skiboot-5.4.0-rc1¶
skiboot-5.4.0-rc1 was released on Monday October 17th 2016. It is the first release candidate of skiboot 5.4, which will become the new stable release of skiboot following the 5.3 release, first released August 2nd 2016.
skiboot-5.4.0-rc1 contains all bug fixes as of skiboot-5.3.7 and skiboot-5.1.18 (the currently maintained stable releases).
For how the skiboot stable releases work, see Skiboot stable tree rules and releases for details.
The current plan is to release a new release candidate every week until we feel good about it. The aim is for skiboot-5.4.x to be in op-build v1.13, which is due by November 23rd 2016.
Over skiboot-5.3, we have the following changes:
New Features¶
Initial Trusted Boot support (see Secure and Trusted Boot Library (LibSTB) Documentation). There are several limitations with this initial release:
CAPP partition is not measured correctly
Only Nuvoton TPM 2.0 is supported
Requires hardware rework on late revision Habanero or Firestone boards in order to install TPM.
Add i2c Nuvoton TPM 2.0 Driver
romcode driver for POWER8 secure ROM
See Device tree docs for tpm and ibm,secureboot nodes
See main secure and trusted boot documentation.
Fast reboot for P8
This makes reboot take an awful lot less time, somewhere between four and ten times faster than a full IPL. It is currently experimental and not enabled by default. You can enable the experimental support via nvram option:
# nvram -p ibm,skiboot --update-config experimental-fast-reset=feeling-lucky
WARNING: This has known bugs. For example, if you have used a device in CAPI mode, we will currently NOT reset it back to plain PCI. There are also some known issues in most simulators.
Support
ibm,skiboot
NVRAM partition with skiboot configuration options.These should generally only be used if you either completely know what you are doing or need to work around a skiboot bug. They are not intended for end users.
Add support for supplying the kernel boot arguments from the
bootargs
configuration string in theibm,skiboot
NVRAM partition.Enabling the experimental fast reset feature is done via this method.
Add support for nap mode on P8 while in skiboot
While nap has been exposed to the Operating System since day 1, we have not utilized low power states when in skiboot itself, leading to higher power consumption during boot. We only enable the functionality after the 0x100 vector has been patched, and we disable it before transferring control to Linux.
libflash: add 128MB MX66L1G45G part
Pointer validation of OPAL API call arguments.
If the kernel called an OPAL API with vmalloc’d address or any other address range in real mode, we would hit a problem with aliasing. Since the top 4 bits are ignored in real mode, pointers from 0xc.. and 0xd.. (and other ranges) could collide and lead to hard to solve bugs. This patch adds the infrastructure for pointer validation and a simple test case for testing the API
The checks validate pointers sent in using
opal_addr_valid()
Documentation¶
There have been a number of documentation fixes this release. Most prominent is the switch to Sphinx (from the Python project) and ReStructured Text (RST) as the documentation format. RST and Sphinx enable both production of pretty documentation in HTML and PDF formats while remaining readable in their raw form to those with no knowledge of RST.
You can build a HTML site by doing the following:
cd doc/
make html
As always, documentation patches are very, very welcome as we attempt to document the OPAL API, the device tree bindings and important parts of OPAL internals.
We would like the Device Tree documentation to follow the style that can be included in the Device Tree Specification.
General¶
Make console-log time more readable: seconds rather than timebase Log format is now
[SECONDS.(tb%512000000),LEVEL]
Flash (PNOR) code improvements
flash: Make size 64 bit safe This makes the size of flash 64 bit safe so that we can have flash devices greater than 4GB. This is especially useful for mambo disks passed through to Linux.
core/flash.c: load actual partition size We are downloading 0x20000 bytes from PNOR for CAPP, but currently the CAPP lid is only 40K.
flash: Rework error paths and messages for multiple flash controllers Now that we have mambo bogusdisk flash, we can have many flash chips. This is resulting in some confusing output messages.
core/init: Fix “failure of getting node in the free list” warning on boot.
slw: improve error message for SLW timer stuck
Centaur / XSCOM error handling
print message on disabling xscoms to centaur due to many errors
Mark centaur offline after 10 consecutive access errors
XSCOM improvements
xscom: Map all HMER status codes to OPAL errors
xscom: Initialize the data to a known value in
xscom_read
In case of error, don’t leave the data random. It helps debugging when the user fails to check the error code. This happens due to a bug in the PRD wrapper app.chip: Add a quirk for when core direct control XSCOMs are missing
p8-i2c: Don’t crash if a centaur errored out
cpu: Make endian switch message more informative
cpu: Display number of started CPUs during boot
core/init: ensure that HRMOR is zero at boot
asm: Fix backtrace for unexpected exception
cpu: Remove pollers calling heuristics from
cpu_wait_job
This will be handled bytime_wait_ms()
. Also remove a uselesssmt_medium()
. Note that this introduce a difference in behaviour: time_wait will only call the pollers on the boot CPU whilecpu_wait_job()
could call them on any. However, I can’t think of a case where this is a problem.cpu: Remove global job queue Instead, target a specific CPU for a global job at queuing time. This will allow us to wake up the target using an interrupt when implementing nap mode. The algorithm used is to look for idle primary threads first, then idle secondaries, and finally the less loaded thread. If nothing can be found, we fallback to a synchronous call.
lpc: Log LPC SYNC errors as unrecoverable ones for manufacturing
lpc: Optimize SerIRQ dispatch based on which PSI IRQ fired
- interrupts: Add new source
->attributes()
callback This allows a given source to provide per-interrupt attributes such as whether it targets OPAL or Linux and it’s estimated frequency.
The former allows to get rid of the double set of ops used to decide which interrupts go where on some modules like the PHBs and the latter will be eventually used to implement smart caching of the source lookups.
- interrupts: Add new source
opal/hmi: Fix a TOD HMI failure during a race condition.
platform: Add BT to Generic platform
NVRAM¶
Support
ibm,skiboot
partition for skiboot specific configuration options- flash: Size NVRAM based on ECC for OpenPOWER platforms
If NVRAM has ECC (as per the ffs header) then the actual size of the partition is less than reported by the ffs header in the PNOR then the actual size of the partition is less than reported by the ffs header.
NVLink/NPU¶
Fix reserved PE#
NPU bdfn allocation bugfix
- Fix bad PE number check
NPUs have 4 PEs which are zero indexed, so {0, 1, 2, 3}. A bad PE number check in npu_err_inject checks if the PE number is greater than 4 as a fail case, so it would wrongly perform operations on a non-existant PE 4.
Use PCI virtual device
assert the NPU irq min is aligned.
program NPU BUID reg properly
- npu: reword “error” to indicate it’s actually a warning
Incorrect FWTS annotation. Without this patch, you get spurious FirmWare Test Suite (FWTS) warnings about NVLink not working on machines that aren’t fully populated with GPUs.
- external: NPU hardware procedure script
Performing NPU hardware procedures requires some config space magic. Put all that magic into a script, so you can just specify the target device and the procedure number.
PCI¶
Generic fixes
Claim surprise hotplug capability
Reserve PCI buses for RC’s slot
Update PCI topology after power change
Return slot cached power state
Cache power state on slot without power control
Avoid hot resets at boot time
Fix initial PCIe slot power state
Print CRS retry times It’s useful to know the CRS retry times before the PCI device is detected successfully. In PCI hot add case, it usually indicates time consumed for the adapter’s firmware to be partially ready (responsive PCI config space).
core/pci: Fix the power-off timeout in
pci_slot_power_off()
The timeout should be 1000ms instead of 1000 ticks while powering off PCI slot inpci_slot_power_off()
. Otherwise, it’s likely to hit timeout powering off the PCI slot as below skiboot logs reveal:[5399576870,5] PHB#0005:02:11.0 Timeout powering off slot
PHB3
Override root slot’s
prepare_link_change()
with PHB’sDisable surprise link down event on PCI slots
Disable ECRC on Broadcom adapter behind PMC switch
astbmc platforms
Support dynamic PCI slot. We might insert a PCIe switch to PHB direct slot and the downstream ports of the PCIe switch supports PCI hotplug.
CAPI¶
- hw/phb3: Update capi initialization sequence
The capi initialization sequence was revised in a circumvention document when a ‘link down’ error was converted from fatal to Endpoint Recoverable. Other, non-capi, register setup was corrected even before the initial open-source release of skiboot, but a few capi-related registers were not updated then, so this patch fixes it.
IPMI¶
- core/ipmi: Set interrupt-parent property
This allows ipmi-opal to properly use the OPAL irqchip rather than falling back to the event interface in Linux.
Mambo Simulator¶
Helpers for POWER9 Mambo.
mambo: Advertise available RADIX page sizes
mambo: Add section for kernel command line boot args Users can set kernel command line boot arguments for Mambo in a tcl script.
mambo: add exception and qtrace helpers
external/mambo: Update skiboot.tcl to add page-sizes nodes to device tree
Simics Simulator¶
chiptod: Enable ChipTOD in SIMICS
Utilities¶
pflash
fix harmless buffer overflow:
fl_total_size
wasuint32_t
notuint64_t
.Don’t try to write protect when writing to flash file
Misc small improvements to code and code style
makefile bug fixes
external/boot_tests
remove lid from the BMC after flashing
add the nobooting option -N
add arbitrary lid option -F
getscom
/getsram
/putscom
: Parse chip-id as hexWe print the chip-id in hex (without a leading 0x), but we fail to parse that same value correctly in
getscom
/getsram
/putscom
# getscom -l ... 80000000 | DD2.0 | Centaur memory buffer # getscom -c 80000000 201140a Error -19 reading XSCOM
Fix this by assuming base 16 when parsing chip-id.
PRD¶
opal-prd: Fix error code from
scom_read
andscom_write
opal-prd: Add get_interface_capabilities to host interfaces
opal-prd: fix for 64-bit pnor sizes
- occ/prd/opal-prd: Queue OCC_RESET event message to host in OpenPOWER
During an OCC reset cycle the system is forced to Psafe pstate. When OCC becomes active, the system has to be restored to its last pstate as requested by host. So host needs to be notified of OCC_RESET event or else system will continue to remian in Psafe state until host requests a new pstate after the OCC reset cycle.
IBM FSP Based Platforms¶
- fsp/console: Allocate irq for each hvc console
Allocate an irq number for each hvc console and set its interrupt-parent property so that Linux can use the opal irqchip instead of the OPAL_EVENT_CONSOLE_INPUT interface.
platforms/firenze: Fix clock frequency dt property:
[ 1.212366090,3] DT: Unexpected property length /xscom@3fc0000000000/i2cm@a0020/clock-frequency
- HDAT: Fix typo in nest-frequency property
nest-frquency -> nest-frequency
- platforms/ibm-fsp: Use power_ctl bit when determining slot reset method
The power_ctl bit is used to represent if power management is available. If power_ctl is set to true, then the I2C based external power management functionality will be populated on the PCI slot. Otherwise we will try to use the inband PERST as the fundamental reset, as before.
- FSP/ELOG: Fix elog timeout issue
Presently we set timeout value as soon as we add elog to queue. If we have multiple elogs to write, it doesn’t consider queue wait time. Instead set timeout value when we are actually sending elog to FSP.
- FSP/ELOG: elog_enable flag should be false by default
This issue is one of the corner case, which is related to recent change went upstream and only observed in the petitboot prompt, where we see only one error log instead of getting all error log in
/sys/firmware/opal/elog
.
POWER9¶
mambo: Make POWER9 look like DD2
- flash: Move flash node under
ibm,opal/flash/
This changes the boot ABI, so it’s only active for P9 and later systems, even though it’s unrelated to hardware changes. There is an associated Linux change to properly search for this node as well.
- flash: Move flash node under
core/cpu.c: Add OPAL call to setup Nest MMU
psi: On p9, create an interrupt-map for routing PSI interrupts
lpc: Add P9 LPC interrupts support
chiptod: Basic P9 support
psi: Add P9 support
Testing and Debugging¶
test/qemu: bump qemu version used in CI, adds IPMI support
platform/qemu: add BT and IPMI support Enables testing BT and IPMI functionality in the Qemu simulator
init: In debug builds, enable debug output to console
- mem_region: Be a bit smarter about poisoning
Don’t poison chunks that are already free and poison regions on first allocation. This speeds things up dramatically.
- libc: Use 8-bytes stores for non-0 memset too
Memory poisoning hammers this, so let’s be a bit smart about it and avoid falling back to byte stores when the data is not 0
fwts: add annotation for manufacturing mode
check: Fix bugs in mem region tests
- Don’t set -fstack-protector-all unconditionally
We set it already in DEBUG builds and we use -fstack-protector-strong in release builds which provides most of the benefits and is more efficient.
- Build host programs (and checks) with debug enabled
This enables memory poisoning in allocations and list checking among other things.
Add global DEBUG make flag
Contributors¶
Extending the analysis done for the last few releases, we can see our trends in code review across versions:
Release |
csets |
Ack |
Reviews |
Tested |
Reported |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
5.0 |
329 |
15 |
20 |
1 |
0 |
5.1 |
372 |
13 |
38 |
1 |
4 |
5.2-rc1 |
334 |
20 |
34 |
6 |
11 |
5.3-rc1 |
302 |
36 |
53 |
4 |
5 |
5.4-rc1 |
278 |
8 |
19 |
0 |
4 |
This release has fewer changesets over previous 5.x first release candidates, but that is not indicative of the size or complexity of these changes.
Processed 278 csets from 31 developers A total of 17052 lines added, 4745 removed (delta 12307)
Developers with the most changesets
Stewart Smith |
71 |
(25.5%) |
Benjamin Herrenschmidt |
50 |
(18.0%) |
Claudio Carvalho |
38 |
(13.7%) |
Gavin Shan |
20 |
(7.2%) |
Oliver O’Halloran |
18 |
(6.5%) |
Mukesh Ojha |
9 |
(3.2%) |
Cyril Bur |
7 |
(2.5%) |
Russell Currey |
7 |
(2.5%) |
Vasant Hegde |
7 |
(2.5%) |
Pridhiviraj Paidipeddi |
6 |
(2.2%) |
Michael Neuling |
6 |
(2.2%) |
Alistair Popple |
4 |
(1.4%) |
Sam Mendoza-Jonas |
3 |
(1.1%) |
Vipin K Parashar |
3 |
(1.1%) |
Balbir Singh |
3 |
(1.1%) |
Mahesh Salgaonkar |
3 |
(1.1%) |
Frederic Barrat |
3 |
(1.1%) |
Chris Smart |
2 |
(0.7%) |
Jack Miller |
2 |
(0.7%) |
Patrick Williams |
2 |
(0.7%) |
Jeremy Kerr |
2 |
(0.7%) |
Suraj Jitindar Singh |
2 |
(0.7%) |
Milton Miller |
2 |
(0.7%) |
Shilpasri G Bhat |
1 |
(0.4%) |
Frederic Bonnard |
1 |
(0.4%) |
Joel Stanley |
1 |
(0.4%) |
Breno Leitao |
1 |
(0.4%) |
Anton Blanchard |
1 |
(0.4%) |
Nicholas Piggin |
1 |
(0.4%) |
Nageswara R Sastry |
1 |
(0.4%) |
Cédric Le Goater |
1 |
(0.4%) |
Developers with the most changed lines
Claudio Carvalho |
6817 |
(38.2%) |
Stewart Smith |
4677 |
(26.2%) |
Benjamin Herrenschmidt |
2586 |
(14.5%) |
Gavin Shan |
1005 |
(5.6%) |
Cyril Bur |
509 |
(2.9%) |
Mukesh Ojha |
361 |
(2.0%) |
Oliver O’Halloran |
343 |
(1.9%) |
Russell Currey |
343 |
(1.9%) |
Balbir Singh |
227 |
(1.3%) |
Pridhiviraj Paidipeddi |
194 |
(1.1%) |
Michael Neuling |
121 |
(0.7%) |
Cédric Le Goater |
115 |
(0.6%) |
Vipin K Parashar |
68 |
(0.4%) |
Alistair Popple |
66 |
(0.4%) |
Vasant Hegde |
65 |
(0.4%) |
Shilpasri G Bhat |
45 |
(0.3%) |
Suraj Jitindar Singh |
41 |
(0.2%) |
Nicholas Piggin |
34 |
(0.2%) |
Sam Mendoza-Jonas |
33 |
(0.2%) |
Jack Miller |
32 |
(0.2%) |
Nageswara R Sastry |
32 |
(0.2%) |
Jeremy Kerr |
23 |
(0.1%) |
Mahesh Salgaonkar |
21 |
(0.1%) |
Chris Smart |
20 |
(0.1%) |
Milton Miller |
19 |
(0.1%) |
Patrick Williams |
11 |
(0.1%) |
Frederic Barrat |
6 |
(0.0%) |
Anton Blanchard |
3 |
(0.0%) |
Frederic Bonnard |
2 |
(0.0%) |
Joel Stanley |
2 |
(0.0%) |
Breno Leitao |
2 |
(0.0%) |
Developers with the most lines removed
Cyril Bur |
299 |
(6.3%) |
Developers with the most signoffs (total 226)
Stewart Smith |
219 |
(96.9%) |
Alistair Popple |
4 |
(1.8%) |
Cyril Bur |
1 |
(0.4%) |
Jeremy Kerr |
1 |
(0.4%) |
Benjamin Herrenschmidt |
1 |
(0.4%) |
Developers with the most reviews (total 19)
Mukesh Ojha |
5 |
(26.3%) |
Andrew Donnellan |
4 |
(21.1%) |
Vasant Hegde |
3 |
(15.8%) |
Russell Currey |
3 |
(15.8%) |
Balbir Singh |
2 |
(10.5%) |
Cyril Bur |
1 |
(5.3%) |
Vaidyanathan Srinivasan |
1 |
(5.3%) |
Developers with the most test credits (total 0)
Developers who gave the most tested-by credits (total 0)
Developers with the most report credits (total 4)
Benjamin Herrenschmidt |
1 |
(25.0%) |
Li Meng |
1 |
(25.0%) |
Pridhiviraj Paidipeddi |
1 |
(25.0%) |
Gavin Shan |
1 |
(25.0%) |
Developers who gave the most report credits (total 4)
Gavin Shan |
1 |
(25.0%) |
Vasant Hegde |
1 |
(25.0%) |
Russell Currey |
1 |
(25.0%) |
Stewart Smith |
1 |
(25.0%) |