Commit graph

163 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Xiaoliang Yang 23ae3a7877 net: dsa: felix: add stream gate settings for psfp
This patch adds stream gate settings for PSFP. Use SGI table to store
stream gate entries. Disable the gate entry when it is not used by any
stream.

Signed-off-by: Xiaoliang Yang <xiaoliang.yang_1@nxp.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2021-11-18 12:07:24 +00:00
Xiaoliang Yang 7d4b564d6a net: dsa: felix: support psfp filter on vsc9959
VSC9959 supports Per-Stream Filtering and Policing(PSFP) that complies
with the IEEE 802.1Qci standard. The stream is identified by Null stream
identification(DMAC and VLAN ID) defined in IEEE802.1CB.

For PSFP, four tables need to be set up: stream table, stream filter
table, stream gate table, and flow meter table. Identify the stream by
parsing the tc flower keys and add it to the stream table. The stream
filter table is automatically maintained, and its index is determined by
SGID(flow gate index) and FMID(flow meter index).

Signed-off-by: Xiaoliang Yang <xiaoliang.yang_1@nxp.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2021-11-18 12:07:24 +00:00
Vladimir Oltean 92f62485b3 net: dsa: felix: fix broken VLAN-tagged PTP under VLAN-aware bridge
Normally it is expected that the dsa_device_ops :: rcv() method finishes
parsing the DSA tag and consumes it, then never looks at it again.

But commit c0bcf53766 ("net: dsa: ocelot: add hardware timestamping
support for Felix") added support for RX timestamping in a very
unconventional way. On this switch, a partial timestamp is available in
the DSA header, but the driver got away with not parsing that timestamp
right away, but instead delayed that parsing for a little longer:

dsa_switch_rcv():
	nskb = cpu_dp->rcv(skb, dev); <------------- not here
	-> ocelot_rcv()
	...

	skb = nskb;
	skb_push(skb, ETH_HLEN);
	skb->pkt_type = PACKET_HOST;
	skb->protocol = eth_type_trans(skb, skb->dev);

	...

	if (dsa_skb_defer_rx_timestamp(p, skb)) <--- but here
	-> felix_rxtstamp()
		return 0;

When in felix_rxtstamp(), this driver accounted for the fact that
eth_type_trans() happened in the meanwhile, so it got a hold of the
extraction header again by subtracting (ETH_HLEN + OCELOT_TAG_LEN) bytes
from the current skb->data.

This worked for quite some time but was quite fragile from the very
beginning. Not to mention that having DSA tag parsing split in two
different files, under different folders (net/dsa/tag_ocelot.c vs
drivers/net/dsa/ocelot/felix.c) made it quite non-obvious for patches to
come that they might break this.

Finally, the blamed commit does the following: at the end of
ocelot_rcv(), it checks whether the skb payload contains a VLAN header.
If it does, and this port is under a VLAN-aware bridge, that VLAN ID
might not be correct in the sense that the packet might have suffered
VLAN rewriting due to TCAM rules (VCAP IS1). So we consume the VLAN ID
from the skb payload using __skb_vlan_pop(), and take the classified
VLAN ID from the DSA tag, and construct a hwaccel VLAN tag with the
classified VLAN, and the skb payload is VLAN-untagged.

The big problem is that __skb_vlan_pop() does:

	memmove(skb->data + VLAN_HLEN, skb->data, 2 * ETH_ALEN);
	__skb_pull(skb, VLAN_HLEN);

aka it moves the Ethernet header 4 bytes to the right, and pulls 4 bytes
from the skb headroom (effectively also moving skb->data, by definition).
So for felix_rxtstamp()'s fragile logic, all bets are off now.
Instead of having the "extraction" pointer point to the DSA header,
it actually points to 4 bytes _inside_ the extraction header.
Corollary, the last 4 bytes of the "extraction" header are in fact 4
stale bytes of the destination MAC address from the Ethernet header,
from prior to the __skb_vlan_pop() movement.

So of course, RX timestamps are completely bogus when the system is
configured in this way.

The fix is actually very simple: just don't structure the code like that.
For better or worse, the DSA PTP timestamping API does not offer a
straightforward way for drivers to present their RX timestamps, but
other drivers (sja1105) have established a simple mechanism to carry
their RX timestamp from dsa_device_ops :: rcv() all the way to
dsa_switch_ops :: port_rxtstamp() and even later. That mechanism is to
simply save the partial timestamp to the skb->cb, and complete it later.

Question: why don't we simply populate the skb's struct
skb_shared_hwtstamps from ocelot_rcv(), and bother with this
complication of propagating the timestamp to felix_rxtstamp()?

Answer: dsa_switch_ops :: port_rxtstamp() answers the question whether
PTP packets need sleepable context to retrieve the full RX timestamp.
Currently felix_rxtstamp() answers "no, thanks" to that question, and
calls ocelot_ptp_gettime64() from softirq atomic context. This is
understandable, since Felix VSC9959 is a PCIe memory-mapped switch, so
hardware access does not require sleeping. But the felix driver is
preparing for the introduction of other switches where hardware access
is over a slow bus like SPI or MDIO:
https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/20210814025003.2449143-1-colin.foster@in-advantage.com/

So I would like to keep this code structure, so the rework needed when
that driver will need PTP support will be minimal (answer "yes, I need
deferred context for this skb's RX timestamp", then the partial
timestamp will still be found in the skb->cb.

Fixes: ea440cd2d9 ("net: dsa: tag_ocelot: use VLAN information from tagging header when available")
Reported-by: Po Liu <po.liu@nxp.com>
Cc: Yangbo Lu <yangbo.lu@nxp.com>
Signed-off-by: Vladimir Oltean <vladimir.oltean@nxp.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2021-11-03 14:22:00 +00:00
Sean Anderson 4973056cce net: convert users of bitmap_foo() to linkmode_foo()
This converts instances of
	bitmap_foo(args..., __ETHTOOL_LINK_MODE_MASK_NBITS)
to
	linkmode_foo(args...)

I manually fixed up some lines to prevent them from being excessively
long. Otherwise, this change was generated with the following semantic
patch:

// Generated with
// echo linux/linkmode.h > includes
// git grep -Flf includes include/ | cut -f 2- -d / | cat includes - \
// | sort | uniq | tee new_includes | wc -l && mv new_includes includes
// and repeating until the number stopped going up
@i@
@@

(
 #include <linux/acpi_mdio.h>
|
 #include <linux/brcmphy.h>
|
 #include <linux/dsa/loop.h>
|
 #include <linux/dsa/sja1105.h>
|
 #include <linux/ethtool.h>
|
 #include <linux/ethtool_netlink.h>
|
 #include <linux/fec.h>
|
 #include <linux/fs_enet_pd.h>
|
 #include <linux/fsl/enetc_mdio.h>
|
 #include <linux/fwnode_mdio.h>
|
 #include <linux/linkmode.h>
|
 #include <linux/lsm_audit.h>
|
 #include <linux/mdio-bitbang.h>
|
 #include <linux/mdio.h>
|
 #include <linux/mdio-mux.h>
|
 #include <linux/mii.h>
|
 #include <linux/mii_timestamper.h>
|
 #include <linux/mlx5/accel.h>
|
 #include <linux/mlx5/cq.h>
|
 #include <linux/mlx5/device.h>
|
 #include <linux/mlx5/driver.h>
|
 #include <linux/mlx5/eswitch.h>
|
 #include <linux/mlx5/fs.h>
|
 #include <linux/mlx5/port.h>
|
 #include <linux/mlx5/qp.h>
|
 #include <linux/mlx5/rsc_dump.h>
|
 #include <linux/mlx5/transobj.h>
|
 #include <linux/mlx5/vport.h>
|
 #include <linux/of_mdio.h>
|
 #include <linux/of_net.h>
|
 #include <linux/pcs-lynx.h>
|
 #include <linux/pcs/pcs-xpcs.h>
|
 #include <linux/phy.h>
|
 #include <linux/phy_led_triggers.h>
|
 #include <linux/phylink.h>
|
 #include <linux/platform_data/bcmgenet.h>
|
 #include <linux/platform_data/xilinx-ll-temac.h>
|
 #include <linux/pxa168_eth.h>
|
 #include <linux/qed/qed_eth_if.h>
|
 #include <linux/qed/qed_fcoe_if.h>
|
 #include <linux/qed/qed_if.h>
|
 #include <linux/qed/qed_iov_if.h>
|
 #include <linux/qed/qed_iscsi_if.h>
|
 #include <linux/qed/qed_ll2_if.h>
|
 #include <linux/qed/qed_nvmetcp_if.h>
|
 #include <linux/qed/qed_rdma_if.h>
|
 #include <linux/sfp.h>
|
 #include <linux/sh_eth.h>
|
 #include <linux/smsc911x.h>
|
 #include <linux/soc/nxp/lpc32xx-misc.h>
|
 #include <linux/stmmac.h>
|
 #include <linux/sunrpc/svc_rdma.h>
|
 #include <linux/sxgbe_platform.h>
|
 #include <net/cfg80211.h>
|
 #include <net/dsa.h>
|
 #include <net/mac80211.h>
|
 #include <net/selftests.h>
|
 #include <rdma/ib_addr.h>
|
 #include <rdma/ib_cache.h>
|
 #include <rdma/ib_cm.h>
|
 #include <rdma/ib_hdrs.h>
|
 #include <rdma/ib_mad.h>
|
 #include <rdma/ib_marshall.h>
|
 #include <rdma/ib_pack.h>
|
 #include <rdma/ib_pma.h>
|
 #include <rdma/ib_sa.h>
|
 #include <rdma/ib_smi.h>
|
 #include <rdma/ib_umem.h>
|
 #include <rdma/ib_umem_odp.h>
|
 #include <rdma/ib_verbs.h>
|
 #include <rdma/iw_cm.h>
|
 #include <rdma/mr_pool.h>
|
 #include <rdma/opa_addr.h>
|
 #include <rdma/opa_port_info.h>
|
 #include <rdma/opa_smi.h>
|
 #include <rdma/opa_vnic.h>
|
 #include <rdma/rdma_cm.h>
|
 #include <rdma/rdma_cm_ib.h>
|
 #include <rdma/rdmavt_cq.h>
|
 #include <rdma/rdma_vt.h>
|
 #include <rdma/rdmavt_qp.h>
|
 #include <rdma/rw.h>
|
 #include <rdma/tid_rdma_defs.h>
|
 #include <rdma/uverbs_ioctl.h>
|
 #include <rdma/uverbs_named_ioctl.h>
|
 #include <rdma/uverbs_std_types.h>
|
 #include <rdma/uverbs_types.h>
|
 #include <soc/mscc/ocelot.h>
|
 #include <soc/mscc/ocelot_ptp.h>
|
 #include <soc/mscc/ocelot_vcap.h>
|
 #include <trace/events/ib_mad.h>
|
 #include <trace/events/rdma_core.h>
|
 #include <trace/events/rdma.h>
|
 #include <trace/events/rpcrdma.h>
|
 #include <uapi/linux/ethtool.h>
|
 #include <uapi/linux/ethtool_netlink.h>
|
 #include <uapi/linux/mdio.h>
|
 #include <uapi/linux/mii.h>
)

@depends on i@
expression list args;
@@

(
- bitmap_zero(args, __ETHTOOL_LINK_MODE_MASK_NBITS)
+ linkmode_zero(args)
|
- bitmap_copy(args, __ETHTOOL_LINK_MODE_MASK_NBITS)
+ linkmode_copy(args)
|
- bitmap_and(args, __ETHTOOL_LINK_MODE_MASK_NBITS)
+ linkmode_and(args)
|
- bitmap_or(args, __ETHTOOL_LINK_MODE_MASK_NBITS)
+ linkmode_or(args)
|
- bitmap_empty(args, ETHTOOL_LINK_MODE_MASK_NBITS)
+ linkmode_empty(args)
|
- bitmap_andnot(args, __ETHTOOL_LINK_MODE_MASK_NBITS)
+ linkmode_andnot(args)
|
- bitmap_equal(args, __ETHTOOL_LINK_MODE_MASK_NBITS)
+ linkmode_equal(args)
|
- bitmap_intersects(args, __ETHTOOL_LINK_MODE_MASK_NBITS)
+ linkmode_intersects(args)
|
- bitmap_subset(args, __ETHTOOL_LINK_MODE_MASK_NBITS)
+ linkmode_subset(args)
)

Add missing linux/mii.h include to mellanox. -DaveM

Signed-off-by: Sean Anderson <sean.anderson@seco.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2021-10-24 13:58:52 +01:00
Jakub Kicinski e15f5972b8 Merge git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/netdev/net
tools/testing/selftests/net/ioam6.sh
  7b1700e009 ("selftests: net: modify IOAM tests for undef bits")
  bf77b1400a ("selftests: net: Test for the IOAM encapsulation with IPv6")

Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
2021-10-14 16:50:14 -07:00
Vladimir Oltean 8d5f7954b7 net: dsa: felix: break at first CPU port during init and teardown
The NXP LS1028A switch has two Ethernet ports towards the CPU, but only
one of them is capable of acting as an NPI port at a time (inject and
extract packets using DSA tags).

However, using the alternative ocelot-8021q tagging protocol, it should
be possible to use both CPU ports symmetrically, but for that we need to
mark both ports in the device tree as DSA masters.

In the process of doing that, it can be seen that traffic to/from the
network stack gets broken, and this is because the Felix driver iterates
through all DSA CPU ports and configures them as NPI ports. But since
there can only be a single NPI port, we effectively end up in a
situation where DSA thinks the default CPU port is the first one, but
the hardware port configured to be an NPI is the last one.

I would like to treat this as a bug, because if the updated device trees
are going to start circulating, it would be really good for existing
kernels to support them, too.

Fixes: adb3dccf09 ("net: dsa: felix: convert to the new .change_tag_protocol DSA API")
Signed-off-by: Vladimir Oltean <vladimir.oltean@nxp.com>
Reviewed-by: Florian Fainelli <f.fainelli@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
2021-10-12 17:35:19 -07:00
Vladimir Oltean 1328a88325 net: dsa: felix: purge skb from TX timestamping queue if it cannot be sent
At present, when a PTP packet which requires TX timestamping gets
dropped under congestion by the switch, things go downhill very fast.
The driver keeps a clone of that skb in a queue of packets awaiting TX
timestamp interrupts, but interrupts will never be raised for the
dropped packets.

Moreover, matching timestamped packets to timestamps is done by a 2-bit
timestamp ID, and this can wrap around and we can match on the wrong skb.

Since with the default NPI-based tagging protocol, we get no notification
about packet drops, the best we can do is eventually recover from the
drop of a PTP frame: its skb will be dead memory until another skb which
was assigned the same timestamp ID happens to find it.

However, with the ocelot-8021q tagger which injects packets using the
manual register interface, it appears that we can check for more
information, such as:

- whether the input queue has reached the high watermark or not
- whether the injection group's FIFO can accept additional data or not

so we know that a PTP frame is likely to get dropped before actually
sending it, and drop it ourselves (because DSA uses NETIF_F_LLTX, so it
can't return NETDEV_TX_BUSY to ask the qdisc to requeue the packet).

But when we do that, we can also remove the skb from the timestamping
queue, because there surely won't be any timestamp that matches it.

Fixes: 0a6f17c6ae ("net: dsa: tag_ocelot_8021q: add support for PTP timestamping")
Signed-off-by: Vladimir Oltean <vladimir.oltean@nxp.com>
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
2021-10-12 17:35:18 -07:00
Vladimir Oltean 49f885b2d9 net: dsa: tag_ocelot_8021q: break circular dependency with ocelot switch lib
Michael reported that when using the "ocelot-8021q" tagging protocol,
the switch driver module must be manually loaded before the tagging
protocol can be loaded/is available.

This appears to be the same problem described here:
https://lore.kernel.org/netdev/20210908220834.d7gmtnwrorhharna@skbuf/
where due to the fact that DSA tagging protocols make use of symbols
exported by the switch drivers, circular dependencies appear and this
breaks module autoloading.

The ocelot_8021q driver needs the ocelot_can_inject() and
ocelot_port_inject_frame() functions from the switch library. Previously
the wrong approach was taken to solve that dependency: shims were
provided for the case where the ocelot switch library was compiled out,
but that turns out to be insufficient, because the dependency when the
switch lib _is_ compiled is problematic too.

We cannot declare ocelot_can_inject() and ocelot_port_inject_frame() as
static inline functions, because these access I/O functions like
__ocelot_write_ix() which is called by ocelot_write_rix(). Making those
static inline basically means exposing the whole guts of the ocelot
switch library, not ideal...

We already have one tagging protocol driver which calls into the switch
driver during xmit but not using any exported symbol: sja1105_defer_xmit.
We can do the same thing here: create a kthread worker and one work item
per skb, and let the switch driver itself do the register accesses to
send the skb, and then consume it.

Fixes: 0a6f17c6ae ("net: dsa: tag_ocelot_8021q: add support for PTP timestamping")
Reported-by: Michael Walle <michael@walle.cc>
Signed-off-by: Vladimir Oltean <vladimir.oltean@nxp.com>
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
2021-10-12 17:35:18 -07:00
Vladimir Oltean 52849bcf00 net: mscc: ocelot: avoid overflowing the PTP timestamp FIFO
PTP packets with 2-step TX timestamp requests are matched to packets
based on the egress port number and a 6-bit timestamp identifier.
All PTP timestamps are held in a common FIFO that is 128 entry deep.

This patch ensures that back-to-back timestamping requests cannot exceed
the hardware FIFO capacity. If that happens, simply send the packets
without requesting a TX timestamp to be taken (in the case of felix,
since the DSA API has a void return code in ds->ops->port_txtstamp) or
drop them (in the case of ocelot).

I've moved the ts_id_lock from a per-port basis to a per-switch basis,
because we need separate accounting for both numbers of PTP frames in
flight. And since we need locking to inc/dec the per-switch counter,
that also offers protection for the per-port counter and hence there is
no reason to have a per-port counter anymore.

Fixes: 4e3b0468e6 ("net: mscc: PTP Hardware Clock (PHC) support")
Signed-off-by: Vladimir Oltean <vladimir.oltean@nxp.com>
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
2021-10-12 17:35:17 -07:00
Vladimir Oltean abecbfcdb9 net: dsa: felix: accept "ethernet-ports" OF node name
Since both forms are accepted, let's search for both when we
pre-validate the PHY modes.

Signed-off-by: Vladimir Oltean <vladimir.oltean@nxp.com>
Reviewed-by: Florian Fainelli <f.fainelli@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2021-09-24 14:07:59 +01:00
Vladimir Oltean 0650bf52b3 net: dsa: be compatible with masters which unregister on shutdown
Lino reports that on his system with bcmgenet as DSA master and KSZ9897
as a switch, rebooting or shutting down never works properly.

What does the bcmgenet driver have special to trigger this, that other
DSA masters do not? It has an implementation of ->shutdown which simply
calls its ->remove implementation. Otherwise said, it unregisters its
network interface on shutdown.

This message can be seen in a loop, and it hangs the reboot process there:

unregister_netdevice: waiting for eth0 to become free. Usage count = 3

So why 3?

A usage count of 1 is normal for a registered network interface, and any
virtual interface which links itself as an upper of that will increment
it via dev_hold. In the case of DSA, this is the call path:

dsa_slave_create
-> netdev_upper_dev_link
   -> __netdev_upper_dev_link
      -> __netdev_adjacent_dev_insert
         -> dev_hold

So a DSA switch with 3 interfaces will result in a usage count elevated
by two, and netdev_wait_allrefs will wait until they have gone away.

Other stacked interfaces, like VLAN, watch NETDEV_UNREGISTER events and
delete themselves, but DSA cannot just vanish and go poof, at most it
can unbind itself from the switch devices, but that must happen strictly
earlier compared to when the DSA master unregisters its net_device, so
reacting on the NETDEV_UNREGISTER event is way too late.

It seems that it is a pretty established pattern to have a driver's
->shutdown hook redirect to its ->remove hook, so the same code is
executed regardless of whether the driver is unbound from the device, or
the system is just shutting down. As Florian puts it, it is quite a big
hammer for bcmgenet to unregister its net_device during shutdown, but
having a common code path with the driver unbind helps ensure it is well
tested.

So DSA, for better or for worse, has to live with that and engage in an
arms race of implementing the ->shutdown hook too, from all individual
drivers, and do something sane when paired with masters that unregister
their net_device there. The only sane thing to do, of course, is to
unlink from the master.

However, complications arise really quickly.

The pattern of redirecting ->shutdown to ->remove is not unique to
bcmgenet or even to net_device drivers. In fact, SPI controllers do it
too (see dspi_shutdown -> dspi_remove), and presumably, I2C controllers
and MDIO controllers do it too (this is something I have not researched
too deeply, but even if this is not the case today, it is certainly
plausible to happen in the future, and must be taken into consideration).

Since DSA switches might be SPI devices, I2C devices, MDIO devices, the
insane implication is that for the exact same DSA switch device, we
might have both ->shutdown and ->remove getting called.

So we need to do something with that insane environment. The pattern
I've come up with is "if this, then not that", so if either ->shutdown
or ->remove gets called, we set the device's drvdata to NULL, and in the
other hook, we check whether the drvdata is NULL and just do nothing.
This is probably not necessary for platform devices, just for devices on
buses, but I would really insist for consistency among drivers, because
when code is copy-pasted, it is not always copy-pasted from the best
sources.

So depending on whether the DSA switch's ->remove or ->shutdown will get
called first, we cannot really guarantee even for the same driver if
rebooting will result in the same code path on all platforms. But
nonetheless, we need to do something minimally reasonable on ->shutdown
too to fix the bug. Of course, the ->remove will do more (a full
teardown of the tree, with all data structures freed, and this is why
the bug was not caught for so long). The new ->shutdown method is kept
separate from dsa_unregister_switch not because we couldn't have
unregistered the switch, but simply in the interest of doing something
quick and to the point.

The big question is: does the DSA switch's ->shutdown get called earlier
than the DSA master's ->shutdown? If not, there is still a risk that we
might still trigger the WARN_ON in unregister_netdevice that says we are
attempting to unregister a net_device which has uppers. That's no good.
Although the reference to the master net_device won't physically go away
even if DSA's ->shutdown comes afterwards, remember we have a dev_hold
on it.

The answer to that question lies in this comment above device_link_add:

 * A side effect of the link creation is re-ordering of dpm_list and the
 * devices_kset list by moving the consumer device and all devices depending
 * on it to the ends of these lists (that does not happen to devices that have
 * not been registered when this function is called).

so the fact that DSA uses device_link_add towards its master is not
exactly for nothing. device_shutdown() walks devices_kset from the back,
so this is our guarantee that DSA's shutdown happens before the master's
shutdown.

Fixes: 2f1e8ea726 ("net: dsa: link interfaces with the DSA master to get rid of lockdep warnings")
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/netdev/20210909095324.12978-1-LinoSanfilippo@gmx.de/
Reported-by: Lino Sanfilippo <LinoSanfilippo@gmx.de>
Signed-off-by: Vladimir Oltean <vladimir.oltean@nxp.com>
Tested-by: Andrew Lunn <andrew@lunn.ch>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2021-09-19 12:08:37 +01:00
Vladimir Oltean 3c9cfb5269 net: update NXP copyright text
NXP Legal insists that the following are not fine:

- Saying "NXP Semiconductors" instead of "NXP", since the company's
  registered name is "NXP"

- Putting a "(c)" sign in the copyright string

- Putting a comma in the copyright string

The only accepted copyright string format is "Copyright <year-range> NXP".

This patch changes the copyright headers in the networking files that
were sent by me, or derived from code sent by me.

Signed-off-by: Vladimir Oltean <vladimir.oltean@nxp.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2021-09-17 13:52:17 +01:00
Vladimir Oltean 3b95d1b293 net: mscc: ocelot: transmit the VLAN filtering restrictions via extack
We need to transmit more restrictions in future patches, convert this
one to netlink extack.

Signed-off-by: Vladimir Oltean <vladimir.oltean@nxp.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2021-08-20 14:39:52 +01:00
Vladimir Oltean 01af940e9b net: mscc: ocelot: transmit the "native VLAN" error via extack
We need to reject some more configurations in future patches, convert
the existing one to netlink extack.

Signed-off-by: Vladimir Oltean <vladimir.oltean@nxp.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2021-08-20 14:39:52 +01:00
Vladimir Oltean e6e12df625 net: mscc: ocelot: convert to phylink
The felix DSA driver, which is a wrapper over the same hardware class as
ocelot, is integrated with phylink, but ocelot is using the plain PHY
library. It makes sense to bring together the two implementations, which
is what this patch achieves.

This is a large patch and hard to break up, but it does the following:

The existing ocelot_adjust_link writes some registers, and
felix_phylink_mac_link_up writes some registers, some of them are
common, but both functions write to some registers to which the other
doesn't.

The main reasons for this are:
- Felix switches so far have used an NXP PCS so they had no need to
  write the PCS1G registers that ocelot_adjust_link writes
- Felix switches have the MAC fixed at 1G, so some of the MAC speed
  changes actually break the link and must be avoided.

The naming conventions for the functions introduced in this patch are:
- vsc7514_phylink_{mac_config,validate} are specific to the Ocelot
  instantiations and placed in ocelot_net.c which is built only for the
  ocelot switchdev driver.
- ocelot_phylink_mac_link_{up,down} are shared between the ocelot
  switchdev driver and the felix DSA driver (they are put in the common
  lib).

One by one, the registers written by ocelot_adjust_link are:

DEV_MAC_MODE_CFG - felix_phylink_mac_link_up had no need to write this
                   register since its out-of-reset value was fine and
                   did not need changing. The write is moved to the
                   common ocelot_phylink_mac_link_up and on felix it is
                   guarded by a quirk bit that makes the written value
                   identical with the out-of-reset one
DEV_PORT_MISC - runtime invariant, was moved to vsc7514_phylink_mac_config
PCS1G_MODE_CFG - same as above
PCS1G_SD_CFG - same as above
PCS1G_CFG - same as above
PCS1G_ANEG_CFG - same as above
PCS1G_LB_CFG - same as above
DEV_MAC_ENA_CFG - both ocelot_adjust_link and ocelot_port_disable
                  touched this. felix_phylink_mac_link_{up,down} also
                  do. We go with what felix does and put it in
                  ocelot_phylink_mac_link_up.
DEV_CLOCK_CFG - ocelot_adjust_link and felix_phylink_mac_link_up both
                write this, but to different values. Move to the common
                ocelot_phylink_mac_link_up and make sure via the quirk
                that the old values are preserved for both.
ANA_PFC_PFC_CFG - ocelot_adjust_link wrote this, felix_phylink_mac_link_up
                  did not. Runtime invariant, speed does not matter since
                  PFC is disabled via the RX_PFC_ENA bits which are cleared.
                  Move to vsc7514_phylink_mac_config.
QSYS_SWITCH_PORT_MODE_PORT_ENA - both ocelot_adjust_link and
                                 felix_phylink_mac_link_{up,down} wrote
                                 this. Ocelot also wrote this register
                                 from ocelot_port_disable. Keep what
                                 felix did, move in ocelot_phylink_mac_link_{up,down}
                                 and delete ocelot_port_disable.
ANA_POL_FLOWC - same as above
SYS_MAC_FC_CFG - same as above, except slight behavior change. Whereas
                 ocelot always enabled RX and TX flow control, felix
                 listened to phylink (for the most part, at least - see
                 the 2500base-X comment).

The registers which only felix_phylink_mac_link_up wrote are:

SYS_PAUSE_CFG_PAUSE_ENA - this is why I am not sure that flow control
                          worked on ocelot. Not it should, since the
                          code is shared with felix where it does.
ANA_PORT_PORT_CFG - this is a Frame Analyzer block register, phylink
                    should be the one touching them, deleted.

Other changes:

- The old phylib registration code was in mscc_ocelot_init_ports. It is
  hard to work with 2 levels of indentation already in, and with hard to
  follow teardown logic. The new phylink registration code was moved
  inside ocelot_probe_port(), right between alloc_etherdev() and
  register_netdev(). It could not be done before (=> outside of)
  ocelot_probe_port() because ocelot_probe_port() allocates the struct
  ocelot_port which we then use to assign ocelot_port->phy_mode to. It
  is more preferable to me to have all PHY handling logic inside the
  same function.
- On the same topic: struct ocelot_port_private :: serdes is only used
  in ocelot_port_open to set the SERDES protocol to Ethernet. This is
  logically a runtime invariant and can be done just once, when the port
  registers with phylink. We therefore don't even need to keep the
  serdes reference inside struct ocelot_port_private, or to use the devm
  variant of of_phy_get().
- Phylink needs a valid phy-mode for phylink_create() to succeed, and
  the existing device tree bindings in arch/mips/boot/dts/mscc/ocelot_pcb120.dts
  don't define one for the internal PHY ports. So we patch
  PHY_INTERFACE_MODE_NA into PHY_INTERFACE_MODE_INTERNAL.
- There was a strategically placed:

	switch (priv->phy_mode) {
	case PHY_INTERFACE_MODE_NA:
	        continue;

  which made the code skip the serdes initialization for the internal
  PHY ports. Frankly that is not all that obvious, so now we explicitly
  initialize the serdes under an "if" condition and not rely on code
  jumps, so everything is clearer.
- There was a write of OCELOT_SPEED_1000 to DEV_CLOCK_CFG for QSGMII
  ports. Since that is in fact the default value for the register field
  DEV_CLOCK_CFG_LINK_SPEED, I can only guess the intention was to clear
  the adjacent fields, MAC_TX_RST and MAC_RX_RST, aka take the port out
  of reset, which does match the comment. I don't even want to know why
  this code is placed there, but if there is indeed an issue that all
  ports that share a QSGMII lane must all be up, then this logic is
  already buggy, since mscc_ocelot_init_ports iterates using
  for_each_available_child_of_node, so nobody prevents the user from
  putting a 'status = "disabled";' for some QSGMII ports which would
  break the driver's assumption.
  In any case, in the eventuality that I'm right, we would have yet
  another issue if ocelot_phylink_mac_link_down would reset those ports
  and that would be forbidden, so since the ocelot_adjust_link logic did
  not do that (maybe for a reason), add another quirk to preserve the
  old logic.

The ocelot driver teardown goes through all ports in one fell swoop.
When initialization of one port fails, the ocelot->ports[port] pointer
for that is reset to NULL, and teardown is done only for non-NULL ports,
so there is no reason to do partial teardowns, let the central
mscc_ocelot_release_ports() do its job.

Tested bind, unbind, rebind, link up, link down, speed change on mock-up
hardware (modified the driver to probe on Felix VSC9959). Also
regression tested the felix DSA driver. Could not test the Ocelot
specific bits (PCS1G, SERDES, device tree bindings).

Signed-off-by: Vladimir Oltean <vladimir.oltean@nxp.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2021-08-16 11:19:34 +01:00
Vladimir Oltean 46efe4efb9 net: dsa: felix: stop calling ocelot_port_{enable,disable}
ocelot_port_enable touches ANA_PORT_PORT_CFG, which has the following
fields:

- LOCKED_PORTMOVE_CPU, LEARNDROP, LEARNCPU, LEARNAUTO, RECV_ENA, all of
  which are written with their hardware default values, also runtime
  invariants. So it makes no sense to write these during every .ndo_open.

- PORTID_VAL: this field has an out-of-reset value of zero for all ports
  and must be initialized by software. Additionally, the
  ocelot_setup_logical_port_ids() code path sets up different logical
  port IDs for the ports in a hardware LAG, and we absolutely don't want
  .ndo_open to interfere there and reset those values.

So in fact the write from ocelot_port_enable can better be moved to
ocelot_init_port, and the .ndo_open hook deleted.

ocelot_port_disable touches DEV_MAC_ENA_CFG and QSYS_SWITCH_PORT_MODE_PORT_ENA,
in an attempt to undo what ocelot_adjust_link did. But since .ndo_stop
does not get called each time the link falls (i.e. this isn't a
substitute for .phylink_mac_link_down), felix already does better at
this by writing those registers already in felix_phylink_mac_link_down.

So keep ocelot_port_disable (for now, until ocelot is converted to
phylink too), and just delete the felix call to it, which is not
necessary.

Signed-off-by: Vladimir Oltean <vladimir.oltean@nxp.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2021-08-16 11:19:34 +01:00
Arnd Bergmann e5f3155267 ethernet: fix PTP_1588_CLOCK dependencies
The 'imply' keyword does not do what most people think it does, it only
politely asks Kconfig to turn on another symbol, but does not prevent
it from being disabled manually or built as a loadable module when the
user is built-in. In the ICE driver, the latter now causes a link failure:

aarch64-linux-ld: drivers/net/ethernet/intel/ice/ice_main.o: in function `ice_eth_ioctl':
ice_main.c:(.text+0x13b0): undefined reference to `ice_ptp_get_ts_config'
ice_main.c:(.text+0x13b0): relocation truncated to fit: R_AARCH64_CALL26 against undefined symbol `ice_ptp_get_ts_config'
aarch64-linux-ld: ice_main.c:(.text+0x13bc): undefined reference to `ice_ptp_set_ts_config'
ice_main.c:(.text+0x13bc): relocation truncated to fit: R_AARCH64_CALL26 against undefined symbol `ice_ptp_set_ts_config'
aarch64-linux-ld: drivers/net/ethernet/intel/ice/ice_main.o: in function `ice_prepare_for_reset':
ice_main.c:(.text+0x31fc): undefined reference to `ice_ptp_release'
ice_main.c:(.text+0x31fc): relocation truncated to fit: R_AARCH64_CALL26 against undefined symbol `ice_ptp_release'
aarch64-linux-ld: drivers/net/ethernet/intel/ice/ice_main.o: in function `ice_rebuild':

This is a recurring problem in many drivers, and we have discussed
it several times befores, without reaching a consensus. I'm providing
a link to the previous email thread for reference, which discusses
some related problems.

To solve the dependency issue better than the 'imply' keyword, introduce a
separate Kconfig symbol "CONFIG_PTP_1588_CLOCK_OPTIONAL" that any driver
can depend on if it is able to use PTP support when available, but works
fine without it. Whenever CONFIG_PTP_1588_CLOCK=m, those drivers are
then prevented from being built-in, the same way as with a 'depends on
PTP_1588_CLOCK || !PTP_1588_CLOCK' dependency that does the same trick,
but that can be rather confusing when you first see it.

Since this should cover the dependencies correctly, the IS_REACHABLE()
hack in the header is no longer needed now, and can be turned back
into a normal IS_ENABLED() check. Any driver that gets the dependency
wrong will now cause a link time failure rather than being unable to use
PTP support when that is in a loadable module.

However, the two recently added ptp_get_vclocks_index() and
ptp_convert_timestamp() interfaces are only called from builtin code with
ethtool and socket timestamps, so keep the current behavior by stubbing
those out completely when PTP is in a loadable module. This should be
addressed properly in a follow-up.

As Richard suggested, we may want to actually turn PTP support into a
'bool' option later on, preventing it from being a loadable module
altogether, which would be one way to solve the problem with the ethtool
interface.

Fixes: 06c16d89d2 ("ice: register 1588 PTP clock device object for E810 devices")
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/netdev/20210804121318.337276-1-arnd@kernel.org/
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/netdev/CAK8P3a06enZOf=XyZ+zcAwBczv41UuCTz+=0FMf2gBz1_cOnZQ@mail.gmail.com/
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/netdev/CAK8P3a3=eOxE-K25754+fB_-i_0BZzf9a9RfPTX3ppSwu9WZXw@mail.gmail.com/
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/netdev/20210726084540.3282344-1-arnd@kernel.org/
Acked-by: Shannon Nelson <snelson@pensando.io>
Acked-by: Jacob Keller <jacob.e.keller@intel.com>
Acked-by: Richard Cochran <richardcochran@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Vladimir Oltean <vladimir.oltean@nxp.com>
Signed-off-by: Arnd Bergmann <arnd@arndb.de>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20210812183509.1362782-1-arnd@kernel.org
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
2021-08-13 17:49:05 -07:00
Vladimir Oltean 328621f613 net: dsa: tag_8021q: absorb dsa_8021q_setup into dsa_tag_8021q_{,un}register
Right now, setting up tag_8021q is a 2-step operation for a driver,
first the context structure needs to be created, then the VLANs need to
be installed on the ports. A similar thing is true for teardown.

Merge the 2 steps into the register/unregister methods, to be as
transparent as possible for the driver as to what tag_8021q does behind
the scenes. This also gets rid of the funny "bool setup == true means
setup, == false means teardown" API that tag_8021q used to expose.

Note that dsa_tag_8021q_register() must be called at least in the
.setup() driver method and never earlier (like in the driver probe
function). This is because the DSA switch tree is not initialized at
probe time, and the cross-chip notifiers will not work.

For symmetry with .setup(), the unregister method should be put in
.teardown().

Signed-off-by: Vladimir Oltean <vladimir.oltean@nxp.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2021-07-20 06:36:42 -07:00
Vladimir Oltean 5da11eb407 net: dsa: make tag_8021q operations part of the core
Make tag_8021q a more central element of DSA and move the 2 driver
specific operations outside of struct dsa_8021q_context (which is
supposed to hold dynamic data and not really constant function
pointers).

Signed-off-by: Vladimir Oltean <vladimir.oltean@nxp.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2021-07-20 06:36:42 -07:00
Vladimir Oltean d7b1fd520d net: dsa: let the core manage the tag_8021q context
The basic problem description is as follows:

Be there 3 switches in a daisy chain topology:

                                             |
    sw0p0     sw0p1     sw0p2     sw0p3     sw0p4
 [  user ] [  user ] [  user ] [  dsa  ] [  cpu  ]
                                   |
                                   +---------+
                                             |
    sw1p0     sw1p1     sw1p2     sw1p3     sw1p4
 [  user ] [  user ] [  user ] [  dsa  ] [  dsa  ]
                                   |
                                   +---------+
                                             |
    sw2p0     sw2p1     sw2p2     sw2p3     sw2p4
 [  user ] [  user ] [  user ] [  user ] [  dsa  ]

The CPU will not be able to ping through the user ports of the
bottom-most switch (like for example sw2p0), simply because tag_8021q
was not coded up for this scenario - it has always assumed DSA switch
trees with a single switch.

To add support for the topology above, we must admit that the RX VLAN of
sw2p0 must be added on some ports of switches 0 and 1 as well. This is
in fact a textbook example of thing that can use the cross-chip notifier
framework that DSA has set up in switch.c.

There is only one problem: core DSA (switch.c) is not able right now to
make the connection between a struct dsa_switch *ds and a struct
dsa_8021q_context *ctx. Right now, it is drivers who call into
tag_8021q.c and always provide a struct dsa_8021q_context *ctx pointer,
and tag_8021q.c calls them back with the .tag_8021q_vlan_{add,del}
methods.

But with cross-chip notifiers, it is possible for tag_8021q to call
drivers without drivers having ever asked for anything. A good example
is right above: when sw2p0 wants to set itself up for tag_8021q,
the .tag_8021q_vlan_add method needs to be called for switches 1 and 0,
so that they transport sw2p0's VLANs towards the CPU without dropping
them.

So instead of letting drivers manage the tag_8021q context, add a
tag_8021q_ctx pointer inside of struct dsa_switch, which will be
populated when dsa_tag_8021q_register() returns success.

The patch is fairly long-winded because we are partly reverting commit
5899ee367a ("net: dsa: tag_8021q: add a context structure") which made
the driver-facing tag_8021q API use "ctx" instead of "ds". Now that we
can access "ctx" directly from "ds", this is no longer needed.

Signed-off-by: Vladimir Oltean <vladimir.oltean@nxp.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2021-07-20 06:36:42 -07:00
Vladimir Oltean cedf467064 net: dsa: tag_8021q: create dsa_tag_8021q_{register,unregister} helpers
In preparation of moving tag_8021q to core DSA, move all initialization
and teardown related to tag_8021q which is currently done by drivers in
2 functions called "register" and "unregister". These will gather more
functionality in future patches, which will better justify the chosen
naming scheme.

Signed-off-by: Vladimir Oltean <vladimir.oltean@nxp.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2021-07-20 06:36:42 -07:00
Vladimir Oltean de274be32c net: dsa: felix: set TX flow control according to the phylink_mac_link_up resolution
Instead of relying on the static initialization done by ocelot_init_port()
which enables flow control unconditionally, set SYS_PAUSE_CFG_PAUSE_ENA
according to the parameters negotiated by the PHY.

Signed-off-by: Vladimir Oltean <vladimir.oltean@nxp.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2021-06-08 16:35:14 -07:00
Yang Yingliang f1fe19c2cb net: mscc: ocelot: check return value after calling platform_get_resource()
It will cause null-ptr-deref if platform_get_resource() returns NULL,
we need check the return value.

Signed-off-by: Yang Yingliang <yangyingliang@huawei.com>
Reviewed-by: Vladimir Oltean <vladimir.oltean@nxp.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2021-06-07 14:02:25 -07:00
Michael Walle 297c4de6f7 net: dsa: felix: re-enable TAS guard band mode
Commit 316bcffe44 ("net: dsa: felix: disable always guard band bit for
TAS config") disabled the guard band and broke 802.3Qbv compliance.

There are two issues here:
 (1) Without the guard band the end of the scheduling window could be
     overrun by a frame in transit.
 (2) Frames that don't fit into a configured window will still be sent.

The reason for both issues is that the switch will schedule the _start_
of a frame transmission inside the predefined window without taking the
length of the frame into account. Thus, we'll need the guard band which
will close the gate early, so that a complete frame can still be sent.
Revert the commit and add a note.

For a lengthy discussion see [1].

[1] https://lore.kernel.org/netdev/c7618025da6723418c56a54fe4683bd7@walle.cc/

Fixes: 316bcffe44 ("net: dsa: felix: disable always guard band bit for TAS config")
Signed-off-by: Michael Walle <michael@walle.cc>
Reviewed-by: Vladimir Oltean <vladimir.oltean@nxp.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2021-05-10 14:48:55 -07:00
Yangbo Lu 682eaad93e net: mscc: ocelot: convert to ocelot_port_txtstamp_request()
Convert to a common ocelot_port_txtstamp_request() for TX timestamp
request handling.

Signed-off-by: Yangbo Lu <yangbo.lu@nxp.com>
Reviewed-by: Vladimir Oltean <vladimir.oltean@nxp.com>
Acked-by: Richard Cochran <richardcochran@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2021-04-27 14:10:15 -07:00
Yangbo Lu c4b364ce12 net: dsa: free skb->cb usage in core driver
Free skb->cb usage in core driver and let device drivers decide to
use or not. The reason having a DSA_SKB_CB(skb)->clone was because
dsa_skb_tx_timestamp() which may set the clone pointer was called
before p->xmit() which would use the clone if any, and the device
driver has no way to initialize the clone pointer.

This patch just put memset(skb->cb, 0, sizeof(skb->cb)) at beginning
of dsa_slave_xmit(). Some new features in the future, like one-step
timestamp may need more bytes of skb->cb to use in
dsa_skb_tx_timestamp(), and p->xmit().

Signed-off-by: Yangbo Lu <yangbo.lu@nxp.com>
Acked-by: Richard Cochran <richardcochran@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2021-04-27 14:10:15 -07:00
Yangbo Lu 5c5416f5d4 net: dsa: no longer clone skb in core driver
It was a waste to clone skb directly in dsa_skb_tx_timestamp().
For one-step timestamping, a clone was not needed. For any failure of
port_txtstamp (this may usually happen), the skb clone had to be freed.

So this patch moves skb cloning for tx timestamp out of dsa core, and
let drivers clone skb in port_txtstamp if they really need.

Signed-off-by: Yangbo Lu <yangbo.lu@nxp.com>
Tested-by: Kurt Kanzenbach <kurt@linutronix.de>
Acked-by: Richard Cochran <richardcochran@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2021-04-27 14:10:15 -07:00
Yangbo Lu cf536ea3c7 net: dsa: no longer identify PTP packet in core driver
Move ptp_classify_raw out of dsa core driver for handling tx
timestamp request. Let device drivers do this if they want.
Not all drivers want to limit tx timestamping for only PTP
packet.

Signed-off-by: Yangbo Lu <yangbo.lu@nxp.com>
Tested-by: Kurt Kanzenbach <kurt@linutronix.de>
Acked-by: Richard Cochran <richardcochran@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2021-04-27 14:10:15 -07:00
Yangbo Lu cfd12c06cd net: dsa: check tx timestamp request in core driver
Check tx timestamp request in core driver at very beginning of
dsa_skb_tx_timestamp(), so that most skbs not requiring tx
timestamp just return. And drop such checking in device drivers.

Signed-off-by: Yangbo Lu <yangbo.lu@nxp.com>
Tested-by: Kurt Kanzenbach <kurt@linutronix.de>
Reviewed-by: Florian Fainelli <f.fainelli@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Richard Cochran <richardcochran@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2021-04-27 14:10:15 -07:00
Xiaoliang Yang 316bcffe44 net: dsa: felix: disable always guard band bit for TAS config
ALWAYS_GUARD_BAND_SCH_Q bit in TAS config register is descripted as
this:
	0: Guard band is implemented for nonschedule queues to schedule
	   queues transition.
	1: Guard band is implemented for any queue to schedule queue
	   transition.

The driver set guard band be implemented for any queue to schedule queue
transition before, which will make each GCL time slot reserve a guard
band time that can pass the max SDU frame. Because guard band time could
not be set in tc-taprio now, it will use about 12000ns to pass 1500B max
SDU. This limits each GCL time interval to be more than 12000ns.

This patch change the guard band to be only implemented for nonschedule
queues to schedule queues transition, so that there is no need to reserve
guard band on each GCL. Users can manually add guard band time for each
schedule queues in their configuration if they want.

Signed-off-by: Xiaoliang Yang <xiaoliang.yang_1@nxp.com>
Reviewed-by: Vladimir Oltean <vladimir.oltean@nxp.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2021-04-20 16:09:42 -07:00
Guobin Huang a180be79db net: mscc: ocelot: remove redundant dev_err call in vsc9959_mdio_bus_alloc()
There is a error message within devm_ioremap_resource
already, so remove the dev_err call to avoid redundant
error message.

Reported-by: Hulk Robot <hulkci@huawei.com>
Signed-off-by: Guobin Huang <huangguobin4@huawei.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2021-03-29 13:16:44 -07:00
Vladimir Oltean e4bd44e89d net: ocelot: replay switchdev events when joining bridge
The premise of this change is that the switchdev port attributes and
objects offloaded by ocelot might have been missed when we are joining
an already existing bridge port, such as a bonding interface.

The patch pulls these switchdev attributes and objects from the bridge,
on behalf of the 'bridge port' net device which might be either the
ocelot switch interface, or the bonding upper interface.

The ocelot_net.c belongs strictly to the switchdev ocelot driver, while
ocelot.c is part of a library shared with the DSA felix driver.
The ocelot_port_bridge_leave function (part of the common library) used
to call ocelot_port_vlan_filtering(false), something which is not
necessary for DSA, since the framework deals with that already there.
So we move this function to ocelot_switchdev_unsync, which is specific
to the switchdev driver.

The code movement described above makes ocelot_port_bridge_leave no
longer return an error code, so we change its type from int to void.

Signed-off-by: Vladimir Oltean <vladimir.oltean@nxp.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2021-03-23 14:49:06 -07:00
Horatiu Vultur a026c50b59 net: dsa: felix: Add support for MRP
Implement functions 'port_mrp_add', 'port_mrp_del',
'port_mrp_add_ring_role' and 'port_mrp_del_ring_role' to call the mrp
functions from ocelot.

Also all MRP frames that arrive to CPU on queue number OCELOT_MRP_CPUQ
will be forward by the SW.

Signed-off-by: Horatiu Vultur <horatiu.vultur@microchip.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2021-02-16 14:47:46 -08:00
Vladimir Oltean 6b73b7c96a net: dsa: felix: perform teardown on error in felix_setup
If the driver fails to probe, it would be nice to not leak memory.

Signed-off-by: Vladimir Oltean <vladimir.oltean@nxp.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2021-02-16 13:52:57 -08:00
Vladimir Oltean 42b5adbbac net: dsa: felix: don't deinitialize unused ports
ocelot_init_port is called only if dsa_is_unused_port == false, however
ocelot_deinit_port is called unconditionally. This causes a warning in
the skb_queue_purge inside ocelot_deinit_port saying that the spin lock
protecting ocelot_port->tx_skbs was not initialized.

Fixes: e5fb512d81 ("net: mscc: ocelot: deinitialize only initialized ports")
Signed-off-by: Vladimir Oltean <vladimir.oltean@nxp.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2021-02-16 13:52:14 -08:00
Vladimir Oltean 89153ed6eb net: dsa: propagate extack to .port_vlan_filtering
Some drivers can't dynamically change the VLAN filtering option, or
impose some restrictions, it would be nice to propagate this info
through netlink instead of printing it to a kernel log that might never
be read. Also netlink extack includes the module that emitted the
message, which means that it's easier to figure out which ones are
driver-generated errors as opposed to command misuse.

Signed-off-by: Vladimir Oltean <vladimir.oltean@nxp.com>
Reviewed-by: Florian Fainelli <f.fainelli@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2021-02-14 17:38:12 -08:00
Vladimir Oltean 31046a5fd9 net: dsa: propagate extack to .port_vlan_add
Allow drivers to communicate their restrictions to user space directly,
instead of printing to the kernel log. Where the conversion would have
been lossy and things like VLAN ID could no longer be conveyed (due to
the lack of support for printf format specifier in netlink extack), I
chose to keep the messages in full form to the kernel log only, and
leave it up to individual driver maintainers to move more messages to
extack.

Signed-off-by: Vladimir Oltean <vladimir.oltean@nxp.com>
Reviewed-by: Florian Fainelli <f.fainelli@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2021-02-14 17:38:11 -08:00
Vladimir Oltean 0a6f17c6ae net: dsa: tag_ocelot_8021q: add support for PTP timestamping
For TX timestamping, we use the felix_txtstamp method which is common
with the regular (non-8021q) ocelot tagger. This method says that skb
deferral is needed, prepares a timestamp request ID, and puts a clone of
the skb in a queue waiting for the timestamp IRQ.

felix_txtstamp is called by dsa_skb_tx_timestamp() just before the
tagger's xmit method. In the tagger xmit, we divert the packets
classified by dsa_skb_tx_timestamp() as PTP towards the MMIO-based
injection registers, and we declare them as dead towards dsa_slave_xmit.
If not PTP, we proceed with normal tag_8021q stuff.

Then the timestamp IRQ fires, the clone queued up from felix_txtstamp is
matched to the TX timestamp retrieved from the switch's FIFO based on
the timestamp request ID, and the clone is delivered to the stack.

On RX, thanks to the VCAP IS2 rule that redirects the frames with an
EtherType for 1588 towards two destinations:
- the CPU port module (for MMIO based extraction) and
- if the "no XTR IRQ" workaround is in place, the dsa_8021q CPU port
the relevant data path processing starts in the ptp_classify_raw BPF
classifier installed by DSA in the RX data path (post tagger, which is
completely unaware that it saw a PTP packet).

This time we can't reuse the same implementation of .port_rxtstamp that
also works with the default ocelot tagger. That is because felix_rxtstamp
is given an skb with a freshly stripped DSA header, and it says "I don't
need deferral for its RX timestamp, it's right in it, let me show you";
and it just points to the header right behind skb->data, from where it
unpacks the timestamp and annotates the skb with it.

The same thing cannot happen with tag_ocelot_8021q, because for one
thing, the skb did not have an extraction frame header in the first
place, but a VLAN tag with no timestamp information. So the code paths
in felix_rxtstamp for the regular and 8021q tagger are completely
independent. With tag_8021q, the timestamp must come from the packet's
duplicate delivered to the CPU port module, but there is potentially
complex logic to be handled [ and prone to reordering ] if we were to
just start reading packets from the CPU port module, and try to match
them to the one we received over Ethernet and which needs an RX
timestamp. So we do something simple: we tell DSA "give me some time to
think" (we request skb deferral by returning false from .port_rxtstamp)
and we just drop the frame we got over Ethernet with no attempt to match
it to anything - we just treat it as a notification that there's data to
be processed from the CPU port module's queues. Then we proceed to read
the packets from those, one by one, which we deliver up the stack,
timestamped, using netif_rx - the same function that any driver would
use anyway if it needed RX timestamp deferral. So the assumption is that
we'll come across the PTP packet that triggered the CPU extraction
notification eventually, but we don't know when exactly. Thanks to the
VCAP IS2 trap/redirect rule and the exclusion of the CPU port module
from the flooding replicators, only PTP frames should be present in the
CPU port module's RX queues anyway.

There is just one conflict between the VCAP IS2 trapping rule and the
semantics of the BPF classifier. Namely, ptp_classify_raw() deems
general messages as non-timestampable, but still, those are trapped to
the CPU port module since they have an EtherType of ETH_P_1588. So, if
the "no XTR IRQ" workaround is in place, we need to run another BPF
classifier on the frames extracted over MMIO, to avoid duplicates being
sent to the stack (once over Ethernet, once over MMIO). It doesn't look
like it's possible to install VCAP IS2 rules based on keys extracted
from the 1588 frame headers.

Signed-off-by: Vladimir Oltean <vladimir.oltean@nxp.com>
Reviewed-by: Florian Fainelli <f.fainelli@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2021-02-14 17:31:44 -08:00
Vladimir Oltean c8c0ba4fe2 net: dsa: felix: setup MMIO filtering rules for PTP when using tag_8021q
Since the tag_8021q tagger is software-defined, it has no means by
itself for retrieving hardware timestamps of PTP event messages.

Because we do want to support PTP on ocelot even with tag_8021q, we need
to use the CPU port module for that. The RX timestamp is present in the
Extraction Frame Header. And because we can't use NPI mode which redirects
the CPU queues to an "external CPU" (meaning the ARM CPU running Linux),
then we need to poll the CPU port module through the MMIO registers to
retrieve TX and RX timestamps.

Sadly, on NXP LS1028A, the Felix switch was integrated into the SoC
without wiring the extraction IRQ line to the ARM GIC. So, if we want to
be notified of any PTP packets received on the CPU port module, we have
a problem.

There is a possible workaround, which is to use the Ethernet CPU port as
a notification channel that packets are available on the CPU port module
as well. When a PTP packet is received by the DSA tagger (without timestamp,
of course), we go to the CPU extraction queues, poll for it there, then
we drop the original Ethernet packet and masquerade the packet retrieved
over MMIO (plus the timestamp) as the original when we inject it up the
stack.

Create a quirk in struct felix is selected by the Felix driver (but not
by Seville, since that doesn't support PTP at all). We want to do this
such that the workaround is minimally invasive for future switches that
don't require this workaround.

The only traffic for which we need timestamps is PTP traffic, so add a
redirection rule to the CPU port module for this. Currently we only have
the need for PTP over L2, so redirection rules for UDP ports 319 and 320
are TBD for now.

Note that for the workaround of matching of PTP-over-Ethernet-port with
PTP-over-MMIO queues to work properly, both channels need to be
absolutely lossless. There are two parts to achieving that:
- We keep flow control enabled on the tag_8021q CPU port
- We put the DSA master interface in promiscuous mode, so it will never
  drop a PTP frame (for the profiles we are interested in, these are
  sent to the multicast MAC addresses of 01-80-c2-00-00-0e and
  01-1b-19-00-00-00).

Signed-off-by: Vladimir Oltean <vladimir.oltean@nxp.com>
Reviewed-by: Florian Fainelli <f.fainelli@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2021-02-14 17:31:44 -08:00
Vladimir Oltean 7c4bb540e9 net: dsa: tag_ocelot: create separate tagger for Seville
The ocelot tagger is a hot mess currently, it relies on memory
initialized by the attached driver for basic frame transmission.
This is against all that DSA tagging protocols stand for, which is that
the transmission and reception of a DSA-tagged frame, the data path,
should be independent from the switch control path, because the tag
protocol is in principle hot-pluggable and reusable across switches
(even if in practice it wasn't until very recently). But if another
driver like dsa_loop wants to make use of tag_ocelot, it couldn't.

This was done to have common code between Felix and Ocelot, which have
one bit difference in the frame header format. Quoting from commit
67c2404922 ("net: dsa: felix: create a template for the DSA tags on
xmit"):

    Other alternatives have been analyzed, such as:
    - Create a separate tag_seville.c: too much code duplication for just 1
      bit field difference.
    - Create a separate DSA_TAG_PROTO_SEVILLE under tag_ocelot.c, just like
      tag_brcm.c, which would have a separate .xmit function. Again, too
      much code duplication for just 1 bit field difference.
    - Allocate the template from the init function of the tag_ocelot.c
      module, instead of from the driver: couldn't figure out a method of
      accessing the correct port template corresponding to the correct
      tagger in the .xmit function.

The really interesting part is that Seville should have had its own
tagging protocol defined - it is not compatible on the wire with Ocelot,
even for that single bit. In principle, a packet generated by
DSA_TAG_PROTO_OCELOT when booted on NXP LS1028A would look in a certain
way, but when booted on NXP T1040 it would look differently. The reverse
is also true: a packet generated by a Seville switch would be
interpreted incorrectly by Wireshark if it was told it was generated by
an Ocelot switch.

Actually things are a bit more nuanced. If we concentrate only on the
DSA tag, what I said above is true, but Ocelot/Seville also support an
optional DSA tag prefix, which can be short or long, and it is possible
to distinguish the two taggers based on an integer constant put in that
prefix. Nonetheless, creating a separate tagger is still justified,
since the tag prefix is optional, and without it, there is again no way
to distinguish.

Claiming backwards binary compatibility is a bit more tough, since I've
already changed the format of tag_ocelot once, in commit 5124197ce5
("net: dsa: tag_ocelot: use a short prefix on both ingress and egress").
Therefore I am not very concerned with treating this as a bugfix and
backporting it to stable kernels (which would be another mess due to the
fact that there would be lots of conflicts with the other DSA_TAG_PROTO*
definitions). It's just simpler to say that the string values of the
taggers have ABI value starting with kernel 5.12, which will be when the
changing of tag protocol via /sys/class/net/<dsa-master>/dsa/tagging
goes live.

Signed-off-by: Vladimir Oltean <vladimir.oltean@nxp.com>
Reviewed-by: Florian Fainelli <f.fainelli@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2021-02-14 17:31:44 -08:00
Vladimir Oltean 40d3f295b5 net: mscc: ocelot: use common tag parsing code with DSA
The Injection Frame Header and Extraction Frame Header that the switch
prepends to frames over the NPI port is also prepended to frames
delivered over the CPU port module's queues.

Let's unify the handling of the frame headers by making the ocelot
driver call some helpers exported by the DSA tagger. Among other things,
this allows us to get rid of the strange cpu_to_be32 when transmitting
the Injection Frame Header on ocelot, since the packing API uses
network byte order natively (when "quirks" is 0).

The comments above ocelot_gen_ifh talk about setting pop_cnt to 3, and
the cpu extraction queue mask to something, but the code doesn't do it,
so we don't do it either.

Signed-off-by: Vladimir Oltean <vladimir.oltean@nxp.com>
Reviewed-by: Florian Fainelli <f.fainelli@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2021-02-14 17:31:44 -08:00
Vladimir Oltean 421741ea56 net: mscc: ocelot: offload bridge port flags to device
We should not be unconditionally enabling address learning, since doing
that is actively detrimential when a port is standalone and not offloading
a bridge. Namely, if a port in the switch is standalone and others are
offloading the bridge, then we could enter a situation where we learn an
address towards the standalone port, but the bridged ports could not
forward the packet there, because the CPU is the only path between the
standalone and the bridged ports. The solution of course is to not
enable address learning unless the bridge asks for it.

We need to set up the initial port flags for no learning and flooding
everything, and also when the port joins and leaves the bridge.
The flood configuration was already configured ok for standalone mode
in ocelot_init, we just need to disable learning in ocelot_init_port.

Signed-off-by: Vladimir Oltean <vladimir.oltean@nxp.com>
Reviewed-by: Alexandre Belloni <alexandre.belloni@bootlin.com>
Reviewed-by: Florian Fainelli <f.fainelli@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2021-02-12 17:08:05 -08:00
Vladimir Oltean b360d94f1b net: mscc: ocelot: use separate flooding PGID for broadcast
In preparation of offloading the bridge port flags which have
independent settings for unknown multicast and for broadcast, we should
also start reserving one destination Port Group ID for the flooding of
broadcast packets, to allow configuring it individually.

Signed-off-by: Vladimir Oltean <vladimir.oltean@nxp.com>
Reviewed-by: Florian Fainelli <f.fainelli@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2021-02-12 17:08:05 -08:00
Vladimir Oltean 6edb9e8d45 net: dsa: felix: restore multicast flood to CPU when NPI tagger reinitializes
ocelot_init sets up PGID_MC to include the CPU port module, and that is
fine, but the ocelot-8021q tagger removes the CPU port module from the
unknown multicast replicator. So after a transition from the default
ocelot tagger towards ocelot-8021q and then again towards ocelot,
multicast flooding towards the CPU port module will be disabled.

Fixes: e21268efbe ("net: dsa: felix: perform switch setup for tag_8021q")
Signed-off-by: Vladimir Oltean <vladimir.oltean@nxp.com>
Reviewed-by: Florian Fainelli <f.fainelli@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2021-02-12 17:08:05 -08:00
David S. Miller dc9d87581d Merge git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/netdev/net 2021-02-10 13:30:12 -08:00
Vladimir Oltean eb4733d7cf net: dsa: felix: implement port flushing on .phylink_mac_link_down
There are several issues which may be seen when the link goes down while
forwarding traffic, all of which can be attributed to the fact that the
port flushing procedure from the reference manual was not closely
followed.

With flow control enabled on both the ingress port and the egress port,
it may happen when a link goes down that Ethernet packets are in flight.
In flow control mode, frames are held back and not dropped. When there
is enough traffic in flight (example: iperf3 TCP), then the ingress port
might enter congestion and never exit that state. This is a problem,
because it is the egress port's link that went down, and that has caused
the inability of the ingress port to send packets to any other port.
This is solved by flushing the egress port's queues when it goes down.

There is also a problem when performing stream splitting for
IEEE 802.1CB traffic (not yet upstream, but a sort of multicast,
basically). There, if one port from the destination ports mask goes
down, splitting the stream towards the other destinations will no longer
be performed. This can be traced down to this line:

	ocelot_port_writel(ocelot_port, 0, DEV_MAC_ENA_CFG);

which should have been instead, as per the reference manual:

	ocelot_port_rmwl(ocelot_port, 0, DEV_MAC_ENA_CFG_RX_ENA,
			 DEV_MAC_ENA_CFG);

Basically only DEV_MAC_ENA_CFG_RX_ENA should be disabled, but not
DEV_MAC_ENA_CFG_TX_ENA - I don't have further insight into why that is
the case, but apparently multicasting to several ports will cause issues
if at least one of them doesn't have DEV_MAC_ENA_CFG_TX_ENA set.

I am not sure what the state of the Ocelot VSC7514 driver is, but
probably not as bad as Felix/Seville, since VSC7514 uses phylib and has
the following in ocelot_adjust_link:

	if (!phydev->link)
		return;

therefore the port is not really put down when the link is lost, unlike
the DSA drivers which use .phylink_mac_link_down for that.

Nonetheless, I put ocelot_port_flush() in the common ocelot.c because it
needs to access some registers from drivers/net/ethernet/mscc/ocelot_rew.h
which are not exported in include/soc/mscc/ and a bugfix patch should
probably not move headers around.

Fixes: bdeced75b1 ("net: dsa: felix: Add PCS operations for PHYLINK")
Signed-off-by: Vladimir Oltean <vladimir.oltean@nxp.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2021-02-09 11:41:11 -08:00
Vladimir Oltean 8fe6832e96 net: dsa: felix: propagate the LAG offload ops towards the ocelot lib
The ocelot switch has been supporting LAG offload since its initial
commit, however felix could not make use of that, due to lack of a LAG
abstraction in DSA. Now that we have that, let's forward DSA's calls
towards the ocelot library, who will deal with setting up the bonding.

Signed-off-by: Vladimir Oltean <vladimir.oltean@nxp.com>
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
2021-02-06 14:51:51 -08:00
Vladimir Oltean e21268efbe net: dsa: felix: perform switch setup for tag_8021q
Unlike sja1105, the only other user of the software-defined tag_8021q.c
tagger format, the implementation we choose for the Felix DSA switch
driver preserves full functionality under a vlan_filtering bridge
(i.e. IP termination works through the DSA user ports under all
circumstances).

The tag_8021q protocol just wants:
- Identifying the ingress switch port based on the RX VLAN ID, as seen
  by the CPU. We achieve this by using the TCAM engines (which are also
  used for tc-flower offload) to push the RX VLAN as a second, outer
  tag, on egress towards the CPU port.
- Steering traffic injected into the switch from the network stack
  towards the correct front port based on the TX VLAN, and consuming
  (popping) that header on the switch's egress.

A tc-flower pseudocode of the static configuration done by the driver
would look like this:

$ tc qdisc add dev <cpu-port> clsact
$ for eth in swp0 swp1 swp2 swp3; do \
	tc filter add dev <cpu-port> egress flower indev ${eth} \
		action vlan push id <rxvlan> protocol 802.1ad; \
	tc filter add dev <cpu-port> ingress protocol 802.1Q flower
		vlan_id <txvlan> action vlan pop \
		action mirred egress redirect dev ${eth}; \
done

but of course since DSA does not register network interfaces for the CPU
port, this configuration would be impossible for the user to do. Also,
due to the same reason, it is impossible for the user to inadvertently
delete these rules using tc. These rules do not collide in any way with
tc-flower, they just consume some TCAM space, which is something we can
live with.

Signed-off-by: Vladimir Oltean <vladimir.oltean@nxp.com>
Reviewed-by: Florian Fainelli <f.fainelli@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
2021-01-29 21:25:27 -08:00
Vladimir Oltean 7c83a7c539 net: dsa: add a second tagger for Ocelot switches based on tag_8021q
There are use cases for which the existing tagger, based on the NPI
(Node Processor Interface) functionality, is insufficient.

Namely:
- Frames injected through the NPI port bypass the frame analyzer, so no
  source address learning is performed, no TSN stream classification,
  etc.
- Flow control is not functional over an NPI port (PAUSE frames are
  encapsulated in the same Extraction Frame Header as all other frames)
- There can be at most one NPI port configured for an Ocelot switch. But
  in NXP LS1028A and T1040 there are two Ethernet CPU ports. The non-NPI
  port is currently either disabled, or operated as a plain user port
  (albeit an internally-facing one). Having the ability to configure the
  two CPU ports symmetrically could pave the way for e.g. creating a LAG
  between them, to increase bandwidth seamlessly for the system.

So there is a desire to have an alternative to the NPI mode. This change
keeps the default tagger for the Seville and Felix switches as "ocelot",
but it can be changed via the following device attribute:

echo ocelot-8021q > /sys/class/<dsa-master>/dsa/tagging

Signed-off-by: Vladimir Oltean <vladimir.oltean@nxp.com>
Reviewed-by: Florian Fainelli <f.fainelli@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
2021-01-29 21:25:27 -08:00
Vladimir Oltean adb3dccf09 net: dsa: felix: convert to the new .change_tag_protocol DSA API
In expectation of the new tag_ocelot_8021q tagger implementation, we
need to be able to do runtime switchover between one tagger and another.
So we must structure the existing code for the current NPI-based tagger
in a certain way.

We move the felix_npi_port_init function in expectation of the future
driver configuration necessary for tag_ocelot_8021q: we would like to
not have the NPI-related bits interspersed with the tag_8021q bits.

The conversion from this:

	ocelot_write_rix(ocelot,
			 ANA_PGID_PGID_PGID(GENMASK(ocelot->num_phys_ports, 0)),
			 ANA_PGID_PGID, PGID_UC);

to this:

	cpu_flood = ANA_PGID_PGID_PGID(BIT(ocelot->num_phys_ports));
	ocelot_rmw_rix(ocelot, cpu_flood, cpu_flood, ANA_PGID_PGID, PGID_UC);

is perhaps non-trivial, but is nonetheless non-functional. The PGID_UC
(replicator for unknown unicast) is already configured out of hardware
reset to flood to all ports except ocelot->num_phys_ports (the CPU port
module). All we change is that we use a read-modify-write to only add
the CPU port module to the unknown unicast replicator, as opposed to
doing a full write to the register.

Signed-off-by: Vladimir Oltean <vladimir.oltean@nxp.com>
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
2021-01-29 21:25:27 -08:00