[monojob] Check for job progress only once per timer tick
Checking for job progress is essentially a user interface activity,
and can safely be performed only once per timer tick (as is already
done with checking for keypresses).
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
[malloc] Avoid false positive warnings from valgrind
Calling discard_cache() is likely to result in a call to
free_memblock(), which will call valgrind_make_blocks_noaccess()
before returning. This causes valgrind to report an invalid read on
the next iteration through the loop in alloc_memblock().
Fix by explicitly calling valgrind_make_blocks_defined() after
discard_cache() returns. Also call valgrind_make_blocks_noaccess()
before calling discard_cache(), to guard against free list corruption
while executing cache discarders.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Allow values to be read from ACPI tables using the syntax
${acpi/<signature>.<index>.0.<offset>.<length>}
where <signature> is the ACPI table signature as a 32-bit hexadecimal
number (e.g. 0x41504093 for the 'APIC' signature on the MADT), <index>
is the index into the array of tables matching this signature,
<offset> is the byte offset within the table, and <length> is the
field length in bytes.
Numeric values are returned in reverse byte order, since ACPI numeric
values are usually little-endian.
For example:
${acpi/0x41504943.0.0.0.0} - entire MADT table in raw hex
${acpi/0x41504943.0.0.0x0a.6:string} - MADT table OEM ID
${acpi/0x41504943.0.0.0x24.4:uint32} - local APIC address
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
[block] Provide abstraction to allow system to be quiesced
When performing a SAN boot via INT 13, there is no way for the
operating system to indicate that it has finished using the INT 13 SAN
device. We therefore have no opportunity to clean up state before the
loaded operating system's native drivers take over. This can cause
problems when booting Windows, which tends not to be forgiving of
unexpected system state.
Windows will typically write a flag to the SAN device as the last
action before transferring control to the native drivers. We can use
this as a heuristic to bring the system to a quiescent state (without
performing a full shutdown); this provides us an opportunity to
temporarily clean up state that could otherwise prevent a successful
Windows boot.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
[block] Allow use of a non-default EFI SAN boot filename
Some older operating systems (e.g. RHEL6) use a non-default filename
on the root disk and rely on setting an EFI variable to point to the
bootloader. This does not work when performing a SAN boot on a
machine where the EFI variable is not present.
Fix by allowing a non-default filename to be specified via the
"sanboot --filename" option or the "san-filename" setting. For
example:
sanboot --filename \efi\redhat\grub.efi \
iscsi:192.168.0.1::::iqn.2010-04.org.ipxe.demo:rhel6
or
option ipxe.san-filename code 188 = string;
option ipxe.san-filename "\\efi\\redhat\\grub.efi";
option root-path "iscsi:192.168.0.1::::iqn.2010-04.org.ipxe.demo:rhel6";
Originally-implemented-by: Vishvananda Ishaya Abrams <vish.ishaya@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Describe all SAN devices via ACPI tables such as the iBFT. For tables
that can describe only a single device (i.e. the aBFT and sBFT), one
table is installed per device. For multi-device tables (i.e. the
iBFT), all devices are described in a single table.
An underlying SAN device connection may be closed at the time that we
need to construct an ACPI table. We therefore introduce the concept
of an "ACPI descriptor" which enables the SAN boot code to maintain an
opaque pointer to the underlying object, and an "ACPI model" which can
build tables from a list of such descriptors. This separates the
lifecycles of ACPI descriptions from the lifecycles of the block
device interfaces, and allows for construction of the ACPI tables even
if the block device interface has been closed.
For a multipath SAN device, iPXE will wait until sufficient
information is available to describe all devices but will not wait for
all paths to connect successfully. For example: with a multipath
iSCSI boot iPXE will wait until at least one path has become available
and name resolution has completed on all other paths. We do this
since the iBFT has to include IP addresses rather than DNS names. We
will commence booting without waiting for the inactive paths to either
become available or close; this avoids unnecessary boot delays.
Note that the Linux kernel will refuse to accept an iBFT with more
than two NIC or target structures. We therefore describe only the
NICs that are actually required in order to reach the described
targets. Any iBFT with at most two targets is therefore guaranteed to
describe at most two NICs.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
For some block device protocols, the active path may continue to
receive xfer_window_changed() notifications during normal use. These
currently result in the active path being erroneously closed.
Fix by ignoring any xfer_window_changed() messages if this path is
already the active path.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
[block] Retry reopening indefinitely for multipath devices
For multipath SAN devices, verify that the device is capable of being
opened (i.e. that all URIs are parseable and that at least one path is
alive) and thereafter retry indefinitely to reopen the device as
needed.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
[block] Add a small delay between attempts to reopen SAN targets
When all SAN targets are completely unreachable, there will be a
natural delay between reopening attempts due to the network connection
timeout on the unreachable targets.
However, some SAN targets may accept connections instantly and report
a temporary unavailability by e.g. failing the TEST UNIT READY
command. If all targets are behaving this way then there will be no
natural delay, and we will attempt to saturate the network with
connection attempts.
Fix by introducing a small delay between attempts.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Allow the SAN retry count to be configured via the ${san-retry}
setting, defaulting to the current value of 10 retries if not
specified.
Note that setting a retry count of zero is inadvisable, since iSCSI
targets in particular will often report spurious errors such as "power
on occurred" for the first few commands.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Add basic support for multipath block devices. The "sanboot" and
"sanhook" commands now accept a list of SAN URIs. We open all URIs
concurrently. The first connection to become available for issuing
block device commands is marked as the active path and used for all
subsequent commands; all other connections are then closed. Whenever
the active path fails, we reopen all URIs and repeat the process.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Add a dummy SAN device which allows the "sanhook" command to be tested
even when no SAN booting capability is present on the platform. This
allows substantial portions of the SAN boot code to be run in Linux
under Valgrind.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Track the current and maximum heap usage, and display the maximum
during shutdown when DEBUG=malloc is enabled.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Avoid potential division by zero when performing the check against
multiplication overflow. (Note that if the width is zero then there
can be no overflow anyway, so it is then safe to bypass the check.)
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
The SCSI layer currently implements a retry loop in order to retry
commands that fail due to spurious "error" conditions such as "power
on occurred". Move this retry loop to the generic SAN device layer:
this allow for retries due to other transient error conditions such as
an iSCSI target having dropped the connection due to inactivity.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
The concept of the SAN drive number is meaningful only in a BIOS
environment, where it represents the INT13 drive number (0x80 for the
first hard disk). We retain this concept in a UEFI environment to
allow for a simple way for iPXE commands to refer to SAN drives.
Centralise the concept of the default drive number, since it is shared
between all supported environments.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
[interface] Provide the ability to shut down multiple interfaces
Shutting down (and optionally restarting) multiple interfaces is
fraught with problems if there are loops in the interface connectivity
(e.g. the HTTP content-decoded and transfer-decoded interfaces, which
will generally loop back to each other). Various workarounds
currently exist across the codebase, generally involving preceding
calls to intf_nullify() to avoid problems due to known loops.
Provide intfs_shutdown() and intfs_restart() to allow all of an
object's interfaces to be shut down (or restarted) in a single call,
without having to worry about potential external loops.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
[settings] Add "unixtime" builtin setting to expose the current time
Expose the current wall-clock time (in seconds since the Epoch), since
this is often useful in captured boot logs and can also be useful when
checking unexpected X.509 certificate validation failures.
Use a :uint32 setting to avoid Y2K38 rollover, thereby ensuring that
this will eventually be somebody else's problem.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Allow the active timer (providing udelay() and currticks()) to be
selected at runtime based on probing during the INIT_EARLY stage of
initialisation.
TICKS_PER_SEC is now a fixed compile-time constant for all builds, and
is independent of the underlying clock tick rate. We choose the value
1024 to allow multiplications and divisions on seconds to be converted
to bit shifts.
TICKS_PER_MS is defined as 1, allowing multiplications and divisions
on milliseconds to be omitted entirely. The 2% inaccuracy in this
definition is negligible when using the standard BIOS timer (running
at around 18.2Hz).
TIMER_RDTSC now checks for a constant TSC before claiming to be a
usable timer. (This timer can be tested in KVM via the command-line
option "-cpu host,+invtsc".)
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
[interface] Unplug interface before calling intf_close() in intf_shutdown()
The call to intf_close() may result in the original interface being
reopened. For example: when reading the capacity of a 2TB+ disk via
iSCSI, the SCSI layer will respond to the intf_close() from the READ
CAPACITY (10) command by immediately issuing a READ CAPACITY (16)
command. The iSCSI layer happens to reuse the same interface for the
new command (since it allows only a single concurrent command).
Currently, intf_shutdown() unplugs the interface after the call to
intf_close() returns. In the above scenario, this results in
unplugging the just-reopened interface.
Fix by transferring the interface destination (and its reference) to a
temporary interface, and so effectively performing the unplug before
making the call to intf_close().
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
Enable IMAGE_PNG (but not IMAGE_PNM) by default, and drag in the
relevant objects only when image_pixbuf() is present in the binary.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
[crypto] Enable both DER and PEM formats by default
Enable both IMAGE_DER and IMAGE_PEM by default, and drag in the
relevant objects only when image_asn1() is present in the binary.
This allows "imgverify" to transparently use either DER or PEM
signature files.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
[settings] Allow settings blocks to specify a sibling ordering
Allow settings blocks to provide an explicit default ordering between
siblings, with lower precedence than the existing ${priority} setting.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>
The settings scope ipv6_scope refers specifically to IPv6 settings
that have a corresponding DHCPv6 option. Rename to dhcpv6_scope to
more accurately reflect this purpose.
Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org>