Intel Speed Shift is Intel's technology to control frequency in hardware,
with hints from software.
Let's get a working version of this in the tree and we can refine it from
here.
Submitted by: bwidawsk, scottph
Reviewed by: bcr (manpages), myself
Discussed with: jhb, kib (earlier versions)
With feedback from: Greg V, gallatin, freebsdnewbie AT freenet.de
Relnotes: yes
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D18028
This enables virtio modules on PowerPC* target.
On PowerPC64, drivers are also kernel builtin.
QEMU currently needs to be patched to in order to work on LE hosts due to known
issue affecting pre-1.0 (legacy) virtio drivers.
The patch was submitted to QEMU mail list by @afscoelho_gmail.com, available at
https://lists.nongnu.org/archive/html/qemu-devel/2020-01/msg01496.html
Submitted by: Alfredo Dal'Ava Junior <alfredo.junior@eldorado.org.br>
Reviewed by: luporl
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D22833
This overlays can be used on A64 board to use spigen and spi(8)
on the spi0 pins.
Tested On: Pine64-LTS, A64-Olinuxino
Submitted by: Gary Otten <gdotten@gmail.com>
An i2c bus can be divided into segments which can be selectively connected
and disconnected from the main bus. This is usually done to enable using
multiple slave devices having the same address, by isolating the devices
onto separate bus segments, only one of which is connected to the main bus
at once.
There are several types of i2c bus muxes, which break down into two general
categories...
- Muxes which are themselves i2c slaves. These devices respond to i2c
commands on their upstream bus, and based on those commands, connect
various downstream buses to the upstream. In newbus terms, they are both
a child of an iicbus and the parent of one or more iicbus instances.
- Muxes which are not i2c devices themselves. Such devices are part of the
i2c bus electrically, but in newbus terms their parent is some other
bus. The association with the upstream bus must be established by
separate metadata (such as FDT data).
In both cases, the mux driver has one or more iicbus child instances
representing the downstream buses. The mux driver implements the iicbus_if
interface, as if it were an iichb host bridge/i2c controller driver. It
services the IO requests sent to it by forwarding them to the iicbus
instance representing the upstream bus, after electrically connecting the
upstream bus to the downstream bus that hosts the i2c slave device which
made the IO request.
The net effect is automatic mux switching which is transparent to slaves on
the downstream buses. They just do i2c IO they way they normally do, and the
bus is electrically connected for the duration of the IO and then idled when
it is complete.
The existing iicbus_if callback() method is enhanced so that the parameter
passed to it can be a struct which contains a device_t for the requesting
bus and slave devices. This change is done by adding a flag that indicates
the extra values are present, and making the flags field the first field of
a new args struct. If the flag is set, the iichb or mux driver can recast
the pointer-to-flags into a pointer-to-struct and access the extra
fields. Thus abi compatibility with older drivers is retained (but a mux
cannot exist on the bus with the older iicbus driver in use.)
A new set of core support routines exists in iicbus.c. This code will help
implement mux drivers for any type of mux hardware by supplying all the
boilerplate code that forwards IO requests upstream. It also has code for
parsing metadata and instantiating the child iicbus instances based on it.
Two new hardware mux drivers are added. The ltc430x driver supports the
LTC4305/4306 mux chips which are controlled via i2c commands. The
iic_gpiomux driver supports any mux hardware which is controlled by
manipulating the state of one or more gpio pins. Test Plan
Tested locally using a variety of mux'd bus configurations involving both
ltc4305 and a homebrew gpio-controlled mux. Tested configurations included
cascaded muxes (unlikely in the real world, but useful to prove that 'it all
just works' in terms of the automatic switching and upstream forwarding of
IO requests).
This code was not actively maintained since it was introduced 10 years ago.
It lacks support for many later GEOM features, such as direct dispatch,
unmapped I/O, stripesize/stripeoffset, resize, etc. Plus it is the only
remaining use of GEOM nstart/nend request counters, used there to implement
live insertion/removal, questionable by itself. Plus, as number of people
commented, GEOM is not the best place for I/O scheduler, since it has
limited information about layers both above and below it, required for
efficient scheduling. Plus with the modern shift to SSDs there is just no
more significant need for this kind of scheduling.
Approved by: imp, phk, luigi
Relnotes: yes
This uses the new layout of the upstream repository, which was recently
migrated to GitHub, and converted into a "monorepo". That is, most of
the earlier separate sub-projects with their own branches and tags were
consolidated into one top-level directory, and are now branched and
tagged together.
Updating the vendor area to match this layout is next.
array with a singleton.
Also, pccbb isa attachment is never going to happen, do disconnect it from the
build (will delete this in future commit). It would need to be updated as well,
but since this code is effectively dead code, remove it from the build instead.
datagrams.
Previously destination address from original datagram was used. That
looked confusing, especially in the traceroute6 output.
Also honor IPSTEALTH kernel option and do TTL/HLIM decrementing only
when stealth mode is disabled.
Reported by: Marco van Tol <marco at tols org>
Reviewed by: melifaro
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: Yandex LLC
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D22631
These were obtained from the Chelsio Unified Wire v3.12.0.1 beta
release.
Note that the firmwares are not uuencoded any more.
MFH: 1 month
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
ConnectX-6 DX.
Currently TLS v1.2 and v1.3 with AES 128/256 crypto over TCP/IP (v4
and v6) is supported.
A per PCI device UMA zone is used to manage the memory of the send
tags. To optimize performance some crypto contexts may be cached by
the UMA zone, until the UMA zone finishes the memory of the given send
tag.
An asynchronous task is used manage setup of the send tags towards the
firmware. Most importantly setting the AES 128/256 bit pre-shared keys
for the crypto context.
Updating the state of the AES crypto engine and encrypting data, is
all done in the fast path. Each send tag tracks the TCP sequence
number in order to detect non-contiguous blocks of data, which may
require a dump of prior unencrypted data, to restore the crypto state
prior to wire transmission.
Statistics counters have been added to count the amount of TLS data
transmitted in total, and the amount of TLS data which has been dumped
prior to transmission. When non-contiguous TCP sequence numbers are
detected, the software needs to dump the beginning of the current TLS
record up until the point of retransmission. All TLS counters utilize
the counter(9) API.
In order to enable hardware TLS offload the following sysctls must be set:
kern.ipc.mb_use_ext_pgs=1
kern.ipc.tls.ifnet.permitted=1
kern.ipc.tls.enable=1
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies
The hardware offload is primarily targeted for TLS v1.2 and v1.3,
using AES 128/256 bit pre-shared keys. This patch adds all the needed
hardware structures, capabilites and firmware commands.
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies
This adds support for ifnet (NIC) KTLS using Chelsio T6 adapters.
Unlike the TOE-based KTLS in r353328, NIC TLS works with non-TOE
connections.
NIC KTLS on T6 is not able to use the normal TSO (LSO) path to segment
the encrypted TLS frames output by the crypto engine. Instead, the
TOE is placed into a special setup to permit "dummy" connections to be
associated with regular sockets using KTLS. This permits using the
TOE to segment the encrypted TLS records. However, this approach does
have some limitations:
1) Regular TOE sockets cannot be used when the TOE is in this special
mode. One can use either TOE and TOE-based KTLS or NIC KTLS, but
not both at the same time.
2) In NIC KTLS mode, the TOE is only able to accept a per-connection
timestamp offset that varies in the upper 4 bits. Put another way,
only connections whose timestamp offset has the 28 lower bits
cleared can use NIC KTLS and generate correct timestamps. The
driver will refuse to enable NIC KTLS on connections with a
timestamp offset with any of the lower 28 bits set. To use NIC
KTLS, users can either disable TCP timestamps by setting the
net.inet.tcp.rfc1323 sysctl to 0, or apply a local patch to the
tcp_new_ts_offset() function to clear the lower 28 bits of the
generated offset.
3) Because the TCP segmentation relies on fields mirrored in a TCB in
the TOE, not all fields in a TCP packet can be sent in the TCP
segments generated from a TLS record. Specifically, for packets
containing TCP options other than timestamps, the driver will
inject an "empty" TCP packet holding the requested options (e.g. a
SACK scoreboard) along with the segments from the TLS record.
These empty TCP packets are counted by the
dev.cc.N.txq.M.kern_tls_options sysctls.
Unlike TOE TLS which is able to buffer encrypted TLS records in
on-card memory to handle retransmits, NIC KTLS must re-encrypt TLS
records for retransmit requests as well as non-retransmit requests
that do not include the start of a TLS record but do include the
trailer. The T6 NIC KTLS code tries to optimize some of the cases for
requests to transmit partial TLS records. In particular it attempts
to minimize sending "waste" bytes that have to be given as input to
the crypto engine but are not needed on the wire to satisfy mbufs sent
from the TCP stack down to the driver.
TCP packets for TLS requests are broken down into the following
classes (with associated counters):
- Mbufs that send an entire TLS record in full do not have any waste
bytes (dev.cc.N.txq.M.kern_tls_full).
- Mbufs that send a short TLS record that ends before the end of the
trailer (dev.cc.N.txq.M.kern_tls_short). For sockets using AES-CBC,
the encryption must always start at the beginning, so if the mbuf
starts at an offset into the TLS record, the offset bytes will be
"waste" bytes. For sockets using AES-GCM, the encryption can start
at the 16 byte block before the starting offset capping the waste at
15 bytes.
- Mbufs that send a partial TLS record that has a non-zero starting
offset but ends at the end of the trailer
(dev.cc.N.txq.M.kern_tls_partial). In order to compute the
authentication hash stored in the trailer, the entire TLS record
must be sent as input to the crypto engine, so the bytes before the
offset are always "waste" bytes.
In addition, other per-txq sysctls are provided:
- dev.cc.N.txq.M.kern_tls_cbc: Count of sockets sent via this txq
using AES-CBC.
- dev.cc.N.txq.M.kern_tls_gcm: Count of sockets sent via this txq
using AES-GCM.
- dev.cc.N.txq.M.kern_tls_fin: Count of empty FIN-only packets sent to
compensate for the TOE engine not being able to set FIN on the last
segment of a TLS record if the TLS record mbuf had FIN set.
- dev.cc.N.txq.M.kern_tls_records: Count of TLS records sent via this
txq including full, short, and partial records.
- dev.cc.N.txq.M.kern_tls_octets: Count of non-waste bytes (TLS header
and payload) sent for TLS record requests.
- dev.cc.N.txq.M.kern_tls_waste: Count of waste bytes sent for TLS
record requests.
To enable NIC KTLS with T6, set the following tunables prior to
loading the cxgbe(4) driver:
hw.cxgbe.config_file=kern_tls
hw.cxgbe.kern_tls=1
Reviewed by: np
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D21962
Update the NetBSD Kernel Concurrency Sanitizer (KCSAN) runtime to work in
the FreeBSD kernel. It is a useful tool for finding data races between
threads executing on different CPUs.
This can be enabled by enabling KCSAN in the kernel config, or by using the
GENERIC-KCSAN amd64 kernel. It works on amd64 and arm64, however the later
needs a compiler change to allow -fsanitize=thread that KCSAN uses.
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D22315
This driver allows to usage of the paravirt SCSI controller
in VMware products like ESXi. The pvscsi driver provides a
substantial performance improvement in block devices versus
the emulated mpt and mps SCSI/SAS controllers.
Error handling in this driver has not been extensively tested
yet.
Submitted by: vbhakta@vmware.com
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: VMware, Panzura
Differential Revision: D18613
ccr(4) and TLS support in cxgbe(4) construct key contexts used by the
crypto engine in the T6. This consolidates some duplicated code for
helper functions used to build key contexts.
Reviewed by: np
MFC after: 1 month
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D22156
Match such chips using the device ID. We should really be checking the
subdevice as well, since a smaller number of 9460 and 9560 devices
actually belong to a new series of devices and require different
firmware, but that will require some extra logic in iwm_attach().
Submitted by: lwhsu, Guo Wen Jun <blockk2000@gmail.com>
MFC after: 2 weeks
The Microchip LAN7430 is a PCIe 10/100/1000 Ethernet MAC with integrated
PHY, and the LAN7431 is a MAC with RGMII interface.
To be connected to the build after further testing and review.
Committing now so that changes like r354345 (adding a common
ETHER_IS_ZERO macro) will update this driver too.
Submitted by: Gerald ND Aryeetey <aryeeteygerald_rogers.com>
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20079
Version 43 requires further modifications to iwm(4), and this was not
caught in some initial testing. Version 34 works and is the version
available on Intel's web site.
MFC with: r354201
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Port illumos change: https://www.illumos.org/issues/11667
Move lz4.c out of zfs tree to opensolaris/common/lz4, adjust it to be
usable from kernel/stand/userland builds, so we can use just one single
source. Add lz4.h to declare lz4_compress() and lz4_decompress().
MFC after: 1 month
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D22037
Mock implementation of NETMAP routines is located in ena_netmap.c/.h
files. All code is protected under the DEV_NETMAP macro. Makefile was
updated with files and flag.
As ENA driver provide own implementations of (un)likely it must be
undefined before including NETMAP headers.
ena_netmap_attach function is called on the end of NIC attach. It fills
structure with NIC configuration and callbacks. Then provides it to
netmap_attach. Similarly netmap_detach is called during ena_detach.
Three callbacks are used.
nm_register is implemented by ena_netmap_reg. It is called when user
space application open or close NIC in NETMAP mode. Current action is
recognized based on onoff parameter: true means on and false off. As
NICs rings need to be reconfigured ena_down and ena_up are reused.
When user space application wants to receive new packets from NIC
nm_rxsync is called, and when there are new packets ready for Tx
nm_txsync is called.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D21934
Submitted by: Rafal Kozik <rk@semihalf.com>
Michal Krawczyk <mk@semihalf.com>
Obtained from: Semihalf
Sponsored by: Amazon, Inc.
Move Rx/Tx routines to separate file.
Some functions:
* ena_restore_device,
* ena_destroy_device,
* ena_up,
* ena_down,
* ena_refill_rx_bufs
could be reused in upcoming netmap code in the driver. To make it
possible, they were moved to ena.h header.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D21933
Submitted by: Rafal Kozik <rk@semihalf.com>
Obtained from: Semihalf
Sponsored by: Amazon, Inc.
This is in preparation for adding the corresponding support to iwm(4).
Version 46 is the latest but contains unrecognized TLVs, so use version
43 for now.
Obtained from: linux-firmware
MFC after: 1 month
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
These drivers have been merged into a single if_tuntap in 13.0. The
compatibility links existed only for the interim and will be MFC'd along
with the if_tuntap merge shortly.
MFC after: never
starting at the max. domain, and then work down. Then existing FreeBSD
drivers will attach. Interrupt routing from the VMD MSI-X to the NVME
drive is not well known, so any interrupt is sent to all children that
register.
VROC used Intel meta data so graid(8) works with it. However, graid(8)
supports RAID 0,1,10 for read and write. I have some early code to
support writes with RAID 5. Note that RAID 5 can have life issues
with SSDs since it can cause write amplification from updating the parity
data.
Hot plug support needs a change to skip the following check to work:
if (pcib_request_feature(dev, PCI_FEATURE_HP) != 0) {
in sys/dev/pci/pci_pci.c.
Looked at by: imp, rpokala, bcr
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D21383
nvdimm_e820 is a newbus pseudo driver that looks for "legacy" e820 PRAM
spans and creates ordinary-looking SPA devfs nodes for them
(/dev/nvdimm_spaN).
As these legacy regions lack real NFIT SPA regions and namespace
definitions, they must be administratively sliced up externally using
device.hints. This is similar in purpose to the Linux memmap= mechanism.
It is assumed that systems with working NFIT tables will not have any use
for this driver, and that that will be the prevailing style going forward,
so if there are no explicit hints provided, this driver does not
automatically create any devices.
Reviewed by: kib (previous version)
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D21885
MPFS is a logical switch in the Mellanox device which forward packets
based on a hardware driven L2 address table, to one or more physical-
or virtual- functions. The physical- or virtual- function is required
to tell the MPFS by using the MPFS firmware commands, which unicast
MAC addresses it is requesting from the physical port's traffic.
Broadcast and multicast traffic however, is copied to all listening
physical- and virtual- functions and does not need a rule in the MPFS
switching table.
Linux commit: eeb66cdb682678bfd1f02a4547e3649b38ffea7e
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies
No functional change intended.
The intent is to add a "legacy" e820 pmem newbus bus for nvdimm device in a
subsequent revision, and it's a little more clear if the parent buses get
independent source files.
Quite a lot of ACPI-specific logic is left in nvdimm.c; disentangling that
is a much larger change (and probably not especially useful).
Reviewed by: kib
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D21813
is a completely separate TCP stack (tcp_bbr.ko) that will be built only if
you add the make options WITH_EXTRA_TCP_STACKS=1 and also include the option
TCPHPTS. You can also include the RATELIMIT option if you have a NIC interface that
supports hardware pacing, BBR understands how to use such a feature.
Note that this commit also adds in a general purpose time-filter which
allows you to have a min-filter or max-filter. A filter allows you to
have a low (or high) value for some period of time and degrade slowly
to another value has time passes. You can find out the details of
BBR by looking at the original paper at:
https://queue.acm.org/detail.cfm?id=3022184
or consult many other web resources you can find on the web
referenced by "BBR congestion control". It should be noted that
BBRv1 (which this is) does tend to unfairness in cases of small
buffered paths, and it will usually get less bandwidth in the case
of large BDP paths(when competing with new-reno or cubic flows). BBR
is still an active research area and we do plan on implementing V2
of BBR to see if it is an improvement over V1.
Sponsored by: Netflix Inc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D21582
Add a very basic NVRAM driver for OPAL which can be used by the IBM
powerpc-utils nvram utility, not to be confused with the base nvram utility,
which only operates on powermac_nvram.
The IBM utility handles all partitions itself, treating the nvram device as
a plain store.
An alternative would be to manage partitions in the kernel, and augment the
base nvram utility to deal with different backing stores, but that
complicates the driver significantly. Instead, present the same interface
IBM's utlity expects, and we get the usage for free.
Tested by: bdragon
More work needs to be done, but it is capable of running basic
statically or dynamically linked Linux/arm64 binaries.
Relnotes: Yes
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
KTLS adds support for in-kernel framing and encryption of Transport
Layer Security (1.0-1.2) data on TCP sockets. KTLS only supports
offload of TLS for transmitted data. Key negotation must still be
performed in userland. Once completed, transmit session keys for a
connection are provided to the kernel via a new TCP_TXTLS_ENABLE
socket option. All subsequent data transmitted on the socket is
placed into TLS frames and encrypted using the supplied keys.
Any data written to a KTLS-enabled socket via write(2), aio_write(2),
or sendfile(2) is assumed to be application data and is encoded in TLS
frames with an application data type. Individual records can be sent
with a custom type (e.g. handshake messages) via sendmsg(2) with a new
control message (TLS_SET_RECORD_TYPE) specifying the record type.
At present, rekeying is not supported though the in-kernel framework
should support rekeying.
KTLS makes use of the recently added unmapped mbufs to store TLS
frames in the socket buffer. Each TLS frame is described by a single
ext_pgs mbuf. The ext_pgs structure contains the header of the TLS
record (and trailer for encrypted records) as well as references to
the associated TLS session.
KTLS supports two primary methods of encrypting TLS frames: software
TLS and ifnet TLS.
Software TLS marks mbufs holding socket data as not ready via
M_NOTREADY similar to sendfile(2) when TLS framing information is
added to an unmapped mbuf in ktls_frame(). ktls_enqueue() is then
called to schedule TLS frames for encryption. In the case of
sendfile_iodone() calls ktls_enqueue() instead of pru_ready() leaving
the mbufs marked M_NOTREADY until encryption is completed. For other
writes (vn_sendfile when pages are available, write(2), etc.), the
PRUS_NOTREADY is set when invoking pru_send() along with invoking
ktls_enqueue().
A pool of worker threads (the "KTLS" kernel process) encrypts TLS
frames queued via ktls_enqueue(). Each TLS frame is temporarily
mapped using the direct map and passed to a software encryption
backend to perform the actual encryption.
(Note: The use of PHYS_TO_DMAP could be replaced with sf_bufs if
someone wished to make this work on architectures without a direct
map.)
KTLS supports pluggable software encryption backends. Internally,
Netflix uses proprietary pure-software backends. This commit includes
a simple backend in a new ktls_ocf.ko module that uses the kernel's
OpenCrypto framework to provide AES-GCM encryption of TLS frames. As
a result, software TLS is now a bit of a misnomer as it can make use
of hardware crypto accelerators.
Once software encryption has finished, the TLS frame mbufs are marked
ready via pru_ready(). At this point, the encrypted data appears as
regular payload to the TCP stack stored in unmapped mbufs.
ifnet TLS permits a NIC to offload the TLS encryption and TCP
segmentation. In this mode, a new send tag type (IF_SND_TAG_TYPE_TLS)
is allocated on the interface a socket is routed over and associated
with a TLS session. TLS records for a TLS session using ifnet TLS are
not marked M_NOTREADY but are passed down the stack unencrypted. The
ip_output_send() and ip6_output_send() helper functions that apply
send tags to outbound IP packets verify that the send tag of the TLS
record matches the outbound interface. If so, the packet is tagged
with the TLS send tag and sent to the interface. The NIC device
driver must recognize packets with the TLS send tag and schedule them
for TLS encryption and TCP segmentation. If the the outbound
interface does not match the interface in the TLS send tag, the packet
is dropped. In addition, a task is scheduled to refresh the TLS send
tag for the TLS session. If a new TLS send tag cannot be allocated,
the connection is dropped. If a new TLS send tag is allocated,
however, subsequent packets will be tagged with the correct TLS send
tag. (This latter case has been tested by configuring both ports of a
Chelsio T6 in a lagg and failing over from one port to another. As
the connections migrated to the new port, new TLS send tags were
allocated for the new port and connections resumed without being
dropped.)
ifnet TLS can be enabled and disabled on supported network interfaces
via new '[-]txtls[46]' options to ifconfig(8). ifnet TLS is supported
across both vlan devices and lagg interfaces using failover, lacp with
flowid enabled, or lacp with flowid enabled.
Applications may request the current KTLS mode of a connection via a
new TCP_TXTLS_MODE socket option. They can also use this socket
option to toggle between software and ifnet TLS modes.
In addition, a testing tool is available in tools/tools/switch_tls.
This is modeled on tcpdrop and uses similar syntax. However, instead
of dropping connections, -s is used to force KTLS connections to
switch to software TLS and -i is used to switch to ifnet TLS.
Various sysctls and counters are available under the kern.ipc.tls
sysctl node. The kern.ipc.tls.enable node must be set to true to
enable KTLS (it is off by default). The use of unmapped mbufs must
also be enabled via kern.ipc.mb_use_ext_pgs to enable KTLS.
KTLS is enabled via the KERN_TLS kernel option.
This patch is the culmination of years of work by several folks
including Scott Long and Randall Stewart for the original design and
implementation; Drew Gallatin for several optimizations including the
use of ext_pgs mbufs, the M_NOTREADY mechanism for TLS records
awaiting software encryption, and pluggable software crypto backends;
and John Baldwin for modifications to support hardware TLS offload.
Reviewed by: gallatin, hselasky, rrs
Obtained from: Netflix
Sponsored by: Netflix, Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D21277
Intel has created RST and many laptops from vendors like Lenovo and Asus. It's a
mechanism for creating multiple boot devices under windows. It effectively hides
the nvme drive inside of the ahci controller. The details are supposed to be a
trade secret. However, there's a reverse engineered Linux driver, and this
implements similar operations to allow nvme drives to attach. The ahci driver
attaches nvme children that proxy the remapped resources to the child. nvme_ahci
is just like nvme_pci, except it doesn't do the PCI specific things. That's
moved into ahci where appropriate.
When the nvme drive is remapped, MSI-x interrupts aren't forwarded (the linux
driver doesn't know how to use this either). INTx interrupts are used
instead. This is suboptimal, but usually sufficient for the laptops these parts
are in.
This is based loosely on https://www.spinics.net/lists/linux-ide/msg53364.html
submitted, but not accepted by, Linux. It was written by Dan Williams. These
changes were written from scratch by Olivier Houchard.
Submitted by: cognet@ (Olivier Houchard)
Nvme drives can be attached in a number of different ways. Separate out the PCI
attachment so that we can have other attachment types, like ahci and various
types of NVMeoF.
Submitted by: cognet@
Add helper function for synchronous execution of HCI commands at probe
stage and use this function to check firmware state of Intel Wireless
8260/8265 bluetooth devices found in many post 2016 year laptops.
Attempt to initialize FreeBSD bluetooth stack while such a device is in
bootloader mode locks the adapter hardly so it requires power on/off
cycle to restore.
This change blocks ng_ubt attachment unless operational firmware is
loaded thus preventing the lock up.
PR: 237083
Reviewed by: hps, emax
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D21071
NTB Tool driver is meant for testing NTB hardware driver functionalities,
such as doorbell interrupts, link events, scratchpad registers and memory
windows. This is a port of ntb_tool driver from Linux. It has been
verified on top of AMD and PLX NTB HW drivers.
Submitted by: Arpan Palit <arpan.palit@amd.com>
Cleaned up by: mav
MFC after: 2 weeks
Relnotes: yes
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D18819
The Zstd format bumps the CLOOP major number to 4 to avoid incompatibility
with older systems. Support in geom_uzip(4) is conditional on the ZSTDIO
kernel option, which is enabled in amd64 GENERIC, but not all in-tree
configurations.
mkuzip(8) was modified slightly to always initialize the nblocks + 1'th
offset in the CLOOP file format. Previously, it was only initialized in the
case where the final compressed block happened to be unaligned w.r.t.
DEV_BSIZE. The "Fake" last+1 block change in r298619 means that the final
compressed block's 'blen' was never correct unless the compressed uzip image
happened to be BSIZE-aligned. This happened in about 1 out of every 512
cases. The zlib and lzma decompressors are probably tolerant of extra trash
following the frame they were told to decode, but Zstd complains that the
input size is incorrect.
Correspondingly, geom_uzip(4) was modified slightly to avoid trashing the
nblocks + 1'th offset when it is known to be initialized to a good value.
This corrects the calculated final real cluster compressed length to match
that printed by mkuzip(8).
mkuzip(8) was refactored somewhat to reduce code duplication and increase
ease of adding other compression formats.
* Input block size validation was pulled out of individual compression
init routines into main().
* Init routines now validate a user-provided compression level or select
an algorithm-specific default, if none was provided.
* A new interface for calculating the maximal compressed size of an
incompressible input block was added for each driver. The generic code
uses it to validate against MAXPHYS as well as to allocate compression
result buffers in the generic code.
* Algorithm selection is now driven by a table lookup, to increase ease of
adding other formats in the future.
mkuzip(8) gained the ability to explicitly specify a compression level with
'-C'. The prior defaults -- 9 for zlib and 6 for lzma -- are maintained.
The new zstd default is 9, to match zlib.
Rather than select lzma or zlib with '-L' or its absense, respectively, a
new argument '-A <algorithm>' is provided to select 'zlib', 'lzma', or
'zstd'. '-L' is considered deprecated, but will probably never be removed.
All of the new features were documented in mkuzip.8; the page was also
cleaned up slightly.
Relnotes: yes
Follow-up on r322318 and r322319 and remove the deprecated modules.
Shift some now-unused kernel files into userspace utilities that incorporate
them. Remove references to removed GEOM classes in userspace utilities.
Reviewed by: imp (earlier version)
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D21249
- Use new zlib headers;
- Removed z_alloc and z_free to use the common sys/dev/zlib version.
- Replace z_compressBound with compressBound from zlib.
While there, limit LZMA CFLAGS to apply only for g_uzip_lzma.c.
PR: 229763
Submitted by: Yoshihiro Ota <ota j email ne jp> (with changes,
bugs are mine)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20271
On FreeBSD 13.0, the fuse driver will always be known as fusefs. The
backwards compatibility symlink will still be used for stable/12 and
stable/11, though.
Reported by: jhibbits
Reviewed by: rgrimes, imp, cem
MFC after: Never
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D21181
with Communication Device Class Ethernet Emulation Model (CDC EEM).
The driver supports both the device, and host side operation; there
is a new USB template (#11) for the former.
This enables communication with virtual USB NIC provided by iLO 5,
as found in new HPE Proliant servers.
Reviewed by: hselasky
MFC after: 2 weeks
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: Hewlett Packard Enterprise
Instances of the device can be configured using hints or FDT data.
Interfaces to reconfigure the chip and extract voltage measurements from
it are available via sysctl(8).
with an eventual goal to convert all legacl zlib callers to the new zlib
version:
* Move generic zlib shims that are not specific to zlib 1.0.4 to
sys/dev/zlib.
* Connect new zlib (1.2.11) to the zlib kernel module, currently built
with Z_SOLO.
* Prefix the legacy zlib (1.0.4) with 'zlib104_' namespace.
* Convert sys/opencrypto/cryptodeflate.c to use new zlib.
* Remove bundled zlib 1.2.3 from ZFS and adapt it to new zlib and make
it depend on the zlib module.
* Fix Z_SOLO build of new zlib.
PR: 229763
Submitted by: Yoshihiro Ota <ota j email ne jp>
Reviewed by: markm (sys/dev/zlib/zlib_kmod.c)
Relnotes: yes
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19706
It is assembled using "${CC} -x assembler-with-cpp", which by convention
(bsd.suffixes.mk) uses the .asm extension.
This is a portion of the review referenced below (D18344). That review
also renamed linux_support.s to .S, but that is a functional change
(using the compiler's integrated assembler instead of as) and will be
revisited separately.
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D18344
The already-listed APMC0D0F ID belongs to the Ampere eMAG aarch64
platform, but ACPI support was not even built on aarch64.
Submitted by: Greg V <greg_unrelenting.technology>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D21059
well as sets in some of the groundwork for committing BBR. The
hpts system is updated as well as some other needed utilities
for the entrance of BBR. This is actually part 1 of 3 more
needed commits which will finally complete with BBRv1 being
added as a new tcp stack.
Sponsored by: Netflix Inc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20834
This patch is the driver for NTB hardware in AMD SoCs (ported from Linux)
and enables the NTB infrastructure like Doorbells, Scratchpads and Memory
window in AMD SoC. This driver has been validated using ntb_transport and
if_ntb driver already available in FreeBSD.
Submitted by: Rajesh Kumar <rajesh1.kumar@amd.com>
MFC after: 1 month
Relnotes: yes
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D18774
The goal of this driver is consolidate information about SuperIO chips
and to provide for peaceful coexistence of drivers that need to access
SuperIO configuration registers.
While SuperIO chips can host various functions most of them are
discoverable and accessible without any knowledge of the SuperIO.
Examples are: keyboard and mouse controllers, UARTs, floppy disk
controllers. SuperIO-s also provide non-standard functions such as
GPIO, watchdog timers and hardware monitoring. Such functions do
require drivers with a knowledge of a specific SuperIO.
At this time the driver supports a number of ITE and Nuvoton (fka
Winbond) SuperIO chips.
There is a single driver for all devices. So, I have not done the usual
split between the hardware driver and the bus functionality. Although,
superio does act as a bus for devices that represent known non-standard
functions of a SuperIO chip. The bus provides enumeration of child
devices based on the hardcoded knowledge of such functions. The
knowledge as extracted from datasheets and other drivers.
As there is a single driver, I have not defined a kobj interface for it.
So, its interface is currently made of simple functions.
I think that we can the flexibility (and complications) when we actually
need it.
I am planning to convert nctgpio and wbwd to superio bus very soon.
Also, I am working on itwd driver (watchdog in ITE SuperIO-s).
Additionally, there is ithwm driver based on the reverted sensors
import, but I am not sure how to integrate it given that we still lack
any sensors interface.
Discussed with: imp, jhb
MFC after: 7 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D8175
NANDFS has been broken for years. Remove it. The NAND drivers that
remain are for ancient parts that are no longer relevant. They are
polled, have terrible performance and just for ancient arm
hardware. NAND parts have evolved significantly from this early work
and little to none of it would be relevant should someone need to
update to support raw nand. This code has been off by default for
years and has violated the vnode protocol leading to panics since it
was committed.
Numerous posts to arch@ and other locations have found no actual users
for this software.
Relnotes: Yes
No Objection From: arch@
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20745
This adds ACPI device path on devinfo(8) output and
show value of _UPC(usb port capabilities), _PLD (physical location of device)
when hw.usb.debug >= 1 .
Reviewed by: hselasky
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20630
The natural place to look for them based on how other SoCs are organized
would be sys/modules/ti, but that's already taken. Drop a clue into
modules/ti/Makefile directing people to modules/arm_ti if they're looking
for ARM modules.
necessary support functions in cpu-v6.h, and it may be that the only armv6
platform we support (RPi, the bcm2835 SOC) is incapable of supporting hwpmc.
Reported by: dim@
This fixes META_MODE rebuilding since it assumes that it this is
a non-consistent build command. These are always unencoded consistently
though and do not need to use the .OODATE/$? mechanism.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Reported by: npn
Sponsored by: DellEMC
Add a CAM-Newbus SDIO support module. This works provides a newbus
infrastructure for device drivers wanting to use SDIO. On the lower end
while it is connected by newbus to SDHCI, it talks CAM using the MMCCAM
framework to get to it.
This also duplicates the usbdevs framework to equally create sdiodev
header files with #defines for "vendors" and "products".
Submitted by: kibab (initial work, see https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12467)
Reviewed by: kibab, imp (comments on earlier version)
MFC after: 6 weeks
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19749
install -> ${INSTALL}
mtree -> ${MTREE_CMD}
services_mkdb -> ${SERVICES_MKDB_CMD}
cap_mkdb -> ${CAP_MKDB_CMD}
pwd_mkdb -> ${PWD_MKDB_CMD}
kldxref -> ${KLDXREF_CMD}
If you do custom FreeBSD builds you may want to override those
in some cases.
Sponsored by: Sippy Software, Inc.
ENAv2 introduces many new features, bug fixes and improvements.
Main new features are LLQ (Low Latency Queues) and independent queues
reconfiguration using sysctl commands.
The year in copyright notice was updated to 2019.
Submitted by: Michal Krawczyk <mk@semihalf.com>
Obtained from: Semihalf
Sponsored by: Amazon, Inc.
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
FDT data is sometimes used to configure usb devices which are hardwired into
an embedded system. Because the devices are instantiated by the usb
enumeration process rather than by ofwbus iterating through the fdt data, it
is somewhat difficult for a usb driver to locate fdt data that belongs to
it. In the past, various ad-hoc methods have been used, which can lead to
errors such applying configuration that should apply only to a hardwired
device onto a similar device attached by the user at runtime. For example,
if the user adds an ethernet device that uses the same driver as the builtin
ethernet, both devices might end up with the same MAC address.
These changes add a new usb_fdt_get_node() helper function that a driver can
use to locate FDT data that belongs to a single unique instance of the
device. This function locates the proper FDT data using the mechanism
detailed in the standard "usb-device.txt" binding document [1].
There is also a new usb_fdt_get_mac_addr() function, used to retrieve the
mac address for a given device instance from the fdt data. It uses
usb_fdt_get_node() to locate the right node in the FDT data, and attempts to
obtain the mac-address or local-mac-address property (in that order, the
same as linux does it).
The existing if_smsc driver is modified to use the new functions, both as an
example and for testing the new functions. Rpi and rpi2 boards use this
driver and provide the mac address via the fdt data.
[1] https://github.com/torvalds/linux/blob/master/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/usb/usb-device.txt
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20262
The source file was moved to base earlier and also improved upon,
but never compiled in. This patch will:
- Make a module in sys/modules
- Make lindebugfs depend on linuxkpi (for seq_file)
- Check if read/write functions are set before calling, DRM drivers
don't always set both of them.
Reviewed by: hps
Approved by: imp (mentor), hps
MFC after: 1 week
seq_file.h and linux_seq_file.c was imported form ports earlier but
linux_seq_file.c was never compiled in with the module. With this
commit base seq_file will replace ports seq_file and it required a
few modifications to not break functionality and build.
Reviewed by: hps
Approved by: imp (mentor), hps
MFC after: 1 week
of them listed in opt_global.h which is not generated while building
modules outside of a kernel and such modules never match real cofigured
kernel.
So, we should prevent our users from building obviously defective modules.
Therefore, remove the root cause of the building of modules outside of a
kernel - the possibility of building modules with DEBUG or KTR flags.
And remove all of DEBUG printfs as it is incomplete and in threaded
programms not informative, also a half of system call does not have DEBUG
printf. For debuging Linux programms we have dtrace, ktr and ktrace ability.
PR: 222861
Reviewed by: trasz
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20178
alter the userspace sockaddr to convert the format between linux and BSD versions.
That's the minimum 3 of copyin/copyout operations for one syscall.
Also some syscall uses linux_sa_put() and linux_getsockaddr() when load
sockaddr to userspace or from userspace accordingly.
To avoid this chaos, especially converting sockaddr in the userspace,
rewrite these 4 functions to convert sockaddr only in kernel and leave
only 2 of this functions.
Also in order to reduce duplication between MD parts of the Linuxulator put
struct sockaddr conversion functions that are MI out into linux_common module.
PR: 232920
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20157
This add ability to automatically load ipsec kernel module, when
if_ipsec(4) virtual interface is created using ifconfig(8).
Reviewed by: gallatin
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20169
Add support for DIM based on Linux,
with some minor adaptions specific to FreeBSD.
Linux commit
f97c3dc3c0e8d23a5c4357d182afeef4c67f5c33
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies
tun(4) and tap(4) share the same general management interface and have a lot
in common. Bugs exist in tap(4) that have been fixed in tun(4), and
vice-versa. Let's reduce the maintenance requirements by merging them
together and using flags to differentiate between the three interface types
(tun, tap, vmnet).
This fixes a couple of tap(4)/vmnet(4) issues right out of the gate:
- tap devices may no longer be destroyed while they're open [0]
- VIMAGE issues already addressed in tun by kp
[0] emaste had removed an easy-panic-button in r240938 due to devdrn
blocking. A naive glance over this leads me to believe that this isn't quite
complete -- destroy_devl will only block while executing d_* functions, but
doesn't block the device from being destroyed while a process has it open.
The latter is the intent of the condvar in tun, so this is "fixed" (for
certain definitions of the word -- it wasn't really broken in tap, it just
wasn't quite ideal).
ifconfig(8) also grew the ability to map an interface name to a kld, so
that `ifconfig {tun,tap}0` can continue to autoload the correct module, and
`ifconfig vmnet0 create` will now autoload the correct module. This is a
low overhead addition.
(MFC commentary)
This may get MFC'd if many bugs in tun(4)/tap(4) are discovered after this,
and how critical they are. Changes after this are likely easily MFC'd
without taking this merge, but the merge will be easier.
I have no plans to do this MFC as of now.
Reviewed by: bcr (manpages), tuexen (testing, syzkaller/packetdrill)
Input also from: melifaro
Relnotes: yes
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20044
The DTS for this board is already present in sys/gnu/dts/arm64/rockchip/
and just needs to be enabled.
Submitted by: alex@wied.io
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19823
Some PPC systems (PowerNV) use msdosfs for /boot, which can't handle either
symlinks or hardlinks. So on PPC, copy the module instead. This change fixes
installkernel on such systems after r345350.
Reported by: Brandon Bergren <git_bdragon.rtk0.net>
Reviewed by: jhibbits, rgrimes
MFC after: 2 weeks
MFC-With: 345350, 346441
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19993
This GRE-in-UDP encapsulation allows the UDP source port field to be
used as an entropy field for load-balancing of GRE traffic in transit
networks. Also most of multiqueue network cards are able distribute
incoming UDP datagrams to different NIC queues, while very little are
able do this for GRE packets.
When an administrator enables UDP encapsulation with command
`ifconfig gre0 udpencap`, the driver creates kernel socket, that binds
to tunnel source address and after udp_set_kernel_tunneling() starts
receiving of all UDP packets destined to 4754 port. Each kernel socket
maintains list of tunnels with different destination addresses. Thus
when several tunnels use the same source address, they all handled by
single socket. The IP[V6]_BINDANY socket option is used to be able bind
socket to source address even if it is not yet available in the system.
This may happen on system boot, when gre(4) interface is created before
source address become available. The encapsulation and sending of packets
is done directly from gre(4) into ip[6]_output() without using sockets.
Reviewed by: eugen
MFC after: 1 month
Relnotes: yes
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19921
Tested by Greg V with mlx5en on an Ampere eMAG instance at Packet.com on
c2.large.arm (with some additional uncommitted PCIe WIP).
PR: 237055
Submitted by: Greg V <greg@unrelenting.technology>
Reviewed by: hselasky
MFC after: 1 month
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19983
When aliasing a kernel module to a different name (ie if_igb for if_em),
it's better to use symlinks than hard links. kldxref will omit entries for
the links, ensuring that the loaded module has the correct name.
Reviewed by: imp
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19979
PR#223036 reported that INET6 callback addresses were not printed by
nfsdumpstate(8). This kernel patch adds INET6 addresses to the dump structure,
so that nfsdumpstate(8) can print them out, post-r346190.
The patch also includes the addition of #ifdef INET, INET6 as requested
by bz@.
PR: 223036
Reviewed by: bz, rgrimes
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19839
TMPFS_PAGES_MINRESERVED controls how much memory is reserved for the system
and not used by tmpfs.
On very small memory systems, the default value may be too high and this
prevents these small memory systems from using reroot, which is required
for them to install firmware updates.
Submitted by: Hiroki Mori <yamori813@yahoo.co.jp>
Reviewed by: mizhka
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D13583
This module provides support for the Amazon Elastic Network Adapter; it
was previously only built on x86 architectures, but Amazon EC2 now also
has ARM64 instances with this hardware.
Submitted by: Greg V
This makes it more consistent with other filesystems, which all end in "fs",
and more consistent with its mount helper, which is already named
"mount_fusefs".
Reviewed by: cem, rgrimes
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19649
Update NAT64LSN implementation:
o most of data structures and relations were modified to be able support
large number of translation states. Now each supported protocol can
use full ports range. Ports groups now are belongs to IPv4 alias
addresses, not hosts. Each ports group can keep several states chunks.
This is controlled with new `states_chunks` config option. States
chunks allow to have several translation states for single alias address
and port, but for different destination addresses.
o by default all hash tables now use jenkins hash.
o ConcurrencyKit and epoch(9) is used to make NAT64LSN lockless on fast path.
o one NAT64LSN instance now can be used to handle several IPv6 prefixes,
special prefix "::" value should be used for this purpose when instance
is created.
o due to modified internal data structures relations, the socket opcode
that does states listing was changed.
Obtained from: Yandex LLC
MFC after: 1 month
Sponsored by: Yandex LLC
o most of data structures and relations were modified to be able support
large number of translation states. Now each supported protocol can
use full ports range. Ports groups now are belongs to IPv4 alias
addresses, not hosts. Each ports group can keep several states chunks.
This is controlled with new `states_chunks` config option. States
chunks allow to have several translation states for single alias address
and port, but for different destination addresses.
o by default all hash tables now use jenkins hash.
o ConcurrencyKit and epoch(9) is used to make NAT64LSN lockless on fast path.
o one NAT64LSN instance now can be used to handle several IPv6 prefixes,
special prefix "::" value should be used for this purpose when instance
is created.
o due to modified internal data structures relations, the socket opcode
that does states listing was changed.
Obtained from: Yandex LLC
MFC after: 1 month
Sponsored by: Yandex LLC
CLAT is customer-side translator that algorithmically translates 1:1
private IPv4 addresses to global IPv6 addresses, and vice versa.
It is implemented as part of ipfw_nat64 kernel module. When module
is loaded or compiled into the kernel, it registers "nat64clat" external
action. External action named instance can be created using `create`
command and then used in ipfw rules. The create command accepts two
IPv6 prefixes `plat_prefix` and `clat_prefix`. If plat_prefix is ommitted,
IPv6 NAT64 Well-Known prefix 64:ff9b::/96 will be used.
# ipfw nat64clat CLAT create clat_prefix SRC_PFX plat_prefix DST_PFX
# ipfw add nat64clat CLAT ip4 from IPv4_PFX to any out
# ipfw add nat64clat CLAT ip6 from DST_PFX to SRC_PFX in
Obtained from: Yandex LLC
Submitted by: Boris N. Lytochkin
MFC after: 1 month
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: Yandex LLC
For some reason this seems to be required on aarch64, but I can build armv7
from clean without needing this in the list. (The file does get included,
so the mystery is why armv7 works.)
geom_flashmap depends on a slicer being available in order to do any
work. On fdt platforms this is provided by fdt_slicer, but this needs
to be available. Often it's compiled into the kernel for platforms that
boot from the relevant media, but this is not always the case. Add the
file to the geom_flashmap module so that it can be used on platforms
which don't always need this functionality available.
Embedded lzma decompression library becomes a module usable by other
consumers, in addition to geom_uzip.
Most important code changes are
- removal of XZ_DEC_SINGLE define, we need the code to work
with XZ_DEC_DYNALLOC;
- xz_crc32_init() call is removed from geom_uzip, xz module handles
initialization on its own.
xz is no longer embedded into geom_uzip, instead the depend line for
the module is provided, and corresponding kernel option is added to
each MIPS kernel config file using geom_uzip.
The commit also carries unrelated cleanup by removing excess "device geom_uzip"
in places which were missed in r344479.
Reviewed by: cem, hselasky, ray, slavash (previous versions)
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19266
MFC after: 3 weeks
Add support for simple NVDIMM v1.2 namespaces from the UEFI
version 2.7 specification. The combination of NVDIMM regions and
labels can lead to a wide variety of namespace layouts. Here we
support a simple subset of namespaces where each NVDIMM SPA range
is composed of a single region per member dimm.
Submitted by: D Scott Phillips <d.scott.phillips@intel.com>
Discussed with: kib
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Intel Corporation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D18736
An upcoming bug fix requires 64-bit atomics, which aren't implemented on
powerpc. The powerpc port of fasttrap is incomplete anyway and doesn't
get loaded by dtraceall.ko on powerpc because of a missing dependency;
it's presumed that it's effectively unused.
Discussed with: jhibbits
MFC after: 2 weeks
Remove support for compiling drm2 as a module. This has transitioned
to the drm-kmod or drm-legacy-kmodw ports.
Approved by: graphics team
Reviewed by: manu@, mmel@
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19196
Retire the drm modules / drivers. These are now handled by the
drm-legacy-kmod port and/or the drm-kmod port. All future
development and maintanace will be handled there.
Approved by: graphics team
Reviewed by: manu@, mmel@
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19196
This adds the CBC-MAC code to the kernel, but does not hook it up to
anything (that comes in the next commit).
https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc3610 describes the algorithm.
Note that this is a software-only implementation, which means it is
fairly slow.
Sponsored by: iXsystems Inc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D18592
Not all child devices of the NVDIMM root device represent DIMM devices
which are present in the system. The spec says (ACPI 6.2, sec 9.20.2):
For each NVDIMM present or intended to be supported by platform,
platform firmware also exposes an NVDIMM device ... under the
NVDIMM root device.
Present NVDIMM devices are found by walking all of the NFIT table's
SPA ranges, then walking the NVDIMM regions mentioned by those SPA
ranges.
A set of NFIT walking helper functions are introduced to avoid the
need to splat the enumeration logic across several disparate
callbacks.
Submitted by: D Scott Phillips <d.scott.phillips@intel.com>
Sponsored by: Intel Corporation
MFC after: 1 week
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D18439
iflib is already a module, but it is unconditionally compiled into the
kernel. There are drivers which do not need iflib(4), and there are
situations where somebody might not want iflib in kernel because of
using the corresponding driver as module.
Reviewed by: marius
Discussed with: erj
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19041
- Remove CS=2 entry from spigen-rpi2 since it didn't work
- Add spigen-rpi3 overlay for Raspberry Pi 3
- Enable rpi overlay modules for GENERIC kernel on aarch64
PR: 233489
Submitted by: bobf@mrp3.com
Reviewed by: db
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16088
Update the appropriate Makefile to build the new driver
together with the old one.
Submitted by: Kornel Duleba <mindal@semihalf.com>
Reported by: kib
Obtained from: Semihalf
Sponsored by: Stormshield
This fixes a warning seen when compiling amd64 GENERIC with clang 7.
Also remove the workaround added in r337324. clang 7 and gcc 4.2
generate the same code with or without the code change.
Reviewed by: imp (previous version)
MFC after: 3 days
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D18603
The code is unreachable since the entries of radeon_ioctls[] are not
associated with any device: we provide only the KMS entry points.
Moreover, r600_cp_dispatch_texture() contains an integer overflow bug
that can be triggered from userspace.[1]
Reported by: Anonymous of the Shellphish Grill Team[1]
Reviewed by: dumbbell
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D18516
I also learned that 'mips' is overly broad and covers 64bit architectures
too. However, it's not worth the fight right now, so any refinements
will have to come another day.
mpr as a module for powerpc or mips. An upcoming commit will cause these
drivers to rely on the presence of 64bit atomic operations. Discussed
with jhibbits.
Changelist:
- Replace netmap passthrough host support with a more general
mechanism to call TXSYNC/RXSYNC from an in-kernel event-loop.
No kernel threads are used to use this feature: the application
is required to spawn a thread (or a process) and issue a
SYNC_KLOOP_START (NIOCCTRL) command in the thread body. The
kernel loop is executed by the ioctl implementation, which returns
to userspace only when a different thread calls SYNC_KLOOP_STOP
or the netmap file descriptor is closed.
- Update the if_ptnet driver to cope with the new data structures,
and prune all the obsolete ptnetmap code.
- Add support for "null" netmap ports, useful to allocate netmap_if,
netmap_ring and netmap buffers to be used by specialized applications
(e.g. hypervisors). TXSYNC/RXSYNC on these ports have no effect.
- Various fixes and code refactoring.
Sponsored by: Sunny Valley Networks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D18015
Description of sensors is generated from firmware sources.
Submitted by: Martin Harvey <mharvey at solarflare.com>
Sponsored by: Solarflare Communications, Inc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D18251
Move empty definitions for platform-specific annotations from efsys.h
to EFX headers.
Submitted by: Martin Harvey <mharvey at solarflare.com>
Submitted by: Andrew Lee <alee at solarflare.com>
Sponsored by: Solarflare Communications, Inc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D18248
Submitted by: Andy Moreton <amoreton at solarflare.com>
Sponsored by: Solarflare Communications, Inc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D18214
- Store the clip table in 'struct adapter' instead of in the TOM softc.
- Init the clip table during attach and teardown during detach.
- While here, add a dev.<nexus>.<unit>.misc.clip sysctl to dump the
CLIP table.
This does mean that we update the clip table even if TOE is not enabled,
but non-TOE things need the CLIP table anyway.
Reviewed by: np, Krishnamraju Eraparaju @ Chelsio
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D18010
Submitted by: Andy Moreton <amoreton at solarflare.com>
Sponsored by: Solarflare Communications, Inc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D18142
Pick up Medford2 interfaces.
Split AOE operations out into own header.
Sponsored by: Solarflare Communications, Inc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D18137
HW needs to know which UDP packets should be treated as tunnel
encapsulation to do inner packet recognition, classification and
offloads.
Submitted by: Ivan Malov <ivan.malov at oktetlabs.ru>
Sponsored by: Solarflare Communications, Inc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D18134
CLANG_NO_IAS34 was introduced in r276696 to allow then-HEAD kernels to
be built with clang 3.4 in FreeBSD 10. As FreeBSD 11 and later includes
a version of Clang with a sufficiently capable integrated assembler we
do not need the workaround any longer.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
This driver was marked as gone in 12. We're at 13 now. Remove it.
Data from nycbug's dmesg cache shows only one potential user,
suggesting it never was used much. However, even though this device
has been obsolete for 15 years at least, sys/joystick.h is included in
a number of graphics packages still, so that remains. A full exprun
is needed before that can be removed.
RelNotes: yes
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D17629
I held the mistaken belief this was completely unused. While the
driver is unused and likely not relevant for a long time,
sys/joystick.h lives on in maybe half a dozen ports, even though
hardware to use it hasn't been widely used in maybe 15 years.
This driver has been obsolete since the FreeBSD 4.x. It should have
been removed then since the sym(4) driver had subsumed it. The driver
was commented out of GENERIC in 2000.
RelNotes: Yes
scsi_low was a common set of routines to do the SCSI bus sequencing
for the ncv, nsp and stg drivers. Those have been removed, so it's no
longer needed since nothing else in the tree uses it and nothing
likely ever will (it's for super-low-end 8-bit parallel SCSI cards).
stg(4) is marked as gone in 12. Remove it. There are no sightings of
it in the nycbug dmesg database. It was for an obscure SCSI card that
sold mostly in Japan, and was especially popilar among pc98 hackers in
the 4.x time frame. It was also only enabled on i386.
Relnote: Yes
nsp(4) is marked as gone in 12. Remove it. There are no sightings of
it in the nycbug dmesg database. It was for an obscure SCSI card that
sold mostly in Japan, and was especially popilar among pc98 hackers in
the 4.x time frame. It was also only enabled on i386.
Relnote: Yes
ncv(4) is marked as gone in 12. Remove it. There are no sightings of
it in the nycbug dmesg database. It was for an obscure SCSI card that
sold mostly in Japan, and was especially popilar among pc98 hackers in
the 4.x time frame..
Relnote: Yes
aic was marked to be gone in 12 a while ago. Go ahead and remove it.
nycbug's dmesg database shows this was last seen in 6 and one more
time in 4.x. It never was popular, and what popularity it had was over
before the nycbug databse got going in 2004.
Relnotes: yes
We tagged aha as gone in 12 a while ago. Proceed with its removal.
Data from nycbug's database shows the last sighting of this driver in
6, with the prior one in 4.x show its popularity had died prior to
4.x.
Relnotes: yes
Remove mse and all support for bus and inport devices from the tree.
Data from nycbug's dmesg database shows the last sighting of this
driver was in 4.10 on only one machine.
Relnotes: yes
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D17628
This driver was marked as gone in 12. We're at 13 now. Remove it.
Data from nycbug's dmesg cache shows only one potential user,
suggesting it never was used much.
RelNotes: yes
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D17629
to switch the output method in run-time. Also document some sysctl
variables that can by changed for NAT64 module.
NAT64 had compile time option IPFIREWALL_NAT64_DIRECT_OUTPUT to use
if_output directly from nat64 module. By default is used netisr based
output method. Now both methods can be used, but they require different
handling by rules.
Obtained from: Yandex LLC
MFC after: 3 weeks
Sponsored by: Yandex LLC
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16647
Driver enumerates NVDIMMs. Besides, for each found System Physical
Address (SPA) range, spaN geom provider is created, which allows
formatting and mounting the region as the normal volume. Also,
/dev/nvdimm_spaN node is created, which can be read/written/mapped by
userspace, the mapping is zero-copy.
No support for block access methods implemented, labels are not
parsed. No management interfaces are provided.
Tested by: Intel, NetApp
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Approved by: re (gjb)
MFC after: 2 weeks
Rename functions and variables from ixlv to iavf to match the
user-facing name change. There shouldn't be any functional changes
with this change, but this may help with browsing the source code
and reducing diffs in the future.
Submitted by: kbowling@
Reviewed by: erj@, sbruno@
Approved by: re (gjb@)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D17544
Finishes the conversion of the 40Gb Intel Ethernet drivers to iflib(9) for
FreeBSD 12.0, and fixes numerous bugs in both ixl(4) and iavf(4).
This commit also re-adds the VF driver to GENERIC since it now compiles and
functions.
The VF driver name was changed from ixlv(4) to iavf(4) because the VF driver is
now intended to be used with future products, not just with Fortville/Fort Park
VFs.
A man page update that documents these drivers is forthcoming in a separate
commit.
Reviewed by: sbruno@, kbowling@
Tested by: jeffrey.e.pieper@intel.com
Approved by: re (gjb@)
Relnotes: yes
Sponsored by: Intel Corporation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16429
This appeared to be required to have EFI RT support and EFI RTC
enabled by default, because there are too many reports of faulting
calls on many different machines. The knob is added to leave the
exceptions unhandled to allow to debug the actual bugs.
Reviewed by: kevans
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
Approved by: re (rgrimes)
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16972
play the MIDI files through /dev/sequencer device with tools like
playmidi. The audio output will go through the external MIDI device
such like wavetable synthesis card.
Reviewed by: matk (a long time ago), kib
Approved by: re (kib)
Tested with: Terratec SiXPack 5.1+ + Yamaha DB50XG
MFC after: 4 weeks
Make the building of drm dependent on MK_MODULE_DRM and the building
of module drm2 on MK_MODULE_DRM2. The defaults are unchanged.
Approved by: re@ (gjb)
Differential Review: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16894
given in random(4).
This includes updating of the relevant man pages, and no-longer-used
harvesting parameters.
Ensure that the pseudo-unit-test still does something useful, now also
with the "other" algorithm instead of Yarrow.
PR: 230870
Reviewed by: cem
Approved by: so(delphij,gtetlow)
Approved by: re(marius)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16898
- sun50i-a64-sid.dtso registers the Security ID node, needed for thermal
- sun50i-a64-ths.dtso registers the thermal node, for which we already have a
driver
- sun50i-a64-timer.dtso registers the timer node, needed as the generic timer
glitch on A64 SoC.
Approved by: re (gjb)
Revert r338177, r338176, r338175, r338174, r338172
After long consultations with re@, core members and mmacy, revert
these changes. Followup changes will be made to mark them as
deprecated and prent a message about where to find the up-to-date
driver. Followup commits will be made to make this clear in the
installer. Followup commits to reduce POLA in ways we're still
exploring.
It's anticipated that after the freeze, this will be removed in
13-current (with the residual of the drm2 code copied to
sys/arm/dev/drm2 for the TEGRA port's use w/o the intel or
radeon drivers).
Due to the impending freeze, there was no formal core vote for
this. I've been talking to different core members all day, as well as
Matt Macey and Glen Barber. Nobody is completely happy, all are
grudgingly going along with this. Work is in progress to mitigate
the negative effects as much as possible.
Requested by: re@ (gjb, rgrimes)
As discussed on the MLs drm2 conflicts with the ports' version and there
is no upstream for most if not all of drm. Both have been merged in to
a single port.
Users on powerpc, 32-bit hardware, or with GPUs predating Radeon
and i915 will need to install the graphics/drm-legacy-kmod. All
other users should be able to use one of the LinuxKPI-based ports:
graphics/drm-stable-kmod, graphics/drm-next-kmod, graphics/drm-devel-kmod.
MFC: never
Approved by: core@
This is an amalgam of a patch by Doug Ambrisko to
generalize uart_acpi_find_device, imp moving the
ACPI table to uart_dev_ns8250.c and advice by jhb
to work around a bug in the EPYC 3151 BIOS
(the BIOS incorrectly marks the serial ports as
disabled)
Reviewed by: imp
MFC after: 8 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16432
The wrapper is a thin shim around libsodium's Poly-1305 implementation. For
now, we just use the C algorithm and do not attempt to build the
SSE-optimized variant for x86 processors.
The algorithm support has not yet been plumbed through cryptodev, or added
to cryptosoft.
To compile this driver with evdev support enabled, place
following lines into the kernel configuration file:
options EVDEV_SUPPORT
device evdev
Note: Native and evdev modes are mutually exclusive.
Reviewed by: gonzo, wblock (docs)
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D11156
The links were to cope with the switch to upstream dts.
We don't need them anymore.
While here add the rest of the beaglebone family dts as u-boot is common
on all those boards and load the dtb based on the product name.
This just miss the pocketbeagle variant as it's not yet in sys/gnu/dts but
will be with the Linux 4.18 dts import.