The Intel I210's packet buffer size registers reset only on power up,
not when a reset signal is asserted. This can lead to the inability
to pass traffic in the event that the DMA TX Maximum Packet Size
(which does reset to its default value on reset) is bigger than the TX
Packet Buffer Size.
For example, an operating system may be using the time sensitive
networking features of the I210 and the registers may be programmed
correctly, but then a reset signal is asserted and iPXE on the next
boot will be unable to use the I210.
Mimic what Linux does and forcibly set the registers to their default
values.
Signed-off-by: Matt Parrella <parrella.matthew@gmail.com>
We currently specify only the iSCSI default value for MaxBurstLength
and ignore any negotiated value, since our internal block device API
allows only for receiving directly into caller-allocated buffers and
so we have no intrinsic limit on burst length.
A conscientious target may however refuse to attempt a transfer that
we request for a number of blocks that would exceed the negotiated
maximum burst length.
Fix by recording the negotiated maximum burst length and using it to
limit the maximum number of blocks per transfer as reported by the
SCSI layer.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
EISA expansion slot I/O port addresses overlap space that may be
assigned to PCI devices, which can lead to register reads and writes
with unwanted side effects during EISA probing.
Reduce the chances of performing EISA probing on PCI devices by
probing EISA slot vendor and product ID registers only if the EISA
system board vendor ID register indicates that the motherboard
supports EISA.
Debugged-by: Václav Ovsík <vaclav.ovsik@gmail.com>
Tested-by: Václav Ovsík <vaclav.ovsik@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
The "bridge" driver introduced in 3aa6b79 ("[pci] Add minimal PCI
bridge driver") is required only for BIOS builds using the ENA driver,
where experimentation shows that we cannot rely on the BIOS to fully
assign MMIO addresses.
Since the driver is a valid PCI driver, it will end up binding to all
PCI bridge devices even on a UEFI platform, where the firmware is
likely to have completed MMIO address assignment correctly. This has
no impact on most systems since there is generally no UEFI driver for
PCI bridges: the enumeration of the whole PCI bus is handled by the
PciBusDxe driver bound to the root bridge.
Experimentation shows that at least one laptop will freeze at the
point that iPXE attempts to bind to the bridge device. No deeper
investigation has been carried out to find the root cause.
Fix by causing efipci_supported() to return an error unless the
configuration space header type indicates a non-bridge device.
Reported-by: Marcel Petersen <mp@sbe.de>
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Some cards seem to have the receive VLAN tag stripping feature enabled
by default, which causes received VLAN packets to be misinterpreted as
being received by the trunk device.
Fix by disabling VLAN tag stripping in the C+ Command Register.
Debugged-by: Xinming Lai <yiyihu@gmail.com>
Tested-by: Xinming Lai <yiyihu@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
UEFI has the mildly annoying habit of installing copies of the
EFI_SIMPLE_NETWORK_PROTOCOL instance on the IPv4 and IPv6 child device
handles. This can cause iPXE's SNP driver to attempt to bind to a
copy of the EFI_SIMPLE_NETWORK_PROTOCOL that iPXE itself provided on a
different handle.
Fix by refusing to bind to an SNP (or NII) handle if there exists
another instance of the same protocol further up the device path (on
the basis that we always want to bind to the highest possible device).
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Extend the functionality of efi_locate_device() to allow callers to
find instances of the protocol that may exist further up the device
path.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
We currently don't allocate an Asynchronous Event Notification Queue
(AENQ) because we don't actually care about any of the events that may
come in.
The ENA firmware found on Graviton instances requires the AENQ to
exist, otherwise all admin queue commands will fail.
Fix by allocating an AENQ and disabling all events (so that we do not
need to include code to acknowledge any events that may arrive).
Signed-off-by: Alexander Graf <graf@amazon.com>
Many laptops now include the ability to specify a "system-specific MAC
address" (also known as "pass-through MAC"), which is supposed to be
used for both the onboard NIC and for any attached docking station or
other USB NIC. This is intended to simplify interoperability with
software or hardware that relies on a MAC address to recognise an
individual machine: for example, a deployment server may associate the
MAC address with a particular operating system image to be deployed.
This therefore creates legitimate situations in which duplicate MAC
addresses may exist within the same system.
As described in commit 98d09a1 ("[netdevice] Avoid registering
duplicate network devices"), the Xen netfront driver relies on the
rejection of duplicate MAC addresses in order to inhibit registration
of the emulated PCI devices that a Xen PV-HVM guest will create to
shadow each of the paravirtual network devices.
Move the code that rejects duplicate MAC addresses from the network
device core to the Xen netfront driver, to allow for the existence of
duplicate MAC addresses in non-Xen setups.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Some UNDI drivers (such as the AMI UsbNetworkPkg currently in the
process of being upstreamed into EDK2) have a bug that will prevent
any packets from being received unless at least one attempt has been
made to disable some receive filters.
Work around these buggy drivers by attempting to disable receive
filters before enabling them. Ignore any errors, since we genuinely
do not care whether or not the disabling succeeds.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
The behaviour of PCI devices across a function-level reset seems to be
inconsistent in practice: some devices will preserve PCI BARs, some
will not.
Fix the behaviour of FLR on devices that do not preserve PCI BARs by
backing up and restoring PCI configuration space across the reset.
Preserve only the standard portion of the configuration space, since
there may be registers with unexpected side effects in the remaining
non-standardised space.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Some BIOSes in AWS EC2 (observed with a c6i.metal instance in
eu-west-2) will fail to assign an MMIO address to the ENA device,
which causes ioremap() to fail.
Experiments show that the ENA device is the only device behind its
bridge, even when multiple ENA devices are present, and that the BIOS
does assign a memory window to the bridge.
We may therefore choose to assign the device an MMIO address at the
start of the bridge's memory window.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Add a minimal driver for PCI bridges that can be used to locate the
bridge to which a PCI device is attached.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Pretty much all physical machines and off-the-shelf virtual machines
will provide a functional PCI BIOS. We therefore default to using
only the PCI BIOS, with no fallback to an alternative mechanism if the
PCI BIOS fails.
AWS EC2 provides the opportunity to experience some exceptions to this
rule. For example, the t3a.nano instances in eu-west-1 have no
functional PCI BIOS at all. As of commit 83516ba ("[cloud] Use
PCIAPI_DIRECT for cloud images") we therefore use direct Type 1
configuration space accesses in the images built and published for use
in the cloud.
Recent experience has discovered yet more variation in AWS EC2
instances. For example, some of the metal instance types have
multiple PCI host bridges and the direct Type 1 accesses therefore
see only a subset of the PCI devices.
Attempt to accommodate future such variations by making the PCI I/O
API selectable at runtime and choosing ECAM (if available), falling
back to the PCI BIOS (if available), then finally falling back to
direct Type 1 accesses.
This is implemented as a dedicated PCIAPI_CLOUD API, rather than by
having the PCI core select a suitable API at runtime (as was done for
timers in commit 302f1ee ("[time] Allow timer to be selected at
runtime"). The common case will remain that only the PCI BIOS API is
required, and we would prefer to retain the optimisations that come
from inlining the configuration space accesses in this common case.
Cloud images are (at present) disk images rather than ROM images, and
so the increased code size required for this design approach in the
PCIAPI_CLOUD case is acceptable.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
The ACPI MCFG table describes a direct mapping of PCI configuration
space into MMIO space. This mapping allows access to extended
configuration space (up to 4096 bytes) and also provides for the
existence of multiple host bridges.
Add support for the ECAM mechanism described by the ACPI MCFG table,
as a selectable PCI I/O API alongside the existing PCI BIOS and Type 1
mechanisms.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Allow pci_find_next() to discover devices beyond the first PCI
segment, by generalising pci_num_bus() (which implicitly assumes that
there is only a single PCI segment) with pci_discover() (which has the
ability to return an arbitrary contiguous chunk of PCI bus:dev.fn
address space).
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
The semantics of the bus:dev.fn parameter passed to pci_find_next()
are "find the first existent PCI device at this address or higher",
with the caller expected to increment the address between finding
devices. This does not allow the parameter to distinguish between the
two cases "start from address zero" and "wrapped after incrementing
maximal possible address", which could therefore lead to an infinite
loop in the degenerate case that a device with address ffff:ff:1f.7
really exists.
Fix by checking for wraparound in the caller (which is already
responsible for performing the increment).
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Separate the return status code from the returned PCI bus:dev.fn
address, in order to allow pci_find_next() to be used to find devices
with a non-zero PCI segment number.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Some versions of the ENA hardware (observed on a c6i.large instance in
eu-west-2) seem to require a receive ring containing at least 128
entries: any smaller ring will never see receive completions or will
stall after the first few completions.
Increase the receive ring size to 128 entries (determined empirically)
for compatibility with these hardware versions. Limit the receive
ring fill level to 16 (as at present) to avoid consuming more memory
than will typically be available in the internal heap.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Some versions of the ENA firmware (observed on a c6i.large instance in
eu-west-2) seem to require a host information page, without which the
CREATE_CQ command will fail with ENA_ADMIN_UNKNOWN_ERROR.
These firmware versions also seem to require us to claim that we are a
Linux kernel with a specific driver major version number. This
appears to be a firmware bug, as revealed by Linux kernel commit
1a63443af ("net/amazon: Ensure that driver version is aligned to the
linux kernel"): this commit changed the value of the driver version
number field to be the Linux kernel version, and was hastily reverted
in commit 92040c6da ("net: ena: fix broken interface between ENA
driver and FW") which clarified that the version number field does
actually have some undocumented significance to some versions of the
firmware.
Fix by providing a host information page via the SET_FEATURE command,
incorporating the apparently necessary lies about our identity.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Some versions of the ENA firmware (observed on a c6i.large instance in
eu-west-2) will complain if the completion queue's MSI-X vector field
is left empty, even though the queue configuration specifies that
interrupts are not used.
Work around these firmware versions by passing in what appears to be
the magic "no MSI-X vector" value in this field.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
The ENA data path design has separate submission and completion
queues. Submission queues must be refilled in strict order (since
there is only a single linear tail pointer used to communicate the
existence of new entries to the hardware), and completion queue
entries include a request identifier copied verbatim from the
submission queue entry. Once the submission queue doorbell has been
rung, software never again reads from the submission queue entry and
nothing ever needs to write back to the submission queue entry since
completions are reported via the separate completion queue.
This design allows the hardware to complete submission queue entries
out of order, provided that it internally caches at least as many
entries as it leaves gaps.
Record and identify I/O buffers by request identifier (using a
circular ring buffer of unique request identifiers), and remove the
assumption that submission queue entries will be completed in order.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
The CREATE_CQ command is permitted to return a size smaller than
requested, which could leave us in a situation where the completion
queue could overflow.
Avoid overflow by limiting the submission queue fill level to the
actual size of the completion queue.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Current versions of the E810 PF driver fail to set the number of
in-use queue pairs in response to the CONFIG_VSI_QUEUES message. When
the number of in-use queue pairs is less than the number of available
queue pairs, this results in some packets being directed to
nonexistent receive queues and hence silently dropped.
Work around this PF driver bug by explicitly configuring the number of
available queue pairs via the REQUEST_QUEUES message. This message
triggers a VF reset that, in turn, requires us to reopen the admin
queue and issue an additional GET_RESOURCES message to restore the VF
to a functional state.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
The RESET_VF admin queue command does not complete via the usual
mechanism, but instead requires us to poll registers to wait for the
reset to take effect and then reopen the admin queue.
Allow for the existence of other admin queue commands that also
trigger a VF reset, by separating out the logic that waits for the
reset to complete.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Negotiate API version 1.1 in order to allow access to virtual function
opcodes that are disallowed by default on the E810.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Add a driver for the E810 family of 100 Gigabit Ethernet NICs. The
core datapath is identical to that of the 40 Gigabit XL710, and this
part of the code is shared between both drivers. The admin queue
mechanism is sufficiently similar to make it worth reusing substantial
portions of the code, with separate implementations for several
commands to handle the (unnecessarily) breaking changes in data
structure layouts. The major differences are in the mechanisms for
programming queue contexts (where the E810 abandons TX/RX symmetry)
and for configuring the transmit scheduler and receive filters: these
portions are sufficiently different to justify a separate driver.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Remove knowledge of the PRTGL_SA[HL] registers, and instead use the
admin queue to set the MAC address and maximum frame size.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Remove knowledge of the PRTPM_SA[HL] registers, and instead use the
admin queue to retrieve the MAC address.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Allow for the MAC address to be fetched using an admin queue command,
instead of reading the PRTPM_SA[HL] registers directly.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
The PRTGL_SAH register contains the current maximum frame size, and is
not guaranteed on reset to contain the actual maximum frame size
supported by the hardware, which the datasheet specifies as 9728 bytes
(including the 4-byte CRC).
Set the maximum packet size to a hardcoded 9728 bytes instead of
reading from the PRTGL_SAH register.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Remove knowledge of the GLLAN_RCTL_0 register (which changes location
between the XL810 and E810 register maps), and instead unconditionally
issue the "clear PXE mode" command with the EEXIST error silenced.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
The "clear PXE mode" admin queue command will return an EEXIST error
if the device is already in non-PXE mode, but there is no other admin
queue command that can be used to determine whether the device has
already been switched into non-PXE mode.
Provide a mechanism to allow expected errors from a command to be
silenced, to allow the "clear PXE mode" command to be cleanly used
without needing to first check the GLLAN_RCTL_0 register value.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
At least one E810 admin queue command (Query Default Scheduling Tree
Topology) insists upon being provided with a 4kB data buffer, even
when the data to be returned is much smaller.
Work around this requirement by increasing the admin queue data buffer
size to 4kB.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Move knowledge of the virtual function data structures and admin
command definitions from intelxl.h to intelxlvf.h.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Remove the large static admin data buffer structure embedded within
struct intelxl_nic, and instead copy the response received via the
"send to VF" admin queue event to the (already consumed and completed)
admin command descriptor and data buffer.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
The physical and virtual function drivers each care about precisely
one admin queue event type. Simplify event handling by using a
per-driver callback instead of the existing weak function symbol.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
The PCI device ID 8086:1889 is for the Intel Ethernet Adaptive Virtual
Function, which is a generic virtual function that can be exposed by
different generations of Intel hardware.
Rename the PCI ID from "xl710-vf-ad" to "iavf" to reflect that the
driver is not XL710-specific.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
The E810 requires that receive descriptor rings have at least 64
entries (and are a multiple of 32 entries).
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Do not attempt to use the admin commands to get the firmware version
and report the driver version for the virtual function driver, since
these will be rejected by the E810 firmware as invalid commands when
issued by a virtual function. Instead, use the mailbox interface to
negotiate the API version with the physical function driver.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
The 100 Gigabit physical function driver requires a virtual function
driver to request that transmit and receive queues are mapped to MSI-X
vector 1 or higher.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
The second parameter to intelxlvf_admin_queues() is a boolean used to
select the VF opcode, rather than the raw VF opcode itself.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Remove knowledge of the PFGEN_CTRL register (which changes location
between XL710 and E810 register maps), and instead use PCIe FLR to
reset the physical function.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Use the tail register offset (which exists for all ring types) as the
ring identifier in all relevant debug messages.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
For the sake of completeness, ensure that all 32 bytes of the receive
queue context are programmed (including the unused final 8 bytes).
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Commit 8f3e648 ("[intelxl] Use one admin queue buffer per admin queue
descriptor") changed the API for intelxl_admin_command() such that the
caller now constructs the command directly within the next available
descriptor ring entry, rather than relying on intelxl_admin_command()
to copy the descriptor to and from the descriptor ring.
This introduced a regression in intelxl_admin_switch(), since the
second and subsequent iterations of the loop will not have constructed
a valid command in the new descriptor ring entry before calling
intelxl_admin_command().
Fix by constructing the command within the loop.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
When applying an ACPI-provided system-specific MAC address, apply it
to netdev->ll_addr rather than netdev->hw_addr. This allows iPXE
scripts to access the permanent MAC address via the ${netX/hwaddr}
setting (and thereby provides scripts with a mechanism to ascertain
that the NIC is using a MAC address other than its own permanent
hardware address).
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
As per the general pattern for initialisation functions in iPXE,
pci_init() saves code size by assuming that the caller has already
zeroed the underlying storage (e.g. as part of zeroing a larger
containing structure). There are several places within the code where
pci_init() is deliberately used to initialise a transient struct
pci_device without zeroing the entire structure, because the calling
code knows that only the PCI bus:dev.fn address is required to be
initialised (e.g. when reading from PCI configuration space).
Ensure that using pci_init() followed by pci_read_config() will fully
initialise the struct pci_device even if the caller did not previously
zero the underlying storage, since Coverity reports that there are
several places in the code that rely upon this.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Several keyboard layouts define ASCII characters as accessible only
via the AltGr modifier. Add support for this modifier to ensure that
all ASCII characters are accessible.
Experiments suggest that the BIOS console is likely to fail to
generate ASCII characters when the AltGr key is pressed. Work around
this limitation by accepting LShift+RShift (which will definitely
produce an ASCII character) as a synonym for AltGr.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Handle Ctrl and CapsLock key modifiers within key_remap(), to provide
consistent behaviour across different console types.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
The key with scancode 86 appears in the position between left shift
and Z on a US keyboard, where it typically fails to exist entirely.
Most US keyboard maps define this nonexistent key as generating "\|",
with the notable exception of "loadkeys" which instead reports it as
generating "<>". Both of these mapping choices duplicate keys that
exist elsewhere in the map, which causes problems for our ASCII-based
remapping mechanism.
Work around these quirks by treating the key as generating "\|" with
the high bit set, and making it subject to remapping. Where the BIOS
generates "\|" as expected, this allows us to remap to the correct
ASCII value.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Some keyboard layouts (e.g. "fr") swap letter and punctuation keys.
Apply the logic for upper and lower case and for Ctrl-<key> only after
applying remapping, in order to handle these layouts correctly.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
On some systems (observed with the Thunderbolt ports on a ThinkPad X1
Extreme Gen3 and a ThinkPad P53), if the IOMMU is enabled then the
system firmware will install an ExitBootServices notification event
that disables bus mastering on the Thunderbolt xHCI controller and all
PCI bridges, and destroys any extant IOMMU mappings. This leaves the
xHCI controller unable to perform any DMA operations.
As described in commit 236299b ("[xhci] Avoid DMA during shutdown if
firmware has disabled bus mastering"), any subsequent DMA operation
attempted by the xHCI controller will end up completing after the
operating system kernel has reenabled bus mastering, resulting in a
DMA operation to an area of memory that the hardware is no longer
permitted to access and, on Windows with the Driver Verifier enabled,
a STOP 0xE6 (DRIVER_VERIFIER_DMA_VIOLATION).
That commit avoids triggering any DMA attempts during the shutdown of
the xHCI controller itself. However, this is not a complete solution
since any attached and opened USB device (e.g. a USB NIC) may
asynchronously trigger DMA attempts that happen to occur after bus
mastering has been disabled but before we reset the xHCI controller.
Avoid this problem by installing our own ExitBootServices notification
event at TPL_NOTIFY, thereby causing it to be invoked before the
firmware's own ExitBootServices notification event that disables bus
mastering.
This unsurprisingly causes the shutdown hook itself to be invoked at
TPL_NOTIFY, which causes a fatal error when later code attempts to
raise the TPL to TPL_CALLBACK (which is a lower TPL). Work around
this problem by redefining the "internal" iPXE TPL to be variable, and
set this internal TPL to TPL_NOTIFY when the shutdown hook is invoked.
Avoid calling into an underlying SNP protocol instance from within our
shutdown hook at TPL_NOTIFY, since the underlying SNP driver may
attempt to raise the TPL to TPL_CALLBACK (which would cause a fatal
error). Failing to shut down the underlying SNP device is safe to do
since the underlying device must, in any case, have installed its own
ExitBootServices hook if any shutdown actions are required.
Reported-by: Andreas Hammarskjöld <junior@2PintSoftware.com>
Tested-by: Andreas Hammarskjöld <junior@2PintSoftware.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
On some systems (observed with the Thunderbolt ports on a ThinkPad X1
Extreme Gen3 and a ThinkPad P53), the system firmware will disable bus
mastering on the xHCI controller and all PCI bridges at the point that
ExitBootServices() is called if the IOMMU is enabled. This leaves the
xHCI controller unable to shut down cleanly since all commands will
fail with a timeout.
Commit 85eb961 ("[xhci] Allow for permanent failure of the command
mechanism") allows us to detect that this has happened and respond
cleanly. However, some unidentified hardware component (either the
xHCI controller or one of the PCI bridges) seems to manage to enqueue
the attempted DMA operation and eventually complete it after the
operating system kernel has reenabled bus mastering. This results in
a DMA operation to an area of memory that the hardware is no longer
permitted to access. On Windows with the Driver Verifier enabled,
this will result in a STOP 0xE6 (DRIVER_VERIFIER_DMA_VIOLATION).
Work around this problem by detecting when bus mastering has been
disabled, and immediately failing the device to avoid initiating any
further DMA attempts.
Reported-by: Andreas Hammarskjöld <junior@2PintSoftware.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Some xHCI controllers (observed with the Thunderbolt ports on a
ThinkPad X1 Extreme Gen3 and a ThinkPad P53) seem to suffer a
catastrophic failure at the point that ExitBootServices() is called if
the IOMMU is enabled. The symptoms appear to be consistent with
another UEFI driver (e.g. the IOMMU driver, or the Thunderbolt driver)
having torn down the DMA mappings, leaving the xHCI controller unable
to write to host memory. The observable effect is that all commands
fail with a timeout, and attempts to abort command execution similarly
fail since the xHCI controller is unable to report the abort
completion.
Check for failure to abort a command, and respond by performing a full
device reset (as recommended by the xHCI specification) and by marking
the device as permanently failed.
Reported-by: Andreas Hammarskjöld <junior@2PintSoftware.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Use the "system MAC address" provided within the DSDT/SSDT if such an
address is available and has not already been assigned to a network
device.
Tested-by: Andreas Hammarskjöld <junior@2PintSoftware.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
The RTL8211B seems to have a bug that prevents the link from coming up
unless the MII_MMD_DATA register is cleared.
The Linux kernel driver applies this workaround (in rtl8211b_resume())
only to the specific RTL8211B PHY model, along with a matching
workaround to set bit 9 of MII_MMD_DATA when suspending the PHY.
Since we have no need to ever suspend the PHY, and since writing a
zero ought to be harmless, we just clear the register unconditionally.
Debugged-by: Nikolay Pertsev <nikolay.p@cos.flag.org>
Tested-by: Nikolay Pertsev <nikolay.p@cos.flag.org>
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Use hexadecimal values instead of macros in PCI_ROM entries so Perl
script can parse them correctly. Move PCI_ROM entries from header
file to C file. Integrate bnxt_vf_nics array into PCI_ROM entries by
introducing BNXT_FLAG_PCI_VF flag into driver_data field. Add
whitespaces in PCI_ROM entries for style consistency.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
The use of jumbo frames for the Xen netfront virtual NIC requires the
use of scatter-gather ("feature-sg"), with the receive descriptor ring
becoming a list of page-sized buffers and the backend using as many
page buffers as required for each packet.
Since iPXE's abstraction of an I/O buffer does not include any sort of
scatter-gather list, this requires an extra allocation and copy on the
receive datapath for any packet that spans more than a single page.
This support is required in order to successfully boot an AWS EC2
virtual machine (with non-enhanced networking) via iSCSI if jumbo
frames are enabled, since the netback driver used in EC2 seems not to
allow "feature-sg" to be renegotiated once the Linux kernel driver
takes over.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
There is no method for obtaining the number of PCI buses when using
PCIAPI_DIRECT, and we therefore currently scan all possible bus
numbers. This can cause a several-second startup delay in some
virtualised environments, since PCI configuration space access will
necessarily require the involvement of the hypervisor.
Ameliorate this situation by defaulting to scanning only a single bus,
and expanding the number of PCI buses to accommodate any subordinate
buses that are detected during enumeration.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Adding this missing identifier allows the X557-AT2 chipset seen on (at
least) Super Micro A2SDI-H-TF motherboards to function with iPXE.
Signed-off-by: Tyler J. Stachecki <stachecki.tyler@gmail.com>
Allow arbitrary settings to be specified on the Linux command line.
For example:
./bin-x86_64-linux/slirp.linux \
--net slirp,testserver=qa-test.ipxe.org
This can be useful when using the Linux userspace build to test
embedded scripts, since it allows arbitrary parameters to be passed
directly on the command line.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Add a driver using libslirp to provide a virtual network interface
without requiring root permissions on the host. This simplifies the
process of running iPXE as a Linux userspace application with network
access. For example:
make bin-x86_64-linux/slirp.linux
./bin-x86_64-linux/slirp.linux --net slirp
libslirp will provide a built-in emulated DHCP server and NAT router.
Settings such as the boot filename may be controlled via command-line
options. For example:
./bin-x86_64-linux/slirp.linux \
--net slirp,filename=http://192.168.0.1/boot.ipxe
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
When building as a Linux userspace application, iPXE currently
implements its own system calls to the host kernel rather than relying
on the host's C library. The output binary is statically linked and
has no external dependencies.
This matches the general philosophy of other platforms on which iPXE
runs, since there are no external libraries available on either BIOS
or UEFI bare metal. However, it would be useful for the Linux
userspace application to be able to link against host libraries such
as libslirp.
Modify the build process to perform a two-stage link: first picking
out the requested objects in the usual way from blib.a but with
relocations left present, then linking again with a helper object to
create a standard hosted application. The helper object provides the
standard main() entry point and wrappers for the Linux system calls
required by the iPXE Linux drivers and interface code.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
The GCC11 compiler pointed out something that apparently no previous
compiler noticed: in ath5k_eeprom_pread_turbo_modes, local variable
val is used uninitialized. From what I can see, the code is just
missing an initial AR5K_EEPROM_READ. Add it right before the switch
statement.
Signed-off-by: Bruce Rogers <brogers@suse.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
The Linux and FreeBSD drivers for the (totally undocumented) ENA
adapters use a two-phase reset mechanism: first set ENA_CTRL.RESET and
wait for this to be reflected in ENA_STAT.RESET, then clear
ENA_CTRL.RESET and again wait for it to be reflected in
ENA_STAT.RESET.
The iPXE driver currently assumes a self-clearing reset mechanism,
which appeared to work at the time that the driver was created but
seems no longer to function, at least on the t3.nano and t3a.nano
instance types found in eu-west-1.
Switch to a simplified version of the two-phase reset mechanism as
used by Linux and FreeBSD.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
After a ton of tedious work, I am pleased to finally introduce full
support for ConnectX-3 cards in iPXE!
The work has been done by finding all publicly available versions of
the Mellanox Flexboot sources, cleaning them up, synthesizing a git
history from them, cleaning out non-significant changes, and
correlating with the iPXE upstream git history.
After this, a proof-of-concept diff was produced, that allowed iPXE to
be compiled with rudimentary ConnectX-3 support. This diff was over
10k lines, and contained many changes that were not part of the core
driver.
Special thanks to Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org> for answering my
barrage of questions, and helping brainstorm the development along the
way.
Signed-off-by: Christian Iversen <ci@iversenit.dk>
The CQE length field will not be valid for a completion in error.
Avoid parsing the length field and just call the completion handler
directly.
In debug builds, also dump the queue pair context to allow for
inspection of the error.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Check for reset completion by waiting for the device to respond to PCI
configuration cycles, as documented in the Programmer's Reference
Manual. On the original ConnectX HCA, this reduces the time spent on
reset from 1000ms down to 1ms.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
When auto-detecting the initial port type, the Hermon driver will spam
the debug output without hesitation. Add a short delay in each
iteration to fix this.
Signed-off-by: Christian Iversen <ci@iversenit.dk>
Inspired by Flexboot, the function hermon_event_port_mgmnt_change() is
added to handle the HERMON_EV_PORT_MGMNT_CHANGE event type, which
updates the Infiniband subsystem.
Signed-off-by: Christian Iversen <ci@iversenit.dk>
Modified-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Hermon Ethernet work queues have more RX than TX entries, unlike most
other drivers. This is possibly the source of some stochastic
deadlocks previously experienced with this driver.
Update the sizes to be in line with other drivers, and make them
slightly larger for better performance. These new queue sizes have
been found to work well with ConnectX-3 hardware.
Signed-off-by: Christian Iversen <ci@iversenit.dk>
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
The programming documentation states that the reset magic value is
"0x00000001 (Big Endian)", and the current code matches this by using
the value 0x01000000 for the implicitly little-endian writel().
Inspection of the FlexBoot source code reveals an exciting variety of
reset values, some suggestive of confusion around endianness.
Experimentation suggests that the value 0x01000001 works reliably
across a wide range of hardware.
Debugged-by: Christian Iversen <ci@iversenit.dk>
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Some older versions of the hardware (and/or firmware) do not report an
event when an Infiniband link reaches the INIT state. The driver
works around this missing event by calling ib_smc_update() on each
event queue poll while the link is in the DOWN state.
Commit 6cb12ee ("[hermon] Increase polling rate for command
completions") addressed this by speeding up the time taken to issue
each command invoked by ib_smc_update(). Experimentation shows that
the impact is still significant: for example, in a situation where an
unplugged port is opened, the throughput on the other port can be
reduced by over 99%.
Fix by throttling the rate at which link polling is attempted.
Debugged-by: Christian Iversen <ci@iversenit.dk>
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
This change is ported from Flexboot sources. When stopping a Hermon
device, perform hermon_unmap_mpt() which runs HERMON_HCR_HW2SW_MPT to
bring the Memory Protection Table (MPT) back to software control.
Signed-off-by: Christian Iversen <ci@iversenit.dk>
Modified-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
The eIPoIB local Ethernet MAC is currently constructed from the port
GUID. Given a base GUID/MAC value of N, Mellanox seems to populate:
Node GUID: N + 0
Port 1 GUID: N + 1
Port 2 GUID: N + 2
and
Port 1 MAC: N + 0
Port 2 MAC: N + 1
This causes a duplicate local MAC address when port 1 is configured as
Infiniband and port 2 as Ethernet, since both will derive their MAC
address as (N + 1).
Fix by using the port's Ethernet MAC as the eIPoIB local EMAC. This
is a behavioural change that could potentially break configurations
that rely on the local EMAC value, such as a DHCP server relying on
the chaddr field for DHCP reservations.
Signed-off-by: Christian Iversen <ci@iversenit.dk>
Modified-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Some older versions of the hardware (and/or firmware) do not report an
event when an Infiniband link reaches the INIT state. The driver
works around this missing event by calling ib_smc_update() on each
event queue poll while the link is in the DOWN state. This results in
a very large number of commands being issued while any open Infiniband
link is in the DOWN state (e.g. unplugged), to the point that the 1ms
delay from waiting for each command to complete will noticeably affect
responsiveness.
Fix by decreasing the command completion polling delay from 1ms to
10us.
Signed-off-by: Christian Iversen <ci@iversenit.dk>
Modified-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Add hermon_dump_eqctx() for dumping the event queue context and
hermon_dump_eqes() for dumping any unconsumed event queue entries.
Originally-implemented-by: Christian Iversen <ci@iversenit.dk>
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Some commands (particularly in relation to device initialization) can
occasionally take longer than 2 seconds, and the Mellanox documentation
recommends a 10 second timeout.
Signed-off-by: Christian Iversen <ci@iversenit.dk>