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alistair23-linux/drivers/infiniband/hw/cxgb3/iwch_cm.c

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/*
* Copyright (c) 2006 Chelsio, Inc. All rights reserved.
*
* This software is available to you under a choice of one of two
* licenses. You may choose to be licensed under the terms of the GNU
* General Public License (GPL) Version 2, available from the file
* COPYING in the main directory of this source tree, or the
* OpenIB.org BSD license below:
*
* Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or
* without modification, are permitted provided that the following
* conditions are met:
*
* - Redistributions of source code must retain the above
* copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following
* disclaimer.
*
* - Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above
* copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following
* disclaimer in the documentation and/or other materials
* provided with the distribution.
*
* THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND,
* EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF
* MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND
* NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS
* BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN
* ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN
* CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE
* SOFTWARE.
*/
#include <linux/module.h>
#include <linux/list.h>
include cleanup: Update gfp.h and slab.h includes to prepare for breaking implicit slab.h inclusion from percpu.h percpu.h is included by sched.h and module.h and thus ends up being included when building most .c files. percpu.h includes slab.h which in turn includes gfp.h making everything defined by the two files universally available and complicating inclusion dependencies. percpu.h -> slab.h dependency is about to be removed. Prepare for this change by updating users of gfp and slab facilities include those headers directly instead of assuming availability. As this conversion needs to touch large number of source files, the following script is used as the basis of conversion. http://userweb.kernel.org/~tj/misc/slabh-sweep.py The script does the followings. * Scan files for gfp and slab usages and update includes such that only the necessary includes are there. ie. if only gfp is used, gfp.h, if slab is used, slab.h. * When the script inserts a new include, it looks at the include blocks and try to put the new include such that its order conforms to its surrounding. It's put in the include block which contains core kernel includes, in the same order that the rest are ordered - alphabetical, Christmas tree, rev-Xmas-tree or at the end if there doesn't seem to be any matching order. * If the script can't find a place to put a new include (mostly because the file doesn't have fitting include block), it prints out an error message indicating which .h file needs to be added to the file. The conversion was done in the following steps. 1. The initial automatic conversion of all .c files updated slightly over 4000 files, deleting around 700 includes and adding ~480 gfp.h and ~3000 slab.h inclusions. The script emitted errors for ~400 files. 2. Each error was manually checked. Some didn't need the inclusion, some needed manual addition while adding it to implementation .h or embedding .c file was more appropriate for others. This step added inclusions to around 150 files. 3. The script was run again and the output was compared to the edits from #2 to make sure no file was left behind. 4. Several build tests were done and a couple of problems were fixed. e.g. lib/decompress_*.c used malloc/free() wrappers around slab APIs requiring slab.h to be added manually. 5. The script was run on all .h files but without automatically editing them as sprinkling gfp.h and slab.h inclusions around .h files could easily lead to inclusion dependency hell. Most gfp.h inclusion directives were ignored as stuff from gfp.h was usually wildly available and often used in preprocessor macros. Each slab.h inclusion directive was examined and added manually as necessary. 6. percpu.h was updated not to include slab.h. 7. Build test were done on the following configurations and failures were fixed. CONFIG_GCOV_KERNEL was turned off for all tests (as my distributed build env didn't work with gcov compiles) and a few more options had to be turned off depending on archs to make things build (like ipr on powerpc/64 which failed due to missing writeq). * x86 and x86_64 UP and SMP allmodconfig and a custom test config. * powerpc and powerpc64 SMP allmodconfig * sparc and sparc64 SMP allmodconfig * ia64 SMP allmodconfig * s390 SMP allmodconfig * alpha SMP allmodconfig * um on x86_64 SMP allmodconfig 8. percpu.h modifications were reverted so that it could be applied as a separate patch and serve as bisection point. Given the fact that I had only a couple of failures from tests on step 6, I'm fairly confident about the coverage of this conversion patch. If there is a breakage, it's likely to be something in one of the arch headers which should be easily discoverable easily on most builds of the specific arch. Signed-off-by: Tejun Heo <tj@kernel.org> Guess-its-ok-by: Christoph Lameter <cl@linux-foundation.org> Cc: Ingo Molnar <mingo@redhat.com> Cc: Lee Schermerhorn <Lee.Schermerhorn@hp.com>
2010-03-24 02:04:11 -06:00
#include <linux/slab.h>
#include <linux/workqueue.h>
#include <linux/skbuff.h>
#include <linux/timer.h>
#include <linux/notifier.h>
#include <linux/inetdevice.h>
#include <net/neighbour.h>
#include <net/netevent.h>
#include <net/route.h>
#include "tcb.h"
#include "cxgb3_offload.h"
#include "iwch.h"
#include "iwch_provider.h"
#include "iwch_cm.h"
static char *states[] = {
"idle",
"listen",
"connecting",
"mpa_wait_req",
"mpa_req_sent",
"mpa_req_rcvd",
"mpa_rep_sent",
"fpdu_mode",
"aborting",
"closing",
"moribund",
"dead",
NULL,
};
RDMA/cxgb3: Support peer-2-peer connection setup Open MPI, Intel MPI and other applications don't respect the iWARP requirement that the client (active) side of the connection send the first RDMA message. This class of application connection setup is called peer-to-peer. Typically once the connection is setup, _both_ sides want to send data. This patch enables supporting peer-to-peer over the chelsio RNIC by enforcing this iWARP requirement in the driver itself as part of RDMA connection setup. Connection setup is extended, when the peer2peer module option is 1, such that the MPA initiator will send a 0B Read (the RTR) just after connection setup. The MPA responder will suspend SQ processing until the RTR message is received and reply-to. In the longer term, this will be handled in a standardized way by enhancing the MPA negotiation so peers can indicate whether they want/need the RTR and what type of RTR (0B read, 0B write, or 0B send) should be sent. This will be done by standardizing a few bits of the private data in order to negotiate all this. However this patch enables peer-to-peer applications now and allows most of the required firmware and driver changes to be done and tested now. Design: - Add a module option, peer2peer, to enable this mode. - New firmware support for peer-to-peer mode: - a new bit in the rdma_init WR to tell it to do peer-2-peer and what form of RTR message to send or expect. - process _all_ preposted recvs before moving the connection into rdma mode. - passive side: defer completing the rdma_init WR until all pre-posted recvs are processed. Suspend SQ processing until the RTR is received. - active side: expect and process the 0B read WR on offload TX queue. Defer completing the rdma_init WR until all pre-posted recvs are processed. Suspend SQ processing until the 0B read WR is processed from the offload TX queue. - If peer2peer is set, driver posts 0B read request on offload TX queue just after posting the rdma_init WR to the offload TX queue. - Add CQ poll logic to ignore unsolicitied read responses. Signed-off-by: Steve Wise <swise@opengridcomputing.com> Signed-off-by: Roland Dreier <rolandd@cisco.com>
2008-04-29 14:46:52 -06:00
int peer2peer = 0;
module_param(peer2peer, int, 0644);
MODULE_PARM_DESC(peer2peer, "Support peer2peer ULPs (default=0)");
static int ep_timeout_secs = 60;
module_param(ep_timeout_secs, int, 0644);
MODULE_PARM_DESC(ep_timeout_secs, "CM Endpoint operation timeout "
"in seconds (default=60)");
static int mpa_rev = 1;
module_param(mpa_rev, int, 0644);
MODULE_PARM_DESC(mpa_rev, "MPA Revision, 0 supports amso1100, "
"1 is spec compliant. (default=1)");
static int markers_enabled = 0;
module_param(markers_enabled, int, 0644);
MODULE_PARM_DESC(markers_enabled, "Enable MPA MARKERS (default(0)=disabled)");
static int crc_enabled = 1;
module_param(crc_enabled, int, 0644);
MODULE_PARM_DESC(crc_enabled, "Enable MPA CRC (default(1)=enabled)");
static int rcv_win = 256 * 1024;
module_param(rcv_win, int, 0644);
MODULE_PARM_DESC(rcv_win, "TCP receive window in bytes (default=256)");
static int snd_win = 32 * 1024;
module_param(snd_win, int, 0644);
MODULE_PARM_DESC(snd_win, "TCP send window in bytes (default=32KB)");
static unsigned int nocong = 0;
module_param(nocong, uint, 0644);
MODULE_PARM_DESC(nocong, "Turn off congestion control (default=0)");
static unsigned int cong_flavor = 1;
module_param(cong_flavor, uint, 0644);
MODULE_PARM_DESC(cong_flavor, "TCP Congestion control flavor (default=1)");
static struct workqueue_struct *workq;
static struct sk_buff_head rxq;
static struct sk_buff *get_skb(struct sk_buff *skb, int len, gfp_t gfp);
static void ep_timeout(struct timer_list *t);
static void connect_reply_upcall(struct iwch_ep *ep, int status);
static void start_ep_timer(struct iwch_ep *ep)
{
pr_debug("%s ep %p\n", __func__, ep);
if (timer_pending(&ep->timer)) {
pr_debug("%s stopped / restarted timer ep %p\n", __func__, ep);
del_timer_sync(&ep->timer);
} else
get_ep(&ep->com);
ep->timer.expires = jiffies + ep_timeout_secs * HZ;
add_timer(&ep->timer);
}
static void stop_ep_timer(struct iwch_ep *ep)
{
pr_debug("%s ep %p\n", __func__, ep);
if (!timer_pending(&ep->timer)) {
WARN(1, "%s timer stopped when its not running! ep %p state %u\n",
__func__, ep, ep->com.state);
return;
}
del_timer_sync(&ep->timer);
put_ep(&ep->com);
}
static int iwch_l2t_send(struct t3cdev *tdev, struct sk_buff *skb, struct l2t_entry *l2e)
{
int error = 0;
struct cxio_rdev *rdev;
rdev = (struct cxio_rdev *)tdev->ulp;
if (cxio_fatal_error(rdev)) {
kfree_skb(skb);
return -EIO;
}
error = l2t_send(tdev, skb, l2e);
if (error < 0)
kfree_skb(skb);
return error < 0 ? error : 0;
}
int iwch_cxgb3_ofld_send(struct t3cdev *tdev, struct sk_buff *skb)
{
int error = 0;
struct cxio_rdev *rdev;
rdev = (struct cxio_rdev *)tdev->ulp;
if (cxio_fatal_error(rdev)) {
kfree_skb(skb);
return -EIO;
}
error = cxgb3_ofld_send(tdev, skb);
if (error < 0)
kfree_skb(skb);
return error < 0 ? error : 0;
}
static void release_tid(struct t3cdev *tdev, u32 hwtid, struct sk_buff *skb)
{
struct cpl_tid_release *req;
skb = get_skb(skb, sizeof *req, GFP_KERNEL);
if (!skb)
return;
req = skb_put(skb, sizeof(*req));
req->wr.wr_hi = htonl(V_WR_OP(FW_WROPCODE_FORWARD));
OPCODE_TID(req) = htonl(MK_OPCODE_TID(CPL_TID_RELEASE, hwtid));
skb->priority = CPL_PRIORITY_SETUP;
iwch_cxgb3_ofld_send(tdev, skb);
return;
}
int iwch_quiesce_tid(struct iwch_ep *ep)
{
struct cpl_set_tcb_field *req;
struct sk_buff *skb = get_skb(NULL, sizeof(*req), GFP_KERNEL);
if (!skb)
return -ENOMEM;
req = skb_put(skb, sizeof(*req));
req->wr.wr_hi = htonl(V_WR_OP(FW_WROPCODE_FORWARD));
req->wr.wr_lo = htonl(V_WR_TID(ep->hwtid));
OPCODE_TID(req) = htonl(MK_OPCODE_TID(CPL_SET_TCB_FIELD, ep->hwtid));
req->reply = 0;
req->cpu_idx = 0;
req->word = htons(W_TCB_RX_QUIESCE);
req->mask = cpu_to_be64(1ULL << S_TCB_RX_QUIESCE);
req->val = cpu_to_be64(1 << S_TCB_RX_QUIESCE);
skb->priority = CPL_PRIORITY_DATA;
return iwch_cxgb3_ofld_send(ep->com.tdev, skb);
}
int iwch_resume_tid(struct iwch_ep *ep)
{
struct cpl_set_tcb_field *req;
struct sk_buff *skb = get_skb(NULL, sizeof(*req), GFP_KERNEL);
if (!skb)
return -ENOMEM;
req = skb_put(skb, sizeof(*req));
req->wr.wr_hi = htonl(V_WR_OP(FW_WROPCODE_FORWARD));
req->wr.wr_lo = htonl(V_WR_TID(ep->hwtid));
OPCODE_TID(req) = htonl(MK_OPCODE_TID(CPL_SET_TCB_FIELD, ep->hwtid));
req->reply = 0;
req->cpu_idx = 0;
req->word = htons(W_TCB_RX_QUIESCE);
req->mask = cpu_to_be64(1ULL << S_TCB_RX_QUIESCE);
req->val = 0;
skb->priority = CPL_PRIORITY_DATA;
return iwch_cxgb3_ofld_send(ep->com.tdev, skb);
}
static void set_emss(struct iwch_ep *ep, u16 opt)
{
pr_debug("%s ep %p opt %u\n", __func__, ep, opt);
ep->emss = T3C_DATA(ep->com.tdev)->mtus[G_TCPOPT_MSS(opt)] - 40;
if (G_TCPOPT_TSTAMP(opt))
ep->emss -= 12;
if (ep->emss < 128)
ep->emss = 128;
pr_debug("emss=%d\n", ep->emss);
}
static enum iwch_ep_state state_read(struct iwch_ep_common *epc)
{
unsigned long flags;
enum iwch_ep_state state;
spin_lock_irqsave(&epc->lock, flags);
state = epc->state;
spin_unlock_irqrestore(&epc->lock, flags);
return state;
}
static void __state_set(struct iwch_ep_common *epc, enum iwch_ep_state new)
{
epc->state = new;
}
static void state_set(struct iwch_ep_common *epc, enum iwch_ep_state new)
{
unsigned long flags;
spin_lock_irqsave(&epc->lock, flags);
pr_debug("%s - %s -> %s\n", __func__, states[epc->state], states[new]);
__state_set(epc, new);
spin_unlock_irqrestore(&epc->lock, flags);
return;
}
static void *alloc_ep(int size, gfp_t gfp)
{
struct iwch_ep_common *epc;
2007-07-19 02:49:03 -06:00
epc = kzalloc(size, gfp);
if (epc) {
kref_init(&epc->kref);
spin_lock_init(&epc->lock);
init_waitqueue_head(&epc->waitq);
}
pr_debug("%s alloc ep %p\n", __func__, epc);
return epc;
}
void __free_ep(struct kref *kref)
{
struct iwch_ep *ep;
ep = container_of(container_of(kref, struct iwch_ep_common, kref),
struct iwch_ep, com);
pr_debug("%s ep %p state %s\n",
__func__, ep, states[state_read(&ep->com)]);
if (test_bit(RELEASE_RESOURCES, &ep->com.flags)) {
cxgb3_remove_tid(ep->com.tdev, (void *)ep, ep->hwtid);
dst_release(ep->dst);
[SCSI] cxgb3i: convert cdev->l2opt to use rcu to prevent NULL dereference This oops was reported recently: d:mon> e cpu 0xd: Vector: 300 (Data Access) at [c0000000fd4c7120] pc: d00000000076f194: .t3_l2t_get+0x44/0x524 [cxgb3] lr: d000000000b02108: .init_act_open+0x150/0x3d4 [cxgb3i] sp: c0000000fd4c73a0 msr: 8000000000009032 dar: 0 dsisr: 40000000 current = 0xc0000000fd640d40 paca = 0xc00000000054ff80 pid = 5085, comm = iscsid d:mon> t [c0000000fd4c7450] d000000000b02108 .init_act_open+0x150/0x3d4 [cxgb3i] [c0000000fd4c7500] d000000000e45378 .cxgbi_ep_connect+0x784/0x8e8 [libcxgbi] [c0000000fd4c7650] d000000000db33f0 .iscsi_if_rx+0x71c/0xb18 [scsi_transport_iscsi2] [c0000000fd4c7740] c000000000370c9c .netlink_data_ready+0x40/0xa4 [c0000000fd4c77c0] c00000000036f010 .netlink_sendskb+0x4c/0x9c [c0000000fd4c7850] c000000000370c18 .netlink_sendmsg+0x358/0x39c [c0000000fd4c7950] c00000000033be24 .sock_sendmsg+0x114/0x1b8 [c0000000fd4c7b50] c00000000033d208 .sys_sendmsg+0x218/0x2ac [c0000000fd4c7d70] c00000000033f55c .sys_socketcall+0x228/0x27c [c0000000fd4c7e30] c0000000000086a4 syscall_exit+0x0/0x40 --- Exception: c01 (System Call) at 00000080da560cfc The root cause was an EEH error, which sent us down the offload_close path in the cxgb3 driver, which in turn sets cdev->l2opt to NULL, without regard for upper layer driver (like the cxgbi drivers) which might have execution contexts in the middle of its use. The result is the oops above, when t3_l2t_get attempts to dereference L2DATA(cdev)->nentries in arp_hash right after the EEH error handler sets it to NULL. The fix is to prevent the setting of the NULL pointer until after there are no further users of it. The t3cdev->l2opt pointer is now converted to be an rcu pointer and the L2DATA macro is now called under the protection of the rcu_read_lock(). When the EEH error path: t3_adapter_error->offload_close->cxgb3_offload_deactivate Is exectured, setting of that l2opt pointer to NULL, is now gated on an rcu quiescence point, preventing, allowing L2DATA callers to safely check for a NULL pointer without concern that the underlying data will be freeded before the pointer is dereferenced. This has been tested by the reporter and shown to fix the reproted oops [nhorman: fix up unitinialised variable reported by Dan Carpenter] Signed-off-by: Neil Horman <nhorman@tuxdriver.com> Reviewed-by: Karen Xie <kxie@chelsio.com> Cc: stable@kernel.org Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-09-06 11:59:13 -06:00
l2t_release(ep->com.tdev, ep->l2t);
}
kfree(ep);
}
static void release_ep_resources(struct iwch_ep *ep)
{
pr_debug("%s ep %p tid %d\n", __func__, ep, ep->hwtid);
set_bit(RELEASE_RESOURCES, &ep->com.flags);
put_ep(&ep->com);
}
static int status2errno(int status)
{
switch (status) {
case CPL_ERR_NONE:
return 0;
case CPL_ERR_CONN_RESET:
return -ECONNRESET;
case CPL_ERR_ARP_MISS:
return -EHOSTUNREACH;
case CPL_ERR_CONN_TIMEDOUT:
return -ETIMEDOUT;
case CPL_ERR_TCAM_FULL:
return -ENOMEM;
case CPL_ERR_CONN_EXIST:
return -EADDRINUSE;
default:
return -EIO;
}
}
/*
* Try and reuse skbs already allocated...
*/
static struct sk_buff *get_skb(struct sk_buff *skb, int len, gfp_t gfp)
{
if (skb && !skb_is_nonlinear(skb) && !skb_cloned(skb)) {
skb_trim(skb, 0);
skb_get(skb);
} else {
skb = alloc_skb(len, gfp);
}
return skb;
}
static struct rtable *find_route(struct t3cdev *dev, __be32 local_ip,
__be32 peer_ip, __be16 local_port,
__be16 peer_port, u8 tos)
{
struct rtable *rt;
struct flowi4 fl4;
rt = ip_route_output_ports(&init_net, &fl4, NULL, peer_ip, local_ip,
peer_port, local_port, IPPROTO_TCP,
tos, 0);
if (IS_ERR(rt))
return NULL;
return rt;
}
static unsigned int find_best_mtu(const struct t3c_data *d, unsigned short mtu)
{
int i = 0;
while (i < d->nmtus - 1 && d->mtus[i + 1] <= mtu)
++i;
return i;
}
static void arp_failure_discard(struct t3cdev *dev, struct sk_buff *skb)
{
pr_debug("%s t3cdev %p\n", __func__, dev);
kfree_skb(skb);
}
/*
* Handle an ARP failure for an active open.
*/
static void act_open_req_arp_failure(struct t3cdev *dev, struct sk_buff *skb)
{
pr_err("ARP failure during connect\n");
kfree_skb(skb);
}
/*
* Handle an ARP failure for a CPL_ABORT_REQ. Change it into a no RST variant
* and send it along.
*/
static void abort_arp_failure(struct t3cdev *dev, struct sk_buff *skb)
{
struct cpl_abort_req *req = cplhdr(skb);
pr_debug("%s t3cdev %p\n", __func__, dev);
req->cmd = CPL_ABORT_NO_RST;
iwch_cxgb3_ofld_send(dev, skb);
}
static int send_halfclose(struct iwch_ep *ep, gfp_t gfp)
{
struct cpl_close_con_req *req;
struct sk_buff *skb;
pr_debug("%s ep %p\n", __func__, ep);
skb = get_skb(NULL, sizeof(*req), gfp);
if (!skb) {
pr_err("%s - failed to alloc skb\n", __func__);
return -ENOMEM;
}
skb->priority = CPL_PRIORITY_DATA;
set_arp_failure_handler(skb, arp_failure_discard);
req = skb_put(skb, sizeof(*req));
req->wr.wr_hi = htonl(V_WR_OP(FW_WROPCODE_OFLD_CLOSE_CON));
req->wr.wr_lo = htonl(V_WR_TID(ep->hwtid));
OPCODE_TID(req) = htonl(MK_OPCODE_TID(CPL_CLOSE_CON_REQ, ep->hwtid));
return iwch_l2t_send(ep->com.tdev, skb, ep->l2t);
}
static int send_abort(struct iwch_ep *ep, struct sk_buff *skb, gfp_t gfp)
{
struct cpl_abort_req *req;
pr_debug("%s ep %p\n", __func__, ep);
skb = get_skb(skb, sizeof(*req), gfp);
if (!skb) {
pr_err("%s - failed to alloc skb\n", __func__);
return -ENOMEM;
}
skb->priority = CPL_PRIORITY_DATA;
set_arp_failure_handler(skb, abort_arp_failure);
req = skb_put_zero(skb, sizeof(*req));
req->wr.wr_hi = htonl(V_WR_OP(FW_WROPCODE_OFLD_HOST_ABORT_CON_REQ));
req->wr.wr_lo = htonl(V_WR_TID(ep->hwtid));
OPCODE_TID(req) = htonl(MK_OPCODE_TID(CPL_ABORT_REQ, ep->hwtid));
req->cmd = CPL_ABORT_SEND_RST;
return iwch_l2t_send(ep->com.tdev, skb, ep->l2t);
}
static int send_connect(struct iwch_ep *ep)
{
struct cpl_act_open_req *req;
struct sk_buff *skb;
u32 opt0h, opt0l, opt2;
unsigned int mtu_idx;
int wscale;
pr_debug("%s ep %p\n", __func__, ep);
skb = get_skb(NULL, sizeof(*req), GFP_KERNEL);
if (!skb) {
pr_err("%s - failed to alloc skb\n", __func__);
return -ENOMEM;
}
mtu_idx = find_best_mtu(T3C_DATA(ep->com.tdev), dst_mtu(ep->dst));
wscale = compute_wscale(rcv_win);
opt0h = V_NAGLE(0) |
V_NO_CONG(nocong) |
V_KEEP_ALIVE(1) |
F_TCAM_BYPASS |
V_WND_SCALE(wscale) |
V_MSS_IDX(mtu_idx) |
V_L2T_IDX(ep->l2t->idx) | V_TX_CHANNEL(ep->l2t->smt_idx);
opt0l = V_TOS((ep->tos >> 2) & M_TOS) | V_RCV_BUFSIZ(rcv_win>>10);
opt2 = F_RX_COALESCE_VALID | V_RX_COALESCE(0) | V_FLAVORS_VALID(1) |
V_CONG_CONTROL_FLAVOR(cong_flavor);
skb->priority = CPL_PRIORITY_SETUP;
set_arp_failure_handler(skb, act_open_req_arp_failure);
req = skb_put(skb, sizeof(*req));
req->wr.wr_hi = htonl(V_WR_OP(FW_WROPCODE_FORWARD));
OPCODE_TID(req) = htonl(MK_OPCODE_TID(CPL_ACT_OPEN_REQ, ep->atid));
req->local_port = ep->com.local_addr.sin_port;
req->peer_port = ep->com.remote_addr.sin_port;
req->local_ip = ep->com.local_addr.sin_addr.s_addr;
req->peer_ip = ep->com.remote_addr.sin_addr.s_addr;
req->opt0h = htonl(opt0h);
req->opt0l = htonl(opt0l);
req->params = 0;
req->opt2 = htonl(opt2);
return iwch_l2t_send(ep->com.tdev, skb, ep->l2t);
}
static void send_mpa_req(struct iwch_ep *ep, struct sk_buff *skb)
{
int mpalen;
struct tx_data_wr *req;
struct mpa_message *mpa;
int len;
pr_debug("%s ep %p pd_len %d\n", __func__, ep, ep->plen);
BUG_ON(skb_cloned(skb));
mpalen = sizeof(*mpa) + ep->plen;
if (skb->data + mpalen + sizeof(*req) > skb_end_pointer(skb)) {
kfree_skb(skb);
skb=alloc_skb(mpalen + sizeof(*req), GFP_KERNEL);
if (!skb) {
connect_reply_upcall(ep, -ENOMEM);
return;
}
}
skb_trim(skb, 0);
skb_reserve(skb, sizeof(*req));
skb_put(skb, mpalen);
skb->priority = CPL_PRIORITY_DATA;
mpa = (struct mpa_message *) skb->data;
memset(mpa, 0, sizeof(*mpa));
memcpy(mpa->key, MPA_KEY_REQ, sizeof(mpa->key));
mpa->flags = (crc_enabled ? MPA_CRC : 0) |
(markers_enabled ? MPA_MARKERS : 0);
mpa->private_data_size = htons(ep->plen);
mpa->revision = mpa_rev;
if (ep->plen)
memcpy(mpa->private_data, ep->mpa_pkt + sizeof(*mpa), ep->plen);
/*
* Reference the mpa skb. This ensures the data area
* will remain in memory until the hw acks the tx.
* Function tx_ack() will deref it.
*/
skb_get(skb);
set_arp_failure_handler(skb, arp_failure_discard);
skb_reset_transport_header(skb);
len = skb->len;
req = skb_push(skb, sizeof(*req));
RDMA/cxgb3: Support peer-2-peer connection setup Open MPI, Intel MPI and other applications don't respect the iWARP requirement that the client (active) side of the connection send the first RDMA message. This class of application connection setup is called peer-to-peer. Typically once the connection is setup, _both_ sides want to send data. This patch enables supporting peer-to-peer over the chelsio RNIC by enforcing this iWARP requirement in the driver itself as part of RDMA connection setup. Connection setup is extended, when the peer2peer module option is 1, such that the MPA initiator will send a 0B Read (the RTR) just after connection setup. The MPA responder will suspend SQ processing until the RTR message is received and reply-to. In the longer term, this will be handled in a standardized way by enhancing the MPA negotiation so peers can indicate whether they want/need the RTR and what type of RTR (0B read, 0B write, or 0B send) should be sent. This will be done by standardizing a few bits of the private data in order to negotiate all this. However this patch enables peer-to-peer applications now and allows most of the required firmware and driver changes to be done and tested now. Design: - Add a module option, peer2peer, to enable this mode. - New firmware support for peer-to-peer mode: - a new bit in the rdma_init WR to tell it to do peer-2-peer and what form of RTR message to send or expect. - process _all_ preposted recvs before moving the connection into rdma mode. - passive side: defer completing the rdma_init WR until all pre-posted recvs are processed. Suspend SQ processing until the RTR is received. - active side: expect and process the 0B read WR on offload TX queue. Defer completing the rdma_init WR until all pre-posted recvs are processed. Suspend SQ processing until the 0B read WR is processed from the offload TX queue. - If peer2peer is set, driver posts 0B read request on offload TX queue just after posting the rdma_init WR to the offload TX queue. - Add CQ poll logic to ignore unsolicitied read responses. Signed-off-by: Steve Wise <swise@opengridcomputing.com> Signed-off-by: Roland Dreier <rolandd@cisco.com>
2008-04-29 14:46:52 -06:00
req->wr_hi = htonl(V_WR_OP(FW_WROPCODE_OFLD_TX_DATA)|F_WR_COMPL);
req->wr_lo = htonl(V_WR_TID(ep->hwtid));
req->len = htonl(len);
req->param = htonl(V_TX_PORT(ep->l2t->smt_idx) |
V_TX_SNDBUF(snd_win>>15));
req->flags = htonl(F_TX_INIT);
req->sndseq = htonl(ep->snd_seq);
BUG_ON(ep->mpa_skb);
ep->mpa_skb = skb;
iwch_l2t_send(ep->com.tdev, skb, ep->l2t);
start_ep_timer(ep);
state_set(&ep->com, MPA_REQ_SENT);
return;
}
static int send_mpa_reject(struct iwch_ep *ep, const void *pdata, u8 plen)
{
int mpalen;
struct tx_data_wr *req;
struct mpa_message *mpa;
struct sk_buff *skb;
pr_debug("%s ep %p plen %d\n", __func__, ep, plen);
mpalen = sizeof(*mpa) + plen;
skb = get_skb(NULL, mpalen + sizeof(*req), GFP_KERNEL);
if (!skb) {
pr_err("%s - cannot alloc skb!\n", __func__);
return -ENOMEM;
}
skb_reserve(skb, sizeof(*req));
mpa = skb_put(skb, mpalen);
memset(mpa, 0, sizeof(*mpa));
memcpy(mpa->key, MPA_KEY_REP, sizeof(mpa->key));
mpa->flags = MPA_REJECT;
mpa->revision = mpa_rev;
mpa->private_data_size = htons(plen);
if (plen)
memcpy(mpa->private_data, pdata, plen);
/*
* Reference the mpa skb again. This ensures the data area
* will remain in memory until the hw acks the tx.
* Function tx_ack() will deref it.
*/
skb_get(skb);
skb->priority = CPL_PRIORITY_DATA;
set_arp_failure_handler(skb, arp_failure_discard);
skb_reset_transport_header(skb);
req = skb_push(skb, sizeof(*req));
RDMA/cxgb3: Support peer-2-peer connection setup Open MPI, Intel MPI and other applications don't respect the iWARP requirement that the client (active) side of the connection send the first RDMA message. This class of application connection setup is called peer-to-peer. Typically once the connection is setup, _both_ sides want to send data. This patch enables supporting peer-to-peer over the chelsio RNIC by enforcing this iWARP requirement in the driver itself as part of RDMA connection setup. Connection setup is extended, when the peer2peer module option is 1, such that the MPA initiator will send a 0B Read (the RTR) just after connection setup. The MPA responder will suspend SQ processing until the RTR message is received and reply-to. In the longer term, this will be handled in a standardized way by enhancing the MPA negotiation so peers can indicate whether they want/need the RTR and what type of RTR (0B read, 0B write, or 0B send) should be sent. This will be done by standardizing a few bits of the private data in order to negotiate all this. However this patch enables peer-to-peer applications now and allows most of the required firmware and driver changes to be done and tested now. Design: - Add a module option, peer2peer, to enable this mode. - New firmware support for peer-to-peer mode: - a new bit in the rdma_init WR to tell it to do peer-2-peer and what form of RTR message to send or expect. - process _all_ preposted recvs before moving the connection into rdma mode. - passive side: defer completing the rdma_init WR until all pre-posted recvs are processed. Suspend SQ processing until the RTR is received. - active side: expect and process the 0B read WR on offload TX queue. Defer completing the rdma_init WR until all pre-posted recvs are processed. Suspend SQ processing until the 0B read WR is processed from the offload TX queue. - If peer2peer is set, driver posts 0B read request on offload TX queue just after posting the rdma_init WR to the offload TX queue. - Add CQ poll logic to ignore unsolicitied read responses. Signed-off-by: Steve Wise <swise@opengridcomputing.com> Signed-off-by: Roland Dreier <rolandd@cisco.com>
2008-04-29 14:46:52 -06:00
req->wr_hi = htonl(V_WR_OP(FW_WROPCODE_OFLD_TX_DATA)|F_WR_COMPL);
req->wr_lo = htonl(V_WR_TID(ep->hwtid));
req->len = htonl(mpalen);
req->param = htonl(V_TX_PORT(ep->l2t->smt_idx) |
V_TX_SNDBUF(snd_win>>15));
req->flags = htonl(F_TX_INIT);
req->sndseq = htonl(ep->snd_seq);
BUG_ON(ep->mpa_skb);
ep->mpa_skb = skb;
return iwch_l2t_send(ep->com.tdev, skb, ep->l2t);
}
static int send_mpa_reply(struct iwch_ep *ep, const void *pdata, u8 plen)
{
int mpalen;
struct tx_data_wr *req;
struct mpa_message *mpa;
int len;
struct sk_buff *skb;
pr_debug("%s ep %p plen %d\n", __func__, ep, plen);
mpalen = sizeof(*mpa) + plen;
skb = get_skb(NULL, mpalen + sizeof(*req), GFP_KERNEL);
if (!skb) {
pr_err("%s - cannot alloc skb!\n", __func__);
return -ENOMEM;
}
skb->priority = CPL_PRIORITY_DATA;
skb_reserve(skb, sizeof(*req));
mpa = skb_put(skb, mpalen);
memset(mpa, 0, sizeof(*mpa));
memcpy(mpa->key, MPA_KEY_REP, sizeof(mpa->key));
mpa->flags = (ep->mpa_attr.crc_enabled ? MPA_CRC : 0) |
(markers_enabled ? MPA_MARKERS : 0);
mpa->revision = mpa_rev;
mpa->private_data_size = htons(plen);
if (plen)
memcpy(mpa->private_data, pdata, plen);
/*
* Reference the mpa skb. This ensures the data area
* will remain in memory until the hw acks the tx.
* Function tx_ack() will deref it.
*/
skb_get(skb);
set_arp_failure_handler(skb, arp_failure_discard);
skb_reset_transport_header(skb);
len = skb->len;
req = skb_push(skb, sizeof(*req));
RDMA/cxgb3: Support peer-2-peer connection setup Open MPI, Intel MPI and other applications don't respect the iWARP requirement that the client (active) side of the connection send the first RDMA message. This class of application connection setup is called peer-to-peer. Typically once the connection is setup, _both_ sides want to send data. This patch enables supporting peer-to-peer over the chelsio RNIC by enforcing this iWARP requirement in the driver itself as part of RDMA connection setup. Connection setup is extended, when the peer2peer module option is 1, such that the MPA initiator will send a 0B Read (the RTR) just after connection setup. The MPA responder will suspend SQ processing until the RTR message is received and reply-to. In the longer term, this will be handled in a standardized way by enhancing the MPA negotiation so peers can indicate whether they want/need the RTR and what type of RTR (0B read, 0B write, or 0B send) should be sent. This will be done by standardizing a few bits of the private data in order to negotiate all this. However this patch enables peer-to-peer applications now and allows most of the required firmware and driver changes to be done and tested now. Design: - Add a module option, peer2peer, to enable this mode. - New firmware support for peer-to-peer mode: - a new bit in the rdma_init WR to tell it to do peer-2-peer and what form of RTR message to send or expect. - process _all_ preposted recvs before moving the connection into rdma mode. - passive side: defer completing the rdma_init WR until all pre-posted recvs are processed. Suspend SQ processing until the RTR is received. - active side: expect and process the 0B read WR on offload TX queue. Defer completing the rdma_init WR until all pre-posted recvs are processed. Suspend SQ processing until the 0B read WR is processed from the offload TX queue. - If peer2peer is set, driver posts 0B read request on offload TX queue just after posting the rdma_init WR to the offload TX queue. - Add CQ poll logic to ignore unsolicitied read responses. Signed-off-by: Steve Wise <swise@opengridcomputing.com> Signed-off-by: Roland Dreier <rolandd@cisco.com>
2008-04-29 14:46:52 -06:00
req->wr_hi = htonl(V_WR_OP(FW_WROPCODE_OFLD_TX_DATA)|F_WR_COMPL);
req->wr_lo = htonl(V_WR_TID(ep->hwtid));
req->len = htonl(len);
req->param = htonl(V_TX_PORT(ep->l2t->smt_idx) |
V_TX_SNDBUF(snd_win>>15));
req->flags = htonl(F_TX_INIT);
req->sndseq = htonl(ep->snd_seq);
ep->mpa_skb = skb;
state_set(&ep->com, MPA_REP_SENT);
return iwch_l2t_send(ep->com.tdev, skb, ep->l2t);
}
static int act_establish(struct t3cdev *tdev, struct sk_buff *skb, void *ctx)
{
struct iwch_ep *ep = ctx;
struct cpl_act_establish *req = cplhdr(skb);
unsigned int tid = GET_TID(req);
pr_debug("%s ep %p tid %d\n", __func__, ep, tid);
dst_confirm(ep->dst);
/* setup the hwtid for this connection */
ep->hwtid = tid;
cxgb3_insert_tid(ep->com.tdev, &t3c_client, ep, tid);
ep->snd_seq = ntohl(req->snd_isn);
ep->rcv_seq = ntohl(req->rcv_isn);
set_emss(ep, ntohs(req->tcp_opt));
/* dealloc the atid */
cxgb3_free_atid(ep->com.tdev, ep->atid);
/* start MPA negotiation */
send_mpa_req(ep, skb);
return 0;
}
static void abort_connection(struct iwch_ep *ep, struct sk_buff *skb, gfp_t gfp)
{
pr_debug("%s ep %p\n", __FILE__, ep);
state_set(&ep->com, ABORTING);
send_abort(ep, skb, gfp);
}
static void close_complete_upcall(struct iwch_ep *ep)
{
struct iw_cm_event event;
pr_debug("%s ep %p\n", __func__, ep);
memset(&event, 0, sizeof(event));
event.event = IW_CM_EVENT_CLOSE;
if (ep->com.cm_id) {
pr_debug("close complete delivered ep %p cm_id %p tid %d\n",
ep, ep->com.cm_id, ep->hwtid);
ep->com.cm_id->event_handler(ep->com.cm_id, &event);
ep->com.cm_id->rem_ref(ep->com.cm_id);
ep->com.cm_id = NULL;
ep->com.qp = NULL;
}
}
static void peer_close_upcall(struct iwch_ep *ep)
{
struct iw_cm_event event;
pr_debug("%s ep %p\n", __func__, ep);
memset(&event, 0, sizeof(event));
event.event = IW_CM_EVENT_DISCONNECT;
if (ep->com.cm_id) {
pr_debug("peer close delivered ep %p cm_id %p tid %d\n",
ep, ep->com.cm_id, ep->hwtid);
ep->com.cm_id->event_handler(ep->com.cm_id, &event);
}
}
static void peer_abort_upcall(struct iwch_ep *ep)
{
struct iw_cm_event event;
pr_debug("%s ep %p\n", __func__, ep);
memset(&event, 0, sizeof(event));
event.event = IW_CM_EVENT_CLOSE;
event.status = -ECONNRESET;
if (ep->com.cm_id) {
pr_debug("abort delivered ep %p cm_id %p tid %d\n", ep,
ep->com.cm_id, ep->hwtid);
ep->com.cm_id->event_handler(ep->com.cm_id, &event);
ep->com.cm_id->rem_ref(ep->com.cm_id);
ep->com.cm_id = NULL;
ep->com.qp = NULL;
}
}
static void connect_reply_upcall(struct iwch_ep *ep, int status)
{
struct iw_cm_event event;
pr_debug("%s ep %p status %d\n", __func__, ep, status);
memset(&event, 0, sizeof(event));
event.event = IW_CM_EVENT_CONNECT_REPLY;
event.status = status;
memcpy(&event.local_addr, &ep->com.local_addr,
sizeof(ep->com.local_addr));
memcpy(&event.remote_addr, &ep->com.remote_addr,
sizeof(ep->com.remote_addr));
if ((status == 0) || (status == -ECONNREFUSED)) {
event.private_data_len = ep->plen;
event.private_data = ep->mpa_pkt + sizeof(struct mpa_message);
}
if (ep->com.cm_id) {
pr_debug("%s ep %p tid %d status %d\n", __func__, ep,
ep->hwtid, status);
ep->com.cm_id->event_handler(ep->com.cm_id, &event);
}
if (status < 0) {
ep->com.cm_id->rem_ref(ep->com.cm_id);
ep->com.cm_id = NULL;
ep->com.qp = NULL;
}
}
static void connect_request_upcall(struct iwch_ep *ep)
{
struct iw_cm_event event;
pr_debug("%s ep %p tid %d\n", __func__, ep, ep->hwtid);
memset(&event, 0, sizeof(event));
event.event = IW_CM_EVENT_CONNECT_REQUEST;
memcpy(&event.local_addr, &ep->com.local_addr,
sizeof(ep->com.local_addr));
memcpy(&event.remote_addr, &ep->com.remote_addr,
sizeof(ep->com.local_addr));
event.private_data_len = ep->plen;
event.private_data = ep->mpa_pkt + sizeof(struct mpa_message);
event.provider_data = ep;
/*
* Until ird/ord negotiation via MPAv2 support is added, send max
* supported values
*/
event.ird = event.ord = 8;
if (state_read(&ep->parent_ep->com) != DEAD) {
get_ep(&ep->com);
ep->parent_ep->com.cm_id->event_handler(
ep->parent_ep->com.cm_id,
&event);
}
put_ep(&ep->parent_ep->com);
ep->parent_ep = NULL;
}
static void established_upcall(struct iwch_ep *ep)
{
struct iw_cm_event event;
pr_debug("%s ep %p\n", __func__, ep);
memset(&event, 0, sizeof(event));
event.event = IW_CM_EVENT_ESTABLISHED;
/*
* Until ird/ord negotiation via MPAv2 support is added, send max
* supported values
*/
event.ird = event.ord = 8;
if (ep->com.cm_id) {
pr_debug("%s ep %p tid %d\n", __func__, ep, ep->hwtid);
ep->com.cm_id->event_handler(ep->com.cm_id, &event);
}
}
static int update_rx_credits(struct iwch_ep *ep, u32 credits)
{
struct cpl_rx_data_ack *req;
struct sk_buff *skb;
pr_debug("%s ep %p credits %u\n", __func__, ep, credits);
skb = get_skb(NULL, sizeof(*req), GFP_KERNEL);
if (!skb) {
pr_err("update_rx_credits - cannot alloc skb!\n");
return 0;
}
req = skb_put(skb, sizeof(*req));
req->wr.wr_hi = htonl(V_WR_OP(FW_WROPCODE_FORWARD));
OPCODE_TID(req) = htonl(MK_OPCODE_TID(CPL_RX_DATA_ACK, ep->hwtid));
req->credit_dack = htonl(V_RX_CREDITS(credits) | V_RX_FORCE_ACK(1));
skb->priority = CPL_PRIORITY_ACK;
iwch_cxgb3_ofld_send(ep->com.tdev, skb);
return credits;
}
static void process_mpa_reply(struct iwch_ep *ep, struct sk_buff *skb)
{
struct mpa_message *mpa;
u16 plen;
struct iwch_qp_attributes attrs;
enum iwch_qp_attr_mask mask;
int err;
pr_debug("%s ep %p\n", __func__, ep);
/*
* Stop mpa timer. If it expired, then the state has
* changed and we bail since ep_timeout already aborted
* the connection.
*/
stop_ep_timer(ep);
if (state_read(&ep->com) != MPA_REQ_SENT)
return;
/*
* If we get more than the supported amount of private data
* then we must fail this connection.
*/
if (ep->mpa_pkt_len + skb->len > sizeof(ep->mpa_pkt)) {
err = -EINVAL;
goto err;
}
/*
* copy the new data into our accumulation buffer.
*/
skb_copy_from_linear_data(skb, &(ep->mpa_pkt[ep->mpa_pkt_len]),
skb->len);
ep->mpa_pkt_len += skb->len;
/*
* if we don't even have the mpa message, then bail.
*/
if (ep->mpa_pkt_len < sizeof(*mpa))
return;
mpa = (struct mpa_message *) ep->mpa_pkt;
/* Validate MPA header. */
if (mpa->revision != mpa_rev) {
err = -EPROTO;
goto err;
}
if (memcmp(mpa->key, MPA_KEY_REP, sizeof(mpa->key))) {
err = -EPROTO;
goto err;
}
plen = ntohs(mpa->private_data_size);
/*
* Fail if there's too much private data.
*/
if (plen > MPA_MAX_PRIVATE_DATA) {
err = -EPROTO;
goto err;
}
/*
* If plen does not account for pkt size
*/
if (ep->mpa_pkt_len > (sizeof(*mpa) + plen)) {
err = -EPROTO;
goto err;
}
ep->plen = (u8) plen;
/*
* If we don't have all the pdata yet, then bail.
* We'll continue process when more data arrives.
*/
if (ep->mpa_pkt_len < (sizeof(*mpa) + plen))
return;
if (mpa->flags & MPA_REJECT) {
err = -ECONNREFUSED;
goto err;
}
/*
* If we get here we have accumulated the entire mpa
* start reply message including private data. And
* the MPA header is valid.
*/
state_set(&ep->com, FPDU_MODE);
RDMA/cxgb3: Support peer-2-peer connection setup Open MPI, Intel MPI and other applications don't respect the iWARP requirement that the client (active) side of the connection send the first RDMA message. This class of application connection setup is called peer-to-peer. Typically once the connection is setup, _both_ sides want to send data. This patch enables supporting peer-to-peer over the chelsio RNIC by enforcing this iWARP requirement in the driver itself as part of RDMA connection setup. Connection setup is extended, when the peer2peer module option is 1, such that the MPA initiator will send a 0B Read (the RTR) just after connection setup. The MPA responder will suspend SQ processing until the RTR message is received and reply-to. In the longer term, this will be handled in a standardized way by enhancing the MPA negotiation so peers can indicate whether they want/need the RTR and what type of RTR (0B read, 0B write, or 0B send) should be sent. This will be done by standardizing a few bits of the private data in order to negotiate all this. However this patch enables peer-to-peer applications now and allows most of the required firmware and driver changes to be done and tested now. Design: - Add a module option, peer2peer, to enable this mode. - New firmware support for peer-to-peer mode: - a new bit in the rdma_init WR to tell it to do peer-2-peer and what form of RTR message to send or expect. - process _all_ preposted recvs before moving the connection into rdma mode. - passive side: defer completing the rdma_init WR until all pre-posted recvs are processed. Suspend SQ processing until the RTR is received. - active side: expect and process the 0B read WR on offload TX queue. Defer completing the rdma_init WR until all pre-posted recvs are processed. Suspend SQ processing until the 0B read WR is processed from the offload TX queue. - If peer2peer is set, driver posts 0B read request on offload TX queue just after posting the rdma_init WR to the offload TX queue. - Add CQ poll logic to ignore unsolicitied read responses. Signed-off-by: Steve Wise <swise@opengridcomputing.com> Signed-off-by: Roland Dreier <rolandd@cisco.com>
2008-04-29 14:46:52 -06:00
ep->mpa_attr.initiator = 1;
ep->mpa_attr.crc_enabled = (mpa->flags & MPA_CRC) | crc_enabled ? 1 : 0;
ep->mpa_attr.recv_marker_enabled = markers_enabled;
ep->mpa_attr.xmit_marker_enabled = mpa->flags & MPA_MARKERS ? 1 : 0;
ep->mpa_attr.version = mpa_rev;
pr_debug("%s - crc_enabled=%d, recv_marker_enabled=%d, xmit_marker_enabled=%d, version=%d\n",
__func__,
ep->mpa_attr.crc_enabled, ep->mpa_attr.recv_marker_enabled,
ep->mpa_attr.xmit_marker_enabled, ep->mpa_attr.version);
attrs.mpa_attr = ep->mpa_attr;
attrs.max_ird = ep->ird;
attrs.max_ord = ep->ord;
attrs.llp_stream_handle = ep;
attrs.next_state = IWCH_QP_STATE_RTS;
mask = IWCH_QP_ATTR_NEXT_STATE |
IWCH_QP_ATTR_LLP_STREAM_HANDLE | IWCH_QP_ATTR_MPA_ATTR |
IWCH_QP_ATTR_MAX_IRD | IWCH_QP_ATTR_MAX_ORD;
/* bind QP and TID with INIT_WR */
err = iwch_modify_qp(ep->com.qp->rhp,
ep->com.qp, mask, &attrs, 1);
RDMA/cxgb3: Support peer-2-peer connection setup Open MPI, Intel MPI and other applications don't respect the iWARP requirement that the client (active) side of the connection send the first RDMA message. This class of application connection setup is called peer-to-peer. Typically once the connection is setup, _both_ sides want to send data. This patch enables supporting peer-to-peer over the chelsio RNIC by enforcing this iWARP requirement in the driver itself as part of RDMA connection setup. Connection setup is extended, when the peer2peer module option is 1, such that the MPA initiator will send a 0B Read (the RTR) just after connection setup. The MPA responder will suspend SQ processing until the RTR message is received and reply-to. In the longer term, this will be handled in a standardized way by enhancing the MPA negotiation so peers can indicate whether they want/need the RTR and what type of RTR (0B read, 0B write, or 0B send) should be sent. This will be done by standardizing a few bits of the private data in order to negotiate all this. However this patch enables peer-to-peer applications now and allows most of the required firmware and driver changes to be done and tested now. Design: - Add a module option, peer2peer, to enable this mode. - New firmware support for peer-to-peer mode: - a new bit in the rdma_init WR to tell it to do peer-2-peer and what form of RTR message to send or expect. - process _all_ preposted recvs before moving the connection into rdma mode. - passive side: defer completing the rdma_init WR until all pre-posted recvs are processed. Suspend SQ processing until the RTR is received. - active side: expect and process the 0B read WR on offload TX queue. Defer completing the rdma_init WR until all pre-posted recvs are processed. Suspend SQ processing until the 0B read WR is processed from the offload TX queue. - If peer2peer is set, driver posts 0B read request on offload TX queue just after posting the rdma_init WR to the offload TX queue. - Add CQ poll logic to ignore unsolicitied read responses. Signed-off-by: Steve Wise <swise@opengridcomputing.com> Signed-off-by: Roland Dreier <rolandd@cisco.com>
2008-04-29 14:46:52 -06:00
if (err)
goto err;
if (peer2peer && iwch_rqes_posted(ep->com.qp) == 0) {
iwch_post_zb_read(ep);
RDMA/cxgb3: Support peer-2-peer connection setup Open MPI, Intel MPI and other applications don't respect the iWARP requirement that the client (active) side of the connection send the first RDMA message. This class of application connection setup is called peer-to-peer. Typically once the connection is setup, _both_ sides want to send data. This patch enables supporting peer-to-peer over the chelsio RNIC by enforcing this iWARP requirement in the driver itself as part of RDMA connection setup. Connection setup is extended, when the peer2peer module option is 1, such that the MPA initiator will send a 0B Read (the RTR) just after connection setup. The MPA responder will suspend SQ processing until the RTR message is received and reply-to. In the longer term, this will be handled in a standardized way by enhancing the MPA negotiation so peers can indicate whether they want/need the RTR and what type of RTR (0B read, 0B write, or 0B send) should be sent. This will be done by standardizing a few bits of the private data in order to negotiate all this. However this patch enables peer-to-peer applications now and allows most of the required firmware and driver changes to be done and tested now. Design: - Add a module option, peer2peer, to enable this mode. - New firmware support for peer-to-peer mode: - a new bit in the rdma_init WR to tell it to do peer-2-peer and what form of RTR message to send or expect. - process _all_ preposted recvs before moving the connection into rdma mode. - passive side: defer completing the rdma_init WR until all pre-posted recvs are processed. Suspend SQ processing until the RTR is received. - active side: expect and process the 0B read WR on offload TX queue. Defer completing the rdma_init WR until all pre-posted recvs are processed. Suspend SQ processing until the 0B read WR is processed from the offload TX queue. - If peer2peer is set, driver posts 0B read request on offload TX queue just after posting the rdma_init WR to the offload TX queue. - Add CQ poll logic to ignore unsolicitied read responses. Signed-off-by: Steve Wise <swise@opengridcomputing.com> Signed-off-by: Roland Dreier <rolandd@cisco.com>
2008-04-29 14:46:52 -06:00
}
goto out;
err:
abort_connection(ep, skb, GFP_KERNEL);
out:
connect_reply_upcall(ep, err);
return;
}
static void process_mpa_request(struct iwch_ep *ep, struct sk_buff *skb)
{
struct mpa_message *mpa;
u16 plen;
pr_debug("%s ep %p\n", __func__, ep);
/*
* Stop mpa timer. If it expired, then the state has
* changed and we bail since ep_timeout already aborted
* the connection.
*/
stop_ep_timer(ep);
if (state_read(&ep->com) != MPA_REQ_WAIT)
return;
/*
* If we get more than the supported amount of private data
* then we must fail this connection.
*/
if (ep->mpa_pkt_len + skb->len > sizeof(ep->mpa_pkt)) {
abort_connection(ep, skb, GFP_KERNEL);
return;
}
pr_debug("%s enter (%s line %u)\n", __func__, __FILE__, __LINE__);
/*
* Copy the new data into our accumulation buffer.
*/
skb_copy_from_linear_data(skb, &(ep->mpa_pkt[ep->mpa_pkt_len]),
skb->len);
ep->mpa_pkt_len += skb->len;
/*
* If we don't even have the mpa message, then bail.
* We'll continue process when more data arrives.
*/
if (ep->mpa_pkt_len < sizeof(*mpa))
return;
pr_debug("%s enter (%s line %u)\n", __func__, __FILE__, __LINE__);
mpa = (struct mpa_message *) ep->mpa_pkt;
/*
* Validate MPA Header.
*/
if (mpa->revision != mpa_rev) {
abort_connection(ep, skb, GFP_KERNEL);
return;
}
if (memcmp(mpa->key, MPA_KEY_REQ, sizeof(mpa->key))) {
abort_connection(ep, skb, GFP_KERNEL);
return;
}
plen = ntohs(mpa->private_data_size);
/*
* Fail if there's too much private data.
*/
if (plen > MPA_MAX_PRIVATE_DATA) {
abort_connection(ep, skb, GFP_KERNEL);
return;
}
/*
* If plen does not account for pkt size
*/
if (ep->mpa_pkt_len > (sizeof(*mpa) + plen)) {
abort_connection(ep, skb, GFP_KERNEL);
return;
}
ep->plen = (u8) plen;
/*
* If we don't have all the pdata yet, then bail.
*/
if (ep->mpa_pkt_len < (sizeof(*mpa) + plen))
return;
/*
* If we get here we have accumulated the entire mpa
* start reply message including private data.
*/
RDMA/cxgb3: Support peer-2-peer connection setup Open MPI, Intel MPI and other applications don't respect the iWARP requirement that the client (active) side of the connection send the first RDMA message. This class of application connection setup is called peer-to-peer. Typically once the connection is setup, _both_ sides want to send data. This patch enables supporting peer-to-peer over the chelsio RNIC by enforcing this iWARP requirement in the driver itself as part of RDMA connection setup. Connection setup is extended, when the peer2peer module option is 1, such that the MPA initiator will send a 0B Read (the RTR) just after connection setup. The MPA responder will suspend SQ processing until the RTR message is received and reply-to. In the longer term, this will be handled in a standardized way by enhancing the MPA negotiation so peers can indicate whether they want/need the RTR and what type of RTR (0B read, 0B write, or 0B send) should be sent. This will be done by standardizing a few bits of the private data in order to negotiate all this. However this patch enables peer-to-peer applications now and allows most of the required firmware and driver changes to be done and tested now. Design: - Add a module option, peer2peer, to enable this mode. - New firmware support for peer-to-peer mode: - a new bit in the rdma_init WR to tell it to do peer-2-peer and what form of RTR message to send or expect. - process _all_ preposted recvs before moving the connection into rdma mode. - passive side: defer completing the rdma_init WR until all pre-posted recvs are processed. Suspend SQ processing until the RTR is received. - active side: expect and process the 0B read WR on offload TX queue. Defer completing the rdma_init WR until all pre-posted recvs are processed. Suspend SQ processing until the 0B read WR is processed from the offload TX queue. - If peer2peer is set, driver posts 0B read request on offload TX queue just after posting the rdma_init WR to the offload TX queue. - Add CQ poll logic to ignore unsolicitied read responses. Signed-off-by: Steve Wise <swise@opengridcomputing.com> Signed-off-by: Roland Dreier <rolandd@cisco.com>
2008-04-29 14:46:52 -06:00
ep->mpa_attr.initiator = 0;
ep->mpa_attr.crc_enabled = (mpa->flags & MPA_CRC) | crc_enabled ? 1 : 0;
ep->mpa_attr.recv_marker_enabled = markers_enabled;
ep->mpa_attr.xmit_marker_enabled = mpa->flags & MPA_MARKERS ? 1 : 0;
ep->mpa_attr.version = mpa_rev;
pr_debug("%s - crc_enabled=%d, recv_marker_enabled=%d, xmit_marker_enabled=%d, version=%d\n",
__func__,
ep->mpa_attr.crc_enabled, ep->mpa_attr.recv_marker_enabled,
ep->mpa_attr.xmit_marker_enabled, ep->mpa_attr.version);
state_set(&ep->com, MPA_REQ_RCVD);
/* drive upcall */
connect_request_upcall(ep);
return;
}
static int rx_data(struct t3cdev *tdev, struct sk_buff *skb, void *ctx)
{
struct iwch_ep *ep = ctx;
struct cpl_rx_data *hdr = cplhdr(skb);
unsigned int dlen = ntohs(hdr->len);
pr_debug("%s ep %p dlen %u\n", __func__, ep, dlen);
skb_pull(skb, sizeof(*hdr));
skb_trim(skb, dlen);
ep->rcv_seq += dlen;
BUG_ON(ep->rcv_seq != (ntohl(hdr->seq) + dlen));
switch (state_read(&ep->com)) {
case MPA_REQ_SENT:
process_mpa_reply(ep, skb);
break;
case MPA_REQ_WAIT:
process_mpa_request(ep, skb);
break;
case MPA_REP_SENT:
break;
default:
pr_err("%s Unexpected streaming data. ep %p state %d tid %d\n",
__func__, ep, state_read(&ep->com), ep->hwtid);
/*
* The ep will timeout and inform the ULP of the failure.
* See ep_timeout().
*/
break;
}
/* update RX credits */
update_rx_credits(ep, dlen);
return CPL_RET_BUF_DONE;
}
/*
* Upcall from the adapter indicating data has been transmitted.
* For us its just the single MPA request or reply. We can now free
* the skb holding the mpa message.
*/
static int tx_ack(struct t3cdev *tdev, struct sk_buff *skb, void *ctx)
{
struct iwch_ep *ep = ctx;
struct cpl_wr_ack *hdr = cplhdr(skb);
unsigned int credits = ntohs(hdr->credits);
unsigned long flags;
int post_zb = 0;
pr_debug("%s ep %p credits %u\n", __func__, ep, credits);
RDMA/cxgb3: Support peer-2-peer connection setup Open MPI, Intel MPI and other applications don't respect the iWARP requirement that the client (active) side of the connection send the first RDMA message. This class of application connection setup is called peer-to-peer. Typically once the connection is setup, _both_ sides want to send data. This patch enables supporting peer-to-peer over the chelsio RNIC by enforcing this iWARP requirement in the driver itself as part of RDMA connection setup. Connection setup is extended, when the peer2peer module option is 1, such that the MPA initiator will send a 0B Read (the RTR) just after connection setup. The MPA responder will suspend SQ processing until the RTR message is received and reply-to. In the longer term, this will be handled in a standardized way by enhancing the MPA negotiation so peers can indicate whether they want/need the RTR and what type of RTR (0B read, 0B write, or 0B send) should be sent. This will be done by standardizing a few bits of the private data in order to negotiate all this. However this patch enables peer-to-peer applications now and allows most of the required firmware and driver changes to be done and tested now. Design: - Add a module option, peer2peer, to enable this mode. - New firmware support for peer-to-peer mode: - a new bit in the rdma_init WR to tell it to do peer-2-peer and what form of RTR message to send or expect. - process _all_ preposted recvs before moving the connection into rdma mode. - passive side: defer completing the rdma_init WR until all pre-posted recvs are processed. Suspend SQ processing until the RTR is received. - active side: expect and process the 0B read WR on offload TX queue. Defer completing the rdma_init WR until all pre-posted recvs are processed. Suspend SQ processing until the 0B read WR is processed from the offload TX queue. - If peer2peer is set, driver posts 0B read request on offload TX queue just after posting the rdma_init WR to the offload TX queue. - Add CQ poll logic to ignore unsolicitied read responses. Signed-off-by: Steve Wise <swise@opengridcomputing.com> Signed-off-by: Roland Dreier <rolandd@cisco.com>
2008-04-29 14:46:52 -06:00
if (credits == 0) {
pr_debug("%s 0 credit ack ep %p state %u\n",
__func__, ep, state_read(&ep->com));
return CPL_RET_BUF_DONE;
RDMA/cxgb3: Support peer-2-peer connection setup Open MPI, Intel MPI and other applications don't respect the iWARP requirement that the client (active) side of the connection send the first RDMA message. This class of application connection setup is called peer-to-peer. Typically once the connection is setup, _both_ sides want to send data. This patch enables supporting peer-to-peer over the chelsio RNIC by enforcing this iWARP requirement in the driver itself as part of RDMA connection setup. Connection setup is extended, when the peer2peer module option is 1, such that the MPA initiator will send a 0B Read (the RTR) just after connection setup. The MPA responder will suspend SQ processing until the RTR message is received and reply-to. In the longer term, this will be handled in a standardized way by enhancing the MPA negotiation so peers can indicate whether they want/need the RTR and what type of RTR (0B read, 0B write, or 0B send) should be sent. This will be done by standardizing a few bits of the private data in order to negotiate all this. However this patch enables peer-to-peer applications now and allows most of the required firmware and driver changes to be done and tested now. Design: - Add a module option, peer2peer, to enable this mode. - New firmware support for peer-to-peer mode: - a new bit in the rdma_init WR to tell it to do peer-2-peer and what form of RTR message to send or expect. - process _all_ preposted recvs before moving the connection into rdma mode. - passive side: defer completing the rdma_init WR until all pre-posted recvs are processed. Suspend SQ processing until the RTR is received. - active side: expect and process the 0B read WR on offload TX queue. Defer completing the rdma_init WR until all pre-posted recvs are processed. Suspend SQ processing until the 0B read WR is processed from the offload TX queue. - If peer2peer is set, driver posts 0B read request on offload TX queue just after posting the rdma_init WR to the offload TX queue. - Add CQ poll logic to ignore unsolicitied read responses. Signed-off-by: Steve Wise <swise@opengridcomputing.com> Signed-off-by: Roland Dreier <rolandd@cisco.com>
2008-04-29 14:46:52 -06:00
}
spin_lock_irqsave(&ep->com.lock, flags);
BUG_ON(credits != 1);
dst_confirm(ep->dst);
RDMA/cxgb3: Support peer-2-peer connection setup Open MPI, Intel MPI and other applications don't respect the iWARP requirement that the client (active) side of the connection send the first RDMA message. This class of application connection setup is called peer-to-peer. Typically once the connection is setup, _both_ sides want to send data. This patch enables supporting peer-to-peer over the chelsio RNIC by enforcing this iWARP requirement in the driver itself as part of RDMA connection setup. Connection setup is extended, when the peer2peer module option is 1, such that the MPA initiator will send a 0B Read (the RTR) just after connection setup. The MPA responder will suspend SQ processing until the RTR message is received and reply-to. In the longer term, this will be handled in a standardized way by enhancing the MPA negotiation so peers can indicate whether they want/need the RTR and what type of RTR (0B read, 0B write, or 0B send) should be sent. This will be done by standardizing a few bits of the private data in order to negotiate all this. However this patch enables peer-to-peer applications now and allows most of the required firmware and driver changes to be done and tested now. Design: - Add a module option, peer2peer, to enable this mode. - New firmware support for peer-to-peer mode: - a new bit in the rdma_init WR to tell it to do peer-2-peer and what form of RTR message to send or expect. - process _all_ preposted recvs before moving the connection into rdma mode. - passive side: defer completing the rdma_init WR until all pre-posted recvs are processed. Suspend SQ processing until the RTR is received. - active side: expect and process the 0B read WR on offload TX queue. Defer completing the rdma_init WR until all pre-posted recvs are processed. Suspend SQ processing until the 0B read WR is processed from the offload TX queue. - If peer2peer is set, driver posts 0B read request on offload TX queue just after posting the rdma_init WR to the offload TX queue. - Add CQ poll logic to ignore unsolicitied read responses. Signed-off-by: Steve Wise <swise@opengridcomputing.com> Signed-off-by: Roland Dreier <rolandd@cisco.com>
2008-04-29 14:46:52 -06:00
if (!ep->mpa_skb) {
pr_debug("%s rdma_init wr_ack ep %p state %u\n",
__func__, ep, ep->com.state);
RDMA/cxgb3: Support peer-2-peer connection setup Open MPI, Intel MPI and other applications don't respect the iWARP requirement that the client (active) side of the connection send the first RDMA message. This class of application connection setup is called peer-to-peer. Typically once the connection is setup, _both_ sides want to send data. This patch enables supporting peer-to-peer over the chelsio RNIC by enforcing this iWARP requirement in the driver itself as part of RDMA connection setup. Connection setup is extended, when the peer2peer module option is 1, such that the MPA initiator will send a 0B Read (the RTR) just after connection setup. The MPA responder will suspend SQ processing until the RTR message is received and reply-to. In the longer term, this will be handled in a standardized way by enhancing the MPA negotiation so peers can indicate whether they want/need the RTR and what type of RTR (0B read, 0B write, or 0B send) should be sent. This will be done by standardizing a few bits of the private data in order to negotiate all this. However this patch enables peer-to-peer applications now and allows most of the required firmware and driver changes to be done and tested now. Design: - Add a module option, peer2peer, to enable this mode. - New firmware support for peer-to-peer mode: - a new bit in the rdma_init WR to tell it to do peer-2-peer and what form of RTR message to send or expect. - process _all_ preposted recvs before moving the connection into rdma mode. - passive side: defer completing the rdma_init WR until all pre-posted recvs are processed. Suspend SQ processing until the RTR is received. - active side: expect and process the 0B read WR on offload TX queue. Defer completing the rdma_init WR until all pre-posted recvs are processed. Suspend SQ processing until the 0B read WR is processed from the offload TX queue. - If peer2peer is set, driver posts 0B read request on offload TX queue just after posting the rdma_init WR to the offload TX queue. - Add CQ poll logic to ignore unsolicitied read responses. Signed-off-by: Steve Wise <swise@opengridcomputing.com> Signed-off-by: Roland Dreier <rolandd@cisco.com>
2008-04-29 14:46:52 -06:00
if (ep->mpa_attr.initiator) {
pr_debug("%s initiator ep %p state %u\n",
__func__, ep, ep->com.state);
if (peer2peer && ep->com.state == FPDU_MODE)
post_zb = 1;
RDMA/cxgb3: Support peer-2-peer connection setup Open MPI, Intel MPI and other applications don't respect the iWARP requirement that the client (active) side of the connection send the first RDMA message. This class of application connection setup is called peer-to-peer. Typically once the connection is setup, _both_ sides want to send data. This patch enables supporting peer-to-peer over the chelsio RNIC by enforcing this iWARP requirement in the driver itself as part of RDMA connection setup. Connection setup is extended, when the peer2peer module option is 1, such that the MPA initiator will send a 0B Read (the RTR) just after connection setup. The MPA responder will suspend SQ processing until the RTR message is received and reply-to. In the longer term, this will be handled in a standardized way by enhancing the MPA negotiation so peers can indicate whether they want/need the RTR and what type of RTR (0B read, 0B write, or 0B send) should be sent. This will be done by standardizing a few bits of the private data in order to negotiate all this. However this patch enables peer-to-peer applications now and allows most of the required firmware and driver changes to be done and tested now. Design: - Add a module option, peer2peer, to enable this mode. - New firmware support for peer-to-peer mode: - a new bit in the rdma_init WR to tell it to do peer-2-peer and what form of RTR message to send or expect. - process _all_ preposted recvs before moving the connection into rdma mode. - passive side: defer completing the rdma_init WR until all pre-posted recvs are processed. Suspend SQ processing until the RTR is received. - active side: expect and process the 0B read WR on offload TX queue. Defer completing the rdma_init WR until all pre-posted recvs are processed. Suspend SQ processing until the 0B read WR is processed from the offload TX queue. - If peer2peer is set, driver posts 0B read request on offload TX queue just after posting the rdma_init WR to the offload TX queue. - Add CQ poll logic to ignore unsolicitied read responses. Signed-off-by: Steve Wise <swise@opengridcomputing.com> Signed-off-by: Roland Dreier <rolandd@cisco.com>
2008-04-29 14:46:52 -06:00
} else {
pr_debug("%s responder ep %p state %u\n",
__func__, ep, ep->com.state);
if (ep->com.state == MPA_REQ_RCVD) {
ep->com.rpl_done = 1;
wake_up(&ep->com.waitq);
}
RDMA/cxgb3: Support peer-2-peer connection setup Open MPI, Intel MPI and other applications don't respect the iWARP requirement that the client (active) side of the connection send the first RDMA message. This class of application connection setup is called peer-to-peer. Typically once the connection is setup, _both_ sides want to send data. This patch enables supporting peer-to-peer over the chelsio RNIC by enforcing this iWARP requirement in the driver itself as part of RDMA connection setup. Connection setup is extended, when the peer2peer module option is 1, such that the MPA initiator will send a 0B Read (the RTR) just after connection setup. The MPA responder will suspend SQ processing until the RTR message is received and reply-to. In the longer term, this will be handled in a standardized way by enhancing the MPA negotiation so peers can indicate whether they want/need the RTR and what type of RTR (0B read, 0B write, or 0B send) should be sent. This will be done by standardizing a few bits of the private data in order to negotiate all this. However this patch enables peer-to-peer applications now and allows most of the required firmware and driver changes to be done and tested now. Design: - Add a module option, peer2peer, to enable this mode. - New firmware support for peer-to-peer mode: - a new bit in the rdma_init WR to tell it to do peer-2-peer and what form of RTR message to send or expect. - process _all_ preposted recvs before moving the connection into rdma mode. - passive side: defer completing the rdma_init WR until all pre-posted recvs are processed. Suspend SQ processing until the RTR is received. - active side: expect and process the 0B read WR on offload TX queue. Defer completing the rdma_init WR until all pre-posted recvs are processed. Suspend SQ processing until the 0B read WR is processed from the offload TX queue. - If peer2peer is set, driver posts 0B read request on offload TX queue just after posting the rdma_init WR to the offload TX queue. - Add CQ poll logic to ignore unsolicitied read responses. Signed-off-by: Steve Wise <swise@opengridcomputing.com> Signed-off-by: Roland Dreier <rolandd@cisco.com>
2008-04-29 14:46:52 -06:00
}
} else {
pr_debug("%s lsm ack ep %p state %u freeing skb\n",
__func__, ep, ep->com.state);
RDMA/cxgb3: Support peer-2-peer connection setup Open MPI, Intel MPI and other applications don't respect the iWARP requirement that the client (active) side of the connection send the first RDMA message. This class of application connection setup is called peer-to-peer. Typically once the connection is setup, _both_ sides want to send data. This patch enables supporting peer-to-peer over the chelsio RNIC by enforcing this iWARP requirement in the driver itself as part of RDMA connection setup. Connection setup is extended, when the peer2peer module option is 1, such that the MPA initiator will send a 0B Read (the RTR) just after connection setup. The MPA responder will suspend SQ processing until the RTR message is received and reply-to. In the longer term, this will be handled in a standardized way by enhancing the MPA negotiation so peers can indicate whether they want/need the RTR and what type of RTR (0B read, 0B write, or 0B send) should be sent. This will be done by standardizing a few bits of the private data in order to negotiate all this. However this patch enables peer-to-peer applications now and allows most of the required firmware and driver changes to be done and tested now. Design: - Add a module option, peer2peer, to enable this mode. - New firmware support for peer-to-peer mode: - a new bit in the rdma_init WR to tell it to do peer-2-peer and what form of RTR message to send or expect. - process _all_ preposted recvs before moving the connection into rdma mode. - passive side: defer completing the rdma_init WR until all pre-posted recvs are processed. Suspend SQ processing until the RTR is received. - active side: expect and process the 0B read WR on offload TX queue. Defer completing the rdma_init WR until all pre-posted recvs are processed. Suspend SQ processing until the 0B read WR is processed from the offload TX queue. - If peer2peer is set, driver posts 0B read request on offload TX queue just after posting the rdma_init WR to the offload TX queue. - Add CQ poll logic to ignore unsolicitied read responses. Signed-off-by: Steve Wise <swise@opengridcomputing.com> Signed-off-by: Roland Dreier <rolandd@cisco.com>
2008-04-29 14:46:52 -06:00
kfree_skb(ep->mpa_skb);
ep->mpa_skb = NULL;
}
spin_unlock_irqrestore(&ep->com.lock, flags);
if (post_zb)
iwch_post_zb_read(ep);
return CPL_RET_BUF_DONE;
}
static int abort_rpl(struct t3cdev *tdev, struct sk_buff *skb, void *ctx)
{
struct iwch_ep *ep = ctx;
unsigned long flags;
int release = 0;
pr_debug("%s ep %p\n", __func__, ep);
BUG_ON(!ep);
/*
* We get 2 abort replies from the HW. The first one must
* be ignored except for scribbling that we need one more.
*/
if (!test_and_set_bit(ABORT_REQ_IN_PROGRESS, &ep->com.flags)) {
return CPL_RET_BUF_DONE;
}
spin_lock_irqsave(&ep->com.lock, flags);
switch (ep->com.state) {
case ABORTING:
close_complete_upcall(ep);
__state_set(&ep->com, DEAD);
release = 1;
break;
default:
pr_err("%s ep %p state %d\n", __func__, ep, ep->com.state);
break;
}
spin_unlock_irqrestore(&ep->com.lock, flags);
if (release)
release_ep_resources(ep);
return CPL_RET_BUF_DONE;
}
/*
* Return whether a failed active open has allocated a TID
*/
static inline int act_open_has_tid(int status)
{
return status != CPL_ERR_TCAM_FULL && status != CPL_ERR_CONN_EXIST &&
status != CPL_ERR_ARP_MISS;
}
static int act_open_rpl(struct t3cdev *tdev, struct sk_buff *skb, void *ctx)
{
struct iwch_ep *ep = ctx;
struct cpl_act_open_rpl *rpl = cplhdr(skb);
pr_debug("%s ep %p status %u errno %d\n", __func__, ep, rpl->status,
status2errno(rpl->status));
connect_reply_upcall(ep, status2errno(rpl->status));
state_set(&ep->com, DEAD);
if (ep->com.tdev->type != T3A && act_open_has_tid(rpl->status))
release_tid(ep->com.tdev, GET_TID(rpl), NULL);
cxgb3_free_atid(ep->com.tdev, ep->atid);
dst_release(ep->dst);
[SCSI] cxgb3i: convert cdev->l2opt to use rcu to prevent NULL dereference This oops was reported recently: d:mon> e cpu 0xd: Vector: 300 (Data Access) at [c0000000fd4c7120] pc: d00000000076f194: .t3_l2t_get+0x44/0x524 [cxgb3] lr: d000000000b02108: .init_act_open+0x150/0x3d4 [cxgb3i] sp: c0000000fd4c73a0 msr: 8000000000009032 dar: 0 dsisr: 40000000 current = 0xc0000000fd640d40 paca = 0xc00000000054ff80 pid = 5085, comm = iscsid d:mon> t [c0000000fd4c7450] d000000000b02108 .init_act_open+0x150/0x3d4 [cxgb3i] [c0000000fd4c7500] d000000000e45378 .cxgbi_ep_connect+0x784/0x8e8 [libcxgbi] [c0000000fd4c7650] d000000000db33f0 .iscsi_if_rx+0x71c/0xb18 [scsi_transport_iscsi2] [c0000000fd4c7740] c000000000370c9c .netlink_data_ready+0x40/0xa4 [c0000000fd4c77c0] c00000000036f010 .netlink_sendskb+0x4c/0x9c [c0000000fd4c7850] c000000000370c18 .netlink_sendmsg+0x358/0x39c [c0000000fd4c7950] c00000000033be24 .sock_sendmsg+0x114/0x1b8 [c0000000fd4c7b50] c00000000033d208 .sys_sendmsg+0x218/0x2ac [c0000000fd4c7d70] c00000000033f55c .sys_socketcall+0x228/0x27c [c0000000fd4c7e30] c0000000000086a4 syscall_exit+0x0/0x40 --- Exception: c01 (System Call) at 00000080da560cfc The root cause was an EEH error, which sent us down the offload_close path in the cxgb3 driver, which in turn sets cdev->l2opt to NULL, without regard for upper layer driver (like the cxgbi drivers) which might have execution contexts in the middle of its use. The result is the oops above, when t3_l2t_get attempts to dereference L2DATA(cdev)->nentries in arp_hash right after the EEH error handler sets it to NULL. The fix is to prevent the setting of the NULL pointer until after there are no further users of it. The t3cdev->l2opt pointer is now converted to be an rcu pointer and the L2DATA macro is now called under the protection of the rcu_read_lock(). When the EEH error path: t3_adapter_error->offload_close->cxgb3_offload_deactivate Is exectured, setting of that l2opt pointer to NULL, is now gated on an rcu quiescence point, preventing, allowing L2DATA callers to safely check for a NULL pointer without concern that the underlying data will be freeded before the pointer is dereferenced. This has been tested by the reporter and shown to fix the reproted oops [nhorman: fix up unitinialised variable reported by Dan Carpenter] Signed-off-by: Neil Horman <nhorman@tuxdriver.com> Reviewed-by: Karen Xie <kxie@chelsio.com> Cc: stable@kernel.org Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-09-06 11:59:13 -06:00
l2t_release(ep->com.tdev, ep->l2t);
put_ep(&ep->com);
return CPL_RET_BUF_DONE;
}
static int listen_start(struct iwch_listen_ep *ep)
{
struct sk_buff *skb;
struct cpl_pass_open_req *req;
pr_debug("%s ep %p\n", __func__, ep);
skb = get_skb(NULL, sizeof(*req), GFP_KERNEL);
if (!skb) {
pr_err("t3c_listen_start failed to alloc skb!\n");
return -ENOMEM;
}
req = skb_put(skb, sizeof(*req));
req->wr.wr_hi = htonl(V_WR_OP(FW_WROPCODE_FORWARD));
OPCODE_TID(req) = htonl(MK_OPCODE_TID(CPL_PASS_OPEN_REQ, ep->stid));
req->local_port = ep->com.local_addr.sin_port;
req->local_ip = ep->com.local_addr.sin_addr.s_addr;
req->peer_port = 0;
req->peer_ip = 0;
req->peer_netmask = 0;
req->opt0h = htonl(F_DELACK | F_TCAM_BYPASS);
req->opt0l = htonl(V_RCV_BUFSIZ(rcv_win>>10));
req->opt1 = htonl(V_CONN_POLICY(CPL_CONN_POLICY_ASK));
skb->priority = 1;
return iwch_cxgb3_ofld_send(ep->com.tdev, skb);
}
static int pass_open_rpl(struct t3cdev *tdev, struct sk_buff *skb, void *ctx)
{
struct iwch_listen_ep *ep = ctx;
struct cpl_pass_open_rpl *rpl = cplhdr(skb);
pr_debug("%s ep %p status %d error %d\n", __func__, ep,
rpl->status, status2errno(rpl->status));
ep->com.rpl_err = status2errno(rpl->status);
ep->com.rpl_done = 1;
wake_up(&ep->com.waitq);
return CPL_RET_BUF_DONE;
}
static int listen_stop(struct iwch_listen_ep *ep)
{
struct sk_buff *skb;
struct cpl_close_listserv_req *req;
pr_debug("%s ep %p\n", __func__, ep);
skb = get_skb(NULL, sizeof(*req), GFP_KERNEL);
if (!skb) {
pr_err("%s - failed to alloc skb\n", __func__);
return -ENOMEM;
}
req = skb_put(skb, sizeof(*req));
req->wr.wr_hi = htonl(V_WR_OP(FW_WROPCODE_FORWARD));
req->cpu_idx = 0;
OPCODE_TID(req) = htonl(MK_OPCODE_TID(CPL_CLOSE_LISTSRV_REQ, ep->stid));
skb->priority = 1;
return iwch_cxgb3_ofld_send(ep->com.tdev, skb);
}
static int close_listsrv_rpl(struct t3cdev *tdev, struct sk_buff *skb,
void *ctx)
{
struct iwch_listen_ep *ep = ctx;
struct cpl_close_listserv_rpl *rpl = cplhdr(skb);
pr_debug("%s ep %p\n", __func__, ep);
ep->com.rpl_err = status2errno(rpl->status);
ep->com.rpl_done = 1;
wake_up(&ep->com.waitq);
return CPL_RET_BUF_DONE;
}
static void accept_cr(struct iwch_ep *ep, __be32 peer_ip, struct sk_buff *skb)
{
struct cpl_pass_accept_rpl *rpl;
unsigned int mtu_idx;
u32 opt0h, opt0l, opt2;
int wscale;
pr_debug("%s ep %p\n", __func__, ep);
BUG_ON(skb_cloned(skb));
skb_trim(skb, sizeof(*rpl));
skb_get(skb);
mtu_idx = find_best_mtu(T3C_DATA(ep->com.tdev), dst_mtu(ep->dst));
wscale = compute_wscale(rcv_win);
opt0h = V_NAGLE(0) |
V_NO_CONG(nocong) |
V_KEEP_ALIVE(1) |
F_TCAM_BYPASS |
V_WND_SCALE(wscale) |
V_MSS_IDX(mtu_idx) |
V_L2T_IDX(ep->l2t->idx) | V_TX_CHANNEL(ep->l2t->smt_idx);
opt0l = V_TOS((ep->tos >> 2) & M_TOS) | V_RCV_BUFSIZ(rcv_win>>10);
opt2 = F_RX_COALESCE_VALID | V_RX_COALESCE(0) | V_FLAVORS_VALID(1) |
V_CONG_CONTROL_FLAVOR(cong_flavor);
rpl = cplhdr(skb);
rpl->wr.wr_hi = htonl(V_WR_OP(FW_WROPCODE_FORWARD));
OPCODE_TID(rpl) = htonl(MK_OPCODE_TID(CPL_PASS_ACCEPT_RPL, ep->hwtid));
rpl->peer_ip = peer_ip;
rpl->opt0h = htonl(opt0h);
rpl->opt0l_status = htonl(opt0l | CPL_PASS_OPEN_ACCEPT);
rpl->opt2 = htonl(opt2);
rpl->rsvd = rpl->opt2; /* workaround for HW bug */
skb->priority = CPL_PRIORITY_SETUP;
iwch_l2t_send(ep->com.tdev, skb, ep->l2t);
return;
}
static void reject_cr(struct t3cdev *tdev, u32 hwtid, __be32 peer_ip,
struct sk_buff *skb)
{
pr_debug("%s t3cdev %p tid %u peer_ip %x\n", __func__, tdev, hwtid,
peer_ip);
BUG_ON(skb_cloned(skb));
skb_trim(skb, sizeof(struct cpl_tid_release));
skb_get(skb);
if (tdev->type != T3A)
release_tid(tdev, hwtid, skb);
else {
struct cpl_pass_accept_rpl *rpl;
rpl = cplhdr(skb);
skb->priority = CPL_PRIORITY_SETUP;
rpl->wr.wr_hi = htonl(V_WR_OP(FW_WROPCODE_FORWARD));
OPCODE_TID(rpl) = htonl(MK_OPCODE_TID(CPL_PASS_ACCEPT_RPL,
hwtid));
rpl->peer_ip = peer_ip;
rpl->opt0h = htonl(F_TCAM_BYPASS);
rpl->opt0l_status = htonl(CPL_PASS_OPEN_REJECT);
rpl->opt2 = 0;
rpl->rsvd = rpl->opt2;
iwch_cxgb3_ofld_send(tdev, skb);
}
}
static int pass_accept_req(struct t3cdev *tdev, struct sk_buff *skb, void *ctx)
{
struct iwch_ep *child_ep, *parent_ep = ctx;
struct cpl_pass_accept_req *req = cplhdr(skb);
unsigned int hwtid = GET_TID(req);
struct dst_entry *dst;
struct l2t_entry *l2t;
struct rtable *rt;
struct iff_mac tim;
pr_debug("%s parent ep %p tid %u\n", __func__, parent_ep, hwtid);
if (state_read(&parent_ep->com) != LISTEN) {
pr_err("%s - listening ep not in LISTEN\n", __func__);
goto reject;
}
/*
* Find the netdev for this connection request.
*/
tim.mac_addr = req->dst_mac;
tim.vlan_tag = ntohs(req->vlan_tag);
if (tdev->ctl(tdev, GET_IFF_FROM_MAC, &tim) < 0 || !tim.dev) {
pr_err("%s bad dst mac %pM\n", __func__, req->dst_mac);
goto reject;
}
/* Find output route */
rt = find_route(tdev,
req->local_ip,
req->peer_ip,
req->local_port,
req->peer_port, G_PASS_OPEN_TOS(ntohl(req->tos_tid)));
if (!rt) {
pr_err("%s - failed to find dst entry!\n", __func__);
goto reject;
}
dst = &rt->dst;
l2t = t3_l2t_get(tdev, dst, NULL, &req->peer_ip);
if (!l2t) {
pr_err("%s - failed to allocate l2t entry!\n", __func__);
dst_release(dst);
goto reject;
}
child_ep = alloc_ep(sizeof(*child_ep), GFP_KERNEL);
if (!child_ep) {
pr_err("%s - failed to allocate ep entry!\n", __func__);
[SCSI] cxgb3i: convert cdev->l2opt to use rcu to prevent NULL dereference This oops was reported recently: d:mon> e cpu 0xd: Vector: 300 (Data Access) at [c0000000fd4c7120] pc: d00000000076f194: .t3_l2t_get+0x44/0x524 [cxgb3] lr: d000000000b02108: .init_act_open+0x150/0x3d4 [cxgb3i] sp: c0000000fd4c73a0 msr: 8000000000009032 dar: 0 dsisr: 40000000 current = 0xc0000000fd640d40 paca = 0xc00000000054ff80 pid = 5085, comm = iscsid d:mon> t [c0000000fd4c7450] d000000000b02108 .init_act_open+0x150/0x3d4 [cxgb3i] [c0000000fd4c7500] d000000000e45378 .cxgbi_ep_connect+0x784/0x8e8 [libcxgbi] [c0000000fd4c7650] d000000000db33f0 .iscsi_if_rx+0x71c/0xb18 [scsi_transport_iscsi2] [c0000000fd4c7740] c000000000370c9c .netlink_data_ready+0x40/0xa4 [c0000000fd4c77c0] c00000000036f010 .netlink_sendskb+0x4c/0x9c [c0000000fd4c7850] c000000000370c18 .netlink_sendmsg+0x358/0x39c [c0000000fd4c7950] c00000000033be24 .sock_sendmsg+0x114/0x1b8 [c0000000fd4c7b50] c00000000033d208 .sys_sendmsg+0x218/0x2ac [c0000000fd4c7d70] c00000000033f55c .sys_socketcall+0x228/0x27c [c0000000fd4c7e30] c0000000000086a4 syscall_exit+0x0/0x40 --- Exception: c01 (System Call) at 00000080da560cfc The root cause was an EEH error, which sent us down the offload_close path in the cxgb3 driver, which in turn sets cdev->l2opt to NULL, without regard for upper layer driver (like the cxgbi drivers) which might have execution contexts in the middle of its use. The result is the oops above, when t3_l2t_get attempts to dereference L2DATA(cdev)->nentries in arp_hash right after the EEH error handler sets it to NULL. The fix is to prevent the setting of the NULL pointer until after there are no further users of it. The t3cdev->l2opt pointer is now converted to be an rcu pointer and the L2DATA macro is now called under the protection of the rcu_read_lock(). When the EEH error path: t3_adapter_error->offload_close->cxgb3_offload_deactivate Is exectured, setting of that l2opt pointer to NULL, is now gated on an rcu quiescence point, preventing, allowing L2DATA callers to safely check for a NULL pointer without concern that the underlying data will be freeded before the pointer is dereferenced. This has been tested by the reporter and shown to fix the reproted oops [nhorman: fix up unitinialised variable reported by Dan Carpenter] Signed-off-by: Neil Horman <nhorman@tuxdriver.com> Reviewed-by: Karen Xie <kxie@chelsio.com> Cc: stable@kernel.org Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-09-06 11:59:13 -06:00
l2t_release(tdev, l2t);
dst_release(dst);
goto reject;
}
state_set(&child_ep->com, CONNECTING);
child_ep->com.tdev = tdev;
child_ep->com.cm_id = NULL;
child_ep->com.local_addr.sin_family = AF_INET;
child_ep->com.local_addr.sin_port = req->local_port;
child_ep->com.local_addr.sin_addr.s_addr = req->local_ip;
child_ep->com.remote_addr.sin_family = AF_INET;
child_ep->com.remote_addr.sin_port = req->peer_port;
child_ep->com.remote_addr.sin_addr.s_addr = req->peer_ip;
get_ep(&parent_ep->com);
child_ep->parent_ep = parent_ep;
child_ep->tos = G_PASS_OPEN_TOS(ntohl(req->tos_tid));
child_ep->l2t = l2t;
child_ep->dst = dst;
child_ep->hwtid = hwtid;
timer_setup(&child_ep->timer, ep_timeout, 0);
cxgb3_insert_tid(tdev, &t3c_client, child_ep, hwtid);
accept_cr(child_ep, req->peer_ip, skb);
goto out;
reject:
reject_cr(tdev, hwtid, req->peer_ip, skb);
out:
return CPL_RET_BUF_DONE;
}
static int pass_establish(struct t3cdev *tdev, struct sk_buff *skb, void *ctx)
{
struct iwch_ep *ep = ctx;
struct cpl_pass_establish *req = cplhdr(skb);
pr_debug("%s ep %p\n", __func__, ep);
ep->snd_seq = ntohl(req->snd_isn);
ep->rcv_seq = ntohl(req->rcv_isn);
set_emss(ep, ntohs(req->tcp_opt));
dst_confirm(ep->dst);
state_set(&ep->com, MPA_REQ_WAIT);
start_ep_timer(ep);
return CPL_RET_BUF_DONE;
}
static int peer_close(struct t3cdev *tdev, struct sk_buff *skb, void *ctx)
{
struct iwch_ep *ep = ctx;
struct iwch_qp_attributes attrs;
unsigned long flags;
int disconnect = 1;
int release = 0;
pr_debug("%s ep %p\n", __func__, ep);
dst_confirm(ep->dst);
spin_lock_irqsave(&ep->com.lock, flags);
switch (ep->com.state) {
case MPA_REQ_WAIT:
__state_set(&ep->com, CLOSING);
break;
case MPA_REQ_SENT:
__state_set(&ep->com, CLOSING);
connect_reply_upcall(ep, -ECONNRESET);
break;
case MPA_REQ_RCVD:
/*
* We're gonna mark this puppy DEAD, but keep
* the reference on it until the ULP accepts or
* rejects the CR. Also wake up anyone waiting
* in rdma connection migration (see iwch_accept_cr()).
*/
__state_set(&ep->com, CLOSING);
ep->com.rpl_done = 1;
ep->com.rpl_err = -ECONNRESET;
pr_debug("waking up ep %p\n", ep);
wake_up(&ep->com.waitq);
break;
case MPA_REP_SENT:
__state_set(&ep->com, CLOSING);
ep->com.rpl_done = 1;
ep->com.rpl_err = -ECONNRESET;
pr_debug("waking up ep %p\n", ep);
wake_up(&ep->com.waitq);
break;
case FPDU_MODE:
start_ep_timer(ep);
__state_set(&ep->com, CLOSING);
attrs.next_state = IWCH_QP_STATE_CLOSING;
iwch_modify_qp(ep->com.qp->rhp, ep->com.qp,
IWCH_QP_ATTR_NEXT_STATE, &attrs, 1);
peer_close_upcall(ep);
break;
case ABORTING:
disconnect = 0;
break;
case CLOSING:
__state_set(&ep->com, MORIBUND);
disconnect = 0;
break;
case MORIBUND:
stop_ep_timer(ep);
if (ep->com.cm_id && ep->com.qp) {
attrs.next_state = IWCH_QP_STATE_IDLE;
iwch_modify_qp(ep->com.qp->rhp, ep->com.qp,
IWCH_QP_ATTR_NEXT_STATE, &attrs, 1);
}
close_complete_upcall(ep);
__state_set(&ep->com, DEAD);
release = 1;
disconnect = 0;
break;
case DEAD:
disconnect = 0;
break;
default:
BUG_ON(1);
}
spin_unlock_irqrestore(&ep->com.lock, flags);
if (disconnect)
iwch_ep_disconnect(ep, 0, GFP_KERNEL);
if (release)
release_ep_resources(ep);
return CPL_RET_BUF_DONE;
}
/*
* Returns whether an ABORT_REQ_RSS message is a negative advice.
*/
static int is_neg_adv_abort(unsigned int status)
{
return status == CPL_ERR_RTX_NEG_ADVICE ||
status == CPL_ERR_PERSIST_NEG_ADVICE;
}
static int peer_abort(struct t3cdev *tdev, struct sk_buff *skb, void *ctx)
{
struct cpl_abort_req_rss *req = cplhdr(skb);
struct iwch_ep *ep = ctx;
struct cpl_abort_rpl *rpl;
struct sk_buff *rpl_skb;
struct iwch_qp_attributes attrs;
int ret;
int release = 0;
unsigned long flags;
if (is_neg_adv_abort(req->status)) {
pr_debug("%s neg_adv_abort ep %p tid %d\n", __func__, ep,
ep->hwtid);
t3_l2t_send_event(ep->com.tdev, ep->l2t);
return CPL_RET_BUF_DONE;
}
/*
* We get 2 peer aborts from the HW. The first one must
* be ignored except for scribbling that we need one more.
*/
if (!test_and_set_bit(PEER_ABORT_IN_PROGRESS, &ep->com.flags)) {
return CPL_RET_BUF_DONE;
}
spin_lock_irqsave(&ep->com.lock, flags);
pr_debug("%s ep %p state %u\n", __func__, ep, ep->com.state);
switch (ep->com.state) {
case CONNECTING:
break;
case MPA_REQ_WAIT:
stop_ep_timer(ep);
break;
case MPA_REQ_SENT:
stop_ep_timer(ep);
connect_reply_upcall(ep, -ECONNRESET);
break;
case MPA_REP_SENT:
ep->com.rpl_done = 1;
ep->com.rpl_err = -ECONNRESET;
pr_debug("waking up ep %p\n", ep);
wake_up(&ep->com.waitq);
break;
case MPA_REQ_RCVD:
/*
* We're gonna mark this puppy DEAD, but keep
* the reference on it until the ULP accepts or
* rejects the CR. Also wake up anyone waiting
* in rdma connection migration (see iwch_accept_cr()).
*/
ep->com.rpl_done = 1;
ep->com.rpl_err = -ECONNRESET;
pr_debug("waking up ep %p\n", ep);
wake_up(&ep->com.waitq);
break;
case MORIBUND:
case CLOSING:
stop_ep_timer(ep);
/*FALLTHROUGH*/
case FPDU_MODE:
if (ep->com.cm_id && ep->com.qp) {
attrs.next_state = IWCH_QP_STATE_ERROR;
ret = iwch_modify_qp(ep->com.qp->rhp,
ep->com.qp, IWCH_QP_ATTR_NEXT_STATE,
&attrs, 1);
if (ret)
pr_err("%s - qp <- error failed!\n", __func__);
}
peer_abort_upcall(ep);
break;
case ABORTING:
break;
case DEAD:
pr_debug("%s PEER_ABORT IN DEAD STATE!!!!\n", __func__);
spin_unlock_irqrestore(&ep->com.lock, flags);
return CPL_RET_BUF_DONE;
default:
BUG_ON(1);
break;
}
dst_confirm(ep->dst);
if (ep->com.state != ABORTING) {
__state_set(&ep->com, DEAD);
release = 1;
}
spin_unlock_irqrestore(&ep->com.lock, flags);
rpl_skb = get_skb(skb, sizeof(*rpl), GFP_KERNEL);
if (!rpl_skb) {
pr_err("%s - cannot allocate skb!\n", __func__);
release = 1;
goto out;
}
rpl_skb->priority = CPL_PRIORITY_DATA;
rpl = skb_put(rpl_skb, sizeof(*rpl));
rpl->wr.wr_hi = htonl(V_WR_OP(FW_WROPCODE_OFLD_HOST_ABORT_CON_RPL));
rpl->wr.wr_lo = htonl(V_WR_TID(ep->hwtid));
OPCODE_TID(rpl) = htonl(MK_OPCODE_TID(CPL_ABORT_RPL, ep->hwtid));
rpl->cmd = CPL_ABORT_NO_RST;
iwch_cxgb3_ofld_send(ep->com.tdev, rpl_skb);
out:
if (release)
release_ep_resources(ep);
return CPL_RET_BUF_DONE;
}
static int close_con_rpl(struct t3cdev *tdev, struct sk_buff *skb, void *ctx)
{
struct iwch_ep *ep = ctx;
struct iwch_qp_attributes attrs;
unsigned long flags;
int release = 0;
pr_debug("%s ep %p\n", __func__, ep);
BUG_ON(!ep);
/* The cm_id may be null if we failed to connect */
spin_lock_irqsave(&ep->com.lock, flags);
switch (ep->com.state) {
case CLOSING:
__state_set(&ep->com, MORIBUND);
break;
case MORIBUND:
stop_ep_timer(ep);
if ((ep->com.cm_id) && (ep->com.qp)) {
attrs.next_state = IWCH_QP_STATE_IDLE;
iwch_modify_qp(ep->com.qp->rhp,
ep->com.qp,
IWCH_QP_ATTR_NEXT_STATE,
&attrs, 1);
}
close_complete_upcall(ep);
__state_set(&ep->com, DEAD);
release = 1;
break;
case ABORTING:
case DEAD:
break;
default:
BUG_ON(1);
break;
}
spin_unlock_irqrestore(&ep->com.lock, flags);
if (release)
release_ep_resources(ep);
return CPL_RET_BUF_DONE;
}
/*
* T3A does 3 things when a TERM is received:
* 1) send up a CPL_RDMA_TERMINATE message with the TERM packet
* 2) generate an async event on the QP with the TERMINATE opcode
* 3) post a TERMINATE opcode cqe into the associated CQ.
*
* For (1), we save the message in the qp for later consumer consumption.
* For (2), we move the QP into TERMINATE, post a QP event and disconnect.
* For (3), we toss the CQE in cxio_poll_cq().
*
* terminate() handles case (1)...
*/
static int terminate(struct t3cdev *tdev, struct sk_buff *skb, void *ctx)
{
struct iwch_ep *ep = ctx;
if (state_read(&ep->com) != FPDU_MODE)
return CPL_RET_BUF_DONE;
pr_debug("%s ep %p\n", __func__, ep);
skb_pull(skb, sizeof(struct cpl_rdma_terminate));
pr_debug("%s saving %d bytes of term msg\n", __func__, skb->len);
skb_copy_from_linear_data(skb, ep->com.qp->attr.terminate_buffer,
skb->len);
ep->com.qp->attr.terminate_msg_len = skb->len;
ep->com.qp->attr.is_terminate_local = 0;
return CPL_RET_BUF_DONE;
}
static int ec_status(struct t3cdev *tdev, struct sk_buff *skb, void *ctx)
{
struct cpl_rdma_ec_status *rep = cplhdr(skb);
struct iwch_ep *ep = ctx;
pr_debug("%s ep %p tid %u status %d\n", __func__, ep, ep->hwtid,
rep->status);
if (rep->status) {
struct iwch_qp_attributes attrs;
pr_err("%s BAD CLOSE - Aborting tid %u\n",
__func__, ep->hwtid);
stop_ep_timer(ep);
attrs.next_state = IWCH_QP_STATE_ERROR;
iwch_modify_qp(ep->com.qp->rhp,
ep->com.qp, IWCH_QP_ATTR_NEXT_STATE,
&attrs, 1);
abort_connection(ep, NULL, GFP_KERNEL);
}
return CPL_RET_BUF_DONE;
}
static void ep_timeout(struct timer_list *t)
{
struct iwch_ep *ep = from_timer(ep, t, timer);
struct iwch_qp_attributes attrs;
unsigned long flags;
int abort = 1;
spin_lock_irqsave(&ep->com.lock, flags);
pr_debug("%s ep %p tid %u state %d\n", __func__, ep, ep->hwtid,
ep->com.state);
switch (ep->com.state) {
case MPA_REQ_SENT:
__state_set(&ep->com, ABORTING);
connect_reply_upcall(ep, -ETIMEDOUT);
break;
case MPA_REQ_WAIT:
__state_set(&ep->com, ABORTING);
break;
case CLOSING:
case MORIBUND:
if (ep->com.cm_id && ep->com.qp) {
attrs.next_state = IWCH_QP_STATE_ERROR;
iwch_modify_qp(ep->com.qp->rhp,
ep->com.qp, IWCH_QP_ATTR_NEXT_STATE,
&attrs, 1);
}
__state_set(&ep->com, ABORTING);
break;
default:
WARN(1, "%s unexpected state ep %p state %u\n",
__func__, ep, ep->com.state);
abort = 0;
}
spin_unlock_irqrestore(&ep->com.lock, flags);
if (abort)
abort_connection(ep, NULL, GFP_ATOMIC);
put_ep(&ep->com);
}
int iwch_reject_cr(struct iw_cm_id *cm_id, const void *pdata, u8 pdata_len)
{
struct iwch_ep *ep = to_ep(cm_id);
pr_debug("%s ep %p tid %u\n", __func__, ep, ep->hwtid);
if (state_read(&ep->com) == DEAD) {
put_ep(&ep->com);
return -ECONNRESET;
}
BUG_ON(state_read(&ep->com) != MPA_REQ_RCVD);
if (mpa_rev == 0)
abort_connection(ep, NULL, GFP_KERNEL);
else {
send_mpa_reject(ep, pdata, pdata_len);
iwch_ep_disconnect(ep, 0, GFP_KERNEL);
}
put_ep(&ep->com);
return 0;
}
int iwch_accept_cr(struct iw_cm_id *cm_id, struct iw_cm_conn_param *conn_param)
{
int err;
struct iwch_qp_attributes attrs;
enum iwch_qp_attr_mask mask;
struct iwch_ep *ep = to_ep(cm_id);
struct iwch_dev *h = to_iwch_dev(cm_id->device);
struct iwch_qp *qp = get_qhp(h, conn_param->qpn);
pr_debug("%s ep %p tid %u\n", __func__, ep, ep->hwtid);
if (state_read(&ep->com) == DEAD) {
err = -ECONNRESET;
goto err;
}
BUG_ON(state_read(&ep->com) != MPA_REQ_RCVD);
BUG_ON(!qp);
if ((conn_param->ord > qp->rhp->attr.max_rdma_read_qp_depth) ||
(conn_param->ird > qp->rhp->attr.max_rdma_reads_per_qp)) {
abort_connection(ep, NULL, GFP_KERNEL);
err = -EINVAL;
goto err;
}
cm_id->add_ref(cm_id);
ep->com.cm_id = cm_id;
ep->com.qp = qp;
ep->ird = conn_param->ird;
ep->ord = conn_param->ord;
if (peer2peer && ep->ird == 0)
ep->ird = 1;
pr_debug("%s %d ird %d ord %d\n", __func__, __LINE__, ep->ird, ep->ord);
/* bind QP to EP and move to RTS */
attrs.mpa_attr = ep->mpa_attr;
attrs.max_ird = ep->ird;
attrs.max_ord = ep->ord;
attrs.llp_stream_handle = ep;
attrs.next_state = IWCH_QP_STATE_RTS;
/* bind QP and TID with INIT_WR */
mask = IWCH_QP_ATTR_NEXT_STATE |
IWCH_QP_ATTR_LLP_STREAM_HANDLE |
IWCH_QP_ATTR_MPA_ATTR |
IWCH_QP_ATTR_MAX_IRD |
IWCH_QP_ATTR_MAX_ORD;
err = iwch_modify_qp(ep->com.qp->rhp,
ep->com.qp, mask, &attrs, 1);
if (err)
goto err1;
RDMA/cxgb3: Support peer-2-peer connection setup Open MPI, Intel MPI and other applications don't respect the iWARP requirement that the client (active) side of the connection send the first RDMA message. This class of application connection setup is called peer-to-peer. Typically once the connection is setup, _both_ sides want to send data. This patch enables supporting peer-to-peer over the chelsio RNIC by enforcing this iWARP requirement in the driver itself as part of RDMA connection setup. Connection setup is extended, when the peer2peer module option is 1, such that the MPA initiator will send a 0B Read (the RTR) just after connection setup. The MPA responder will suspend SQ processing until the RTR message is received and reply-to. In the longer term, this will be handled in a standardized way by enhancing the MPA negotiation so peers can indicate whether they want/need the RTR and what type of RTR (0B read, 0B write, or 0B send) should be sent. This will be done by standardizing a few bits of the private data in order to negotiate all this. However this patch enables peer-to-peer applications now and allows most of the required firmware and driver changes to be done and tested now. Design: - Add a module option, peer2peer, to enable this mode. - New firmware support for peer-to-peer mode: - a new bit in the rdma_init WR to tell it to do peer-2-peer and what form of RTR message to send or expect. - process _all_ preposted recvs before moving the connection into rdma mode. - passive side: defer completing the rdma_init WR until all pre-posted recvs are processed. Suspend SQ processing until the RTR is received. - active side: expect and process the 0B read WR on offload TX queue. Defer completing the rdma_init WR until all pre-posted recvs are processed. Suspend SQ processing until the 0B read WR is processed from the offload TX queue. - If peer2peer is set, driver posts 0B read request on offload TX queue just after posting the rdma_init WR to the offload TX queue. - Add CQ poll logic to ignore unsolicitied read responses. Signed-off-by: Steve Wise <swise@opengridcomputing.com> Signed-off-by: Roland Dreier <rolandd@cisco.com>
2008-04-29 14:46:52 -06:00
/* if needed, wait for wr_ack */
if (iwch_rqes_posted(qp)) {
wait_event(ep->com.waitq, ep->com.rpl_done);
err = ep->com.rpl_err;
if (err)
goto err1;
RDMA/cxgb3: Support peer-2-peer connection setup Open MPI, Intel MPI and other applications don't respect the iWARP requirement that the client (active) side of the connection send the first RDMA message. This class of application connection setup is called peer-to-peer. Typically once the connection is setup, _both_ sides want to send data. This patch enables supporting peer-to-peer over the chelsio RNIC by enforcing this iWARP requirement in the driver itself as part of RDMA connection setup. Connection setup is extended, when the peer2peer module option is 1, such that the MPA initiator will send a 0B Read (the RTR) just after connection setup. The MPA responder will suspend SQ processing until the RTR message is received and reply-to. In the longer term, this will be handled in a standardized way by enhancing the MPA negotiation so peers can indicate whether they want/need the RTR and what type of RTR (0B read, 0B write, or 0B send) should be sent. This will be done by standardizing a few bits of the private data in order to negotiate all this. However this patch enables peer-to-peer applications now and allows most of the required firmware and driver changes to be done and tested now. Design: - Add a module option, peer2peer, to enable this mode. - New firmware support for peer-to-peer mode: - a new bit in the rdma_init WR to tell it to do peer-2-peer and what form of RTR message to send or expect. - process _all_ preposted recvs before moving the connection into rdma mode. - passive side: defer completing the rdma_init WR until all pre-posted recvs are processed. Suspend SQ processing until the RTR is received. - active side: expect and process the 0B read WR on offload TX queue. Defer completing the rdma_init WR until all pre-posted recvs are processed. Suspend SQ processing until the 0B read WR is processed from the offload TX queue. - If peer2peer is set, driver posts 0B read request on offload TX queue just after posting the rdma_init WR to the offload TX queue. - Add CQ poll logic to ignore unsolicitied read responses. Signed-off-by: Steve Wise <swise@opengridcomputing.com> Signed-off-by: Roland Dreier <rolandd@cisco.com>
2008-04-29 14:46:52 -06:00
}
err = send_mpa_reply(ep, conn_param->private_data,
conn_param->private_data_len);
if (err)
goto err1;
state_set(&ep->com, FPDU_MODE);
established_upcall(ep);
put_ep(&ep->com);
return 0;
err1:
ep->com.cm_id = NULL;
ep->com.qp = NULL;
cm_id->rem_ref(cm_id);
err:
put_ep(&ep->com);
return err;
}
static int is_loopback_dst(struct iw_cm_id *cm_id)
{
struct net_device *dev;
struct sockaddr_in *raddr = (struct sockaddr_in *)&cm_id->m_remote_addr;
dev = ip_dev_find(&init_net, raddr->sin_addr.s_addr);
if (!dev)
return 0;
dev_put(dev);
return 1;
}
int iwch_connect(struct iw_cm_id *cm_id, struct iw_cm_conn_param *conn_param)
{
struct iwch_dev *h = to_iwch_dev(cm_id->device);
struct iwch_ep *ep;
struct rtable *rt;
int err = 0;
struct sockaddr_in *laddr = (struct sockaddr_in *)&cm_id->m_local_addr;
struct sockaddr_in *raddr = (struct sockaddr_in *)&cm_id->m_remote_addr;
if (cm_id->m_remote_addr.ss_family != PF_INET) {
err = -ENOSYS;
goto out;
}
if (is_loopback_dst(cm_id)) {
err = -ENOSYS;
goto out;
}
ep = alloc_ep(sizeof(*ep), GFP_KERNEL);
if (!ep) {
pr_err("%s - cannot alloc ep\n", __func__);
err = -ENOMEM;
goto out;
}
timer_setup(&ep->timer, ep_timeout, 0);
ep->plen = conn_param->private_data_len;
if (ep->plen)
memcpy(ep->mpa_pkt + sizeof(struct mpa_message),
conn_param->private_data, ep->plen);
ep->ird = conn_param->ird;
ep->ord = conn_param->ord;
if (peer2peer && ep->ord == 0)
ep->ord = 1;
ep->com.tdev = h->rdev.t3cdev_p;
cm_id->add_ref(cm_id);
ep->com.cm_id = cm_id;
ep->com.qp = get_qhp(h, conn_param->qpn);
BUG_ON(!ep->com.qp);
pr_debug("%s qpn 0x%x qp %p cm_id %p\n", __func__, conn_param->qpn,
ep->com.qp, cm_id);
/*
* Allocate an active TID to initiate a TCP connection.
*/
ep->atid = cxgb3_alloc_atid(h->rdev.t3cdev_p, &t3c_client, ep);
if (ep->atid == -1) {
pr_err("%s - cannot alloc atid\n", __func__);
err = -ENOMEM;
goto fail2;
}
/* find a route */
rt = find_route(h->rdev.t3cdev_p, laddr->sin_addr.s_addr,
raddr->sin_addr.s_addr, laddr->sin_port,
raddr->sin_port, IPTOS_LOWDELAY);
if (!rt) {
pr_err("%s - cannot find route\n", __func__);
err = -EHOSTUNREACH;
goto fail3;
}
ep->dst = &rt->dst;
ep->l2t = t3_l2t_get(ep->com.tdev, ep->dst, NULL,
&raddr->sin_addr.s_addr);
if (!ep->l2t) {
pr_err("%s - cannot alloc l2e\n", __func__);
err = -ENOMEM;
goto fail4;
}
state_set(&ep->com, CONNECTING);
ep->tos = IPTOS_LOWDELAY;
memcpy(&ep->com.local_addr, &cm_id->m_local_addr,
sizeof(ep->com.local_addr));
memcpy(&ep->com.remote_addr, &cm_id->m_remote_addr,
sizeof(ep->com.remote_addr));
/* send connect request to rnic */
err = send_connect(ep);
if (!err)
goto out;
[SCSI] cxgb3i: convert cdev->l2opt to use rcu to prevent NULL dereference This oops was reported recently: d:mon> e cpu 0xd: Vector: 300 (Data Access) at [c0000000fd4c7120] pc: d00000000076f194: .t3_l2t_get+0x44/0x524 [cxgb3] lr: d000000000b02108: .init_act_open+0x150/0x3d4 [cxgb3i] sp: c0000000fd4c73a0 msr: 8000000000009032 dar: 0 dsisr: 40000000 current = 0xc0000000fd640d40 paca = 0xc00000000054ff80 pid = 5085, comm = iscsid d:mon> t [c0000000fd4c7450] d000000000b02108 .init_act_open+0x150/0x3d4 [cxgb3i] [c0000000fd4c7500] d000000000e45378 .cxgbi_ep_connect+0x784/0x8e8 [libcxgbi] [c0000000fd4c7650] d000000000db33f0 .iscsi_if_rx+0x71c/0xb18 [scsi_transport_iscsi2] [c0000000fd4c7740] c000000000370c9c .netlink_data_ready+0x40/0xa4 [c0000000fd4c77c0] c00000000036f010 .netlink_sendskb+0x4c/0x9c [c0000000fd4c7850] c000000000370c18 .netlink_sendmsg+0x358/0x39c [c0000000fd4c7950] c00000000033be24 .sock_sendmsg+0x114/0x1b8 [c0000000fd4c7b50] c00000000033d208 .sys_sendmsg+0x218/0x2ac [c0000000fd4c7d70] c00000000033f55c .sys_socketcall+0x228/0x27c [c0000000fd4c7e30] c0000000000086a4 syscall_exit+0x0/0x40 --- Exception: c01 (System Call) at 00000080da560cfc The root cause was an EEH error, which sent us down the offload_close path in the cxgb3 driver, which in turn sets cdev->l2opt to NULL, without regard for upper layer driver (like the cxgbi drivers) which might have execution contexts in the middle of its use. The result is the oops above, when t3_l2t_get attempts to dereference L2DATA(cdev)->nentries in arp_hash right after the EEH error handler sets it to NULL. The fix is to prevent the setting of the NULL pointer until after there are no further users of it. The t3cdev->l2opt pointer is now converted to be an rcu pointer and the L2DATA macro is now called under the protection of the rcu_read_lock(). When the EEH error path: t3_adapter_error->offload_close->cxgb3_offload_deactivate Is exectured, setting of that l2opt pointer to NULL, is now gated on an rcu quiescence point, preventing, allowing L2DATA callers to safely check for a NULL pointer without concern that the underlying data will be freeded before the pointer is dereferenced. This has been tested by the reporter and shown to fix the reproted oops [nhorman: fix up unitinialised variable reported by Dan Carpenter] Signed-off-by: Neil Horman <nhorman@tuxdriver.com> Reviewed-by: Karen Xie <kxie@chelsio.com> Cc: stable@kernel.org Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-09-06 11:59:13 -06:00
l2t_release(h->rdev.t3cdev_p, ep->l2t);
fail4:
dst_release(ep->dst);
fail3:
cxgb3_free_atid(ep->com.tdev, ep->atid);
fail2:
cm_id->rem_ref(cm_id);
put_ep(&ep->com);
out:
return err;
}
int iwch_create_listen(struct iw_cm_id *cm_id, int backlog)
{
int err = 0;
struct iwch_dev *h = to_iwch_dev(cm_id->device);
struct iwch_listen_ep *ep;
might_sleep();
if (cm_id->m_local_addr.ss_family != PF_INET) {
err = -ENOSYS;
goto fail1;
}
ep = alloc_ep(sizeof(*ep), GFP_KERNEL);
if (!ep) {
pr_err("%s - cannot alloc ep\n", __func__);
err = -ENOMEM;
goto fail1;
}
pr_debug("%s ep %p\n", __func__, ep);
ep->com.tdev = h->rdev.t3cdev_p;
cm_id->add_ref(cm_id);
ep->com.cm_id = cm_id;
ep->backlog = backlog;
memcpy(&ep->com.local_addr, &cm_id->m_local_addr,
sizeof(ep->com.local_addr));
/*
* Allocate a server TID.
*/
ep->stid = cxgb3_alloc_stid(h->rdev.t3cdev_p, &t3c_client, ep);
if (ep->stid == -1) {
pr_err("%s - cannot alloc atid\n", __func__);
err = -ENOMEM;
goto fail2;
}
state_set(&ep->com, LISTEN);
err = listen_start(ep);
if (err)
goto fail3;
/* wait for pass_open_rpl */
wait_event(ep->com.waitq, ep->com.rpl_done);
err = ep->com.rpl_err;
if (!err) {
cm_id->provider_data = ep;
goto out;
}
fail3:
cxgb3_free_stid(ep->com.tdev, ep->stid);
fail2:
cm_id->rem_ref(cm_id);
put_ep(&ep->com);
fail1:
out:
return err;
}
int iwch_destroy_listen(struct iw_cm_id *cm_id)
{
int err;
struct iwch_listen_ep *ep = to_listen_ep(cm_id);
pr_debug("%s ep %p\n", __func__, ep);
might_sleep();
state_set(&ep->com, DEAD);
ep->com.rpl_done = 0;
ep->com.rpl_err = 0;
err = listen_stop(ep);
if (err)
goto done;
wait_event(ep->com.waitq, ep->com.rpl_done);
cxgb3_free_stid(ep->com.tdev, ep->stid);
done:
err = ep->com.rpl_err;
cm_id->rem_ref(cm_id);
put_ep(&ep->com);
return err;
}
int iwch_ep_disconnect(struct iwch_ep *ep, int abrupt, gfp_t gfp)
{
int ret=0;
unsigned long flags;
int close = 0;
int fatal = 0;
struct t3cdev *tdev;
struct cxio_rdev *rdev;
spin_lock_irqsave(&ep->com.lock, flags);
pr_debug("%s ep %p state %s, abrupt %d\n", __func__, ep,
states[ep->com.state], abrupt);
tdev = (struct t3cdev *)ep->com.tdev;
rdev = (struct cxio_rdev *)tdev->ulp;
if (cxio_fatal_error(rdev)) {
fatal = 1;
close_complete_upcall(ep);
ep->com.state = DEAD;
}
switch (ep->com.state) {
case MPA_REQ_WAIT:
case MPA_REQ_SENT:
case MPA_REQ_RCVD:
case MPA_REP_SENT:
case FPDU_MODE:
close = 1;
if (abrupt)
ep->com.state = ABORTING;
else {
ep->com.state = CLOSING;
start_ep_timer(ep);
}
set_bit(CLOSE_SENT, &ep->com.flags);
break;
case CLOSING:
if (!test_and_set_bit(CLOSE_SENT, &ep->com.flags)) {
close = 1;
if (abrupt) {
stop_ep_timer(ep);
ep->com.state = ABORTING;
} else
ep->com.state = MORIBUND;
}
break;
case MORIBUND:
case ABORTING:
case DEAD:
pr_debug("%s ignoring disconnect ep %p state %u\n",
__func__, ep, ep->com.state);
break;
default:
BUG();
break;
}
spin_unlock_irqrestore(&ep->com.lock, flags);
if (close) {
if (abrupt)
ret = send_abort(ep, NULL, gfp);
else
ret = send_halfclose(ep, gfp);
if (ret)
fatal = 1;
}
if (fatal)
release_ep_resources(ep);
return ret;
}
int iwch_ep_redirect(void *ctx, struct dst_entry *old, struct dst_entry *new,
struct l2t_entry *l2t)
{
struct iwch_ep *ep = ctx;
if (ep->dst != old)
return 0;
pr_debug("%s ep %p redirect to dst %p l2t %p\n", __func__, ep, new,
l2t);
dst_hold(new);
[SCSI] cxgb3i: convert cdev->l2opt to use rcu to prevent NULL dereference This oops was reported recently: d:mon> e cpu 0xd: Vector: 300 (Data Access) at [c0000000fd4c7120] pc: d00000000076f194: .t3_l2t_get+0x44/0x524 [cxgb3] lr: d000000000b02108: .init_act_open+0x150/0x3d4 [cxgb3i] sp: c0000000fd4c73a0 msr: 8000000000009032 dar: 0 dsisr: 40000000 current = 0xc0000000fd640d40 paca = 0xc00000000054ff80 pid = 5085, comm = iscsid d:mon> t [c0000000fd4c7450] d000000000b02108 .init_act_open+0x150/0x3d4 [cxgb3i] [c0000000fd4c7500] d000000000e45378 .cxgbi_ep_connect+0x784/0x8e8 [libcxgbi] [c0000000fd4c7650] d000000000db33f0 .iscsi_if_rx+0x71c/0xb18 [scsi_transport_iscsi2] [c0000000fd4c7740] c000000000370c9c .netlink_data_ready+0x40/0xa4 [c0000000fd4c77c0] c00000000036f010 .netlink_sendskb+0x4c/0x9c [c0000000fd4c7850] c000000000370c18 .netlink_sendmsg+0x358/0x39c [c0000000fd4c7950] c00000000033be24 .sock_sendmsg+0x114/0x1b8 [c0000000fd4c7b50] c00000000033d208 .sys_sendmsg+0x218/0x2ac [c0000000fd4c7d70] c00000000033f55c .sys_socketcall+0x228/0x27c [c0000000fd4c7e30] c0000000000086a4 syscall_exit+0x0/0x40 --- Exception: c01 (System Call) at 00000080da560cfc The root cause was an EEH error, which sent us down the offload_close path in the cxgb3 driver, which in turn sets cdev->l2opt to NULL, without regard for upper layer driver (like the cxgbi drivers) which might have execution contexts in the middle of its use. The result is the oops above, when t3_l2t_get attempts to dereference L2DATA(cdev)->nentries in arp_hash right after the EEH error handler sets it to NULL. The fix is to prevent the setting of the NULL pointer until after there are no further users of it. The t3cdev->l2opt pointer is now converted to be an rcu pointer and the L2DATA macro is now called under the protection of the rcu_read_lock(). When the EEH error path: t3_adapter_error->offload_close->cxgb3_offload_deactivate Is exectured, setting of that l2opt pointer to NULL, is now gated on an rcu quiescence point, preventing, allowing L2DATA callers to safely check for a NULL pointer without concern that the underlying data will be freeded before the pointer is dereferenced. This has been tested by the reporter and shown to fix the reproted oops [nhorman: fix up unitinialised variable reported by Dan Carpenter] Signed-off-by: Neil Horman <nhorman@tuxdriver.com> Reviewed-by: Karen Xie <kxie@chelsio.com> Cc: stable@kernel.org Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@Parallels.com>
2011-09-06 11:59:13 -06:00
l2t_release(ep->com.tdev, ep->l2t);
ep->l2t = l2t;
dst_release(old);
ep->dst = new;
return 1;
}
/*
* All the CM events are handled on a work queue to have a safe context.
* These are the real handlers that are called from the work queue.
*/
static const cxgb3_cpl_handler_func work_handlers[NUM_CPL_CMDS] = {
[CPL_ACT_ESTABLISH] = act_establish,
[CPL_ACT_OPEN_RPL] = act_open_rpl,
[CPL_RX_DATA] = rx_data,
[CPL_TX_DMA_ACK] = tx_ack,
[CPL_ABORT_RPL_RSS] = abort_rpl,
[CPL_ABORT_RPL] = abort_rpl,
[CPL_PASS_OPEN_RPL] = pass_open_rpl,
[CPL_CLOSE_LISTSRV_RPL] = close_listsrv_rpl,
[CPL_PASS_ACCEPT_REQ] = pass_accept_req,
[CPL_PASS_ESTABLISH] = pass_establish,
[CPL_PEER_CLOSE] = peer_close,
[CPL_ABORT_REQ_RSS] = peer_abort,
[CPL_CLOSE_CON_RPL] = close_con_rpl,
[CPL_RDMA_TERMINATE] = terminate,
[CPL_RDMA_EC_STATUS] = ec_status,
};
static void process_work(struct work_struct *work)
{
struct sk_buff *skb = NULL;
void *ep;
struct t3cdev *tdev;
int ret;
while ((skb = skb_dequeue(&rxq))) {
ep = *((void **) (skb->cb));
tdev = *((struct t3cdev **) (skb->cb + sizeof(void *)));
ret = work_handlers[G_OPCODE(ntohl((__force __be32)skb->csum))](tdev, skb, ep);
if (ret & CPL_RET_BUF_DONE)
kfree_skb(skb);
/*
* ep was referenced in sched(), and is freed here.
*/
put_ep((struct iwch_ep_common *)ep);
}
}
static DECLARE_WORK(skb_work, process_work);
static int sched(struct t3cdev *tdev, struct sk_buff *skb, void *ctx)
{
struct iwch_ep_common *epc = ctx;
get_ep(epc);
/*
* Save ctx and tdev in the skb->cb area.
*/
*((void **) skb->cb) = ctx;
*((struct t3cdev **) (skb->cb + sizeof(void *))) = tdev;
/*
* Queue the skb and schedule the worker thread.
*/
skb_queue_tail(&rxq, skb);
queue_work(workq, &skb_work);
return 0;
}
static int set_tcb_rpl(struct t3cdev *tdev, struct sk_buff *skb, void *ctx)
{
struct cpl_set_tcb_rpl *rpl = cplhdr(skb);
if (rpl->status != CPL_ERR_NONE) {
pr_err("Unexpected SET_TCB_RPL status %u for tid %u\n",
rpl->status, GET_TID(rpl));
}
return CPL_RET_BUF_DONE;
}
/*
* All upcalls from the T3 Core go to sched() to schedule the
* processing on a work queue.
*/
cxgb3_cpl_handler_func t3c_handlers[NUM_CPL_CMDS] = {
[CPL_ACT_ESTABLISH] = sched,
[CPL_ACT_OPEN_RPL] = sched,
[CPL_RX_DATA] = sched,
[CPL_TX_DMA_ACK] = sched,
[CPL_ABORT_RPL_RSS] = sched,
[CPL_ABORT_RPL] = sched,
[CPL_PASS_OPEN_RPL] = sched,
[CPL_CLOSE_LISTSRV_RPL] = sched,
[CPL_PASS_ACCEPT_REQ] = sched,
[CPL_PASS_ESTABLISH] = sched,
[CPL_PEER_CLOSE] = sched,
[CPL_CLOSE_CON_RPL] = sched,
[CPL_ABORT_REQ_RSS] = sched,
[CPL_RDMA_TERMINATE] = sched,
[CPL_RDMA_EC_STATUS] = sched,
[CPL_SET_TCB_RPL] = set_tcb_rpl,
};
int __init iwch_cm_init(void)
{
skb_queue_head_init(&rxq);
workq = alloc_ordered_workqueue("iw_cxgb3", WQ_MEM_RECLAIM);
if (!workq)
return -ENOMEM;
return 0;
}
void __exit iwch_cm_term(void)
{
flush_workqueue(workq);
destroy_workqueue(workq);
}