On load_one, we now cache our capabilities registers internally, similar
to QUERY_HCA_CAP. Capabilities can later be queried using macros
introduced in this patch.
Linux commit:
71862561f3a62015a11de16d1c306481e8415c08
Submitted by: slavash@
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies
Introduced registers will expose capabilities of new registers and
features related to port/management.
Driver will query MCAM and PCAM in order to avoid failing on old
firmwares with lack of support.
Linux commit:
c835ad64683bd3e2d1b31ed2cb1ff4366932edb1
Submitted by: slavash@
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies
PCAM: Ports capabilities mask register.
MCAM: Management capabilities mask register.
PCAM and MCAM registers will provide information regarding firmware
support for different features, in order to avoid cases where new driver
combined with old firmware results in syndromes (for ex. PCIe counters
before this patchset).
Linux commit:
cfdcbceaeffc669b70d904d80a2df9c86c232566
Submitted by: slavash@
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies
Today mlx5 devices support two teardown modes:
1- Regular teardown
2- Force teardown
This change introduces the enhanced version of the "Force teardown" that
allows SW to perform teardown in a faster way without the need to reclaim
all the pages.
Fast teardown provides the following advantages:
1- Fix a FW race condition that could cause command timeout
2- Avoid moving to polling mode
3- Close the vport to prevent PCI ACK to be sent without been
scattered to memory
Linux commit:
fcd29ad17c6ff885dfae58f557e9323941e63ba2
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies
Else the SQs won't be properly released when closing rate-limited connections
leading to wrong state transitions on the SQ.
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies
When using CQE zipping, one can choose between RX hash and Checksum.
This will indicate the parameter on which a zipping session should be
stopped.
While porting the Linux code, Checksum was chosen. However, the value
of Checksum is not being used anywhere.
For the FreeBSD driver, we prefer to use the RX hash format which will
guarantee the RX hash value for all the mini CQEs.
While at it, make sure to initialize the Checksum value in the
decompressed CQE.
Submitted by: slavash@
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies
After doing performance measurements, it seems like CQE zipping doesn't
have any significant benefit.
Moreover, we know that this feature is disabled by default on other
operating systems (Linux for example).
Submitted by: slavash@
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies
Split the function into the mlx5e_update_stats_locked() core and make
mlx5e_update_stats_work() call the _locked helper, similar to many other
places in the kernel. This improves the code structure, making the
locking clean.
Submitted by: kib@
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies
Instead of waiting for all jobs to be cancelled, simply close the completion
queue to prevent more completion events and let mlx5e_destroy_rq() cleanup
the remaining mbufs.
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies
The number of priorities is always 8, while the number of traffic classes
supported can vary. While at it convert the sysctl node into an array.
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies
Instead of reading Ethernet RFC 2819 pXtoYoctets counters from
hardware which counts RX octets, count tx_stat_pXtoYoctets from
Ethernet extended counters which counts TX octets.
TX jumbo counters should be accumulated only after the PPCNT
counters were fetched from hardware with their latest value.
Submitted by: slavash@
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies
Avoid an infinite software firmware reset loop that may be caused by a
hardware bug by limiting the maximum number of resets.
The counter between resets is reset by request for reset, and not by a
successful reset.
The interval between two resets can be configured via sysctl:
hw.mlx5.sw_reset_timeout
which is global to all mlx5 devices in the system.
Submitted by: slavash@
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies
Make sure the interrupt handlers don't race with the fast unload one
code in the shutdown handler.
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies
Temperature warning event is sent by FW to indicate high temperature
as detected by one of the sensors on the board.
Add handling of this event by writing the numbers of the alert sensors
to the kernel log.
Linux commit:
1865ea9adbfaf341c5cd5d8f7d384f19948b2fe9
Submitted by: slavash@
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies
While at it remove unused interface state bits. This also fixes and issue
during shutdown:
There is an issue where the firmware fails during mlx5_load_one,
the health_care timer detects the issue and schedules a health_care call.
Then the mlx5_load_one detects the issue, cleans up and quits. Then
the health_care starts and calls mlx5_unload_one to clean up the resources
that no longer exist and causes kernel panic.
The root cause is that the bit MLX5_INTERFACE_STATE_DOWN is not set
after mlx5_load_one fails. The solution is removing the bit
MLX5_INTERFACE_STATE_DOWN and quit mlx5_unload_one if the
bit MLX5_INTERFACE_STATE_UP is not set. The bit MLX5_INTERFACE_STATE_DOWN
is redundant and we can use MLX5_INTERFACE_STATE_UP instead.
Linux commit:
10a8d00707082955b177164d4b4e758ffcbd4017
b3cb5388499c5e219324bfe7da2e46cbad82bfcf
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: Mellanox Technologies
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
This is a prerequisite of unifying kernel zlib instances.
Submitted by: Yoshihiro Ota <ota at j.email.ne.jp>
MFC after: 2 weeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20191
[ARM] Glue register copies to tail calls.
This generally follows what other targets do. I don't completely
understand why the special case for tail calls existed in the first
place; even when the code was committed in r105413, call lowering
didn't work in the way described in the comments.
Stack protector lowering breaks if the register copies are not glued
to a tail call: we have to insert the stack protector check before
the tail call, and we choose the location based on the assumption
that all physical register dependencies of a tail call are adjacent
to the tail call. (See FindSplitPointForStackProtector.) This is sort
of fragile, but I don't see any reason to break that assumption.
I'm guessing nobody has seen this before just because it's hard to
convince the scheduler to actually schedule the code in a way that
breaks; even without the glue, the only computation that could
actually be scheduled after the register copies is the computation of
the call address, and the scheduler usually prefers to schedule that
before the copies anyway.
Fixes https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=41417
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60427
This should fix several instances of "Bad machine code: Using an
undefined physical register", when compiling ports such as
multimedia/vlc, audio/alsa-lib and devel/avro-c for armv6, with
-fstack-protector-strong.
Reported by: jbeich
PR: 237074, 237783, 237784
MFC after: 3 days
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 code never returned match comparing two datasets (not snapshots).
As result, uu_avl_find(), called from zfs_callback(), never succeeded,
allowing to add same dataset into the list multiple times, for example:
# zfs get name pers pers pers@z pers@z
NAME PROPERTY VALUE SOURCE
pers name pers -
pers name pers -
pers@z name pers@z -
With the patch:
# zfs get name pers pers pers@z pers@z
NAME PROPERTY VALUE SOURCE
pers name pers -
pers@z name pers@z -
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
(Introduced incorrectly in r347229 earlier today.)
As pointed out by kevans, 1.6 should be used for FreeBSD 13, like r340383.
Submitted by: kevans
Reported by: kib
Reviewed by: jilles
X-MFC-with: r347229
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20187
Checksum offloading for SCTP is not currently specified for virtio.
If the hypervisor announces checksum offloading support, it means TCP
and UDP checksum offload. If an SCTP packet is sent and the host announced
checksum offload support, the hypervisor inserts the IP checksum (16-bit)
at the correct offset, but this is not the right checksum, which is a CRC32c.
This results in all outgoing packets having the wrong checksum and therefore
breaking SCTP based communications.
This patch removes SCTP checksum offloading support from the virtio
network interface.
Thanks to Felix Weinrank for making me aware of the issue.
Reviewed by: bryanv@
MFC after: 1 week
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20147
While Linux strace(1) doesn't strictly require it - it has a fallback
to PTRACE_GETREGS - it's a newer interface, so we better support it
before the old one is deprecated.
Reviewed by: dchagin
MFC after: 2 weeks
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20152
device_printf does multiple calls to printf allowing other console messages to
be inserted between the device name, and the rest of the message. This change
uses sbuf to compose to two into a single buffer, and prints it all at once.
It exposes an sbuf drain function (drain-to-printf) for common use.
Update documentation to match; some unit tests included.
Submitted by: jmg
Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D16690
Multiple tools use @generated to identify generated files (for example,
in a review Phabricator will by default hide diffs in generated files).
Use the @generated tag in makesyscalls.sh as we've done for other
generated files.
Reviewed by: cem
MFC after: 1 month
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20183
RISC-V ISA specifies no cache management instructions so leave cache
operations in cpufunc.h as no-op for now.
Note some new hardware comes with their own memory-mapped cache
management controller.
Tested on HiFive Unleashed board with cgem(4).
Reviewed by: markj
Obtained from: arm64
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20126
Multiple tools use @generated to identify generated files (for example,
in a review Phabricator will by default hide diffs in generated files).
Use the @generated tag in makeobjops.awk and vnode_if.awk as we've done
for other generated files.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
times - on every interrupt by using an own set of device methods for the
IGB class. This translates to introducing igb_if_intr_{disable,enable}()
and igb_if_{rx,tx}_queue_intr_enable() with that IGB-specific code moved
out of their EM counterparts and otherwise continuing to use the EM IFDI
methods also for IGB.
Note that igb_if_intr_{disable,enable}() also issue E1000_WRITE_FLUSH as
lost with the conversion of igb(4) to iflib(4).
Also note, that the em_if_{disable,enable}_intr() methods are renamed to
em_if_intr_{disable,enable}() for consistency with the names used in the
interface declaration.
o In em_intr():
- Don't bother to bail out if the interrupt type is "legacy", i. e. INTx
or MSI, as iflib(4) doesn't use ift_legacy_intr methods for MSI-X. All
other iflib(4)-based drivers avoid this check, too.
- Given that only the MSI-X interrupts have one-shot behavior (by taking
advantage of the EIAC register), explicitly disable interrupts. Hence,
em_intr() now matches what {em,igb}_irq_fast() previously did (in case
of igb(4) supposedly also to work around MSI message reordering errata
on certain systems).
o In em_if_intr_disable():
- Clear the EIAC register unconditionally for 82574 and not just in case
of MSI-X, matching em_if_intr_enable() and bringing back the last hunk
of r206437 lost with the iflib(4) conversion.
- Write to EM_EIAC for clearing said register instead of to the IGB-only
E1000_EIAC used ever since the iflib(4) conversion.
Reviewed by: shurd
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20176