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2024-03-21Merge tag 'char-misc-6.9-rc1' of ↵Linus Torvalds
git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/gregkh/char-misc Pull char/misc and other driver subsystem updates from Greg KH: "Here is the big set of char/misc and a number of other driver subsystem updates for 6.9-rc1. Included in here are: - IIO driver updates, loads of new ones and evolution of existing ones - coresight driver updates - const cleanups for many driver subsystems - speakup driver additions - platform remove callback void cleanups - mei driver updates - mhi driver updates - cdx driver updates for MSI interrupt handling - nvmem driver updates - other smaller driver updates and cleanups, full details in the shortlog All of these have been in linux-next for a long time with no reported issue, other than a build warning for the speakup driver" The build warning hits clang and is a gcc (and C23) extension, and is fixed up in the merge. Link: https://lore.kernel.org/all/20240321134831.GA2762840@dev-arch.thelio-3990X/ * tag 'char-misc-6.9-rc1' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/gregkh/char-misc: (279 commits) binder: remove redundant variable page_addr uio_dmem_genirq: UIO_MEM_DMA_COHERENT conversion uio_pruss: UIO_MEM_DMA_COHERENT conversion cnic,bnx2,bnx2x: use UIO_MEM_DMA_COHERENT uio: introduce UIO_MEM_DMA_COHERENT type cdx: add MSI support for CDX bus pps: use cflags-y instead of EXTRA_CFLAGS speakup: Add /dev/synthu device speakup: Fix 8bit characters from direct synth parport: sunbpp: Convert to platform remove callback returning void parport: amiga: Convert to platform remove callback returning void char: xillybus: Convert to platform remove callback returning void vmw_balloon: change maintainership MAINTAINERS: change the maintainer for hpilo driver char: xilinx_hwicap: Fix NULL vs IS_ERR() bug hpet: remove hpets::hp_clocksource platform: goldfish: move the separate 'default' propery for CONFIG_GOLDFISH char: xilinx_hwicap: drop casting to void in dev_set_drvdata greybus: move is_gb_* functions out of greybus.h greybus: Remove usage of the deprecated ida_simple_xx() API ...
2024-03-21Merge tag 'usb-6.9-rc1' of ↵Linus Torvalds
git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/gregkh/usb Pull USB / Thunderbolt updates from Greg KH: "Here is the big set of USB and Thunderbolt changes for 6.9-rc1. Lots of tiny changes and forward progress to support new hardware and better support for existing devices. Included in here are: - Thunderbolt (i.e. USB4) updates for newer hardware and uses as more people start to use the hardware - default USB authentication mode Kconfig and documentation update to make it more obvious what is going on - USB typec updates and enhancements - usual dwc3 driver updates - usual xhci driver updates - function USB (i.e. gadget) driver updates and additions - new device ids for lots of drivers - loads of other small updates, full details in the shortlog All of these, including a "last minute regression fix" have been in linux-next with no reported issues" * tag 'usb-6.9-rc1' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/gregkh/usb: (185 commits) usb: usb-acpi: Fix oops due to freeing uninitialized pld pointer usb: gadget: net2272: Use irqflags in the call to net2272_probe_fin usb: gadget: tegra-xudc: Fix USB3 PHY retrieval logic phy: tegra: xusb: Add API to retrieve the port number of phy USB: gadget: pxa27x_udc: Remove unused of_gpio.h usb: gadget/snps_udc_plat: Remove unused of_gpio.h usb: ohci-pxa27x: Remove unused of_gpio.h usb: sl811-hcd: only defined function checkdone if QUIRK2 is defined usb: Clarify expected behavior of dev_bin_attrs_are_visible() xhci: Allow RPM on the USB controller (1022:43f7) by default usb: isp1760: remove SLAB_MEM_SPREAD flag usage usb: misc: onboard_hub: use pointer consistently in the probe function usb: gadget: fsl: Increase size of name buffer for endpoints usb: gadget: fsl: Add of device table to enable module autoloading usb: typec: tcpm: add support to set tcpc connector orientatition usb: typec: tcpci: add generic tcpci fallback compatible dt-bindings: usb: typec-tcpci: add tcpci fallback binding usb: gadget: fsl-udc: Replace custom log wrappers by dev_{err,warn,dbg,vdbg} usb: core: Set connect_type of ports based on DT node dt-bindings: usb: Add downstream facing ports to realtek binding ...
2024-03-18Merge tag 'f2fs-for-6.9-rc1' of ↵Linus Torvalds
git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/jaegeuk/f2fs Pull f2fs update from Jaegeuk Kim: "In this round, there are a number of updates on mainly two areas: Zoned block device support and Per-file compression. For example, we've found several issues to support Zoned block device especially having large sections regarding to GC and file pinning used for Android devices. In compression side, we've fixed many corner race conditions that had broken the design assumption. Enhancements: - Support file pinning for Zoned block device having large section - Enhance the data recovery after sudden power cut on Zoned block device - Add more error injection cases to easily detect the kernel panics - add a proc entry show the entire disk layout - Improve various error paths paniced by BUG_ON in block allocation and GC - support SEEK_DATA and SEEK_HOLE for compression files Bug fixes: - avoid use-after-free issue in f2fs_filemap_fault - fix some race conditions to break the atomic write design assumption - fix to truncate meta inode pages forcely - resolve various per-file compression issues wrt the space management and compression policies - fix some swap-related bugs In addition, we removed deprecated codes such as io_bits and heap_allocation, and also fixed minor error handling routines with neat debugging messages" * tag 'f2fs-for-6.9-rc1' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/jaegeuk/f2fs: (60 commits) f2fs: fix to avoid use-after-free issue in f2fs_filemap_fault f2fs: truncate page cache before clearing flags when aborting atomic write f2fs: mark inode dirty for FI_ATOMIC_COMMITTED flag f2fs: prevent atomic write on pinned file f2fs: fix to handle error paths of {new,change}_curseg() f2fs: unify the error handling of f2fs_is_valid_blkaddr f2fs: zone: fix to remove pow2 check condition for zoned block device f2fs: fix to truncate meta inode pages forcely f2fs: compress: fix reserve_cblocks counting error when out of space f2fs: compress: relocate some judgments in f2fs_reserve_compress_blocks f2fs: add a proc entry show disk layout f2fs: introduce SEGS_TO_BLKS/BLKS_TO_SEGS for cleanup f2fs: fix to check return value of f2fs_gc_range f2fs: fix to check return value __allocate_new_segment f2fs: fix to do sanity check in update_sit_entry f2fs: fix to reset fields for unloaded curseg f2fs: clean up new_curseg() f2fs: relocate f2fs_precache_extents() in f2fs_swap_activate() f2fs: fix blkofs_end correctly in f2fs_migrate_blocks() f2fs: ro: don't start discard thread for readonly image ...
2024-03-16Merge tag 'cxl-for-6.9' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/cxl/cxlLinus Torvalds
Pull CXL updates from Dan Williams: "CXL has mechanisms to enumerate the performance characteristics of memory devices. Those mechanisms allow Linux to build the equivalent of ACPI SRAT, SLIT, and HMAT tables dynamically at runtime. That capability is necessary because static ACPI can not represent dynamic CXL configurations (and reconfigurations). So, building on the v6.8 work to add "Quality of Service" enumeration, this update plumbs CXL "access coordinates" (read/write access latency and bandwidth) in all the same places that ACPI HMAT feeds similar data. Follow-on patches from the -mm side can then use that data to feed mechanisms like mm/memory-tiers.c. Greg has acked the touch to drivers/base/. The other feature update this cycle is support for CXL error injection via the ACPI EINJ module. That facility enables injection of bus protocol errors provided the user knows the magic address values to insert in the interface. To hide that magic, and make this easier to use, new error injection attributes were added to CXL debugfs. That interface injects the errors relative to a CXL object rather than require user tooling to know how to lookup and inject RCRB (Root Complex Register Block) addresses into the raw EINJ debugfs interface. It received some helpful review comments from Tony, but no explicit acks from the ACPI side. The primary user visible change for existing EINJ users is that they may find that einj.ko was already loaded by cxl_core.ko. Previously, einj.ko was only loaded on demand. The usual collection of miscellaneous cleanups are also present this cycle. Summary: - Supplement ACPI HMAT reported memory performance with native CXL memory performance enumeration - Add support for CXL error injection via the ACPI EINJ mechanism - Cleanup CXL DOE and CDAT integration - Miscellaneous cleanups and fixes" * tag 'cxl-for-6.9' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/cxl/cxl: (21 commits) Documentation/ABI/testing/debugfs-cxl: Fix "Unexpected indentation" lib/firmware_table: Provide buffer length argument to cdat_table_parse() cxl/pci: Get rid of pointer arithmetic reading CDAT table cxl/pci: Rename DOE mailbox handle to doe_mb cxl: Fix the incorrect assignment of SSLBIS entry pointer initial location cxl/core: Add CXL EINJ debugfs files EINJ, Documentation: Update EINJ kernel doc EINJ: Add CXL error type support EINJ: Migrate to a platform driver cxl/region: Deal with numa nodes not enumerated by SRAT cxl/region: Add memory hotplug notifier for cxl region cxl/region: Add sysfs attribute for locality attributes of CXL regions cxl/region: Calculate performance data for a region cxl: Set cxlmd->endpoint before adding port device cxl: Move QoS class to be calculated from the nearest CPU cxl: Split out host bridge access coordinates cxl: Split out combine_coordinates() for common shared usage ACPI: HMAT / cxl: Add retrieval of generic port coordinates for both access classes ACPI: HMAT: Introduce 2 levels of generic port access class base/node / ACPI: Enumerate node access class for 'struct access_coordinate' ...
2024-03-15Merge tag 'v6.9-p1' of ↵Linus Torvalds
git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/herbert/crypto-2.6 Pull crypto updates from Herbert Xu: "API: - Avoid unnecessary copying in scomp for trivial SG lists Algorithms: - Optimise NEON CCM implementation on ARM64 Drivers: - Add queue stop/query debugfs support in hisilicon/qm - Intel qat updates and cleanups" * tag 'v6.9-p1' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/herbert/crypto-2.6: (79 commits) Revert "crypto: remove CONFIG_CRYPTO_STATS" crypto: scomp - remove memcpy if sg_nents is 1 and pages are lowmem crypto: tcrypt - add ffdhe2048(dh) test crypto: iaa - fix the missing CRYPTO_ALG_ASYNC in cra_flags crypto: hisilicon/zip - fix the missing CRYPTO_ALG_ASYNC in cra_flags hwrng: hisi - use dev_err_probe MAINTAINERS: Remove T Ambarus from few mchp entries crypto: iaa - Fix comp/decomp delay statistics crypto: iaa - Fix async_disable descriptor leak dt-bindings: rng: atmel,at91-trng: add sam9x7 TRNG dt-bindings: crypto: add sam9x7 in Atmel TDES dt-bindings: crypto: add sam9x7 in Atmel SHA dt-bindings: crypto: add sam9x7 in Atmel AES crypto: remove CONFIG_CRYPTO_STATS crypto: dh - Make public key test FIPS-only crypto: rockchip - fix to check return value crypto: jitter - fix CRYPTO_JITTERENTROPY help text crypto: qat - make ring to service map common for QAT GEN4 crypto: qat - fix ring to service map for dcc in 420xx crypto: qat - fix ring to service map for dcc in 4xxx ...
2024-03-15Merge tag 'fuse-update-6.9' of ↵Linus Torvalds
git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/mszeredi/fuse Pull fuse updates from Miklos Szeredi: - Add passthrough mode for regular file I/O. This allows performing read and write (also via memory maps) on a backing file without incurring the overhead of roundtrips to userspace. For now this is only allowed to privileged servers, but this limitation will go away in the future (Amir Goldstein) - Fix interaction of direct I/O mode with memory maps (Bernd Schubert) - Export filesystem tags through sysfs for virtiofs (Stefan Hajnoczi) - Allow resending queued requests for server crash recovery (Zhao Chen) - Misc fixes and cleanups * tag 'fuse-update-6.9' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/mszeredi/fuse: (38 commits) fuse: get rid of ff->readdir.lock fuse: remove unneeded lock which protecting update of congestion_threshold fuse: Fix missing FOLL_PIN for direct-io fuse: remove an unnecessary if statement fuse: Track process write operations in both direct and writethrough modes fuse: Use the high bit of request ID for indicating resend requests fuse: Introduce a new notification type for resend pending requests fuse: add support for explicit export disabling fuse: __kuid_val/__kgid_val helpers in fuse_fill_attr_from_inode() fuse: fix typo for fuse_permission comment fuse: Convert fuse_writepage_locked to take a folio fuse: Remove fuse_writepage virtio_fs: remove duplicate check if queue is broken fuse: use FUSE_ROOT_ID in fuse_get_root_inode() fuse: don't unhash root fuse: fix root lookup with nonzero generation fuse: replace remaining make_bad_inode() with fuse_make_bad() virtiofs: drop __exit from virtio_fs_sysfs_exit() fuse: implement passthrough for mmap fuse: implement splice read/write passthrough ...
2024-03-14Merge branch 'for-6.9/cxl-einj' into for-6.9/cxlDan Williams
Pick up documentation build fix for v6.9.
2024-03-14Merge tag 'mm-stable-2024-03-13-20-04' of ↵Linus Torvalds
git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/akpm/mm Pull MM updates from Andrew Morton: - Sumanth Korikkar has taught s390 to allocate hotplug-time page frames from hotplugged memory rather than only from main memory. Series "implement "memmap on memory" feature on s390". - More folio conversions from Matthew Wilcox in the series "Convert memcontrol charge moving to use folios" "mm: convert mm counter to take a folio" - Chengming Zhou has optimized zswap's rbtree locking, providing significant reductions in system time and modest but measurable reductions in overall runtimes. The series is "mm/zswap: optimize the scalability of zswap rb-tree". - Chengming Zhou has also provided the series "mm/zswap: optimize zswap lru list" which provides measurable runtime benefits in some swap-intensive situations. - And Chengming Zhou further optimizes zswap in the series "mm/zswap: optimize for dynamic zswap_pools". Measured improvements are modest. - zswap cleanups and simplifications from Yosry Ahmed in the series "mm: zswap: simplify zswap_swapoff()". - In the series "Add DAX ABI for memmap_on_memory", Vishal Verma has contributed several DAX cleanups as well as adding a sysfs tunable to control the memmap_on_memory setting when the dax device is hotplugged as system memory. - Johannes Weiner has added the large series "mm: zswap: cleanups", which does that. - More DAMON work from SeongJae Park in the series "mm/damon: make DAMON debugfs interface deprecation unignorable" "selftests/damon: add more tests for core functionalities and corner cases" "Docs/mm/damon: misc readability improvements" "mm/damon: let DAMOS feeds and tame/auto-tune itself" - In the series "mm/mempolicy: weighted interleave mempolicy and sysfs extension" Rakie Kim has developed a new mempolicy interleaving policy wherein we allocate memory across nodes in a weighted fashion rather than uniformly. This is beneficial in heterogeneous memory environments appearing with CXL. - Christophe Leroy has contributed some cleanup and consolidation work against the ARM pagetable dumping code in the series "mm: ptdump: Refactor CONFIG_DEBUG_WX and check_wx_pages debugfs attribute". - Luis Chamberlain has added some additional xarray selftesting in the series "test_xarray: advanced API multi-index tests". - Muhammad Usama Anjum has reworked the selftest code to make its human-readable output conform to the TAP ("Test Anything Protocol") format. Amongst other things, this opens up the use of third-party tools to parse and process out selftesting results. - Ryan Roberts has added fork()-time PTE batching of THP ptes in the series "mm/memory: optimize fork() with PTE-mapped THP". Mainly targeted at arm64, this significantly speeds up fork() when the process has a large number of pte-mapped folios. - David Hildenbrand also gets in on the THP pte batching game in his series "mm/memory: optimize unmap/zap with PTE-mapped THP". It implements batching during munmap() and other pte teardown situations. The microbenchmark improvements are nice. - And in the series "Transparent Contiguous PTEs for User Mappings" Ryan Roberts further utilizes arm's pte's contiguous bit ("contpte mappings"). Kernel build times on arm64 improved nicely. Ryan's series "Address some contpte nits" provides some followup work. - In the series "mm/hugetlb: Restore the reservation" Breno Leitao has fixed an obscure hugetlb race which was causing unnecessary page faults. He has also added a reproducer under the selftest code. - In the series "selftests/mm: Output cleanups for the compaction test", Mark Brown did what the title claims. - Kinsey Ho has added the series "mm/mglru: code cleanup and refactoring". - Even more zswap material from Nhat Pham. The series "fix and extend zswap kselftests" does as claimed. - In the series "Introduce cpu_dcache_is_aliasing() to fix DAX regression" Mathieu Desnoyers has cleaned up and fixed rather a mess in our handling of DAX on archiecctures which have virtually aliasing data caches. The arm architecture is the main beneficiary. - Lokesh Gidra's series "per-vma locks in userfaultfd" provides dramatic improvements in worst-case mmap_lock hold times during certain userfaultfd operations. - Some page_owner enhancements and maintenance work from Oscar Salvador in his series "page_owner: print stacks and their outstanding allocations" "page_owner: Fixup and cleanup" - Uladzislau Rezki has contributed some vmalloc scalability improvements in his series "Mitigate a vmap lock contention". It realizes a 12x improvement for a certain microbenchmark. - Some kexec/crash cleanup work from Baoquan He in the series "Split crash out from kexec and clean up related config items". - Some zsmalloc maintenance work from Chengming Zhou in the series "mm/zsmalloc: fix and optimize objects/page migration" "mm/zsmalloc: some cleanup for get/set_zspage_mapping()" - Zi Yan has taught the MM to perform compaction on folios larger than order=0. This a step along the path to implementaton of the merging of large anonymous folios. The series is named "Enable >0 order folio memory compaction". - Christoph Hellwig has done quite a lot of cleanup work in the pagecache writeback code in his series "convert write_cache_pages() to an iterator". - Some modest hugetlb cleanups and speedups in Vishal Moola's series "Handle hugetlb faults under the VMA lock". - Zi Yan has changed the page splitting code so we can split huge pages into sizes other than order-0 to better utilize large folios. The series is named "Split a folio to any lower order folios". - David Hildenbrand has contributed the series "mm: remove total_mapcount()", a cleanup. - Matthew Wilcox has sought to improve the performance of bulk memory freeing in his series "Rearrange batched folio freeing". - Gang Li's series "hugetlb: parallelize hugetlb page init on boot" provides large improvements in bootup times on large machines which are configured to use large numbers of hugetlb pages. - Matthew Wilcox's series "PageFlags cleanups" does that. - Qi Zheng's series "minor fixes and supplement for ptdesc" does that also. S390 is affected. - Cleanups to our pagemap utility functions from Peter Xu in his series "mm/treewide: Replace pXd_large() with pXd_leaf()". - Nico Pache has fixed a few things with our hugepage selftests in his series "selftests/mm: Improve Hugepage Test Handling in MM Selftests". - Also, of course, many singleton patches to many things. Please see the individual changelogs for details. * tag 'mm-stable-2024-03-13-20-04' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/akpm/mm: (435 commits) mm/zswap: remove the memcpy if acomp is not sleepable crypto: introduce: acomp_is_async to expose if comp drivers might sleep memtest: use {READ,WRITE}_ONCE in memory scanning mm: prohibit the last subpage from reusing the entire large folio mm: recover pud_leaf() definitions in nopmd case selftests/mm: skip the hugetlb-madvise tests on unmet hugepage requirements selftests/mm: skip uffd hugetlb tests with insufficient hugepages selftests/mm: dont fail testsuite due to a lack of hugepages mm/huge_memory: skip invalid debugfs new_order input for folio split mm/huge_memory: check new folio order when split a folio mm, vmscan: retry kswapd's priority loop with cache_trim_mode off on failure mm: add an explicit smp_wmb() to UFFDIO_CONTINUE mm: fix list corruption in put_pages_list mm: remove folio from deferred split list before uncharging it filemap: avoid unnecessary major faults in filemap_fault() mm,page_owner: drop unnecessary check mm,page_owner: check for null stack_record before bumping its refcount mm: swap: fix race between free_swap_and_cache() and swapoff() mm/treewide: align up pXd_leaf() retval across archs mm/treewide: drop pXd_large() ...
2024-03-14Documentation/ABI/testing/debugfs-cxl: Fix "Unexpected indentation"Dan Williams
Stephen reported that an htmldocs build hit: Documentation/ABI/testing/debugfs-cxl:38: ERROR: Unexpected indentation. It turns out that line was fine but the tool was unhappy about some line breaks in the table of values to error types. It turns out that: make V=1 SPHINXDIRS="admin-guide" htmldocs ...can not be used to get more info about what is behind a documentation build error. It was only pure luck that reflowing the text resulted in an error message that seemed a imply a problem later on with line breaks around the table. Fixes: 8039804cfa73 ("cxl/core: Add CXL EINJ debugfs files") Cc: Jonathan Corbet <corbet@lwn.net> Reported-by: Stephen Rothwell <sfr@canb.auug.org.au> Closes: http://lore.kernel.org/r/20240314141313.7ba04aff@canb.auug.org.au Cc: Ben Cheatham <Benjamin.Cheatham@amd.com> Signed-off-by: Dan Williams <dan.j.williams@intel.com>
2024-03-14Merge tag 'sound-6.9-rc1' of ↵Linus Torvalds
git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/tiwai/sound Pull sound updates from Takashi Iwai: "This was a relatively calm development cycle. Most of changes are rather small device-specific fixes and enhancements. The only significant changes in ALSA core are code refactoring with the recent cleanup infrastructure, which should bring no functionality changes. Some highlights below: Core: - Lots of cleanups in ALSA core code with automatic kfree cleanup and locking guard macros - New ALSA core kunit test ASoC: - SoundWire support for AMD ACP 6.3 systems - Support for reporting version information for AVS firmware - Support DSPless mode for Intel Soundwire systems - Support for configuring CS35L56 amplifiers using EFI calibration data - Log which component is being operated on as part of power management trace events. - Support for Microchip SAM9x7, NXP i.MX95 and Qualcomm WCD939x HD- and USB-audio: - More Cirrus HD-audio codec support - TAS2781 HD-audio codec fixes - Scarlett2 mixer fixes Others: - Enhancement of virtio driver for audio control supports - Cleanups of legacy PM code with new macros - Firewire sound updates" * tag 'sound-6.9-rc1' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/tiwai/sound: (307 commits) ALSA: usb-audio: Stop parsing channels bits when all channels are found. ALSA: hda/tas2781: remove unnecessary runtime_pm calls ALSA: hda/realtek - ALC236 fix volume mute & mic mute LED on some HP models ALSA: aaci: Delete unused variable in aaci_do_suspend ALSA: scarlett2: Fix Scarlett 4th Gen input gain range again ALSA: scarlett2: Fix Scarlett 4th Gen input gain range ALSA: scarlett2: Fix Scarlett 4th Gen autogain status values ALSA: scarlett2: Fix Scarlett 4th Gen 4i4 low-voltage detection ALSA: hda/tas2781: restore power state after system_resume ALSA: hda/tas2781: do not call pm_runtime_force_* in system_resume/suspend ALSA: hda/tas2781: do not reset cur_* values in runtime_suspend ALSA: hda/tas2781: add lock to system_suspend ALSA: hda/tas2781: use dev_dbg in system_resume ALSA: hda/realtek: fix ALC285 issues on HP Envy x360 laptops platform/x86: serial-multi-instantiate: Add support for CS35L54 and CS35L57 ALSA: hda: cs35l56: Add support for CS35L54 and CS35L57 ASoC: cs35l56: Add support for CS35L54 and CS35L57 ASoC: Intel: catpt: Carefully use PCI bitwise constants ALSA: hda: hda_component: Include sound/hda_codec.h ALSA: hda: hda_component: Add missing #include guards ...
2024-03-14Merge tag 'pci-v6.9-changes' of ↵Linus Torvalds
git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/pci/pci Pull PCI updates from Bjorn Helgaas: "Enumeration: - Consolidate interrupt related code in irq.c (Ilpo Järvinen) - Reduce kernel size by replacing sysfs resource macros with functions (Ilpo Järvinen) - Reduce kernel size by compiling sysfs support only when CONFIG_SYSFS=y (Lukas Wunner) - Avoid using Extended Tags on 3ware-9650SE Root Port to work around an apparent hardware defect (Jörg Wedekind) Resource management: - Fix an MMIO mapping leak in pci_iounmap() (Philipp Stanner) - Move pci_iomap.c and other PCI-specific devres code to drivers/pci (Philipp Stanner) - Consolidate PCI devres code in devres.c (Philipp Stanner) Power management: - Avoid D3cold on Asus B1400 PCI-NVMe bridge, where firmware doesn't know how to return correctly to D0, and remove previous quirk that wasn't as specific (Daniel Drake) - Allow runtime PM when the driver enables it but doesn't need any runtime PM callbacks (Raag Jadav) - Drain runtime-idle callbacks before driver removal to avoid races between .remove() and .runtime_idle(), which caused intermittent page faults when the rtsx .runtime_idle() accessed registers that its .remove() had already unmapped (Rafael J. Wysocki) Virtualization: - Avoid Secondary Bus Reset on LSI FW643 so it can be assigned to VMs with VFIO, e.g., for professional audio software on many Apple machines, at the cost of leaking state between VMs (Edmund Raile) Error handling: - Print all logged TLP Prefixes, not just the first, after AER or DPC errors (Ilpo Järvinen) - Quirk the DPC PIO log size for Intel Raptor Lake Root Ports, which still don't advertise a legal size (Paul Menzel) - Ignore expected DPC Surprise Down errors on hot removal (Smita Koralahalli) - Block runtime suspend while handling AER errors to avoid races that prevent the device form being resumed from D3hot (Stanislaw Gruszka) Peer-to-peer DMA: - Use atomic XA allocation in RCU read section (Christophe JAILLET) ASPM: - Collect bits of ASPM-related code that we need even without CONFIG_PCIEASPM into aspm.c (David E. Box) - Save/restore L1 PM Substates config for suspend/resume (David E. Box) - Update save_save when ASPM config is changed, so a .slot_reset() during error recovery restores the changed config, not the .probe()-time config (Vidya Sagar) Endpoint framework: - Refactor and improve pci_epf_alloc_space() API (Niklas Cassel) - Clean up endpoint BAR descriptions (Niklas Cassel) - Fix ntb_register_device() name leak in error path (Yang Yingliang) - Return actual error code for pci_vntb_probe() failure (Yang Yingliang) Broadcom STB PCIe controller driver: - Fix MDIO write polling, which previously never waited for completion (Jonathan Bell) Cadence PCIe endpoint driver: - Clear the ARI "Next Function Number" of last function (Jasko-EXT Wojciech) Freescale i.MX6 PCIe controller driver: - Simplify by replacing switch statements with function pointers for different hardware variants (Frank Li) - Simplify by using clk_bulk*() API (Frank Li) - Remove redundant DT clock and reg/reg-name details (Frank Li) - Add i.MX95 DT and driver support for both Root Complex and Endpoint mode (Frank Li) Microsoft Hyper-V host bridge driver: - Reduce memory usage by limiting ring buffer size to 16KB instead of 4 pages (Michael Kelley) Qualcomm PCIe controller driver: - Add X1E80100 DT and driver support (Abel Vesa) - Add DT 'required-opps' for SoCs that require a minimum performance level (Johan Hovold) - Make DT 'msi-map-mask' optional, depending on how MSI interrupts are mapped (Johan Hovold) - Disable ASPM L0s for sc8280xp, sa8540p and sa8295p because the PHY configuration isn't tuned correctly for L0s (Johan Hovold) - Split dt-binding qcom,pcie.yaml into qcom,pcie-common.yaml and separate files for SA8775p, SC7280, SC8180X, SC8280XP, SM8150, SM8250, SM8350, SM8450, SM8550 for easier reviewing (Krzysztof Kozlowski) - Enable BDF to SID translation by disabling bypass mode (Manivannan Sadhasivam) - Add endpoint MHI support for Snapdragon SA8775P SoC (Mrinmay Sarkar) Synopsys DesignWare PCIe controller driver: - Allocate 64-bit MSI address if no 32-bit address is available (Ajay Agarwal) - Fix endpoint Resizable BAR to actually advertise the required 1MB size (Niklas Cassel) MicroSemi Switchtec management driver: - Release resources if the .probe() fails (Christophe JAILLET) Miscellaneous: - Make pcie_port_bus_type const (Ricardo B. Marliere)" * tag 'pci-v6.9-changes' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/pci/pci: (77 commits) PCI/ASPM: Update save_state when configuration changes PCI/ASPM: Disable L1 before configuring L1 Substates PCI/ASPM: Call pci_save_ltr_state() from pci_save_pcie_state() PCI/ASPM: Save L1 PM Substates Capability for suspend/resume PCI: hv: Fix ring buffer size calculation PCI: dwc: endpoint: Fix advertised resizable BAR size PCI: cadence: Clear the ARI Capability Next Function Number of the last function PCI: dwc: Strengthen the MSI address allocation logic PCI: brcmstb: Fix broken brcm_pcie_mdio_write() polling PCI: qcom: Add X1E80100 PCIe support dt-bindings: PCI: qcom: Document the X1E80100 PCIe Controller PCI: qcom: Enable BDF to SID translation properly PCI/AER: Generalize TLP Header Log reading PCI/AER: Use explicit register size for PCI_ERR_CAP PCI: qcom: Disable ASPM L0s for sc8280xp, sa8540p and sa8295p dt-bindings: PCI: qcom: Do not require 'msi-map-mask' dt-bindings: PCI: qcom: Allow 'required-opps' PCI/AER: Block runtime suspend when handling errors PCI/ASPM: Move pci_save_ltr_state() to aspm.c PCI/ASPM: Always build aspm.c ...
2024-03-14Merge tag 'leds-next-6.9' of ↵Linus Torvalds
git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/lee/leds Pull LED updates from Lee Jones: "Core Framework: - Introduce ExpressWire library New Drivers: - Add support for ON Semiconductor NCP5623 RGB LED Driver New Device Support: - Add support for PM660L to Qualcomm's LPG driver New Functionality: - Dynamically load modules required for the default-trigger - Add some support for suspend and resume - Allow LEDs to remain lit during suspend Fix-ups: - Device Tree binding adaptions/conversions/creation - Fix include lists; alphabetise, remove unused, explicitly add used - Add new led_match_default_trigger to avoid duplication - Add module alias' to aid auto-loading - Default to hw_control if no others are specified - De-bloat the supported link speed attribute lists - Remove superfluous code and simplify overall - Constify some variables Bug Fixes: - Prevent kernel panic when renaming the net interface - Fix Kconfig related build errors - Ensure mutexes are unlocked prior to destroying them - Provide clean-up between state changes to avoid invalid state - Fix some broken kernel-doc headers" * tag 'leds-next-6.9' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/lee/leds: (41 commits) leds: ncp5623: Add MS suffix to time defines leds: Add NCP5623 multi-led driver dt-bindings: leds: Add NCP5623 multi-LED Controller leds: mlxreg: Drop an excess struct mlxreg_led_data member leds: leds-mlxcpld: Fix struct mlxcpld_led_priv member name leds: lm3601x: Fix struct lm3601_led kernel-doc warnings leds: Fix ifdef check for gpio_led_register_device() dt-bindings: leds: qcom-lpg: Narrow nvmem for other variants dt-bindings: leds: qcom-lpg: Drop redundant qcom,pm8550-pwm in if:then: dt-bindings: leds: Add LED_FUNCTION_WAN_ONLINE for Internet access leds: sgm3140: Add missing timer cleanup and flash gpio control leds: expresswire: Don't depend on NEW_LEDS Revert "leds: Only descend into leds directory when CONFIG_NEW_LEDS is set" leds: aw2013: Unlock mutex before destroying it leds: qcom-lpg: Add QCOM_PBS dependency leds: rgb: leds-group-multicolor: Allow LEDs to stay on in suspend leds: trigger: netdev: Fix kernel panic on interface rename trig notify leds: qcom-lpg: Add PM660L configuration and compatible leds: spi-byte: Use devm_led_classdev_register_ext() leds: pca963x: Add support for suspend and resume ...
2024-03-13Merge tag 'hwmon-for-v6.9' of ↵Linus Torvalds
git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/groeck/linux-staging Pull hwmon updates from Guenter Roeck: "New drivers: - Amphenol ChipCap 2 - ASPEED g6 PWM/Fan tach - Astera Labs PT5161L retimer - ASUS ROG RYUJIN II 360 AIO cooler - LTC4282 - Microsoft Surface devices - MPS MPQ8785 Synchronous Step-Down Converter - NZXT Kraken X and Z series AIO CPU coolers Additional chip support in existing drivers: - Ayaneo Air Plus 7320u (oxp-sensors) - INA260 (ina2xx) - XPS 9315 (dell-smm) - MSI customer ID (nct6683) Devicetree bindings updates: - Common schema for hardware monitoring devices - Common schema for fans - Update chip descriptions to use common schema - Document regulator properties in several drivers - Explicit bindings for infineon buck converters Other improvements: - Replaced rbtree with maple tree register cache in several drivers - Added support for humidity min/max alarm and volatage fault attributes to hwmon core - Dropped non-functional I2C_CLASS_HWMON support for drivers w/o detect() - Dropped obsolete and redundant entried from MAINTAINERS - Cleaned up axi-fan-control and coretemp drivers - Minor fixes and improvements in several other drivers" * tag 'hwmon-for-v6.9' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/groeck/linux-staging: (70 commits) hwmon: (dell-smm) Add XPS 9315 to fan control whitelist hwmon: (aspeed-g6-pwm-tacho): Support for ASPEED g6 PWM/Fan tach dt-bindings: hwmon: Support Aspeed g6 PWM TACH Control dt-bindings: hwmon: fan: Add fan binding to schema dt-bindings: hwmon: tda38640: Add interrupt & regulator properties hwmon: (amc6821) add of_match table dt-bindings: hwmon: lm75: use common hwmon schema hwmon: (sis5595) drop unused DIV_TO_REG function dt-bindings: hwmon: reference common hwmon schema dt-bindings: hwmon: lltc,ltc4286: use common hwmon schema dt-bindings: hwmon: adi,adm1275: use common hwmon schema dt-bindings: hwmon: ti,ina2xx: use common hwmon schema dt-bindings: hwmon: add common properties hwmon: (pmbus/ir38064) Use PMBUS_REGULATOR_ONE to declare regulator hwmon: (pmbus/lm25066) Use PMBUS_REGULATOR_ONE to declare regulator hwmon: (pmbus/tda38640) Use PMBUS_REGULATOR_ONE to declare regulator regulator: dt-bindings: promote infineon buck converters to their own binding dt-bindings: hwmon/pmbus: ti,lm25066: document regulators dt-bindings: hwmon: nuvoton,nct6775: Add compatible value for NCT6799 MAINTAINERS: Drop redundant hwmon entries ...
2024-03-13Merge tag 'gpio-updates-for-v6.9-rc1' of ↵Linus Torvalds
git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/brgl/linux Pull gpio updates from Bartosz Golaszewski: "The biggest feature is the locking overhaul. Up until now the synchronization in the GPIO subsystem was broken. There was a single spinlock "protecting" multiple data structures but doing it wrong (as evidenced by several places where it would be released when a sleeping function was called and then reacquired without checking the protected state). We tried to use an RW semaphore before but the main issue with GPIO is that we have drivers implementing the interfaces in both sleeping and non-sleeping ways as well as user-facing interfaces that can be called both from process as well as atomic contexts. Both ends converge in the same code paths that can use neither spinlocks nor mutexes. The only reasonable way out is to use SRCU and go mostly lockless. To that end: we add several SRCU structs in relevant places and use them to assure consistency between API calls together with atomic reads and writes of GPIO descriptor flags where it makes sense. This code has spent several weeks in next and has received several fixes in the first week or two after which it stabilized nicely. The GPIO subsystem is now resilient to providers being suddenly unbound. We managed to also remove the existing character device RW semaphore and the obsolete global spinlock. Other than the locking rework we have one new driver (for Chromebook EC), much appreciated documentation improvements from Kent and the regular driver improvements, DT-bindings updates and GPIOLIB core tweaks. Serialization rework: - use SRCU to serialize access to the global GPIO device list, to GPIO device structs themselves and to GPIO descriptors - make the GPIO subsystem resilient to the GPIO providers being unbound while the API calls are in progress - don't dereference the SRCU-protected chip pointer if the information we need can be obtained from the GPIO device structure - move some of the information contained in struct gpio_chip to struct gpio_device to further reduce the need to dereference the former - pass the GPIO device struct instead of the GPIO chip to sysfs callback to, again, reduce the need for accessing the latter - get GPIO descriptors from the GPIO device, not from the chip for the same reason - allow for mostly lockless operation of the GPIO driver API: assure consistency with SRCU and atomic operations - remove the global GPIO spinlock - remove the character device RW semaphore Core GPIOLIB: - constify pointers in GPIO API where applicable - unify the GPIO counting APIs for ACPI and OF - provide a macro for iterating over all GPIOs, not only the ones that are requested - remove leftover typedefs - pass the consumer device to GPIO core in devm_fwnode_gpiod_get_index() for improved logging - constify the GPIO bus type - don't warn about removing GPIO chips with descriptors still held by users as we can now handle this situation gracefully - remove unused logging helpers - unexport functions that are only used internally in the GPIO subsystem - set the device type (assign the relevant struct device_type) for GPIO devices New drivers: - add the ChromeOS EC GPIO driver Driver improvements: - allow building gpio-vf610 with COMPILE_TEST as well as disabling it in menuconfig (before it was always built for i.MX cofigs) - count the number of EICs using the device properties instead of hard-coding it in gpio-eic-sprd - improve the device naming, extend the debugfs output and add lockdep asserts to gpio-sim DT bindings: - document the 'label' property for gpio-pca9570 - convert aspeed,ast2400-gpio bindings to DT schema - disallow unevaluated properties for gpio-mvebu - document a new model in renesas,rcar-gpio Documentation: - improve the character device kerneldocs in user-space headers - add proper documentation for the character device uAPI (both v1 and v2) - move the sysfs and gpio-mockup docs into the "obsolete" section - improve naming consistency for GPIO terms - clarify the line values description for sysfs - minor docs improvements - improve the driver API contract for setting GPIO direction - mark unsafe APIs as deprecated in kerneldocs and suggest replacements Other: - remove an obsolete test from selftests" * tag 'gpio-updates-for-v6.9-rc1' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/brgl/linux: (79 commits) gpio: sysfs: repair export returning -EPERM on 1st attempt selftest: gpio: remove obsolete gpio-mockup test gpiolib: Deduplicate cleanup for-loop in gpiochip_add_data_with_key() dt-bindings: gpio: aspeed,ast2400-gpio: Convert to DT schema gpio: acpi: Make acpi_gpio_count() take firmware node as a parameter gpio: of: Make of_gpio_get_count() take firmware node as a parameter gpiolib: Pass consumer device through to core in devm_fwnode_gpiod_get_index() gpio: sim: use for_each_hwgpio() gpio: provide for_each_hwgpio() gpio: don't warn about removing GPIO chips with active users anymore gpio: sim: delimit the fwnode name with a ":" when generating labels gpio: sim: add lockdep asserts gpio: Add ChromeOS EC GPIO driver gpio: constify of_phandle_args in of_find_gpio_device_by_xlate() gpio: fix memory leak in gpiod_request_commit() gpio: constify opaque pointer "data" in gpio_device_find() gpio: cdev: fix a NULL-pointer dereference with DEBUG enabled gpio: uapi: clarify default_values being logical gpio: sysfs: fix inverted pointer logic gpio: don't let lockdep complain about inherently dangerous RCU usage ...
2024-03-13Merge tag 'iommu-updates-v6.9' of ↵Linus Torvalds
git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/joro/iommu Pull iommu updates from Joerg Roedel: "Core changes: - Constification of bus_type pointer - Preparations for user-space page-fault delivery - Use a named kmem_cache for IOVA magazines Intel VT-d changes from Lu Baolu: - Add RBTree to track iommu probed devices - Add Intel IOMMU debugfs document - Cleanup and refactoring ARM-SMMU Updates from Will Deacon: - Device-tree binding updates for a bunch of Qualcomm SoCs - SMMUv2: Support for Qualcomm X1E80100 MDSS - SMMUv3: Significant rework of the driver's STE manipulation and domain handling code. This is the initial part of a larger scale rework aiming to improve the driver's implementation of the IOMMU-API in preparation for hooking up IOMMUFD support. AMD-Vi Updates: - Refactor GCR3 table support for SVA - Cleanups Some smaller cleanups and fixes" * tag 'iommu-updates-v6.9' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/joro/iommu: (88 commits) iommu: Fix compilation without CONFIG_IOMMU_INTEL iommu/amd: Fix sleeping in atomic context iommu/dma: Document min_align_mask assumption iommu/vt-d: Remove scalabe mode in domain_context_clear_one() iommu/vt-d: Remove scalable mode context entry setup from attach_dev iommu/vt-d: Setup scalable mode context entry in probe path iommu/vt-d: Fix NULL domain on device release iommu: Add static iommu_ops->release_domain iommu/vt-d: Improve ITE fault handling if target device isn't present iommu/vt-d: Don't issue ATS Invalidation request when device is disconnected PCI: Make pci_dev_is_disconnected() helper public for other drivers iommu/vt-d: Use device rbtree in iopf reporting path iommu/vt-d: Use rbtree to track iommu probed devices iommu/vt-d: Merge intel_svm_bind_mm() into its caller iommu/vt-d: Remove initialization for dynamically heap-allocated rcu_head iommu/vt-d: Remove treatment for revoking PASIDs with pending page faults iommu/vt-d: Add the document for Intel IOMMU debugfs iommu/vt-d: Use kcalloc() instead of kzalloc() iommu/vt-d: Remove INTEL_IOMMU_BROKEN_GFX_WA iommu: re-use local fwnode variable in iommu_ops_from_fwnode() ...
2024-03-13Merge branch 'for-6.9/cxl-einj' into for-6.9/cxlDan Williams
Pick up support for injecting errors via ACPI EINJ into the CXL protocol for v6.9.
2024-03-12cxl/core: Add CXL EINJ debugfs filesBen Cheatham
Export CXL helper functions in einj-cxl.c for getting/injecting available CXL protocol error types to sysfs under kernel/debug/cxl. The kernel/debug/cxl/einj_types file will print the available CXL protocol errors in the same format as the available_error_types file provided by the einj module. The kernel/debug/cxl/$dport_dev/einj_inject file is functionally the same as the error_type and error_inject files provided by the EINJ module, i.e.: writing an error type into $dport_dev/einj_inject will inject said error type into the CXL dport represented by $dport_dev. Reviewed-by: Jonathan Cameron <Jonathan.Cameron@huawei.com> Signed-off-by: Ben Cheatham <Benjamin.Cheatham@amd.com> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20240311142508.31717-4-Benjamin.Cheatham@amd.com Signed-off-by: Dan Williams <dan.j.williams@intel.com>
2024-03-12Merge tag 'net-next-6.9' of ↵Linus Torvalds
git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/netdev/net-next Pull networking updates from Jakub Kicinski: "Core & protocols: - Large effort by Eric to lower rtnl_lock pressure and remove locks: - Make commonly used parts of rtnetlink (address, route dumps etc) lockless, protected by RCU instead of rtnl_lock. - Add a netns exit callback which already holds rtnl_lock, allowing netns exit to take rtnl_lock once in the core instead of once for each driver / callback. - Remove locks / serialization in the socket diag interface. - Remove 6 calls to synchronize_rcu() while holding rtnl_lock. - Remove the dev_base_lock, depend on RCU where necessary. - Support busy polling on a per-epoll context basis. Poll length and budget parameters can be set independently of system defaults. - Introduce struct net_hotdata, to make sure read-mostly global config variables fit in as few cache lines as possible. - Add optional per-nexthop statistics to ease monitoring / debug of ECMP imbalance problems. - Support TCP_NOTSENT_LOWAT in MPTCP. - Ensure that IPv6 temporary addresses' preferred lifetimes are long enough, compared to other configured lifetimes, and at least 2 sec. - Support forwarding of ICMP Error messages in IPSec, per RFC 4301. - Add support for the independent control state machine for bonding per IEEE 802.1AX-2008 5.4.15 in addition to the existing coupled control state machine. - Add "network ID" to MCTP socket APIs to support hosts with multiple disjoint MCTP networks. - Re-use the mono_delivery_time skbuff bit for packets which user space wants to be sent at a specified time. Maintain the timing information while traversing veth links, bridge etc. - Take advantage of MSG_SPLICE_PAGES for RxRPC DATA and ACK packets. - Simplify many places iterating over netdevs by using an xarray instead of a hash table walk (hash table remains in place, for use on fastpaths). - Speed up scanning for expired routes by keeping a dedicated list. - Speed up "generic" XDP by trying harder to avoid large allocations. - Support attaching arbitrary metadata to netconsole messages. Things we sprinkled into general kernel code: - Enforce VM_IOREMAP flag and range in ioremap_page_range and introduce VM_SPARSE kind and vm_area_[un]map_pages (used by bpf_arena). - Rework selftest harness to enable the use of the full range of ksft exit code (pass, fail, skip, xfail, xpass). Netfilter: - Allow userspace to define a table that is exclusively owned by a daemon (via netlink socket aliveness) without auto-removing this table when the userspace program exits. Such table gets marked as orphaned and a restarting management daemon can re-attach/regain ownership. - Speed up element insertions to nftables' concatenated-ranges set type. Compact a few related data structures. BPF: - Add BPF token support for delegating a subset of BPF subsystem functionality from privileged system-wide daemons such as systemd through special mount options for userns-bound BPF fs to a trusted & unprivileged application. - Introduce bpf_arena which is sparse shared memory region between BPF program and user space where structures inside the arena can have pointers to other areas of the arena, and pointers work seamlessly for both user-space programs and BPF programs. - Introduce may_goto instruction that is a contract between the verifier and the program. The verifier allows the program to loop assuming it's behaving well, but reserves the right to terminate it. - Extend the BPF verifier to enable static subprog calls in spin lock critical sections. - Support registration of struct_ops types from modules which helps projects like fuse-bpf that seeks to implement a new struct_ops type. - Add support for retrieval of cookies for perf/kprobe multi links. - Support arbitrary TCP SYN cookie generation / validation in the TC layer with BPF to allow creating SYN flood handling in BPF firewalls. - Add code generation to inline the bpf_kptr_xchg() helper which improves performance when stashing/popping the allocated BPF objects. Wireless: - Add SPP (signaling and payload protected) AMSDU support. - Support wider bandwidth OFDMA, as required for EHT operation. Driver API: - Major overhaul of the Energy Efficient Ethernet internals to support new link modes (2.5GE, 5GE), share more code between drivers (especially those using phylib), and encourage more uniform behavior. Convert and clean up drivers. - Define an API for querying per netdev queue statistics from drivers. - IPSec: account in global stats for fully offloaded sessions. - Create a concept of Ethernet PHY Packages at the Device Tree level, to allow parameterizing the existing PHY package code. - Enable Rx hashing (RSS) on GTP protocol fields. Misc: - Improvements and refactoring all over networking selftests. - Create uniform module aliases for TC classifiers, actions, and packet schedulers to simplify creating modprobe policies. - Address all missing MODULE_DESCRIPTION() warnings in networking. - Extend the Netlink descriptions in YAML to cover message encapsulation or "Netlink polymorphism", where interpretation of nested attributes depends on link type, classifier type or some other "class type". Drivers: - Ethernet high-speed NICs: - Add a new driver for Marvell's Octeon PCI Endpoint NIC VF. - Intel (100G, ice, idpf): - support E825-C devices - nVidia/Mellanox: - support devices with one port and multiple PCIe links - Broadcom (bnxt): - support n-tuple filters - support configuring the RSS key - Wangxun (ngbe/txgbe): - implement irq_domain for TXGBE's sub-interrupts - Pensando/AMD: - support XDP - optimize queue submission and wakeup handling (+17% bps) - optimize struct layout, saving 28% of memory on queues - Ethernet NICs embedded and virtual: - Google cloud vNIC: - refactor driver to perform memory allocations for new queue config before stopping and freeing the old queue memory - Synopsys (stmmac): - obey queueMaxSDU and implement counters required by 802.1Qbv - Renesas (ravb): - support packet checksum offload - suspend to RAM and runtime PM support - Ethernet switches: - nVidia/Mellanox: - support for nexthop group statistics - Microchip: - ksz8: implement PHY loopback - add support for KSZ8567, a 7-port 10/100Mbps switch - PTP: - New driver for RENESAS FemtoClock3 Wireless clock generator. - Support OCP PTP cards designed and built by Adva. - CAN: - Support recvmsg() flags for own, local and remote traffic on CAN BCM sockets. - Support for esd GmbH PCIe/402 CAN device family. - m_can: - Rx/Tx submission coalescing - wake on frame Rx - WiFi: - Intel (iwlwifi): - enable signaling and payload protected A-MSDUs - support wider-bandwidth OFDMA - support for new devices - bump FW API to 89 for AX devices; 90 for BZ/SC devices - MediaTek (mt76): - mt7915: newer ADIE version support - mt7925: radio temperature sensor support - Qualcomm (ath11k): - support 6 GHz station power modes: Low Power Indoor (LPI), Standard Power) SP and Very Low Power (VLP) - QCA6390 & WCN6855: support 2 concurrent station interfaces - QCA2066 support - Qualcomm (ath12k): - refactoring in preparation for Multi-Link Operation (MLO) support - 1024 Block Ack window size support - firmware-2.bin support - support having multiple identical PCI devices (firmware needs to have ATH12K_FW_FEATURE_MULTI_QRTR_ID) - QCN9274: support split-PHY devices - WCN7850: enable Power Save Mode in station mode - WCN7850: P2P support - RealTek: - rtw88: support for more rtw8811cu and rtw8821cu devices - rtw89: support SCAN_RANDOM_SN and SET_SCAN_DWELL - rtlwifi: speed up USB firmware initialization - rtwl8xxxu: - RTL8188F: concurrent interface support - Channel Switch Announcement (CSA) support in AP mode - Broadcom (brcmfmac): - per-vendor feature support - per-vendor SAE password setup - DMI nvram filename quirk for ACEPC W5 Pro" * tag 'net-next-6.9' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/netdev/net-next: (2255 commits) nexthop: Fix splat with CONFIG_DEBUG_PREEMPT=y nexthop: Fix out-of-bounds access during attribute validation nexthop: Only parse NHA_OP_FLAGS for dump messages that require it nexthop: Only parse NHA_OP_FLAGS for get messages that require it bpf: move sleepable flag from bpf_prog_aux to bpf_prog bpf: hardcode BPF_PROG_PACK_SIZE to 2MB * num_possible_nodes() selftests/bpf: Add kprobe multi triggering benchmarks ptp: Move from simple ida to xarray vxlan: Remove generic .ndo_get_stats64 vxlan: Do not alloc tstats manually devlink: Add comments to use netlink gen tool nfp: flower: handle acti_netdevs allocation failure net/packet: Add getsockopt support for PACKET_COPY_THRESH net/netlink: Add getsockopt support for NETLINK_LISTEN_ALL_NSID selftests/bpf: Add bpf_arena_htab test. selftests/bpf: Add bpf_arena_list test. selftests/bpf: Add unit tests for bpf_arena_alloc/free_pages bpf: Add helper macro bpf_addr_space_cast() libbpf: Recognize __arena global variables. bpftool: Recognize arena map type ...
2024-03-12Merge tag 'docs-6.9' of git://git.lwn.net/linuxLinus Torvalds
Pull documentation updates from Jonathan Corbet: "A moderatly busy cycle for development this time around. - Some cleanup of the main index page for easier navigation - Rework some of the other top-level pages for better readability and, with luck, fewer merge conflicts in the future. - Submit-checklist improvements, hopefully the first of many. - New Italian translations - A fair number of kernel-doc fixes and improvements. We have also dropped the recommendation to use an old version of Sphinx. - A new document from Thorsten on bisection ... and lots of fixes and updates" * tag 'docs-6.9' of git://git.lwn.net/linux: (54 commits) docs: verify/bisect: fixes, finetuning, and support for Arch docs: Makefile: Add dependency to $(YNL_INDEX) for targets other than htmldocs docs: Move ja_JP/howto.rst to ja_JP/process/howto.rst docs: submit-checklist: use subheadings docs: submit-checklist: structure by category docs: new text on bisecting which also covers bug validation docs: drop the version constraints for sphinx and dependencies docs: kerneldoc-preamble.sty: Remove code for Sphinx <2.4 docs: Restore "smart quotes" for quotes docs/zh_CN: accurate translation of "function" docs: Include simplified link titles in main index docs: Correct formatting of title in admin-guide/index.rst docs: kernel_feat.py: fix build error for missing files MAINTAINERS: Set the field name for subsystem profile section kasan: Add documentation for CONFIG_KASAN_EXTRA_INFO Fixed case issue with 'fault-injection' in documentation kernel-doc: handle #if in enums as well Documentation: update mailing list addresses doc: kerneldoc.py: fix indentation scripts/kernel-doc: simplify signature printing ...
2024-03-12cxl/region: Add sysfs attribute for locality attributes of CXL regionsDave Jiang
Add read/write latencies and bandwidth sysfs attributes for the enabled CXL region. The bandwidth is the aggregated bandwidth of all devices that contribute to the CXL region. The latency is the worst latency of the device amongst all the devices that contribute to the CXL region. Reviewed-by: Jonathan Cameron <Jonathan.Cameron@huawei.com> Tested-by: Jonathan Cameron <Jonathan.Cameron@huawei.com> Signed-off-by: Dave Jiang <dave.jiang@intel.com> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20240308220055.2172956-11-dave.jiang@intel.com Signed-off-by: Dan Williams <dan.j.williams@intel.com>
2024-03-11x86/rfds: Mitigate Register File Data Sampling (RFDS)Pawan Gupta
RFDS is a CPU vulnerability that may allow userspace to infer kernel stale data previously used in floating point registers, vector registers and integer registers. RFDS only affects certain Intel Atom processors. Intel released a microcode update that uses VERW instruction to clear the affected CPU buffers. Unlike MDS, none of the affected cores support SMT. Add RFDS bug infrastructure and enable the VERW based mitigation by default, that clears the affected buffers just before exiting to userspace. Also add sysfs reporting and cmdline parameter "reg_file_data_sampling" to control the mitigation. For details see: Documentation/admin-guide/hw-vuln/reg-file-data-sampling.rst Signed-off-by: Pawan Gupta <pawan.kumar.gupta@linux.intel.com> Signed-off-by: Dave Hansen <dave.hansen@linux.intel.com> Reviewed-by: Thomas Gleixner <tglx@linutronix.de> Acked-by: Josh Poimboeuf <jpoimboe@kernel.org>
2024-03-08net: dqs: add NIC stall detector based on BQLJakub Kicinski
softnet_data->time_squeeze is sometimes used as a proxy for host overload or indication of scheduling problems. In practice this statistic is very noisy and has hard to grasp units - e.g. is 10 squeezes a second to be expected, or high? Delaying network (NAPI) processing leads to drops on NIC queues but also RTT bloat, impacting pacing and CA decisions. Stalls are a little hard to detect on the Rx side, because there may simply have not been any packets received in given period of time. Packet timestamps help a little bit, but again we don't know if packets are stale because we're not keeping up or because someone (*cough* cgroups) disabled IRQs for a long time. We can, however, use Tx as a proxy for Rx stalls. Most drivers use combined Rx+Tx NAPIs so if Tx gets starved so will Rx. On the Tx side we know exactly when packets get queued, and completed, so there is no uncertainty. This patch adds stall checks to BQL. Why BQL? Because it's a convenient place to add such checks, already called by most drivers, and it has copious free space in its structures (this patch adds no extra cache references or dirtying to the fast path). The algorithm takes one parameter - max delay AKA stall threshold and increments a counter whenever NAPI got delayed for at least that amount of time. It also records the length of the longest stall. To be precise every time NAPI has not polled for at least stall thrs we check if there were any Tx packets queued between last NAPI run and now - stall_thrs/2. Unlike the classic Tx watchdog this mechanism does not ignore stalls caused by Tx being disabled, or loss of link. I don't think the check is worth the complexity, and stall is a stall, whether due to host overload, flow control, link down... doesn't matter much to the application. We have been running this detector in production at Meta for 2 years, with the threshold of 8ms. It's the lowest value where false positives become rare. There's still a constant stream of reported stalls (especially without the ksoftirqd deferral patches reverted), those who like their stall metrics to be 0 may prefer higher value. Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org> Signed-off-by: Breno Leitao <leitao@debian.org> Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2024-03-08Merge branches 'arm/mediatek', 'arm/renesas', 'arm/smmu', 'x86/vt-d', ↵Joerg Roedel
'x86/amd' and 'core' into next
2024-03-07Documentation: leds: Update led-trigger-tty ABI descriptionFlorian Eckert
The 'led-trigger-tty' uses the same naming in the ABI documentation as the 'led-trigger-netdev'. Which leads to the following warning when building the documentation. Warning: /sys/class/leds/<led>/rx is defined 2 times: Documentation/ABI/testing/sysfs-class-led-trigger-tty:7 Documentation/ABI/testing/sysfs-class-led-trigger-netdev:49 Warning: /sys/class/leds/<led>/tx is defined 2 times: Documentation/ABI/testing/sysfs-class-led-trigger-tty:15 Documentation/ABI/testing/sysfs-class-led-trigger-netdev:34 Renaming the 'What' path by prefixing it with 'tty_' solves this problem. Fixes: 6dec659896b4 ("leds: ledtrig-tty: Add additional line state evaluation") Reported-by: Stephen Rothwell <sfr@canb.auug.org.au> Signed-off-by: Florian Eckert <fe@dev.tdt.de> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20240110133410.81645-1-fe@dev.tdt.de Signed-off-by: Lee Jones <lee@kernel.org> (cherry picked from commit ea411a8422c1d7f8193d726fb76ba09534b6a5fe) Signed-off-by: Lee Jones <lee@kernel.org>
2024-03-07docs: ABI: sysfs-class-led-trigger-netdev: Document now hidable link_*Christian Marangi
Document now hidable link speed modes for the LED netdev trigger. Link speed modes are now showed only if the named network device supports them and are hidden if not. Signed-off-by: Christian Marangi <ansuelsmth@gmail.com> Reviewed-by: Marek Behún <kabel@kernel.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20240111160501.1774-2-ansuelsmth@gmail.com Signed-off-by: Lee Jones <lee@kernel.org>
2024-03-05Merge tag 'v6.8-rc7' into gpio/for-nextBartosz Golaszewski
Linux 6.8-rc7
2024-03-05usb: Export BOS descriptor to sysfsElbert Mai
Motivation ---------- The binary device object store (BOS) of a USB device consists of the BOS descriptor followed by a set of device capability descriptors. One that is of interest to users is the platform descriptor. This contains a 128-bit UUID and arbitrary data, and it allows parties outside of USB-IF to add additional metadata about a USB device in a standards-compliant manner. Notable examples include the WebUSB and Microsoft OS 2.0 descriptors. The kernel already retrieves and caches the BOS from USB devices if its bcdUSB is >= 0x0201. Because the BOS is flexible and extensible, we export the entire BOS to sysfs so users can retrieve whatever device capabilities they desire, without requiring USB I/O or elevated permissions. Implementation -------------- Add bos_descriptors attribute to sysfs. This is a binary file and it works the same way as the existing descriptors attribute. The file exists only if the BOS is present in the USB device. Also create a binary attribute group, so the driver core can handle the creation of both the descriptors and bos_descriptors attributes in sysfs. Signed-off-by: Elbert Mai <code@elbertmai.com> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20240305002301.95323-1-code@elbertmai.com Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
2024-03-02Merge tag 'iio-for-6.9b' of ↵Greg Kroah-Hartman
https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/jic23/iio into char-misc-next Jonathan writes: IIO: 2nd set of new device support, cleanups and features for 6.9 New device support ================= adi,hmc425a - Add support for LTC6373 Instrumentation Amplifier. microchip,pac1934 - New driver supporting PAC1931, PAC1932, PAC1933 and PAC1934 power monitoring chips with accumulators. voltafield,af8133j - New driver for the AF8133J 3 axis magnetometer. Docs ==== New general documentation of device buffers, and a specific section on the adi,adis16475 IMU Features ======== kionix,kxcjk-1013 - Add support for ACPI ROTM (Microsoft defined ACPI method) to get rotation matrix. ti,tmp117 - Add missing vcc-supply control and binding. Cleanups and minor fixes ======================== Tree-wide - Corrected headers to remove linux/of.h from a bunch of drivers that only had it to get to linux/mod_devicetable.h - dt binding cleanup to drop redundant type from label properties. adi,hmc425a - Fix constraints on GPIO array sizes for different devices. adi,ltc2983 - Use spi_get_device_match_data instead of open coding similar. - Update naming of fw parsing function to reflect that it is not longer dt only. - Set the chip name explicitly to reduce fragility resulting from different entries in the various ID tables. bosch,bmg160 - Add spi-max-frequency property and limit to dt-binding. microchip,mcp320x - Use devm_* to simplify device removal and error handling. nxp,imx93 - Drop a non existent 4th interrupt from bindings. qcom,mp8xxx-xoadc - Drop unused kerneldoc renesas,isl29501 - Actually use the of_match table. rockchip,saradc - Fix channel bitmask - Fix write masks - Replace custom handling of optional reset control with how it should be done. ti,ads1298 - Fix error code to not return a successfully obtained regulator. - Avoid a divide by zero when setting frequency. ti,hdc2010 - Add missing interrupts dt binding property vishay,veml6075 - Make vdd-supply required in the dt-binding. * tag 'iio-for-6.9b' of https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/jic23/iio: (42 commits) dt-bindings: iio: gyroscope: bosch,bmg160: add spi-max-frequency dt-bindings: iio: adc: imx93: drop the 4th interrupt iio: proximity: isl29501: make use of of_device_id table iio: adc: qcom-pm8xxx-xoadc: drop unused kerneldoc struct pm8xxx_chan_info member dt-bindings: iio: adc: drop redundant type from label dt-bindings: iio: ti,tmp117: add optional label property MAINTAINERS: Add an entry for AF8133J driver iio: magnetometer: add a driver for Voltafield AF8133J magnetometer dt-bindings: iio: magnetometer: Add Voltafield AF8133J dt-bindings: vendor-prefix: Add prefix for Voltafield iio: adc: rockchip_saradc: replace custom logic with devm_reset_control_get_optional_exclusive iio: adc: rockchip_saradc: use mask for write_enable bitfield iio: adc: rockchip_saradc: fix bitmask for channels on SARADCv2 dt-bindings: iio: light: vishay,veml6075: make vdd-supply required iio: adc: adding support for PAC193x dt-bindings: iio: adc: adding support for PAC193X iio: temperature: ltc2983: explicitly set the name in chip_info iio: temperature: ltc2983: rename ltc2983_parse_dt() iio: temperature: ltc2983: make use of spi_get_device_match_data() iio: adc: ti-ads1298: prevent divide by zero in ads1298_set_samp_freq() ...
2024-03-02Merge tag 'coresight-next-v6.9' of ↵Greg Kroah-Hartman
git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/coresight/linux into char-misc-next Suzuki writes: coresight: hwtracing subsystem updates for v6.9 Changes targeting Linux v6.9 include: - CoreSight: Enable W=1 warnings as default - CoreSight: Clean up sysfs/perf mode handling for tracing - Support for Qualcomm TPDM CMB Dataset - Miscellaneous fixes to the CoreSight subsystem - Fix for hisi_ptt PMU to reject events targeting other PMUs Signed-off-by: Suzuki K Poulose <suzuki.poulose@arm.com> * tag 'coresight-next-v6.9' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/coresight/linux: (32 commits) coresight-tpda: Change qcom,dsb-element-size to qcom,dsb-elem-bits dt-bindings: arm: qcom,coresight-tpdm: Rename qcom,dsb-element-size hwtracing: hisi_ptt: Move type check to the beginning of hisi_ptt_pmu_event_init() coresight: tpdm: Fix build break due to uninitialised field coresight: etm4x: Set skip_power_up in etm4_init_arch_data function coresight-tpdm: Add msr register support for CMB dt-bindings: arm: qcom,coresight-tpdm: Add support for TPDM CMB MSR register coresight-tpdm: Add timestamp control register support for the CMB coresight-tpdm: Add pattern registers support for CMB coresight-tpdm: Add support to configure CMB coresight-tpda: Add support to configure CMB element coresight-tpdm: Add CMB dataset support dt-bindings: arm: qcom,coresight-tpdm: Add support for CMB element size coresight-tpdm: Optimize the useage of tpdm_has_dsb_dataset coresight-tpdm: Optimize the store function of tpdm simple dataset coresight: Add helper for setting csdev->mode coresight: Add a helper for getting csdev->mode coresight: Add helper for atomically taking the device coresight: Add explicit member initializers to coresight_dev_type coresight: Remove unused stubs ...
2024-03-01iommu/vt-d: Add the document for Intel IOMMU debugfsJingqi Liu
This document guides users to dump the Intel IOMMU internals by debugfs. Signed-off-by: Jingqi Liu <Jingqi.liu@intel.com> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20240207090742.23857-1-Jingqi.liu@intel.com Signed-off-by: Lu Baolu <baolu.lu@linux.intel.com> Signed-off-by: Joerg Roedel <jroedel@suse.de>
2024-02-29f2fs: introduce FAULT_NO_SEGMENTChao Yu
Use it to simulate no free segment case during block allocation. Signed-off-by: Chao Yu <chao@kernel.org> Signed-off-by: Jaegeuk Kim <jaegeuk@kernel.org>
2024-02-28iio: adc: adding support for PAC193xMarius Cristea
This is the iio driver for Microchip PAC193X series of Power Monitor with Accumulator chip family. Signed-off-by: Marius Cristea <marius.cristea@microchip.com> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20240222164206.65700-3-marius.cristea@microchip.com Signed-off-by: Jonathan Cameron <Jonathan.Cameron@huawei.com>
2024-02-27f2fs: doc: Fix bouncing email address for Sahitya TummalaJeffrey Hugo
The servers for the @codeaurora domain are long retired and any messages addressed there will bounce. Sahitya Tummala has a .mailmap entry to an updated address, but the documentation files still list @codeaurora which might be a problem for anyone reading the documentation directly. Update the documentation files to match the .mailmap update. Signed-off-by: Jeffrey Hugo <quic_jhugo@quicinc.com> Reviewed-by: Chao Yu <chao@kernel.org> Signed-off-by: Jaegeuk Kim <jaegeuk@kernel.org>
2024-02-25ABI: sysfs-class-hwmon: add descriptions for humidity min/max alarmsJavier Carrasco
This attributes have been recently introduced and require the corresponding ABI documentation. Signed-off-by: Javier Carrasco <javier.carrasco.cruz@gmail.com> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20240130-topic-chipcap2-v6-3-260bea05cf9b@gmail.com Signed-off-by: Guenter Roeck <linux@roeck-us.net>
2024-02-23Docs/ABI/damon: document quota goal metric fileSeongJae Park
Update DAMON ABI document for the quota goal target_metric file. Link: https://lkml.kernel.org/r/20240219194431.159606-17-sj@kernel.org Signed-off-by: SeongJae Park <sj@kernel.org> Signed-off-by: Andrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org>
2024-02-23Docs/ABI/damon: document effective_bytes sysfs fileSeongJae Park
Update the DAMON ABI doc for the effective_bytes sysfs file and the kdamond state file input command for updating the content of the file. Link: https://lkml.kernel.org/r/20240219194431.159606-5-sj@kernel.org Signed-off-by: SeongJae Park <sj@kernel.org> Signed-off-by: Andrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org>
2024-02-24Documentation: qat: fix auto_reset sectionGiovanni Cabiddu
Remove unneeded colon in the auto_reset section. This resolves the following errors when building the documentation: Documentation/ABI/testing/sysfs-driver-qat:146: ERROR: Unexpected indentation. Documentation/ABI/testing/sysfs-driver-qat:146: WARNING: Block quote ends without a blank line; unexpected unindent. Fixes: f5419a4239af ("crypto: qat - add auto reset on error") Reported-by: Stephen Rothwell <sfr@canb.auug.org.au> Closes: https://lore.kernel.org/linux-kernel/20240212144830.70495d07@canb.auug.org.au/T/ Signed-off-by: Giovanni Cabiddu <giovanni.cabiddu@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Herbert Xu <herbert@gondor.apana.org.au>
2024-02-23virtiofs: export filesystem tags through sysfsStefan Hajnoczi
The virtiofs filesystem is mounted using a "tag" which is exported by the virtiofs device: # mount -t virtiofs <tag> /mnt The virtiofs driver knows about all the available tags but these are currently not exported to user space. People have asked for these tags to be exported to user space. Most recently Lennart Poettering has asked for it as he wants to scan the tags and mount virtiofs automatically in certain cases. https://gitlab.com/virtio-fs/virtiofsd/-/issues/128 This patch exports tags at /sys/fs/virtiofs/<N>/tag where N is the id of the virtiofs device. The filesystem tag can be obtained by reading this "tag" file. There is also a symlink at /sys/fs/virtiofs/<N>/device that points to the virtiofs device that exports this tag. This patch converts the existing struct virtio_fs into a full kobject. It already had a refcount so it's an easy change. The virtio_fs objects can then be exposed in a kset at /sys/fs/virtiofs/. Note that virtio_fs objects may live slightly longer than we wish for them to be exposed to userspace, so kobject_del() is called explicitly when the underlying virtio_device is removed. The virtio_fs object is freed when all references are dropped (e.g. active mounts) but disappears as soon as the virtiofs device is gone. Originally-by: Vivek Goyal <vgoyal@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Stefan Hajnoczi <stefanha@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Vivek Goyal <vgoyal@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Miklos Szeredi <mszeredi@redhat.com>
2024-02-22mm/cma: add sysfs file 'release_pages_success'Anshuman Khandual
This adds the following new sysfs file tracking the number of successfully released pages from a given CMA heap area. This file will be available via CONFIG_CMA_SYSFS and help in determining active CMA pages available on the CMA heap area. This adds a new 'nr_pages_released' (CONFIG_CMA_SYSFS) into 'struct cma' which gets updated during cma_release(). /sys/kernel/mm/cma/<cma-heap-area>/release_pages_success After this change, an user will be able to find active CMA pages available in a given CMA heap area via the following method. Active pages = alloc_pages_success - release_pages_success That's valuable information for both software designers, and system admins as it allows them to tune the number of CMA pages available in the system. This increases user visibility for allocated CMA area and its utilization. Link: https://lkml.kernel.org/r/20240206045731.472759-1-anshuman.khandual@arm.com Signed-off-by: Anshuman Khandual <anshuman.khandual@arm.com> Signed-off-by: Andrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org>
2024-02-22mm/mempolicy: implement the sysfs-based weighted_interleave interfaceRakie Kim
Patch series "mm/mempolicy: weighted interleave mempolicy and sysfs extension", v5. Weighted interleave is a new interleave policy intended to make use of heterogeneous memory environments appearing with CXL. The existing interleave mechanism does an even round-robin distribution of memory across all nodes in a nodemask, while weighted interleave distributes memory across nodes according to a provided weight. (Weight = # of page allocations per round) Weighted interleave is intended to reduce average latency when bandwidth is pressured - therefore increasing total throughput. In other words: It allows greater use of the total available bandwidth in a heterogeneous hardware environment (different hardware provides different bandwidth capacity). As bandwidth is pressured, latency increases - first linearly and then exponentially. By keeping bandwidth usage distributed according to available bandwidth, we therefore can reduce the average latency of a cacheline fetch. A good explanation of the bandwidth vs latency response curve: https://mahmoudhatem.wordpress.com/2017/11/07/memory-bandwidth-vs-latency-response-curve/ From the article: ``` Constant region: The latency response is fairly constant for the first 40% of the sustained bandwidth. Linear region: In between 40% to 80% of the sustained bandwidth, the latency response increases almost linearly with the bandwidth demand of the system due to contention overhead by numerous memory requests. Exponential region: Between 80% to 100% of the sustained bandwidth, the memory latency is dominated by the contention latency which can be as much as twice the idle latency or more. Maximum sustained bandwidth : Is 65% to 75% of the theoretical maximum bandwidth. ``` As a general rule of thumb: * If bandwidth usage is low, latency does not increase. It is optimal to place data in the nearest (lowest latency) device. * If bandwidth usage is high, latency increases. It is optimal to place data such that bandwidth use is optimized per-device. This is the top line goal: Provide a user a mechanism to target using the "maximum sustained bandwidth" of each hardware component in a heterogenous memory system. For example, the stream benchmark demonstrates that 1:1 (default) interleave is actively harmful, while weighted interleave can be beneficial. Default interleave distributes data such that too much pressure is placed on devices with lower available bandwidth. Stream Benchmark (vs DRAM, 1 Socket + 1 CXL Device) Default interleave : -78% (slower than DRAM) Global weighting : -6% to +4% (workload dependant) Targeted weights : +2.5% to +4% (consistently better than DRAM) Global means the task-policy was set (set_mempolicy), while targeted means VMA policies were set (mbind2). We see weighted interleave is not always beneficial when applied globally, but is always beneficial when applied to bandwidth-driving memory regions. There are 4 patches in this set: 1) Implement system-global interleave weights as sysfs extension in mm/mempolicy.c. These weights are RCU protected, and a default weight set is provided (all weights are 1 by default). In future work, we intend to expose an interface for HMAT/CDAT code to set reasonable default values based on the memory configuration of the system discovered at boot/hotplug. 2) A mild refactor of some interleave-logic for re-use in the new weighted interleave logic. 3) MPOL_WEIGHTED_INTERLEAVE extension for set_mempolicy/mbind 4) Protect interleave logic (weighted and normal) with the mems_allowed seq cookie. If the nodemask changes while accessing it during a rebind, just retry the access. Included below are some performance and LTP test information, and a sample numactl branch which can be used for testing. = Performance summary = (tests may have different configurations, see extended info below) 1) MLC (W2) : +38% over DRAM. +264% over default interleave. MLC (W5) : +40% over DRAM. +226% over default interleave. 2) Stream : -6% to +4% over DRAM, +430% over default interleave. 3) XSBench : +19% over DRAM. +47% over default interleave. = LTP Testing Summary = existing mempolicy & mbind tests: pass mempolicy & mbind + weighted interleave (global weights): pass = version history v5: - style fixes - mems_allowed cookie protection to detect rebind issues, prevents spurious allocation failures and/or mis-allocations - sparse warning fixes related to __rcu on local variables ===================================================================== Performance tests - MLC From - Ravi Jonnalagadda <ravis.opensrc@micron.com> Hardware: Single-socket, multiple CXL memory expanders. Workload: W2 Data Signature: 2:1 read:write DRAM only bandwidth (GBps): 298.8 DRAM + CXL (default interleave) (GBps): 113.04 DRAM + CXL (weighted interleave)(GBps): 412.5 Gain over DRAM only: 1.38x Gain over default interleave: 2.64x Workload: W5 Data Signature: 1:1 read:write DRAM only bandwidth (GBps): 273.2 DRAM + CXL (default interleave) (GBps): 117.23 DRAM + CXL (weighted interleave)(GBps): 382.7 Gain over DRAM only: 1.4x Gain over default interleave: 2.26x ===================================================================== Performance test - Stream From - Gregory Price <gregory.price@memverge.com> Hardware: Single socket, single CXL expander numactl extension: https://github.com/gmprice/numactl/tree/weighted_interleave_master Summary: 64 threads, ~18GB workload, 3GB per array, executed 100 times Default interleave : -78% (slower than DRAM) Global weighting : -6% to +4% (workload dependant) mbind2 weights : +2.5% to +4% (consistently better than DRAM) dram only: numactl --cpunodebind=1 --membind=1 ./stream_c.exe --ntimes 100 --array-size 400M --malloc Function Direction BestRateMBs AvgTime MinTime MaxTime Copy: 0->0 200923.2 0.032662 0.031853 0.033301 Scale: 0->0 202123.0 0.032526 0.031664 0.032970 Add: 0->0 208873.2 0.047322 0.045961 0.047884 Triad: 0->0 208523.8 0.047262 0.046038 0.048414 CXL-only: numactl --cpunodebind=1 -w --membind=2 ./stream_c.exe --ntimes 100 --array-size 400M --malloc Copy: 0->0 22209.7 0.288661 0.288162 0.289342 Scale: 0->0 22288.2 0.287549 0.287147 0.288291 Add: 0->0 24419.1 0.393372 0.393135 0.393735 Triad: 0->0 24484.6 0.392337 0.392083 0.394331 Based on the above, the optimal weights are ~9:1 echo 9 > /sys/kernel/mm/mempolicy/weighted_interleave/node1 echo 1 > /sys/kernel/mm/mempolicy/weighted_interleave/node2 default interleave: numactl --cpunodebind=1 --interleave=1,2 ./stream_c.exe --ntimes 100 --array-size 400M --malloc Copy: 0->0 44666.2 0.143671 0.143285 0.144174 Scale: 0->0 44781.6 0.143256 0.142916 0.143713 Add: 0->0 48600.7 0.197719 0.197528 0.197858 Triad: 0->0 48727.5 0.197204 0.197014 0.197439 global weighted interleave: numactl --cpunodebind=1 -w --interleave=1,2 ./stream_c.exe --ntimes 100 --array-size 400M --malloc Copy: 0->0 190085.9 0.034289 0.033669 0.034645 Scale: 0->0 207677.4 0.031909 0.030817 0.033061 Add: 0->0 202036.8 0.048737 0.047516 0.053409 Triad: 0->0 217671.5 0.045819 0.044103 0.046755 targted regions w/ global weights (modified stream to mbind2 malloc'd regions)) numactl --cpunodebind=1 --membind=1 ./stream_c.exe -b --ntimes 100 --array-size 400M --malloc Copy: 0->0 205827.0 0.031445 0.031094 0.031984 Scale: 0->0 208171.8 0.031320 0.030744 0.032505 Add: 0->0 217352.0 0.045087 0.044168 0.046515 Triad: 0->0 216884.8 0.045062 0.044263 0.046982 ===================================================================== Performance tests - XSBench From - Hyeongtak Ji <hyeongtak.ji@sk.com> Hardware: Single socket, Single CXL memory Expander NUMA node 0: 56 logical cores, 128 GB memory NUMA node 2: 96 GB CXL memory Threads: 56 Lookups: 170,000,000 Summary: +19% over DRAM. +47% over default interleave. Performance tests - XSBench 1. dram only $ numactl -m 0 ./XSBench -s XL –p 5000000 Runtime: 36.235 seconds Lookups/s: 4,691,618 2. default interleave $ numactl –i 0,2 ./XSBench –s XL –p 5000000 Runtime: 55.243 seconds Lookups/s: 3,077,293 3. weighted interleave numactl –w –i 0,2 ./XSBench –s XL –p 5000000 Runtime: 29.262 seconds Lookups/s: 5,809,513 ===================================================================== LTP Tests: https://github.com/gmprice/ltp/tree/mempolicy2 = Existing tests set_mempolicy, get_mempolicy, mbind MPOL_WEIGHTED_INTERLEAVE added manually to test basic functionality but did not adjust tests for weighting. Basically the weights were set to 1, which is the default, and it should behave the same as MPOL_INTERLEAVE if logic is correct. == set_mempolicy01 : passed 18, failed 0 == set_mempolicy02 : passed 10, failed 0 == set_mempolicy03 : passed 64, failed 0 == set_mempolicy04 : passed 32, failed 0 == set_mempolicy05 - n/a on non-x86 == set_mempolicy06 : passed 10, failed 0 this is set_mempolicy02 + MPOL_WEIGHTED_INTERLEAVE == set_mempolicy07 : passed 32, failed 0 set_mempolicy04 + MPOL_WEIGHTED_INTERLEAVE == get_mempolicy01 : passed 12, failed 0 change: added MPOL_WEIGHTED_INTERLEAVE == get_mempolicy02 : passed 2, failed 0 == mbind01 : passed 15, failed 0 added MPOL_WEIGHTED_INTERLEAVE == mbind02 : passed 4, failed 0 added MPOL_WEIGHTED_INTERLEAVE == mbind03 : passed 16, failed 0 added MPOL_WEIGHTED_INTERLEAVE == mbind04 : passed 48, failed 0 added MPOL_WEIGHTED_INTERLEAVE ===================================================================== numactl (set_mempolicy) w/ global weighting test numactl fork: https://github.com/gmprice/numactl/tree/weighted_interleave_master command: numactl -w --interleave=0,1 ./eatmem result (weights 1:1): 0176a000 weighted interleave:0-1 heap anon=65793 dirty=65793 active=0 N0=32897 N1=32896 kernelpagesize_kB=4 7fceeb9ff000 weighted interleave:0-1 anon=65537 dirty=65537 active=0 N0=32768 N1=32769 kernelpagesize_kB=4 50% distribution is correct result (weights 5:1): 01b14000 weighted interleave:0-1 heap anon=65793 dirty=65793 active=0 N0=54828 N1=10965 kernelpagesize_kB=4 7f47a1dff000 weighted interleave:0-1 anon=65537 dirty=65537 active=0 N0=54614 N1=10923 kernelpagesize_kB=4 16.666% distribution is correct result (weights 1:5): 01f07000 weighted interleave:0-1 heap anon=65793 dirty=65793 active=0 N0=10966 N1=54827 kernelpagesize_kB=4 7f17b1dff000 weighted interleave:0-1 anon=65537 dirty=65537 active=0 N0=10923 N1=54614 kernelpagesize_kB=4 16.666% distribution is correct #include <stdio.h> #include <stdlib.h> #include <string.h> int main (void) { char* mem = malloc(1024*1024*256); memset(mem, 1, 1024*1024*256); for (int i = 0; i < ((1024*1024*256)/4096); i++) { mem = malloc(4096); mem[0] = 1; } printf("done\n"); getchar(); return 0; } This patch (of 4): This patch provides a way to set interleave weight information under sysfs at /sys/kernel/mm/mempolicy/weighted_interleave/nodeN The sysfs structure is designed as follows. $ tree /sys/kernel/mm/mempolicy/ /sys/kernel/mm/mempolicy/ [1] └── weighted_interleave [2] ├── node0 [3] └── node1 Each file above can be explained as follows. [1] mm/mempolicy: configuration interface for mempolicy subsystem [2] weighted_interleave/: config interface for weighted interleave policy [3] weighted_interleave/nodeN: weight for nodeN If a node value is set to `0`, the system-default value will be used. As of this patch, the system-default for all nodes is always 1. Link: https://lkml.kernel.org/r/20240202170238.90004-1-gregory.price@memverge.com Link: https://lkml.kernel.org/r/20240202170238.90004-2-gregory.price@memverge.com Suggested-by: "Huang, Ying" <ying.huang@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Rakie Kim <rakie.kim@sk.com> Signed-off-by: Honggyu Kim <honggyu.kim@sk.com> Co-developed-by: Gregory Price <gregory.price@memverge.com> Signed-off-by: Gregory Price <gregory.price@memverge.com> Co-developed-by: Hyeongtak Ji <hyeongtak.ji@sk.com> Signed-off-by: Hyeongtak Ji <hyeongtak.ji@sk.com> Reviewed-by: "Huang, Ying" <ying.huang@intel.com> Cc: Dan Williams <dan.j.williams@intel.com> Cc: Gregory Price <gourry.memverge@gmail.com> Cc: Hasan Al Maruf <Hasan.Maruf@amd.com> Cc: Johannes Weiner <hannes@cmpxchg.org> Cc: Jonathan Corbet <corbet@lwn.net> Cc: Michal Hocko <mhocko@kernel.org> Cc: Srinivasulu Thanneeru <sthanneeru.opensrc@micron.com> Signed-off-by: Andrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org>
2024-02-22dax: add a sysfs knob to control memmap_on_memory behaviorVishal Verma
Add a sysfs knob for dax devices to control the memmap_on_memory setting if the dax device were to be hotplugged as system memory. The default memmap_on_memory setting for dax devices originating via pmem or hmem is set to 'false' - i.e. no memmap_on_memory semantics, to preserve legacy behavior. For dax devices via CXL, the default is on. The sysfs control allows the administrator to override the above defaults if needed. Link: https://lkml.kernel.org/r/20240124-vv-dax_abi-v7-5-20d16cb8d23d@intel.com Signed-off-by: Vishal Verma <vishal.l.verma@intel.com> Tested-by: Li Zhijian <lizhijian@fujitsu.com> Reviewed-by: Jonathan Cameron <Jonathan.Cameron@huawei.com> Reviewed-by: David Hildenbrand <david@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Huang, Ying <ying.huang@intel.com> Reviewed-by: Alison Schofield <alison.schofield@intel.com> Cc: Dan Williams <dan.j.williams@intel.com> Cc: Dave Jiang <dave.jiang@intel.com> Cc: Dave Hansen <dave.hansen@linux.intel.com> Cc: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org> Cc: Matthew Wilcox (Oracle) <willy@infradead.org> Cc: Michal Hocko <mhocko@suse.com> Cc: Oscar Salvador <osalvador@suse.de> Signed-off-by: Andrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org>
2024-02-22Documentatiion/ABI: add ABI documentation for sys-bus-daxVishal Verma
Add the missing sysfs ABI documentation for the device DAX subsystem. Various ABI attributes under this have been present since v5.1, and more have been added over time. In preparation for adding a new attribute, add this file with the historical details. Link: https://lkml.kernel.org/r/20240124-vv-dax_abi-v7-3-20d16cb8d23d@intel.com Signed-off-by: Vishal Verma <vishal.l.verma@intel.com> Cc: Dan Williams <dan.j.williams@intel.com> Cc: Dave Hansen <dave.hansen@linux.intel.com> Cc: Dave Jiang <dave.jiang@intel.com> Cc: David Hildenbrand <david@redhat.com> Cc: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org> Cc: Huang Ying <ying.huang@intel.com> Cc: Jonathan Cameron <Jonathan.Cameron@huawei.com> Cc: Li Zhijian <lizhijian@fujitsu.com> Cc: Matthew Wilcox (Oracle) <willy@infradead.org> Cc: Michal Hocko <mhocko@suse.com> Cc: Oscar Salvador <osalvador@suse.de> Signed-off-by: Andrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org>
2024-02-21Documentation: update mailing list addressesKonstantin Ryabitsev
The mailman2 server running on lists.linuxfoundation.org will be shut down in very imminent future. Update all instances of obsolete list addresses throughout the tree with their new destinations. Signed-off-by: Konstantin Ryabitsev <konstantin@linuxfoundation.org> Reviewed-by: Kees Cook <keescook@chromium.org> Signed-off-by: Jonathan Corbet <corbet@lwn.net> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20240214-lf-org-list-migration-v1-1-ef1eab4b1543@linuxfoundation.org
2024-02-21ASoC: Intel: avs: Fixes and new platforms supportMark Brown
Merge series from Cezary Rojewski <cezary.rojewski@intel.com>: The avs-driver continues to be utilized on more recent Intel machines. As TGL-based (cAVS 2.5) e.g.: RPL, inherit most of the functionality from previous platforms: SKL <- APL <- CNL <- ICL <- TGL rather than putting everything into a single file, the platform-specific bits are split into cnl/icl/tgl.c files instead. Makes the division clear and code easier to maintain. Layout of the patchset: First are two changes combined together address the sound-clipping problem, present when only one stream is running - specifically one CAPTURE stream. Follow up is naming-scheme adjustment for some of the existing functions what improves code incohesiveness. As existing IPC/IRQ code operates solely on cAVS 1.5 architecture, it needs no abstraction. The situation changes when newer platforms come into the picture. Thus the next two patches abstract the existing IPC/IRQ handlers so that majority of the common code can be re-used. The ICCMAX change stands out a bit - the AudioDSP firmware loading procedure differs on ICL-based platforms (and onwards) and having a separate commit makes the situation clear to the developers who are going to support the solution from LTS perspective. For that reason I decided not to merge it into the commit introducing the icl.c file.
2024-02-19Merge 6.8-rc5 into usb-nextGreg Kroah-Hartman
We need the USB fixes in here as well. Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
2024-02-17Merge tag 'char-misc-6.8-rc5' of ↵Linus Torvalds
git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/gregkh/char-misc Pull char / miscdriver fixes from Greg KH: "Here is a small set of char/misc and IIO driver fixes for 6.8-rc5. Included in here are: - lots of iio driver fixes for reported issues - nvmem device naming fixup for reported problem - interconnect driver fixes for reported issues All of these have been in linux-next for a while with no reported the issues (the nvmem patch was included in a different branch in linux-next before sent to me for inclusion here)" * tag 'char-misc-6.8-rc5' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/gregkh/char-misc: (21 commits) nvmem: include bit index in cell sysfs file name iio: adc: ad4130: only set GPIO_CTRL if pin is unused iio: adc: ad4130: zero-initialize clock init data interconnect: qcom: x1e80100: Add missing ACV enable_mask interconnect: qcom: sm8650: Use correct ACV enable_mask iio: accel: bma400: Fix a compilation problem iio: commom: st_sensors: ensure proper DMA alignment iio: hid-sensor-als: Return 0 for HID_USAGE_SENSOR_TIME_TIMESTAMP iio: move LIGHT_UVA and LIGHT_UVB to the end of iio_modifier staging: iio: ad5933: fix type mismatch regression iio: humidity: hdc3020: fix temperature offset iio: adc: ad7091r8: Fix error code in ad7091r8_gpio_setup() iio: adc: ad_sigma_delta: ensure proper DMA alignment iio: imu: adis: ensure proper DMA alignment iio: humidity: hdc3020: Add Makefile, Kconfig and MAINTAINERS entry iio: imu: bno055: serdev requires REGMAP iio: magnetometer: rm3100: add boundary check for the value read from RM3100_REG_TMRC iio: pressure: bmp280: Add missing bmp085 to SPI id table iio: core: fix memleak in iio_device_register_sysfs interconnect: qcom: sm8550: Enable sync_state ...
2024-02-17usb: roles: Link the switch to its connectorHeikki Krogerus
This is probable useful information to have in user space in general, but it's primarily needed for the xHCI DbC (Debug Capability). When xHCI DbC is being used, the USB port needs to be muxed to the xHCI even in device role. In xHCI DbC mode, the xHCI is the USB device controller. Tested-by: Uday Bhat <uday.m.bhat@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Heikki Krogerus <heikki.krogerus@linux.intel.com> Reviewed-by: Prashant Malani <pmalani@chromium.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20240213130018.3029991-2-heikki.krogerus@linux.intel.com Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
2024-02-17crypto: hisilicon/qm - obtain stop queue statusWeili Qian
The debugfs files 'dev_state' and 'dev_timeout' are added. Users can query the current queue stop status through these two files. And set the waiting timeout when the queue is released. dev_state: if dev_timeout is set, dev_state indicates the status of stopping the queue. 0 indicates that the queue is stopped successfully. Other values indicate that the queue stops fail. If dev_timeout is not set, the value of dev_state is 0; dev_timeout: if the queue fails to stop, the queue is released after waiting dev_timeout * 20ms. Signed-off-by: Weili Qian <qianweili@huawei.com> Signed-off-by: Herbert Xu <herbert@gondor.apana.org.au>
2024-02-14nvmem: include bit index in cell sysfs file nameArnd Bergmann
Creating sysfs files for all Cells caused a boot failure for linux-6.8-rc1 on Apple M1, which (in downstream dts files) has multiple nvmem cells that use the same byte address. This causes the device probe to fail with [ 0.605336] sysfs: cannot create duplicate filename '/devices/platform/soc@200000000/2922bc000.efuse/apple_efuses_nvmem0/cells/efuse@a10' [ 0.605347] CPU: 7 PID: 1 Comm: swapper/0 Tainted: G S 6.8.0-rc1-arnd-5+ #133 [ 0.605355] Hardware name: Apple Mac Studio (M1 Ultra, 2022) (DT) [ 0.605362] Call trace: [ 0.605365] show_stack+0x18/0x2c [ 0.605374] dump_stack_lvl+0x60/0x80 [ 0.605383] dump_stack+0x18/0x24 [ 0.605388] sysfs_warn_dup+0x64/0x80 [ 0.605395] sysfs_add_bin_file_mode_ns+0xb0/0xd4 [ 0.605402] internal_create_group+0x268/0x404 [ 0.605409] sysfs_create_groups+0x38/0x94 [ 0.605415] devm_device_add_groups+0x50/0x94 [ 0.605572] nvmem_populate_sysfs_cells+0x180/0x1b0 [ 0.605682] nvmem_register+0x38c/0x470 [ 0.605789] devm_nvmem_register+0x1c/0x6c [ 0.605895] apple_efuses_probe+0xe4/0x120 [ 0.606000] platform_probe+0xa8/0xd0 As far as I can tell, this is a problem for any device with multiple cells on different bits of the same address. Avoid the issue by changing the file name to include the first bit number. Fixes: 0331c611949f ("nvmem: core: Expose cells through sysfs") Link: https://github.com/AsahiLinux/linux/blob/bd0a1a7d4/arch/arm64/boot/dts/apple/t600x-dieX.dtsi#L156 Cc: <regressions@lists.linux.dev> Cc: Miquel Raynal <miquel.raynal@bootlin.com> Cc: Rafał Miłecki <rafal@milecki.pl> Cc: Chen-Yu Tsai <wenst@chromium.org> Cc: Srinivas Kandagatla <srinivas.kandagatla@linaro.org> Cc: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org> Cc: <asahi@lists.linux.dev> Cc: Sven Peter <sven@svenpeter.dev> Signed-off-by: Arnd Bergmann <arnd@arndb.de> Signed-off-by: Srinivas Kandagatla <srinivas.kandagatla@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Eric Curtin <ecurtin@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Miquel Raynal <miquel.raynal@bootlin.com> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20240209163454.98051-1-srinivas.kandagatla@linaro.org Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
2024-02-12net: sysfs: Fix /sys/class/net/<iface> path for statisticsBreno Leitao
The Documentation/ABI/testing/sysfs-class-net-statistics documentation is pointing to the wrong path for the interface. Documentation is pointing to /sys/class/<iface>, instead of /sys/class/net/<iface>. Fix it by adding the `net/` directory before the interface. Fixes: 6044f9700645 ("net: sysfs: document /sys/class/net/statistics/*") Signed-off-by: Breno Leitao <leitao@debian.org> Reviewed-by: Andrew Lunn <andrew@lunn.ch> Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>