
is more than the window size.
- Added fw_filter_vnic_mode to firmware API file (t4fw_interface.h)
- Use correct rx channel in coprocessor crypto completion (CPL_FW6_PLD). This
was causing out of order completion to host.
FOiSCSI
- Fixed a crash due to unaligned access of ipv6 address.
- Fixed a crash during lun reset.
Enhancements
------------
ETH:
- Rate limiting support added for encapsulated (vxlan, nvgre, geneve) NIC TCP
packets.
OFLD:
- More than 128 SGLs supported in FW_RI_FR_NSMR_WR. Now, more than 16GB
(upto 64GB) of PBLs can be written with single FW_RI_FR_NSMR_WR.
Obtained from: Chelsio Communications
MFC after: 1 month
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
This removes support for loadable software backends. The KTLS OCF
support is now always included in kernels with KERN_TLS and the
ktls_ocf.ko module has been removed. The software encryption routines
now take an mbuf directly and use the TLS mbuf as the crypto buffer
when possible.
Bump __FreeBSD_version for software backends in ports.
Reviewed by: gallatin, markj
Sponsored by: Netflix
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D30138
This driver is used to power up sdio card or eMMC.
It handle the reset-gpio, clocks and needed delays for powerup/powerdown.
Sponsored by: Diablotin Systems
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D30288
It's a class0 driver that implements some pcib methods and creates
a pci bus as its children.
The "ofw_pci" name will be used by a new driver that will be a subclass
of the pci bus.
No functional changes intended.
Submitted by: Kornel Duleba <mindal@semihalf.com>
Reviewed by: andrew
Obtained from: Semihalf
Sponsored by: Alstom Group
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D30226
Summary:
To make it easier to build a kernel with PowerISA 2.06 atomics (sub-word
atomics), add a kernel config option. User space still needs to specify
it as a CFLAG but that seems easier to do than for the kernel config.
Reviewed By: luporl
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D29809
PVHv1 was officially removed from Xen in 4.9, so just axe the related
code from FreeBSD.
Note FreeBSD supports PVHv2, which is the replacement for PVHv1.
Sponsored by: Citrix Systems R&D
Reviewed by: kib, Elliott Mitchell
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D30228
The new driver provides probe and attach functions for the NXP LS1028A
clockgen and passes configuration information to QorIQ clockgen class.
Submitted by: Lukasz Hajec <lha@semihalf.com>
Obtained from: Semihalf
Sponsored by: Alstom Group
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D30125
During early qemu development, the /soc node was marked as compatible
with "riscv-virtio-soc" instead of "simple-bus".
This was changed in qemu 53f54508dae6 in Sep 2018, and predates the
baseline required qemu version (5.0) for riscv by a wide margin.
The generic simplebus code handles attachment in all cases nowadays.
Sponsored by: Tag1 Consulting, Inc.
Reviewed by: jrtc27, mhorne
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D30011
This adds a generic sim that abstract a lot of what needs to be implemented
in a driver for mmccam support.
A new interface with three methods is added :
- mmc_sim_get_tran_settings: Use to get what the controller supports in term
of capabilities, freq etc ...
- mmc_sim_set_tran_settings: Use to change the speed/freq/etc of the
sdcard host controller
- mmc_sim_cam_request: Used for MMCIO requests
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27485
Reviewed by: kibab
KASAN enables the use of LLVM's AddressSanitizer in the kernel. This
feature makes use of compiler instrumentation to validate memory
accesses in the kernel and detect several types of bugs, including
use-after-frees and out-of-bounds accesses. It is particularly
effective when combined with test suites or syzkaller. KASAN has high
CPU and memory usage overhead and so is not suited for production
environments.
The runtime and pmap maintain a shadow of the kernel map to store
information about the validity of memory mapped at a given kernel
address.
The runtime implements a number of functions defined by the compiler
ABI. These are prefixed by __asan. The compiler emits calls to
__asan_load*() and __asan_store*() around memory accesses, and the
runtime consults the shadow map to determine whether a given access is
valid.
kasan_mark() is called by various kernel allocators to update state in
the shadow map. Updates to those allocators will come in subsequent
commits.
The runtime also defines various interceptors. Some low-level routines
are implemented in assembly and are thus not amenable to compiler
instrumentation. To handle this, the runtime implements these routines
on behalf of the rest of the kernel. The sanitizer implementation
validates memory accesses manually before handing off to the real
implementation.
The sanitizer in a KASAN-configured kernel can be disabled by setting
the loader tunable debug.kasan.disable=1.
Obtained from: NetBSD
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D29416
LLVM support for enabling KASAN has not yet landed so the option is not
yet usable, but hopefully this will change soon.
Reviewed by: imp, andrew
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D29454
Use .o files directly. Replace the .o.uu files that we uudecode with .o files.
Adjust the kernel and module build to cope.
Suggestions by: markj@, emaste@
Sposnored by: Netflix, Inc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D29636
uudecode the .o.uu files and commit directly to the tree. Adjust the build
infrastructure to cope with the new location, both for the kernel and modules.
Sposnored by: Netflix, Inc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D29635
Store the .o files directly in the tree. We no longer need to play uuencode
games like we did in the CVS days. Adjust the build infrastructure to match.
Reviewed by: markj@
Sposnored by: Netflix, Inc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D29634
We no longer need to use uuencode to uuencode files in our tree. Store the .o
file directly instead. Adjust the build to cope with the new arrangement.
Suggestions by: emaste, bz, donner
Reviewed by: markm
Sposnored by: Netflix, Inc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D29632
This will make future extensions of the API much easier.
The intent is to remove support for DIOCADDRULE in FreeBSD 14.
Reviewed by: markj (previous version), glebius (previous version)
MFC after: 4 weeks
Sponsored by: Rubicon Communications, LLC ("Netgate")
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D29557
Summary:
They're nearly identical, so don't use two copies. Merge the newer
driver into the older one, and move it to a common location.
Add the Semihalf and associated copyrights in addition to mine, since
it's a non-trivial amount of code merged.
Reviewed By: mw
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D29520
Handle the 'z' and 'Z' remote packets for manipulating hardware
watchpoints.
This could be expanded quite easily to support hardware or software
breakpoints as well.
https://sourceware.org/gdb/onlinedocs/gdb/Packets.html
Reviewed by: cem, markj
MFC after: 3 weeks
Sponsored by: NetApp, Inc.
Sponsored by: Klara, Inc.
NetApp PR: 51
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D29173
This warning is very rarely useful (inline is a hint and not mandatory).
This flag results in many warnings being printed when compiling C++
code that uses the standard library with GCC.
This flag was originally added in back in r94332 but the flag is a no-op
in Clang ("This diagnostic flag exists for GCC compatibility, and has no
effect in Clang"). Removing it should make the GCC build output slightly
more readable.
Reviewed By: jrtc27, imp
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D29235
This is a prerequisite to using these functions outside of ddb, but also
provides some cleanup and minor refactoring. This code is almost
entirely duplicated between the two implementations, the only
significant difference being the lack of dbreg synchronization on i386.
Cleanups are:
- demote some internal functions to static
- use the constant NDBREGS instead of a '4' literal
- remove K&R definitions
- some added comments
Reviewed by: kib, jhb
Sponsored by: NetApp, Inc.
Sponsored by: Klara, Inc.
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D29153
Clang 12 no longer supports -Wno-error-..., only the -Wno-error=...
style (which is already used everywhere else in the tree).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D29157
When I synchronized kern.mk with bsd.sys.mk, I accidentally changed
CCLDFLAGS to LDFLAGS which is not used by the kernel builds. This commit
should unbreak the GitHub actions cross-build CI. I didn't notice it
locally because cheribuild already passes -fuse-ld in the linker flags as
it predates this being done in the makefiles.
Reported By: Jose Luis Duran
Fixes: 172a624f0 ("Silence annoying and incorrect non-default linker warning with GCC")
This updates the driver to align with the version included in
the "Intel Ethernet Adapter Complete Driver Pack", version 25.6.
There are no major functional changes; this mostly contains
bug fixes and changes to prepare for new features. This version
of the driver uses the previously committed ice_ddp package
1.3.19.0.
Signed-off-by: Eric Joyner <erj@FreeBSD.org>
Tested by: jeffrey.e.pieper@intel.com
Sponsored by: Intel Corporation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D28640
The CROSS_TOOLCHAIN GCC .mk files include -B${CROSS_BINUTILS_PREFIX}, so
GCC will select the right linker and we don't need to warn.
While here also apply 17b8b8fb5f to kern.mk.
Test Plan: no more warning printed with CROSS_TOOLCHAIN=mips-gcc6
Reviewed By: jhb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D29015
This reduces the memory mapped to be closer to the minimal memory
needed to enable the MMU.
Reviewed by: mmel
Sponsored by: Innovate UK
Differential Revision:://reviews.freebsd.org/D27765
Add it to the x86 GENERIC and MINIMAL kernels
Sponsored by: Ampere Computing LLC
Submitted by: Klara Inc.
Reviewed by: rpokala
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D28738
This package is intended to be used with ice(4) version 0.28.1-k.
That update will happen in a forthcoming commit.
Signed-off-by: Eric Joyner <erj@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored by: Intel Corporation
Tested with glibc test suite.
The C variant in libkern performs excessive branching to find the zero
byte instead of using the bsfq instruction. The same code patched to use
it is still slower than the routine implemented here as the compiler
keeps neglecting to perform certain optimizations (like using leaq).
On top of that the routine can be used as a starting point for copyinstr
which operates on words intead of bytes.
The previous attempt had an instance of swapped operands to andq when
dealing with fully aligned case, which had a side effect of breaking the
code for certain corner cases. Noted by jrtc27.
Sample results:
$(perl -e "print 'A' x 3"):
stock: 211198039
patched:338626619
asm: 465609618
$(perl -e "print 'A' x 100"):
stock: 83151997
patched: 98285919
asm: 120719888
Reviewed by: jhb, kib
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D28779
This uses the chacha20 IETF and poly1305 implementations from
libsodium. A seperate auth_hash is created for the auth side whose
Setkey method derives the poly1305 key from the AEAD key and nonce as
described in RFC 8439.
Sponsored by: Netflix
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27837
Note that this algorithm implements the mode defined in RFC 8439.
Reviewed by: cem
Sponsored by: Netflix
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27836
FreeBSD when running as a dom0 under Xen is not supposed to access the
run time services directly, and instead should proxy the calls through
Xen using an hypercall interface that exposes access to selected run
time services.
Implement the efirt interface on top of the Xen provided hypercalls.
Sponsored by: Citrix Systems R&D
Reviewed by: kib
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D28621
The veriexec option is redundant, mac_veriexec is sufficient.
MFC after: 1 week
#
# 72 columns --|
#
# Uncomment and complete these metadata fields, as appropriate:
#
# PR: <If and which Problem Report is related.>
# Reported by: <If someone else reported the issue.>
# Reviewed by: <If someone else reviewed your modification.>
# Approved by: <If you needed approval for this commit.>
# Obtained from: <If the change is from a third party.>
# MFC after: <N [day[s]|week[s]|month[s]]. Request a reminder email>
# MFH: <Ports tree branch name. Request approval for merge.>
# Relnotes: <Set to 'yes' for mention in release notes.>
# Security: <Vulnerability reference (one per line) or description.>
# Sponsored by: <If the change was sponsored by an organization.>
# Pull Request: <https://github.com/freebsd/<repo>/pull/###>
# Differential Revision: <https://reviews.freebsd.org/D###>
#
# "Pull Request" and "Differential Revision" require the *full* GitHub or
# Phabricator URL. The commit author should be set appropriately, using
# `git commit --author` if someone besides the committer sent in the change.
#
# Uncomment and complete these metadata fields, as appropriate:
#
# PR:
# Reported by: <If someone else reported the issue.>
# Reviewed by: <If someone else reviewed your modification.>
# Approved by: <If you needed approval for this commit.>
# Obtained from: <If the change is from a third party.>
# MFC after: <N [day[s]|week[s]|month[s]]. Request a reminder email>
# MFH: <Ports tree branch name. Request approval for merge.>
# Relnotes: <Set to 'yes' for mention in release notes.>
# Security: <Vulnerability reference (one per line) or description.>
# Sponsored by: <If the change was sponsored by an organization.>
# Pull Request: <https://github.com/freebsd/<repo>/pull/###>
# Differential Revision: <https://reviews.freebsd.org/D###>
#
# "Pull Request" and "Differential Revision" require the *full* GitHub or
# Phabricator URL. The commit author should be set appropriately, using
# `git commit --author` if someone besides the committer sent in the change.
#
This reverts commit af366d353b.
Trips over '\xa4' byte and terminates early, as found in
lib/libc/gen/setdomainname_test:setdomainname_basic testcase
However, keep moving libkern/strlen.c out of conf/files.
Reported by: lwhsu
It appears that production versions of EPYC firmware get the _STA method right
for these nodes. In fact, this workaround breaks on production hardware by
including too many uart nodes. This work around was for pre-release hardware
that wound up not having a large deployment. Move this work around to a kernel
option since the machines that needed it have been powered off and are difficult
to resurrect. Should there be a more significant deployment than is understood,
we can restrict it based on smbios strings.
Discussed with: mmacy@, seanc@, jhb@
MFC After: 3 days
The C variant in libkern performs excessive branching to find the
non-zero byte instead of using the bsfq instruction. The same code
patched to use it is still slower than the routine implemented here
as the compiler keeps neglecting to perform certain optimizations
(like using leaq).
On top of that the routine can is a starting point for copyinstr
which operates on words instead of bytes.
Tested with glibc test suite.
Sample results (calls/s):
Haswell:
$(perl -e "print 'A' x 3"):
stock: 211198039
patched:338626619
asm: 465609618
$(perl -e "print 'A' x 100"):
stock: 83151997
patched: 98285919
asm: 120719888
AMD EPYC 7R32:
$(perl -e "print 'A' x 3"):
stock: 282523617
asm: 491498172
$(perl -e "print 'A' x 100"):
stock: 114857172
asm: 112082057
Userspace has OFED build enabled for quite some time, but kernel modules
were not. This is useless config because any userspace IB code requires
kernel support. So enable modules build by default.
Move WITH_OFED to WITHOUT_OFED since defaults are now enabled.
Reviewed by: emaste, hselasky, kevans
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: NVidia Networking / Mellanox Technologies
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D28460
The current uname is branch-cXXXX-gHASH
Three changes to make uname more useful.
1. Move from using git rev-list --count to git rev-lis --count --first-parent
since that gives a better, incrementing number.
2. Report this count as 'nXXXXX' rather than 'cXXXXX' because c is part of
a hash and we've changed the sematnics of XXXXX
3. Remove g to make HASH cut and pastable.
Durting review, #1 & #3 had the largest consensus. There was a diversity of
opinion on #2, but on the whole it was positive so I'll acknowledge the dissent,
but move forward with something seems to have support since the dissent was all
about what letter to use where I chose 'n'.
MFC After: 3 days
Reviewed by: rgrimes, emaste (earlier version)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D28338
This code implements a version of the devres framework found
working for various iwlwifi use cases and also providing functions
for ttm_page_alloc_dma.c from DRM.
Part of the framework replicates the consumed KPI, while others
are internal helper functions.
In addition the simple devm_k*malloc() consumers were implemented
and kvasprintf() was enhanced to also work for the devm_kasprintf()
case.
Addmittingly lkpi_devm_kmalloc_release() could be avoided but for
the overall understanding of the code and possible memory tracing
it may still be helpful.
Further devsres consumer are implemented for iwlwifi but will follow
later as the main reason for this change is to sort out overlap with
DRM.
Sponsored-by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Obtained-from: bz_iwlwifi
MFC After: 3 days
Reviewed-by: hselasky, manu
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D28189
Implement linux firmware KPI compat code.
This includes: request_firmware() request_firmware_nowait(),
request_firmware_direct(), firmware_request_nowarn(),
and release_firmware().
Given we will try to map requested names from natively ported
or full-linuxkpi-using drivers to a firmware(9) auto-loading
name format (.ko file name and image name matching),
we quieten firmware(9) and print success or failure (unless
the _nowarn() version was called) in the linuxkpi implementation.
At the moment we try up-to 4 different naming combinations,
with path stripped, original name, and requested name with '/'
or '.' replaced.
We do not currently defer loading in the "nowait" case.
Sponsored-by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Sponsored-by: Rubicon Communications, LLC ("Netgate")
(firmware(9) nowarn update from D27413)
MFC after: 3 days
Reviewed by: kib, manu (looked at older versions)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27414
This node is part of an A10-NSP (L2-BSA) development.
Carrier networks tend to stack three or more tags for internal
purposes and therefore hiding the service tags deep inside of the
stack. When decomposing such an access network frame, the processing
order is typically reversed: First distinguish by service, than by
other means.
This new netgragh node allows to bring the relevant VLAN in front (to
the out-most position). This way other netgraph nodes (like ng_vlan)
can operate on this specific type.
Reviewed by: manpages (gbe), brueffer (manpages), kp
Approved by: kp (mentor)
MFC after: 1 month
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: IKS Service GmbH
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D22076
nids(4) was a clever idea in the early 2000's when the market was
flooded with 10/100 NICs with Windows-only drivers, but that hasn't been
the case for ages and the driver has had no meaningful maintenance in
ages. It only supports Windows-XP era drivers.
Also remove:
- ndis support from wpa_supplicant
- ndiscvt(8)
Reviewed By: emaste, bcr (manpages)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27609
gitup writes a .gituprevision file into the shallow clone directory. Read that
file and print commit information only.
Submitted by: Michael Osipov <michael.osipov@siemens.com>
Pull Request: https://github.com/freebsd/freebsd-src/pull/449
While here, drop the redundant branch name from the git output and don't
count commits in shallow clones.
Reported by: Michael Osipov <michael.osipov@siemens.com>
MFC after: 2 weeks
Use the existing legacy PCI driver as the basis for shared code
between the legacy and modern PCI drivers. The existing virtio_pci
kernel module will contain both the legacy and modern drivers.
Changes to the virtqueue and each device driver (network, block, etc)
for V1 support come in later commits.
Update the MMIO driver to reflect the VirtIO bus method changes, but
the modern compliance can be improved on later.
Note that the modern PCI driver requires bus_map_resource() to be
implemented, which is not the case on all archs.
The hw.virtio.pci.transitional tunable default value is zero so
transitional devices will continue to be driven via the legacy
driver.
Reviewed by: grehan (mentor)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27856
Based on discussions on freebsd-arch@, enable KERN_TLS in
GENERIC on amd64, but leave it disabled via the
sysctl kern.ipc.tls.enable. Users wishing to enable
ktls must set kern.ipc.tls.enable=1
While here, fix wording in NOTES to mention that KERN_TLS
also does receive now.
Sponsored by: Netflix
Reviewed by: allanjude
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D28163
The old vendor tree was never fully merged and doing partial merge isn't
supported with git subtree merge so a new one was created.
Switch the build to use the new DTS from sys/contrib/device-tree
This also bump the DTS used to be in sync with Linux 5.9
While here change the way to get the linux version, simply hardcode
the value in sys/dts/freebsd-compatible.dts and use awk to get that
to put it in the CFLAGS.
As a bonus we now have the bindings docs available
in sys/contrib/device-tree/Bindings/ so no need to link to the Linux repo
or to the vendor tree.
Stop running ctfconvert over generated C files in the kernel by marking
them with no-ctfconvert.
This fixes warnings from ctfconvert trying to parse C files:
ctfconvert: file.c: Couldn't read ehdr: Invalid argument
Reviewed by: emaste, mmel
Sponsored by: Innovate UK
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D28156
usbhid(4) is disabled by default to avoid conflicts with existing USB HID
drivers. To enable it place following lines to /boot/loader.conf:
hw.usb.usbhid.enable=1
usbhid_load="YES"
Suggested by: jhb
Reviewed by: hselasky
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D28124
This is the superset of the nooptions found in the -DEBUG kernels.
Reviewed by: emaste, manu
Sponsored by: Innovate UK
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D28152
When building the arm64 kernel for use with dtrace or hwpmc we need
to include a stack frame so they can extract a stack trace.
As with amd64 also build a stack frame in modules.
Sponsored by: Innovate UK
With newer AMD GPUs (>=Navi,Renoir) there is FPU context usage in the
amdgpu driver.
The `kernel_fpu_begin/end` implementations in drm did not even allow nested
begin-end blocks.
Submitted by: Greg V
Reviewed By: manu, hselasky
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D28061
A driver can register a shrinker that will be called when the kernel
wants to free some memory.
Add support for that in linuxkpi and call the registered shrinkers
when the lowmem event is triggered.
Reviewed by: bz
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27728
Stop trying to manually calculate RID, which cannot be done correctly
by PCI_DEVFN(). Use PCI_GET_RID() method instead.
Do not use pci_find_dbsf() to go from the linux pci_dev to freebsd
device_t. First, device is readily available as dev.bsddev. Second,
using pci_find_dbsf() fails for ARI-enabled functions with large
function numbers, because PCI_SLOT()/PCI_FUNC() are for non-ARI.
Reviewed by: bz, hselasky, manu
Tested by: manu (drm)
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies/NVidia Networking
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27960
Everything required for remote kernel debugging over a serial
connection. For FDT-based systems, a debug port can be specified by
setting hw.fdt.dbgport to the desired device tree node in loader.conf.
For example, hw.fdt.dbgport="uart1", or
hw.fdt.dbgport="serial@ff1a0000".
Looks good: emaste
Tested by: rwatson
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27727
Remove wi(4). pccard is going away, and wi only supports PC Card
devices, though it has a minor amount of glue to also support
PCI cards. However, removing the one without removing the other
is hard, so the whole driver is being removed.
Relnotes: Yes
pccard is being removed, so remove bt3c driver since it only has PC
Card attachment. Also remove bt3cfw(8) since it's the firmware for this
driver.
Relnotes: Yes
PC Card support is being removed, so remove its attachment here. ndis
is slated to be removed entirely for 13, but that's not been done yet.
Relnotes: Yes
This change includes:
hpen - Generic / MS Windows compatible HID pen tablet driver.
hgame - Generic game controller and joystick driver.
xb360gp - Xbox360-compatible game controller driver.
Submitted by: Greg V <greg_unrelenting.technology>
Reviewed by: hselasky (as part of D27993)
hidmap is a kernel module that maps HID input usages to evdev events.
Following dependent drivers is included in the commit:
hms - HID mouse driver.
hcons - Consumer page AKA Multimedia keys driver.
hsctrl - System Controls page (Power/Sleep keys) driver.
ps4dshock - Sony DualShock 4 gamepad driver.
Reviewed by: hselasky
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27993
which installs /dev/uhid# alias to hidraw character device for
compatibility with some existing uhid(4) users like Firefox.
As side effect it renames traditional uhid(4) driver to hidraw
to make possible using of common unit number allocator.
Requested by: Greg V <greg_unrelenting.technology>
Reviewed by: hselasky (as part of D27992)
This driver provides raw access to HID devices through uhid(4)-compatible
interface and is based on pre-8.x uhid(4) code. Unlike uhid(4) it does
not take devices in to monopoly ownership and allows parallel access
from other drivers.
hidraw supports Linux's hidraw-compatible interface as well.
Reviewed by: hselasky
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27992
This change implements hid_if.m methods for HID-over-USB protocol [1].
Also, this change adds USBHID_ENABLED kernel option which changes
device_probe() priority and adds/removes PnP records to prefer usbhid
over ums, ukbd, wmt and other USB HID device drivers and vice-versa.
The module is based on uhid(4) driver. It is disabled by default for
now due to conflicts with existing USB HID drivers.
[1] https://www.usb.org/sites/default/files/hid1_11.pdf
Reviewed by: hselasky
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27893
hidquirk(4) is derived from usb_quirk(4) and inherits all its HID-related
functionality. It does not support ioctl(2) interface yet.
Reviewed by: hselasky
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27890
This driver provides support for multiple HID driver attachments
to single HID transport backend. This ability existed in Net/OpenBSD
(uhidev and ihidev drivers) but has never been ported to FreeBSD.
Unlike Net/OpenBSD we do not use report number alone to distinct report
source but we follow MS way and use a top level collection (TLC) usage
index that report belongs to as a location key.
The driver performs child device autodiscovery based on HID report
descriptor data, proxying of HID requests from child devices to parent
transport backends and broadcasting of interrupts in backward direction.
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27888
Create an abstract HID interface that provides hardware independent
access to HID capabilities and functions through the device tree.
hid_if.m resembles existing USBHID KPI and consist of next methods:
HID method USBHID variant
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
hid_intr_setup usbd_transfer_setup (INTERRUPT IN xfer)
hid_intr_unsetup usbd_transfer_unsetup (INTERRUPT IN xfer)
hid_intr_start usbd_transfer_start (INTERRUPT IN xfer)
hid_intr_stop usbd_transfer_drain (INTERRUPT IN xfer)
hid_intr_poll usbd_transfer_poll (INTERRUPT IN xfer)
hid_get_rdesc usbd_req_get_report_descriptor
hid_read No direct analog. Not intended for common use.
hid_write uhid(4) write()
hid_get_report usbd_req_get_report
hid_set_report usbd_req_set_report
hid_set_idle usbd_req_set_idle
hid_set_protocol usbd_req_set_protocol
This change is part of D27888
This does an import of quirk stubs, debugging macros from USB code and
numerous usage constants used by dependent drivers.
Besides, this change renames some functions to get a better matching
with userland library and NetBSD/OpenBSD HID code. Namely:
- Old hid_report_size() renamed to hid_report_size_max()
- New hid_report_size() calculates size of given report rather than
maximum size of all reports.
- hid_get_data_unsigned() renamed to hid_get_udata()
- hid_put_data_unsigned() renamed to hid_put_udata()
Compat shim functions are provided in usbhid.h to make possible compile
of legacy code unmodified after this change.
Reviewed by: manu, hselasky
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27887
It will be used by the upcoming HID-over-i2C implementation. Should be
no-op, except hid.ko module dependency is to be added to affected drivers.
Reviewed by: hselasky, manu
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27867
Only ACPI attachment is supported for now, some others depend on the
presence of smbios(4) support, which we lack on arm64.
Reviewed by: emaste
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D28009
After the removal of obsolete GDB 6.1.1 from the base system in
1c0ea326aa we no longer need to downgrade to DWARF2 debug info.
We will need to ensure that our tools (e.g. ctfconvert) handle DWARF5
prior to it becoming the default in the Clang and GCC versions we use.
Reported by: jhb
Relnotes: Yes
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
-mno-align-long-strings was a flag maintained by FreeBSD for the
now-deleted in-tree gcc. Upstream gcc has no such flag, so just drop
it.
The flag was originally submitted by bde and committed in 2002 (svn
r97911 & r104455). However, upstream gcc did address this same issue in
2004 (gcc svn r76694 / git 4137ba7ab7a), reducing long string alignment
in general, and to 1 with -Os.
Reviewed by: kib
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27768
- Suppress -Wredundant-decls. Ultimately this warning is harmless in
any case, and it does not look like there is a simple way to avoid
redundant declarations in this case without a lot of header pollution
(e.g. having openzfs's shim param.h pulling in sys/kernel.h for hz).
- Suppress -Wnested-externs, which is useless anyway.
Unfortunately it was not sufficient just to modify OPENZFS_CFLAGS,
because the warning suppressions need to appear on the command line
after they are explicitly enabled by CWARNFLAGS from sys/conf/kern.mk,
but OPENZFS_CFLAGS get added before due to use of -I for the shims.
Reviewed by: markj
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27685
dvl reported that "make installkernel" failed with "amd64/arm64/i386
kernel requires linker ifunc support." This test should apply to builds
only; the linker is not used at install time.
I think the same (ifunc-supporting) linker used to build the kernel
should be detected at install time in usual cases (and so not trigger
this error). However, there is no reason to disallow the install, if
for some reason the expected linker isn't the one tested at install
time.
PR: 251580
Reported by: dvl
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
eventfd is a Linux system call that produces special file descriptors
for event notification. When porting Linux software, it is currently
usually emulated by epoll-shim on top of kqueues. Unfortunately, kqueues
are not passable between processes. And, as noted by the author of
epoll-shim, even if they were, the library state would also have to be
passed somehow. This came up when debugging strange HW video decode
failures in Firefox. A native implementation would avoid these problems
and help with porting Linux software.
Since we now already have an eventfd implementation in the kernel (for
the Linuxulator), it's pretty easy to expose it natively, which is what
this patch does.
Submitted by: greg@unrelenting.technology
Reviewed by: markj (previous version)
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26668
These drivers should have been removed along with tl(4) as part of
7c897ca91f and r347918 respectively
as these fromer made sure to only ever attach to the latter, e. g.:
<...>
static int
tlphy_probe(device_t dev)
{
if (!mii_dev_mac_match(dev, "tl"))
return (ENXIO);
<...>
We have stopped using SVN, so the notes containing the old SVN revisions
are no longer populated, so fall back to purely counting the number of
commits (currently at about 255337).
Also turn the format more into what git-describe produces, with a name
first, then the number of commits and the hash last. Note that as we
don't tag anything on `main`, git describe will never produce something
useful there and finds the newest vendor tag that was merged in instead.
Sample output:
FreeBSD 13.0-CURRENT #6 main-c255126-gb81783dc98e6-dirty
FreeBSD 12.2-STABLE #0 stable/12-c243035-gd16dac42b641-dirty
MFC after: 3 weeks
Reviewed by: imp, glebius
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27751
This change introduces framework that allows to dynamically
attach or detach longest prefix match (lpm) lookup algorithms
to speed up datapath route tables lookups.
Framework takes care of handling initial synchronisation,
route subscription, nhop/nhop groups reference and indexing,
dataplane attachments and fib instance algorithm setup/teardown.
Framework features automatic algorithm selection, allowing for
picking the best matching algorithm on-the-fly based on the
amount of routes in the routing table.
Currently framework code is guarded under FIB_ALGO config option.
An idea is to enable it by default in the next couple of weeks.
The following algorithms are provided by default:
IPv4:
* bsearch4 (lockless binary search in a special IP array), tailored for
small-fib (<16 routes)
* radix4_lockless (lockless immutable radix, re-created on every rtable change),
tailored for small-fib (<1000 routes)
* radix4 (base system radix backend)
* dpdk_lpm4 (DPDK DIR24-8-based lookups), lockless datastrucure, optimized
for large-fib (D27412)
IPv6:
* radix6_lockless (lockless immutable radix, re-created on every rtable change),
tailed for small-fib (<1000 routes)
* radix6 (base system radix backend)
* dpdk_lpm6 (DPDK DIR24-8-based lookups), lockless datastrucure, optimized
for large-fib (D27412)
Performance changes:
Micro benchmarks (I7-7660U, single-core lookups, 2048k dst, code in D27604):
IPv4:
8 routes:
radix4: ~20mpps
radix4_lockless: ~24.8mpps
bsearch4: ~69mpps
dpdk_lpm4: ~67 mpps
700k routes:
radix4_lockless: 3.3mpps
dpdk_lpm4: 46mpps
IPv6:
8 routes:
radix6_lockless: ~20mpps
dpdk_lpm6: ~70mpps
100k routes:
radix6_lockless: 13.9mpps
dpdk_lpm6: 57mpps
Forwarding benchmarks:
+ 10-15% IPv4 forwarding performance (small-fib, bsearch4)
+ 25% IPv4 forwarding performance (full-view, dpdk_lpm4)
+ 20% IPv6 forwarding performance (full-view, dpdk_lpm6)
Control:
Framwork adds the following runtime sysctls:
List algos
* net.route.algo.inet.algo_list: bsearch4, radix4_lockless, radix4
* net.route.algo.inet6.algo_list: radix6_lockless, radix6, dpdk_lpm6
Debug level (7=LOG_DEBUG, per-route)
net.route.algo.debug_level: 5
Algo selection (currently only for fib 0):
net.route.algo.inet.algo: bsearch4
net.route.algo.inet6.algo: radix6_lockless
Support for manually changing algos in non-default fib will be added
soon. Some sysctl names will be changed in the near future.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27401
Now that bhyve(8) supports UART, bvmconsole and bvmdebug are no longer needed.
This also removes the '-b' and '-g' flag from bhyve(8). These two flags were
marked deprecated in r368519.
Reviewed by: grehan, kevans
Approved by: kevans (mentor)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27490
Similar to r366897, this uses the .incbin directive to pull in a
firmware file's contents into a .fwo file. The same scheme for
computing symbol names from the filename is used as before to maximize
compatiblity and not require rebuilding existing .fwo files for
NO_CLEAN builds. Using ld -o binary requires extra hacks in linkers
to either specify ABI options (e.g. soft- vs hard-float) or to ignore
ABI incompatiblities when linking certain objects (e.g. object files
with only data). Using the compiler driver avoids the need for these
hacks as the compiler driver is able to set all the appropriate ABI
options.
Reviewed by: imp, markj
Obtained from: CheriBSD
Sponsored by: DARPA
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27579
We're looking for file content differences, so ask the question of git
more directly. This helps a lot, saving tens of thousands of fork()s,
when the builder and editor see different stat() results (e.g., UIDs),
as they might with containers.
Submitted by: Nathaniel Wesley Filardo <nwf20@cl.cam.ac.uk>
Reviewed by: bdrewery, emaste, imp
Obtained from: CheriBSD
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: DARPA
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27646
The hme (Happy Meal Ethernet) driver was the onboard NIC in most
supported sparc64 platforms. A few PCI NICs do exist, but we have seen
no evidence of use on non-sparc systems.
Reviewed by: imp, emaste, bcr
Sponsored by: DARPA
Macfilter to route packets through different hooks based on sender MAC address.
Based on ng_macfilter written by Pekka Nikander
Sponsered by Retina b.v.
Reviewed by: afedorov
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27268
linux_common.c to linux_util.c so they become available on i386.
linux_common.c defines the linux_common kernel module but this module does
not exist on i386 and linux_common.c is not included in the linux module.
linux_util.c is included in the linux_common module on amd64 and the linux
module on i386.
Remove linux_common.c from files.i386 again. It was added recently in
r367433 when the DTrace provider definitions were moved.
The V4L feature declarations were moved to linux_common in r283423.
In r367395 parts of machine dependent linux_dummy.c were moved to a new
machine independent file sys/compat/linux/linux_dummy.c and the existing
linux_dummy.c was renamed to linux_dummy_machdep.c.
Add linux_dummy_machdep.c to the linux module for i386.
Rename sys/amd64/linux32/linux_dummy.c for consistency.
Add the new linux_dummy.c to the linux module for i386.
Enable in-kernel acceleration of SHA1 and SHA2 operations on arm64 by adding
support for the ossl(4) crypto driver. This uses OpenSSL's assembly routines
under the hood, which will detect and use SHA intrinsics if they are
supported by the CPU.
Reviewed by: jhb
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27390
Make room for adding arm64 support to this driver by moving the
x86-specific feature parsing to a separate file.
Reviewed by: jhb
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27388
Implement vt_vbefb to support Vesa Bios Extensions (VBE) framebuffer with VT.
vt_vbefb is built based on vt_efifb and is assuming similar data for
initialization, use MODINFOMD_VBE_FB to identify the structure vbe_fb
in kernel metadata.
struct vbe_fb, is populated by boot loader, and is passed to kernel via
metadata payload.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27373
ROUTE_MPATH is the new config option controlling new multipath routing
implementation. Remove the last pieces of RADIX_MPATH-related code and
the config option.
Reviewed by: glebius
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27244
Replace MAXPHYS by runtime variable maxphys. It is initialized from
MAXPHYS by default, but can be also adjusted with the tunable kern.maxphys.
Make b_pages[] array in struct buf flexible. Size b_pages[] for buffer
cache buffers exactly to atop(maxbcachebuf) (currently it is sized to
atop(MAXPHYS)), and b_pages[] for pbufs is sized to atop(maxphys) + 1.
The +1 for pbufs allow several pbuf consumers, among them vmapbuf(),
to use unaligned buffers still sized to maxphys, esp. when such
buffers come from userspace (*). Overall, we save significant amount
of otherwise wasted memory in b_pages[] for buffer cache buffers,
while bumping MAXPHYS to desired high value.
Eliminate all direct uses of the MAXPHYS constant in kernel and driver
sources, except a place which initialize maxphys. Some random (and
arguably weird) uses of MAXPHYS, e.g. in linuxolator, are converted
straight. Some drivers, which use MAXPHYS to size embeded structures,
get private MAXPHYS-like constant; their convertion is out of scope
for this work.
Changes to cam/, dev/ahci, dev/ata, dev/mpr, dev/mpt, dev/mvs,
dev/siis, where either submitted by, or based on changes by mav.
Suggested by: mav (*)
Reviewed by: imp, mav, imp, mckusick, scottl (intermediate versions)
Tested by: pho
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27225
i386 and the rest of supported architectures by defining KERNLOAD in the
vmparam.h and getting rid of magic constant in the linker script, which albeit
documented via comment but isn't programmatically accessible at a compile time.
Use KERNLOAD to eliminate another (matching) magic constant 100 lines down
inside unremarkable TU "copy.c" 3 levels deep in the EFI loader tree.
Reviewed by: markj
Approved by: markj
MFC after: 1 month
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27355
This driver provides support for Realtek PCI SD card readers. It attaches
mmc(4) bus on card insertion and detaches it on card removal. It has been
tested with RTS5209, RTS5227, RTS5229, RTS522A, RTS525A and RTL8411B. It
should also work with RTS5249, RTL8402 and RTL8411.
PR: 204521
Submitted by: Henri Hennebert (hlh at restart dot be)
Reviewed by: imp, jkim
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26435
The arm configs that required it have been removed from the tree.
Removing this option makes the callout code easier to read and
discourages developers from adding new configs without eventtimer
drivers.
Reviewed by: ian, imp, mav
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27270
This adds an arm64 iommu interface and a driver for Arm System Memory
Management Unit version 3.2 (ARM SMMU v3.2) specified in ARM IHI 0070C
document.
Hardware overview is provided in the header of smmu.c file.
The support is disabled by default. To enable add 'options IOMMU' to your
kernel configuration file.
The support was developed on Arm Neoverse N1 System Development Platform
(ARM N1SDP), kindly provided by ARM Ltd.
Currently, PCI-based devices and ACPI platforms are supported only.
The support was tested on IOMMU-enabled Marvell SATA controller,
Realtek Ethernet controller and a TI xHCI USB controller with a low to
medium load only.
Many thanks to Konstantin Belousov for help forming the generic IOMMU
framework that is vital for this project; to Andrew Turner for adding
IOMMU support to MSI interrupt code; to Mark Johnston for help with SMMU
page management; to John Baldwin for explaining various IOMMU bits.
Reviewed by: mmel
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: DARPA / AFRL
Sponsored by: Innovate UK (Digital Security by Design programme)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24618
These options need to be in the kern.opts.mk file to be alive for kernel
and module builds. This also reverts r367579 since that's not needed with
this fix: the host's bsd.opts.mk is irrelevant.
Reviewed by: brooks@
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27170
When building out-of-tree modules, it appears that the system share/mk
is used, but sys/conf/kern.mk is used. That results in MK_INIT_ALL_ZERO
being undefined. In the interest of maximum compatability, check
that MK_INIT_ALL_* and COMPILER_FEATURES are defined before comparing
their values.
Reported by: mmacy
Sponsored by: DARPA
There are two options:
- WITH_INIT_ALL_ZERO: Zero all variables on the stack.
- WITH_INIT_ALL_PATTERN: Initialize variables with well-defined patterns.
The exact pattern are a compiler implementation detail and vary by type.
They are somewhat documented in the LLVM commit message:
https://reviews.llvm.org/rL349442
I've used WITH_INIT_ALL_* to match Microsoft's InitAll feature rather
than naming them after the LLVM specific compiler flags.
In a range of consumer products, options like these are used in
both debug and production builds with debugs builds using patterns
(intended to provoke crashes on use of uninitialized values) and
production using zeros (deemed more likely to lead to harmless
misbehavior or NULL-pointer dereferences).
Reviewed by: emaste
Obtained from: CheriBSD
Sponsored by: DARPA
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27131
It includes:
ACPI_HANDLE() implementation.
AC and VIDEO ACPI events notification support.
Replacement of hand-rolled GPLed _DSM method evaluation helpers
with in-base ones.
Submitted by: wulf
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26603
Move dtrace SDT definitions into linux_common module code. Also, build
linux_dummy.c into the linux_common kld -- we don't need separate
versions of these stubs for 32- and 64-bit emulation.
Reported by: several
PR: 250897
Discussed with: emaste, trasz
Tested by: John Kennedy, Yasuhiro KIMURA, Oleg Sidorkin
X-MFC-With: r367395
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27124
This fixes a potential crash in firmware 1.25.0.0 on the passive open
side during TOE operation.
Obtained from: Chelsio Communications
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Fix build errors introduced by r367417 and r367390:
- Guard label reached only by powerpc64
- Guard vm_reserv_level_iffullpop call, that is not defined on powerpc
variants that don't support superpages
- Add missing hwpmc file, for when hwpmc is built into kernel
This provides an OpenCrypto driver for Intel QuickAssist devices. The
driver was initially ported from NetBSD and comes with a few
improvements:
- support for GMAC/AES-GCM, AES-CTR and AES-XTS, and support for
SHA/HMAC-authenticated encryption
- support for detaching the driver
- various bug fixes
- DH895X support
Discussed with: jhb
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: Rubicon Communications, LLC (Netgate)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26963
This would be more accurately expressed as COMPAT_LINUXKPI implying or
requiring backlight, but config(8) doesn't really have a way to express
that. This fixes the build with COMPAT_LINUXKPI specified in one's kernel
config.
Currently, this supports SHA1 and SHA2-{224,256,384,512} both as plain
hashes and in HMAC mode on both amd64 and i386. It uses the SHA
intrinsics when present similar to aesni(4), but uses SSE/AVX
instructions when they are not.
Note that some files from OpenSSL that normally wrap the assembly
routines have been adapted to export methods usable by 'struct
auth_xform' as is used by existing software crypto routines.
Reviewed by: gallatin, jkim, delphij, gnn
Sponsored by: Netflix
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26821
This uses the .incbin directive to pull in the MFS image contents.
Using assembly directly ensures that symbols can be defined with the
name and properties (such as .size) desired without having to rename
symbols, etc. via a second objcopy invocation. Since it is compiled
by the C compiler driver, it also avoids the need for all of the
EMBEDFS* make variables.
Suggested by: jrtc27
Reviewed by: kib, markj
Obtained from: CheriBSD
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: DARPA
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26781
This directory doesn't exist and causes gcc-6.4 to complain about
a non-existent include directory
Approved by: kevans, imp
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26846
connections over multiple paths.
Multipath routing relies on mbuf flowid data for both transit
and outbound traffic. Current code fills mbuf flowid from inp_flowid
for connection-oriented sockets. However, inp_flowid is currently
not calculated for outbound connections.
This change creates simple hashing functions and starts calculating hashes
for TCP,UDP/UDP-Lite and raw IP if multipath routes are present in the
system.
Reviewed by: glebius (previous version),ae
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26523
VMware now has arm64 support; move these to MI files in advance of
building them on arm64.
PR: 250308
Reported by: Vincent Milum Jr
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
This patch has the driver for 10Gigabit Ethernet controller in AMD
SoC. This driver is written compatible to the Iflib framework. The
existing driver is for the old version of hardware. The submitted
driver here is for the recent versions of the hardware where the Ethernet
controller is PCI-E based.
Submitted by: Rajesh Kumar <rajesh1.kumar@amd.com>
MFC after: 1 month
Relnotes: yes
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D25793
Fortuna remains the default; no functional change to GENERIC.
Big picture:
- Scalable entropy generation with per-CPU, buffered local generators.
- "Push" system for reseeding child generators when root PRNG is
reseeded. (Design can be extended to arc4random(9) and userspace
generators.)
- Similar entropy pooling system to Fortuna, but starts with a single
pool to quickly bootstrap as much entropy as possible early on.
- Reseeding from pooled entropy based on time schedule. The time
interval starts small and grows exponentially until reaching a cap.
Again, the goal is to have the RNG state depend on as much entropy as
possible quickly, but still periodically incorporate new entropy for
the same reasons as Fortuna.
Notable design choices in this implementation that differ from those
specified in the whitepaper:
- Blake2B instead of SHA-2 512 for entropy pooling
- Chacha20 instead of AES-CTR DRBG
- Initial seeding. We support more platforms and not all of them use
loader(8). So we have to grab the initial entropy sources in kernel
mode instead, as much as possible. Fortuna didn't have any mechanism
for this aside from the special case of loader-provided previous-boot
entropy, so most of these sources remain TODO after this commit.
Reviewed by: markm
Approved by: csprng (markm)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D22837
DTS must be synced with the kernel, add a freebsd,dts-version string in
the root node of each DTS that we compile so we can later in the kernel
check that it contain a correct value.
Reviewed by: imp, mmel
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26724
makeLINT.mk isn't needed or used anymore, remove it and all the files
it uses.
Reviewed by: kevans
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26540
APM BIOS was relevant only to early laptops (approximately P166 or
P200 and slower). These have not been relevant for a long time, and
this code has been untested for a long time (as far as I can
tell). The APM compat code in ACPI and the apm(8) command is not being
retired. Both of these items are still in use (apm(8) is more
scriptable than the replacement acpiconf, for the most part). This has
been commented out of i386 GENERIC since 2002. This code is not
relevant to any other port.
Discussed on: arch@
This change is based on the nexthop objects landed in D24232.
The change introduces the concept of nexthop groups.
Each group contains the collection of nexthops with their
relative weights and a dataplane-optimized structure to enable
efficient nexthop selection.
Simular to the nexthops, nexthop groups are immutable. Dataplane part
gets compiled during group creation and is basically an array of
nexthop pointers, compiled w.r.t their weights.
With this change, `rt_nhop` field of `struct rtentry` contains either
nexthop or nexthop group. They are distinguished by the presense of
NHF_MULTIPATH flag.
All dataplane lookup functions returns pointer to the nexthop object,
leaving nexhop groups details inside routing subsystem.
User-visible changes:
The change is intended to be backward-compatible: all non-mpath operations
should work as before with ROUTE_MPATH and net.route.multipath=1.
All routes now comes with weight, default weight is 1, maximum is 2^24-1.
Current maximum multipath group width is statically set to 64.
This will become sysctl-tunable in the followup changes.
Using functionality:
* Recompile kernel with ROUTE_MPATH
* set net.route.multipath to 1
route add -6 2001:db8::/32 2001:db8::2 -weight 10
route add -6 2001:db8::/32 2001:db8::3 -weight 20
netstat -6On
Nexthop groups data
Internet6:
GrpIdx NhIdx Weight Slots Gateway Netif Refcnt
1 ------- ------- ------- --------------------------------------- --------- 1
13 10 1 2001:db8::2 vlan2
14 20 2 2001:db8::3 vlan2
Next steps:
* Land outbound hashing for locally-originated routes ( D26523 ).
* Fix net/bird multipath (net/frr seems to work fine)
* Add ROUTE_MPATH to GENERIC
* Set net.route.multipath=1 by default
Tested by: olivier
Reviewed by: glebius
Relnotes: yes
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26449
dmi function are used to get smbios values.
The DRM subsystem and drivers use it to enabled (or not) quirks.
Reviewed by: hselasky
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26046
Add backlight function to linuxkpi.
Graphics drivers expose the backlight of the panel directly so allow them to use the backlight subsystem so
user can use backlight(8) to configure them.
Reviewed by: hselasky
Relnotes: yes
Differential Revision: The FreeBSD Foundation
Driver for pwm-backlight compatible device.
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26252
This is a simple subsystem that allow drivers to register as a backlight.
Each backlight creates a device node under /dev/backlight/backlightX and
an alias based on the name provided.
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26250
This is mostly needed for a common arm64/amd64 iommu code.
Reviewed by: kib
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26587
LLVM 11 changed the meaning of '-O' from '-O2' to '-O1', which resulted
in debug kernels (with 'makeoptions DEBUG=-g') being built with inlining
disabled, causing severe performance hit.
The -O2 was already being used for building amd64, powerpc, and powerpcspe.
Discussed with: jrtc27, arichardson, bdragon, jhibbits
Sponsored by: DARPA
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26471
The NOTES files have a bunch of hint lines that are removed when
generating LINT. However, we can achieve the same effect by prepending
each of the lines with 'envvar' so the NOTES files become standard
config(8) files. No functional changes as the sed script to generate
the LINT files filters these either way.
Suggested by: kevans
We left these in the clean rule to avoid having stale files remain in
working trees, but enough time has now passed that it's no longer
relevant.
Discussed with: imp
The TCG implementation of mtmsrd in qemu blindly copies the entire register
to the MSR, instead of the specific bit positions listed in the ISA.
This means that qemu will prematurely switch endian out from under the
running code instead of waiting for the rfid, causing an immediate trap
as it attempts to interpret the next instruction in the wrong endianness.
To work around this, ensure PSL_LE is still set before doing the mtmsrd.
In the future, we may wish to just turn off translation and unconditionally
use rfid to switch to the ofmsr instead of quasi-switching to the ofmsr.
Add a new platform option so this can be disabled. (And so that we can
conditonalize additional QEMU-specific hacks in the platform code.)
Sponsored by: Tag1 Consulting, Inc.
This is the initial set up for PowerPC64LE.
The current plan is for this arch to remain experimental for FreeBSD 13.
This started as a weekend learning project for me and kinda snowballed from
there.
(More to follow momentarily.)
Reviewed by: imp (earlier version), emaste
Sponsored by: Tag1 Consulting, Inc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26399
As with .text, the aim is to ensure that executable sections are
segregated from the rest, to avoid creation of writeable and executable
mappings. Recent versions of LLVM emit a PLT in firmware modules.
Reviewed by: kib
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26444
Use MACHINE_CPUARCH with arm64 (aarch64) when we build code that could run
on any 64-bit Arm instruction set. This will simplify checks in downstream
consumers targeting prototype instruction sets.
The only place we check for MACHINE_ARCH == aarch64 is when building the
device tree blobs. As these are targeting current generation ISAs.
Sponsored by: Innovate UK
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26370
There are a couple of places in the tree that directly parse the newvers.sh
script looking for the BRANCH variable. I found two locations, one in
release/Makefile and the other in bin/freebsd-version/Makefile.
While there is a good argument that BRANCH_OVERRIDE should properly
propagate in those circumstances and the new behavior is thus better, the
reality is this change broke freebsd-update's ability to find timestamps in
binaries and resulted in a large number of gratuitous changes.
Reported by: freebsd-update
Discussed with: cperciva
MFC after: 1 day
freebsd-update(8) builds, where BRANCH is suffixed with -p0 for
builds.
Noticed by: gordon
With help from: cperciva
MFC after: 3 days
MFC note: before 12.2-BETA2
Sponsored by: Rubicon Communications, LLC (netgate.com)
This option was marked as broken because our riscv64-xtoolchain-gcc
package lacked support. Since we are moving away from xtoolchain gcc in
favor of freebsd-gcc9, there should be no issue in enabling this option
by default.
Notably, this enables -Wformat errors.
Reviewed by: kp, jhb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26320
A PL061 is a simple 8 pin GPIO controller. This GPIO device is used to
signal an internal request for shutdown on some virtual machines including
Arm-based Amazon EC2 instances.
Submitted by: Ali Saidi <alisaidi_amazon.com> (previouss version)
Reviewed by: Ali Saidi, manu
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24065
Work around llvm 11 miscompile in 32 bit powerpc that appears to cause ifuncs
to branch to the wrong address by forcing -O2. This worked in previous
versions because -O was mapped to -O2 previously (but is now -O1.)
While here, remove the old temporary workaround from r224882 that does the
opposite thing for powerpc non-DEBUG kernels, bringing it in line with other
platforms that compile at -O2.
This fixes kernel boot on powerpc and powerpcspe after the llvm11 transition.
Sponsored by: Tag1 Consulting, Inc.
Allwinner USB DRD is based on the Mentor USB OTG controller, with a
different register layout and a few missing registers.
The code is by Andrew Turner (andrew).
Reviewed by: hselasky, manu
Obtained from: andrew
MFC after: 5 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D5881
This package is intended to be used with ice(4) version 0.26.16. That
update will happen in a forthcoming commit.
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: Intel Corporation
Make sure that building dev/sdhci/sdhci_fsl_fdt.c has all the right
dependencies until a proper fix can be made.
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies // NVIDIA Networking
Implement support for an eSDHC controller found in NXP QorIQ Layerscape SoCs.
This driver has been tested with NXP LS1046A and LX2160A (Honeycomb board),
which is incompatible with the existing sdhci_fsl driver (aiming at older
chips from this family). As such, it is not intended as replacement for
the old driver, but rather serves as an improved alternative for SoCs that
support it.
It comes with support for both PIO and Single DMA modes and samples the
clock from the extres clk API.
Submitted by: Artur Rojek <ar@semihalf.com>
Reviewed by: manu, mmel, kibab
Obtained from: Semihalf
Sponsored by: Alstom Group
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26153
When using relative paths for the linker we have to transform the name
since clang does not like -fuse-ld=ld.lld and instead requires -fuse-ld=lld
(the same also applies for ld.bfd).
I went through the merge and found the rest of the instances where
${MACHINE_ARCH} == "powerpc" was being used to detect 32-bit and adjusted
the rest of the instances to also check for powerpcspe.
mips32* will probably want to do the same.
Sponsored by: Tag1 Consulting, Inc.
This is needed so that setting LD/XLD is not ignored when linking with $CC
instead of directly using $LD. Currently only clang accepts an absolute
path for -fuse-ld= (Clang 12+ will add a new --ld-path flag), so we now
warn when building with GCC and $LD != "ld" since that might result in the
wrong linker being used.
We have been setting XLD=/path/to/cheri/ld.lld in CheriBSD for a long time and
used a similar version of this patch to avoid linking with /usr/bin/ld.
This change is also required when building FreeBSD on an Ubuntu with Clang:
In that case we set XCC=/usr/lib/llvm-10/bin/clang and since
/usr/lib/llvm-10/bin/ does not contain a "ld" binary the build fails with
`clang: error: unable to execute command: Executable "ld" doesn't exist!`
unless we pass -fuse-ld=/usr/lib/llvm-10/bin/ld.lld.
This change passes -fuse-ld instead of copying ${XLD} to WOLRDTMP/bin/ld
since then we would have to ensure that this file does not exist while
building the bootstrap tools. The cross-linker might not be compatible with
the host linker (e.g. when building on macos: host-linker= Mach-O /usr/bin/ld,
cross-linker=LLVM ld.lld).
Reviewed By: brooks, emaste
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26055
The most awkward bit in this patch is the bootstrapping of m4:
We can't simply use the host version of m4 since that is not compatible
with the flags passed by lex (at least on macOS, possibly also on Linux).
Therefore we need to bootstrap m4, but lex needs m4 to build and m4 also
depends on lex (which needs m4 to generate any files). To work around this
cyclic dependency we can build a bootstrap version of m4 (with pre-generated
files) then use that to build the real m4.
This patch also changes the xz/unxz/dd tools to always use the host version
since the version in the source tree cannot easily be bootstrapped on macOS
or Linux.
Reviewed By: brooks, imp (earlier version)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D25992
The primary benefit is maintaining a completely shared
code base with the community allowing FreeBSD to receive
new features sooner and with less effort.
I would advise against doing 'zpool upgrade'
or creating indispensable pools using new
features until this change has had a month+
to soak.
Work on merging FreeBSD support in to what was
at the time "ZFS on Linux" began in August 2018.
I first publicly proposed transitioning FreeBSD
to (new) OpenZFS on December 18th, 2018. FreeBSD
support in OpenZFS was finally completed in December
2019. A CFT for downstreaming OpenZFS support in
to FreeBSD was first issued on July 8th. All issues
that were reported have been addressed or, for
a couple of less critical matters there are
pull requests in progress with OpenZFS. iXsystems
has tested and dogfooded extensively internally.
The TrueNAS 12 release is based on OpenZFS with
some additional features that have not yet made
it upstream.
Improvements include:
project quotas, encrypted datasets,
allocation classes, vectorized raidz,
vectorized checksums, various command line
improvements, zstd compression.
Thanks to those who have helped along the way:
Ryan Moeller, Allan Jude, Zack Welch, and many
others.
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D25872
An internet draft titled "Towards Remote Procedure Call Encryption By Default"
describes how TLS is to be used for Sun RPC, with NFS as an intended use case.
This patch adds client and server support for this to the kernel RPC,
using KERN_TLS and upcalls to daemons for the handshake, peer reset and
other non-application data record cases.
The upcalls to the daemons use three fields to uniquely identify the
TCP connection. They are the time.tv_sec, time.tv_usec of the connection
establshment, plus a 64bit sequence number. The time fields avoid problems
with re-use of the sequence number after a daemon restart.
For the server side, once a Null RPC with AUTH_TLS is received, kernel
reception on the socket is blocked and an upcall to the rpctlssd(8) daemon
is done to perform the TLS handshake. Upon completion, the completion
status of the handshake is stored in xp_tls as flag bits and the reply to
the Null RPC is sent.
For the client, if CLSET_TLS has been set, a new TCP connection will
send the Null RPC with AUTH_TLS to initiate the handshake. The client
kernel RPC code will then block kernel I/O on the socket and do an upcall
to the rpctlscd(8) daemon to perform the handshake.
If the upcall is successful, ct_rcvstate will be maintained to indicate
if/when an upcall is being done.
If non-application data records are received, the code does an upcall to
the appropriate daemon, which will do a SSL_read() of 0 length to handle
the record(s).
When the socket is being shut down, upcalls are done to the daemons, so
that they can perform SSL_shutdown() calls to perform the "peer reset".
The rpctlssd(8) and rpctlscd(8) daemons require a patched version of the
openssl library and, as such, will not be committed to head at this time.
Although the changes done by this patch are fairly numerous, there should
be no semantics change to the kernel RPC at this time.
A future commit to the NFS code will optionally enable use of TLS for NFS.
Allow to dynamically grow the amount of fibs in each vnet.
This change alters current behavior. Currently, if one defines
ROUTETABLES > 1 in the kernel config, each vnet will be created
with the number of fibs defined in the kernel config.
After this commit vnets will be created with fibs=1.
Dynamic net.fibs is not compatible with net.add_addr_allfibs.
The plan is to deprecate the latter and make
net.add_addr_allfibs=0 default behaviour.
Reviewed by: glebius
Relnotes: yes
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26062
It was a driver for a USB FM tuner that was available in the market in 2002. I
wrote the driver in 2003. I've not used it since 2005 or so, so it's time to
retire this driver. No userland code ever interfaced to the special device it
created. There's no user base: the last bug I received on this driver was in
2004.
Relnotes: Yes
Add prng(9) as a replacement for random(9) in the kernel.
There are two major differences from random(9) and random(3):
- General prng(9) APIs (prng32(9), etc) do not guarantee an
implementation or particular sequence; they should not be used for
repeatable simulations.
- However, specific named API families are also exposed (for now: PCG),
and those are expected to be repeatable (when so-guaranteed by the named
algorithm).
Some minor differences from random(3) and earlier random(9):
- PRNG state for the general prng(9) APIs is per-CPU; this eliminates
contention on PRNG state in SMP workloads. Each PCPU generator in an
SMP system produces a unique sequence.
- Better statistical properties than the Park-Miller ("minstd") PRNG
(longer period, uniform distribution in all bits, passes
BigCrush/PractRand analysis).
- Faster than Park-Miller ("minstd") PRNG -- no division is required to
step PCG-family PRNGs.
For now, random(9) becomes a thin shim around prng32(). Eventually I
would like to mechanically switch consumers over to the explicit API.
Reviewed by: kib, markj (previous version both)
Discussed with: markm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D25916
These exist on the Raspberry Pi 3 and 4 and control and external IO
expander.
Reviewed by: manu
Sponsored by: Innovate UK
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D25858
The newer hardware revisions of the Raspberry Pi 4 removed the ability of
the VIA VL805 xhci controller to load its own firmware. Instead the
firmware must be installed at the appropriate time by the VideoCore
coprocessor.
Submitted by: Robert Crowston <crowston_protonmail.com>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D25261
Provide missing rules for ena_datapath.c and ena_netmap.c,
which prevented the ENA driver from building.
This issue was showing up only when building the driver statically
into the kernel.
PR: 248116
Submitted by: Artur Rojek <ar@semihalf.com>
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D25796
Obtained from: Semihalf
Sponsored by: Amazon, Inc.
APEI allows platform to report different kinds of errors to OS in several
ways. We've found that Supermicro X10/X11 motherboards report PCIe errors
appearing on hot-unplug via this interface using NMI. Without respective
driver it ended up in kernel panic without any additional information.
This driver introduces support for the APEI Generic Hardware Error Source
reporting via NMI, SCI or polling. It decodes the reported errors and
either pass them to pci(4) for processing or just logs otherwise. Errors
marked as fatal still end up in kernel panic, but some more informative.
When somebody get to native PCIe AER support implementation both of the
reporting mechanisms should get common error recovery code. Since in our
case errors happen when the device is already gone, there is nothing to
recover, so the code just clears the error statuses, practically ignoring
the otherwise destructive NMIs in nicer way.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
QEMU's RISC-V virt machine provides syscon-power and syscon-reset
devices as the means by which to shutdown and reboot. We also need to
ensure that we have attached the syscon_generic device before attaching
any syscon_power devices, and so we introduce a new riscv_syscon device
akin to aw_syscon added in r327936. Currently the SiFive test finisher
is used as the specific implementation of such a syscon device.
Reviewed by: br, brooks (mentor), jhb (mentor)
Approved by: br, brooks (mentor), jhb (mentor)
Obtained from: CheriBSD
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D25725
This device was originally used as part of the goldfish virtual hardware
platform used for emulating Android on QEMU, but is now also used as the
RTC for the RISC-V virt machine in QEMU. It provides a simple 64-bit
nanosecond timer exposed via a pair of memory-mapped 32-bit registers,
although only with 1s granularity.
Reviewed by: brooks (mentor), jhb (mentor), kp
Approved by: brooks (mentor), jhb (mentor), kp
Obtained from: CheriBSD
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D25717