This patch will:
- Update ixgbe shared code
- Add support for Intel(R) Ethernet Connection X552 1000BASE-T
- Add error handling for link state check preventing VF from stopping traffic
after changing PF's MTU value
Submitted by: Krzysztof Galazka <krzysztof.galazka@intel.com>
Reviewed by: Intel Networking
Sponsored by: Intel Corporation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D13885
about the chip including the erase block size at attach time.
Also add myself to the copyrights since at this point svn blame would point
to me as the culprit for much of this.
all over the place. Also pass the softc as the arg to all the internal
functions instead of passing a device_t and calling device_get_softc() in
each function.
before starting them.
Using the wait-before logic would make sense if there was useful time-
consuming work that could be done between the end of one write and the
beginning of the next, but it also requires doing the wait-for-ready before
reading, because a prior write or erase could still be in progress. Reading
is the far more common case, so adding a whole extra bus transaction to
check for ready before each read would soak up any small gains that might be
had from doing async writes.
for the same condition that the preceeding lines checked for and would have
returned EIO, so the assert could never possibly trigger (sc_sectorsize must
inherently be an integer multiple of FLASH_PAGE_SIZE).
transfers data in both directions at once. When writing to the device,
use a dummy buffer for the incoming data, not the same buffer as the
outgoing data. Writes are done in FLASH_PAGE_SIZE chunks, which is only
256 bytes, so just put the dummy buffer into the softc.
Occasionally poll for signals during large reads of the /dev/u?random
devices. This allows cancellation via SIGINT of accidental invocations of
very large reads. (A 2GB /dev/random read, which takes about 10 seconds on
my 2017 AMD Zen processor, can be aborted.)
I believe this behavior was intended since 2014 (r273997), just not fully
implemented.
This is motivated by a potential getrandom(2) interface that may not
explicitly forbid extremely large reads on 64-bit platforms -- even larger
than the 2GB limit imposed on devfs I/O by default. Such reads, if they are
to be allowed, should be cancellable by the user or administrator.
Reviewed by: delphij
Approved by: secteam (delphij)
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14684
Make some small improvements to the efirtc driver by obtaining the clock
capabilities (resolution and whether the sub-second counters are reset) and
using the info when registering the clock. When the hardware zeroes out the
subsecond info on clock-set, schedule clock updates to happen just before
top-of-second, so that the RTC time is closely in-sync with kernel time.
Also, in the identify() routine, always add the driver if EFI runtime
services are available, then decide in probe() whether to attach the driver
or not. If not attaching and bootverbose is on, say why. All of this is
basically to avoid "silent failure" -- if someone thinks there should be an
efi rtc and it's not attaching, at least they can set bootverbose and maybe
get a clue from the output.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14565 (timed out)
On some systems, we're getting timeouts when we use multiple queues on
drives that work perfectly well on other systems. On a hunch, Jim
Harris suggested I poll the completion queue when we get a timeout.
This patch polls the completion queue if no fatal status was
indicated. If it had pending I/O, we complete that request and
return. Otherwise, if aborts are enabled and no fatal status, we abort
the command and return. Otherwise we reset the card.
This may clear up the problem, or we may see it result in lots of
timeouts and a performance problem. Either way, we'll know the next
step. We may also need to pay attention to the fatal status bit
of the controller.
PR: 211713
Suggested by: Jim Harris
Sponsored by: Netflix
This allows compatibility translation to take place on the stack
(md_ioctl is too big) and is more suitable as a public interface within
the kernel than the kern_ioctl interface.
Except for the initialization of the md_req from the md_ioctl
(including detection of kernel md_file pointers) and the updating
of the md_ioctl prior to return, this is a mechanical replacment
of md_ioctl and mdio with md_req and mdr.
Reviewed by: markj, cem, kib (assorted versions)
Obtained from: CheriBSD
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14704
Move locks from outside ioctl to the individual implementations.
This is the first step of changing the implementations to act on a
kernel-internal request struct rather than on struct md_ioctl and to
removing the use of kern_ioctl in mountroot.
Reviewed by: cem, kib, markj (prior version)
Obtained from: CheriBSD
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14700
unconditionally incrementing i in the loop;
Reported by: cem
MFC with: r330880
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14685
It seems default timeout of 100ms is not enough for my 2694L card,
while it was perfectly fine for others, even for full-height 2694.
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
The NVME standard has required in section 7.2.6, since at least 1.1,
that a clean shutdown is signalled by deleting the subission and the
completion queues before setting the shutdown bit in CC. The 1.0
standard, apparently, did not and many of the early Intel cards didn't
care. Some newer cards care, at least one whose beta firmware can
scramble the card on an unclean shutdown. Linux has done this for some
time. To make it possible to move forward with an evaluation of this
pre-release card with wonky firmware, delete the queues on the card
when we delete the qpair structures.
Sponsored by: Netflix
We'll need to delete namespaces soon, so go ahead and stop making
these devices eternal. It doesn't help much, and will be getting in
the way soon.
Sponsored by: Netflix
During shutdown mps waits for its SSU requests to complete however when
performing a reboot after handling a panic the scheduler is stopped so
getmicrotime which is used can be non-functional.
Switch to using the same method as shutdown_panic to ensure we actually
complete.
In addition reduce the timeout when RB_NOSYNC is set in howto as we expect
this to fail.
Reviewed by: slm
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Multiplay
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12776
Compare sbavail() with the cached sb_off of already-sent data instead of
always comparing with zero. This will correctly close the connection and
send the FIN if the socket buffer contains some previously-sent data but
no unsent data.
Reported by: Harsh Jain @ Chelsio
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
- Remove the one use of is_tls_offload() and the function. AIO special
handling only needs to be disabled when a TOE socket is actively doing
TLS offload on transmit. The TOE socket's mode (which affects receive
operation) doesn't matter, so remove the check for the socket's mode and
only check if a TOE socket has TLS transmit keys configured to determine
if an AIO write request should fall back to the normal socket handling
instead of the TOE fast path.
- Move can_tls_offload() into t4_tls.c. It is not used in critical paths,
so inlining isn't that important. Change return type to bool while here.
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
When multiple trims are in the queue, collapse them as much as
possible. At present, this usually results in only a few trims being
collapsed together, but more work on that will make it possible to do
hundreds (up to some configurable max).
Sponsored by: Netflix
The TOE engine in Chelsio T6 adapters supports offloading of TLS
encryption and TCP segmentation for offloaded connections. Sockets
using TLS are required to use a set of custom socket options to upload
RX and TX keys to the NIC and to enable RX processing. Currently
these socket options are implemented as TCP options in the vendor
specific range. A patched OpenSSL library will be made available in a
port / package for use with the TLS TOE support.
TOE sockets can either offload both transmit and reception of TLS
records or just transmit. TLS offload (both RX and TX) is enabled by
setting the dev.t6nex.<x>.tls sysctl to 1 and requires TOE to be
enabled on the relevant interface. Transmit offload can be used on
any "normal" or TLS TOE socket by using the custom socket option to
program a transmit key. This permits most TOE sockets to
transparently offload TLS when applications use a patched SSL library
(e.g. using LD_LIBRARY_PATH to request use of a patched OpenSSL
library). Receive offload can only be used with TOE sockets using the
TLS mode. The dev.t6nex.0.toe.tls_rx_ports sysctl can be set to a
list of TCP port numbers. Any connection with either a local or
remote port number in that list will be created as a TLS socket rather
than a plain TOE socket. Note that although this sysctl accepts an
arbitrary list of port numbers, the sysctl(8) tool is only able to set
sysctl nodes to a single value. A TLS socket will hang without
receiving data if used by an application that is not using a patched
SSL library. Thus, the tls_rx_ports node should be used with care.
For a server mostly concerned with offloading TLS transmit, this node
is not needed as plain TOE sockets will fall back to software crypto
when using an unpatched SSL library.
New per-interface statistics nodes are added giving counts of TLS
packets and payload bytes (payload bytes do not include TLS headers or
authentication tags/MACs) offloaded via the TOE engine, e.g.:
dev.cc.0.stats.rx_tls_octets: 149
dev.cc.0.stats.rx_tls_records: 13
dev.cc.0.stats.tx_tls_octets: 26501823
dev.cc.0.stats.tx_tls_records: 1620
TLS transmit work requests are constructed by a new variant of
t4_push_frames() called t4_push_tls_records() in tom/t4_tls.c.
TLS transmit work requests require a buffer containing IVs. If the
IVs are too large to fit into the work request, a separate buffer is
allocated when constructing a work request. This buffer is associated
with the transmit descriptor and freed when the descriptor is ACKed by
the adapter.
Received TLS frames use two new CPL messages. The first message is a
CPL_TLS_DATA containing the decryped payload of a single TLS record.
The handler places the mbuf containing the received payload on an
mbufq in the TOE pcb. The second message is a CPL_RX_TLS_CMP message
which includes a copy of the TLS header and indicates if there were
any errors. The handler for this message places the TLS header into
the socket buffer followed by the saved mbuf with the payload data.
Both of these handlers are contained in tom/t4_tls.c.
A few routines were exposed from t4_cpl_io.c for use by t4_tls.c
including send_rx_credits(), a new send_rx_modulate(), and
t4_close_conn().
TLS keys for both transmit and receive are stored in onboard memory
in the NIC in the "TLS keys" memory region.
In some cases a TLS socket can hang with pending data available in the
NIC that is not delivered to the host. As a workaround, TLS sockets
are more aggressive about sending CPL_RX_DATA_ACK messages anytime that
any data is read from a TLS socket. In addition, a fallback timer will
periodically send CPL_RX_DATA_ACK messages to the NIC for connections
that are still in the handshake phase. Once the connection has
finished the handshake and programmed RX keys via the socket option,
the timer is stopped.
A new function select_ulp_mode() is used to determine what sub-mode a
given TOE socket should use (plain TOE, DDP, or TLS). The existing
set_tcpddp_ulp_mode() function has been renamed to set_ulp_mode() and
handles initialization of TLS-specific state when necessary in
addition to DDP-specific state.
Since TLS sockets do not receive individual TCP segments but always
receive full TLS records, they can receive more data than is available
in the current window (e.g. if a 16k TLS record is received but the
socket buffer is itself 16k). To cope with this, just drop the window
to 0 when this happens, but track the overage and "eat" the overage as
it is read from the socket buffer not opening the window (or adding
rx_credits) for the overage bytes.
Reviewed by: np (earlier version)
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14529
- Change t4_ddp_mod_load() to return void instead of always returning
success. This avoids having to pretend to have proper support for
unloading when only part of t4_tom_mod_load() has run.
- If t4_register_uld() fails, don't invoke t4_tom_mod_unload() directly.
The module handling code in the kernel invokes MOD_UNLOAD on a module
whose MOD_LOAD fails with an error already.
Reviewed by: np (part of a larger patch)
MFC after: 1 month
Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications
Always terminate the list with -1 and document the ioctl behavior.
This preserves existing behavior as seen from userspace with the
addition of the unconditional termination which will not be seen by
working consumers of MDIOCLIST.
Because this ioctl can only be performed by root (in default
configurations) and is not used in the base system this bug is not
deemed to warrant either a security advisory or an eratta notice.
Reviewed by: kib
Obtained from: CheriBSD
Discussed with: security-officer (gordon)
MFC after: 3 days
Security: kernel heap buffer overflow
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14685
For _IO() ioctls, addr is a pointer to uap->data which is a caddr_t.
When the caddr_t stores an int, dereferencing addr as an (int *) results
in truncation on little-endian 64-bit systems and corruption (owing to
extracting top bits) on big-endian 64-bit systems. In practice the
value of chan was probably always zero on systems of the latter type as
all such FreeBSD platforms use a register-based calling convention.
Reviewed by: mav
Obtained from: CheriBSD
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14673
As noted in the comment, UEFI spec claims the capabilities pointer is
optional, but some implementations will choke and attempt to dereference it
without checking. This specific problem was found on a Lenovo Thinkpad X220
that would panic in efirtc_identify.
On x86 the IA-PC Boot Flags in the FADT can signal whether VGA is
available or not.
Sponsored by: Citrix systems R&D
Reviewed by: marcel
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14397
The gcc 7 does check for switch statement fall through cases, and if legit,
such complaint can besilenced by /* FALLTHROUGH */ comment. Unfortunately
such comment is quite limited, but will still notify the reader.
This patch is backport from illumos, see
https://www.illumos.org/rb/r/941/
Reviewed by: eadler
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14663
For each regulators create an hw.regulator.<regname>. :
uvolt: Current value
always_on: 1 If the reg is always on
boot_on: 1 If the reg is set at boot time
enable_cnt: Number of consumer(s)
enable_delay: Delay before enabling the regulator
ramp_delay: The Ramp delay
max_uamp: The maximum value of the regulator in uAmps
min_uamp: The minimal value of the regulator in uAmps
max_uvolt: The maximum value of the regulator in uVolts
min_uvolt: The minimal value of the regulator in uVolts
Reviewed by: ian
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14578
These parameters may be changed via ifconfig(8); by default,
mgt / mcast rates are lowest possible and ucast rate is not set
(matches previous configuration).
While here, store some variables locally for better readability.
this check on open, but "iscsictl -M", or an iSCSI redirect received by
iscsid(8) could end up with two sessions with the same target name and
portal.
MFC after: 2 weeks
Move copy-pasted code for RTS/CTS frame allocation into net80211.
While here, add stat / debug message for allocation failures
(copied from run(4)) + return error here in bwn(4).
Reviewed by: adrian
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14628