[interface] Expand object interface to allow for polymorphic interfaces
We have several types of object interface at present (data-xfer, job
control, name resolution), and there is some duplication of
functionality between them. For example, job_done(), job_kill() and
xfer_close() are almost isomorphic to each other.
This updated version of the object interface mechanism allows for each
interface to export an arbitrary list of supported operations.
Advantages include:
Operations methods now receive a pointer to the object, rather than
a pointer to the interface. This allows an object to, for example,
implement a single close() method that can handle close() operations
from any of its exposed interfaces.
The close() operation is implemented as a generic operation (rather
than having specific variants for data-xfer, job control, etc.).
This will allow functions such as monojob_wait() to be used to wait
for e.g. a name resolution to complete.
The amount of boilerplate code required in objects is reduced, not
least because it is no longer necessary to include per-interface
methods that simply use container_of() to derive a pointer to the
object and then tail-call to a common per-object method.
The cost of adding new operations is reduced; adding a new data-xfer
operation such as stat() no longer incurs the penalty of adding a
.stat member to the operations table of all existing data-xfer
interfaces.
The data-xfer, job control and name resolution interfaces have not yet
been updated to use the new interface mechanism, but the code will
still compile and run.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Standardise on using timer_init() to initialise an embedded retry
timer, to match the coding style used by other embedded objects.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Standardise on using ref_init() to initialise an embedded reference
count, to match the coding style used by other embedded objects.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
This patch replaces the old pcnet32 driver with a new one that
uses iPXE's API.
Signed-off-by: Andrei Faur <da3drus@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Stefan Hajnoczi <stefanha@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
[process] Hold reference to process during call to step()
It is conceivable that the process may terminate during the execution
of step(). If nothing else holds a reference to the containing
object, this would cause the object to be freed prior to returning
from step().
Add a ref_get()/ref_put() around the call to ->step() to prevent this
from happening.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
After changing the driver to refill after feed, if any error occurs a
non-contiguous empty buffer will be introduced in the ring due to my
reuse-buffer-when-error implementation.
Reported-by: Marty Connor <mdc@etherboot.org>
Signed-off-by: Guo-Fu Tseng <cooldavid@cooldavid.org>
Signed-off-by: Stefan Hajnoczi <stefanha@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Add a new network driver that consumes the EFI Simple Network
Protocol. Also add a bus driver that can find the Simple Network
Protocol that iPXE was loaded from; the resulting behavior is similar
to the "undionly" driver for BIOS systems.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Fix up the whitespace errors inadvertently introduced by the
last-minute rename from the internal QLogic codename to "qib7322".
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
strerror() has not been able to use the PXE-only error table since
commit 9aa61ad ("Add per-file error identifiers") back in 2007.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
[legal] Add FILE_LICENCE declarations to EFI header files
Autodetect the BSD licence statement in EFI header files, and add a
suitable FILE_LICENCE macro to the version imported into the iPXE
tree.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Now that the PACKED macro conflict is resolved, we can use an
unmodified import of the EFI header files (using
include/ipxe/efi/import.pl).
Synchronised to EDK2 SVN revision 10556.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Most of iPXE uses __attribute__((packed)) anyway, and PACKED conflicts
with an identically-named macro in the upstream EFI header files.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
The linker chooses to look for _start first and always picks
efidrvprefix.o to satisfy it (probably because it's earlier in the
archive) which causes a multiple definition error when the linker
later has to pick efiprefix.o for other symbols.
Fix by using EFI-specific TGT_LD_FLAGS with an explicit entry point.
Signed-off-by: Piotr Jaroszyński <p.jaroszynski@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Joshua Oreman <oremanj@rwcr.net>
Modified-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Apart from format specifier fixes there are two changes in proper code:
- Change type of regs in skge_hw to unsigned long
- Cast result of sizeof in myri10ge to uint32_t
Both don't change anything for i386 and should be fine on x86_64.
Signed-off-by: Piotr Jaroszyński <p.jaroszynski@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Joshua Oreman <oremanj@rwcr.net>
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
[dhcp] Don't consider invalid offers to be duplicates
This fixes a regression in BOOTP support; since BOOTP requests often
have the `siaddr' field set to 0.0.0.0, they would be considered
duplicates of the first zeroed-out offer slot.
Signed-off-by: Joshua Oreman <oremanj@rwcr.net>
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
[build] Use weak definitions instead of weak declarations
This removes the need for inline safety wrappers, marginally reducing
the size penalty of weak functions, and works around an apparent
binutils bug that causes undefined weak symbols to not actually be
NULL when compiling with -fPIE (as EFI builds do).
A bug in versions of binutils prior to 2.16 (released in 2005) will
cause same-file weak definitions to not work with those
toolchains. Update the README to reflect our new dependency on
binutils >= 2.16.
Signed-off-by: Joshua Oreman <oremanj@rwcr.net>
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Dependencies are considered in left-to-right order so the source file
needs to come first in this case.
Signed-off-by: Piotr Jaroszyński <p.jaroszynski@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Joshua Oreman <oremanj@rwcr.net>
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
[build] Inhibit "skipping incompatible" message from ld
On 64-bit systems with both 32-bit and 64-bit libraries installed, ld
tends to generate noisy "skipping incompatible /usr/lib/libxxx.so"
messages when building elf2efi.c.
Fix by passing --no-warn-search-mismatch to ld.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Currently, if you attempt to build 64-bit EFI binaries on a 32-bit
system without a suitable cross-compiling version of libbfd, the iPXE
build will die with a segmentation fault in elf2efi64.
Fix by properly handling the return value from bfd_check_format().
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
[dhcp] Honor PXEBS_SKIP option in discovery control
It is permissible for a DHCP packet containing PXE options to specify
only "discovery control", instead of the more typical boot menu +
prompt options. This is the strategy used by older versions of
dnsmasq; by specifying the discovery control as PXEBS_SKIP, they cause
vendor PXE ROMs to ignore boot server discovery and just use the
filename and next-server options in the initial (Proxy)DHCP packet.
Modify iPXE to accept this behavior, to be more compatible with the
Intel firmware.
Signed-off-by: Joshua Oreman <oremanj@rwcr.net>
Tested-by: Kyle Kienapfel <kyle@shadowmage.org>
Modified-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
PMKID checking is an additional pre-check that helps detect invalid
passphrases before going through the full handshaking procedure. It
takes up some amount of code size, and is not necessary from a
security perspective. It also is implemented improperly by some
routers, which was causing iPXE to give spurious authentication
errors. Remove it for these reasons.
Signed-off-by: Joshua Oreman <oremanj@rwcr.net>
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
COMBOOT API calls set the carry flag on failure. This was not being
propagated because the COMBOOT interrupt handler used iret to return
with EFLAGS restored from the stack. This patch propagates CF before
returning from the interrupt.
Reported-by: Geoff Lywood <glywood@vmware.com>
Signed-off-by: Stefan Hajnoczi <stefanha@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Marty Connor <mdc@etherboot.org>
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
[tcp] Update received sequence number before delivering received data
iPXE currently updates the TCP sequence number after delivering the
data to the application via xfer_deliver_iob(). If the application
responds to the received data by transmitting more data, this would
result in a stale ACK number appearing in the transmitted packet,
which potentially causes retransmissions and also gives the
undesirable appearance of violating causality (by sending a response
to a message that we claim not to have yet received).
Reported-by: Guo-Fu Tseng <cooldavid@cooldavid.org>
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Microsoft WDS can end up calling PXENV_RESTART_TFTP to execute a
second-stage NBP which then exits. Specifically, wdsnbp.com uses
PXENV_RESTART_TFTP to execute pxeboot.com, which will exit if the user
does not press F12. iPXE currently treats PXENV_RESTART_TFTP as a
normal PXE API call, and so attempts to return to wdsnbp.com, which
has just been vaporised by pxeboot.com.
Use rmsetjmp/rmlongjmp to preserve the stack state as of the initial
NBP execution, and to restore this state immediately prior to
executing the NBP loaded via PXENV_RESTART_TFTP. This matches the
behaviour in the PXE spec (which says that "if TFTP is restarted,
control is never returned to the caller"), and allows pxeboot.com to
exit relatively cleanly back to iPXE.
As with all usage of setjmp/longjmp, there may be subtle corner case
bugs due to not gracefully unwinding any state accumulated by the time
of the longjmp call, but this seems to be the only viable way to
provide the specified behaviour.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Some switch configurations will refuse to enable our port unless we
can speak LACP to inform the switch that we are alive. Add a very
simple passive LACP implementation that is sufficient to convince at
least Linux's bonding driver (when tested using qemu attached to a tap
device enslaved to a bond device configured as "mode=802.3ad").
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>