[int13] Allow default drive to be specified via "san-drive" setting
The DHCP option 175.189 has been defined (by us) since 2006 as
containing the drive number to be used for a SAN boot, but has never
been automatically used as such by iPXE.
Use this option (if specified) to override the default SAN drive
number.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
[int13] Allow drive to be hooked using the natural drive number
Interpret the maximum drive number (0xff for hard disks, 0x7f for
floppy disks) as meaning "use natural drive number".
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
[build] Do not use "objcopy -O binary" for objects with relocation records
The mbr.bin and usbdisk.bin standalone blobs are currently generated
using "objcopy -O binary", which does not process relocation records.
For the i386 build, this does not matter since the section start
address is zero and so the ".rel" relocation records are effectively
no-ops anyway.
For the x86_64 build, the ".rela" relocation records are not no-ops,
since the addend is included as part of the relocation record (rather
than inline). Using "objcopy -O binary" will silently discard the
relocation records, with the result that all symbols are effectively
given a value of zero.
Fix by using "ld --oformat binary" instead of "objcopy -O binary" to
generate mbr.bin and usbdisk.bin.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
The Infiniband specification (volume 1, section 11.4.1.2 "Post Receive
Request") notes that for UD QPs, the GRH will be placed in the first
40 bytes of the receive buffer if present. (If no GRH is present,
which is normal, then the first 40 bytes of the receive buffer will be
unused.)
Mellanox hardware performs this placement automatically: other headers
will be stripped (and their values returned via the CQE), but the
first 40 bytes of the data buffer will be consumed by the (probably
non-existent) GRH.
This does not fit neatly into iPXE's internal abstraction, which
expects the data buffer to represent just the data payload with the
addresses from the GRH (if present) passed as additional parameters to
ib_complete_recv().
The end result of this discrepancy is that attempts to receive
full-sized 2048-byte IPoIB packets on Mellanox hardware will fail.
Fix by allocating a separate ring buffer to hold the received GRHs.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
[crypto] Allow trusted certificates to be stored in non-volatile options
The intention of the existing code (as documented in its own comments)
is that it should be possible to override the list of trusted root
certificates using a "trust" setting held in non-volatile stored
options. However, the rootcert_init() function currently executes
before any devices have been probed, and so will not be able to
retrieve any such non-volatile stored options.
Fix by executing rootcert_init() only after devices have been probed.
Since startup functions may be executed multiple times (unlike
initialisation functions), add an explicit flag to preserve the
property that rootcert_init() should run only once.
As before, if an explicit root of trust is specified at build time,
then any runtime "trust" setting will be ignored.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
[efi] Provide access to files stored on EFI filesystems
Provide access to local files via the "file://" URI scheme. There are
three syntaxes:
- An opaque URI with a relative path (e.g. "file:script.ipxe").
This will be interpreted as a path relative to the iPXE binary.
- A hierarchical URI with a non-network absolute path
(e.g. "file:/boot/script.ipxe"). This will be interpreted as a
path relative to the root of the filesystem from which the iPXE
binary was loaded.
- A hierarchical URI with a network path in which the authority is a
volume label (e.g. "file://bootdisk/script.ipxe"). This will be
interpreted as a path relative to the root of the filesystem with
the specified volume label.
Note that the potentially desirable shell mappings (e.g. "fs0:" and
"blk0:") are concepts internal to the UEFI shell binary, and do not
seem to be exposed in any way to external executables. The old
EFI_SHELL_PROTOCOL (which did provide access to these mappings) is no
longer installed by current versions of the UEFI shell.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
[build] Allow assembler section type character to vary by architecture
On some architectures (such as ARM) the "@" character is used as a
comment delimiter. A section type argument such as "@progbits"
therefore becomes "%progbits".
This is further complicated by the fact that the "%" character has
special meaning for inline assembly when input or output operands are
used, in which cases "@progbits" becomes "%%progbits".
Allow the section type character(s) to be defined via Makefile
variables.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
[linda] Use standard readq() and writeq() implementations
This driver is the original source of the current readq() and writeq()
implementations for 32-bit iPXE. Switch to using the now-centralised
definitions, to avoid including architecture-specific code in an
otherwise architecture-independent driver.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
[librm] Do not unconditionally preserve flags across virt_call()
Commit 196f0f2 ("[librm] Convert prot_call() to a real-mode near
call") introduced a regression in which any deliberate modification to
the low 16 bits of the CPU flags (in struct i386_all_regs) would be
overwritten with the original flags value at the time of entry to
prot_call().
The regression arose because the alignment requirements of the
protected-mode stack necessitated the insertion of two bytes of
padding immediately below the prot_call() return address. The
solution chosen was to extend the existing "pushfl / popfl" pair to
"pushfw;pushfl / popfl;popfw". The extra "pushfw / popfw" appears at
first glance to be a no-op, but fails to take into account the fact
that the flags restored by popfl may have been deliberately modified
by the protected-mode function.
Fix by replacing "pushfw / popfw" with "pushw %ss / popw %ss". While
%ss does appear within struct i386_all_regs, any modification to the
stored value has always been ignored by prot_call() anyway.
The most visible symptom of this regression was that SAN booting would
fail since every INT 13 call would be chained to the original INT 13
vector.
Reported-by: Vishvananda Ishaya <vishvananda@gmail.com>
Reported-by: Jamie Thompson <forum.ipxe@jamie-thompson.co.uk>
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
There is no practical way to generate an underlength ARP packet since
an ARP packet is always padded up to the minimum Ethernet frame length
(or dropped by the receiving Ethernet hardware if incorrectly padded),
but the absence of an explicit check causes warnings from some
analysis tools.
Fix by adding an explicit check on the I/O buffer length.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
The assumption in asn1_type() that an ASN.1 cursor will always contain
a type byte is incorrect. A cursor that has been cleanly invalidated
via asn1_invalidate_cursor() will contain a type byte, but there are
other ways in which to arrive at a zero-length cursor.
Fix by explicitly checking the cursor length in asn1_type(). This
allows asn1_invalidate_cursor() to be reduced to simply zeroing the
length field.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
[tls] Avoid potential out-of-bound reads in length fields
Many TLS records contain variable-length fields. We currently
validate the overall record length, but do so only after reading the
length of the variable-length field. If the record is too short to
even contain the length field, then we may read uninitialised data
from beyond the end of the record.
This is harmless in practice (since the subsequent overall record
length check would fail regardless of the value read from the
uninitialised length field), but causes warnings from some analysis
tools.
Fix by validating that the overall record length is sufficient to
contain the length field before reading from the length field.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
[efi] Work around broken GetFontInfo() implementations
Several UEFI platforms are known to return EFI_NOT_FOUND when asked to
retrieve the system default font information via GetFontInfo(). Work
around these broken platforms by iterating over the glyphs to find the
maximum height used by a printable character.
Originally-fixed-by: Jonathan Dieter <jdieter@lesbg.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Some EoIB implementations utilise an EoIB-to-Ethernet gateway device
that does not perform a FullMember join to the multicast group for the
EoIB broadcast domain. This has various exciting side-effects, such
as requiring every EoIB node to send every broadcast packet twice.
As an added bonus, the gateway may also break the EoIB MAC address to
GID mapping protocol by sending Ethernet-sourced packets from the
wrong QPN.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
[eoib] Allow the multicast group to be forcefully created
Some EoIB implementations require each individual EoIB node to create
the multicast group for the EoIB broadcast domain.
It is left as an exercise for the interested reader to determine how
such an implementation might ever allow the parameters of such a
multicast group to be changed without requiring a simultaneous upgrade
of every driver on every operating system on every machine currently
attached to the fabric.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Some EoIB implementations transmit a vendor-proprietary heartbeat
packet on the same multicast group used to provide the EoIB broadcast
domain.
Silently ignore these heartbeat packets, to avoid cluttering up the
network interface error statistics.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
EoIB is a fairly simple protocol in which raw Ethernet frames
(excluding the CRC) are encapsulated within Infiniband Unreliable
Datagrams, with a four-byte fixed EoIB header (which conveys no actual
information). The Ethernet broadcast domain is provided by a
multicast group, similar to the IPoIB IPv4 multicast group.
The mapping from Ethernet MAC addresses to Infiniband address vectors
is achieved by snooping incoming traffic and building a peer cache
which can then be used to map a MAC address into a port GID. The
address vector is completed using a path record lookup, as for IPoIB.
Note that this requires every packet to include a GRH.
Add basic support for EoIB devices. This driver is substantially
derived from the IPoIB driver. There is currently no mechanism for
automatically creating EoIB devices.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
[infiniband] Make IPoIB support configurable at build time
Add a build configuration option VNIC_IPOIB to control whether or not
IPoIB support is included for Infiniband devices.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>