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H A D | MAINTAINERS | diff 0fb528c8 Thu Feb 22 09:42:06 MST 2024 Marius Cristea <marius.cristea@microchip.com> iio: adc: adding support for PAC193x 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> diff 0edf2567 Thu Feb 22 01:30:04 MST 2024 Basavaraj Natikar <Basavaraj.Natikar@amd.com> MAINTAINERS: change in AMD ptdma maintainer As 'Sanjay R Mehta' stepped down from the role of ptdma maintainer, I request to be added as the new maintainer of AMD PTDMA. Signed-off-by: Basavaraj Natikar <Basavaraj.Natikar@amd.com> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20240222083004.1907070-1-Basavaraj.Natikar@amd.com Signed-off-by: Vinod Koul <vkoul@kernel.org> diff 701ab935 Tue Feb 20 04:50:55 MST 2024 Ankit Agrawal <ankita@nvidia.com> vfio/nvgrace-gpu: Add vfio pci variant module for grace hopper NVIDIA's upcoming Grace Hopper Superchip provides a PCI-like device for the on-chip GPU that is the logical OS representation of the internal proprietary chip-to-chip cache coherent interconnect. The device is peculiar compared to a real PCI device in that whilst there is a real 64b PCI BAR1 (comprising region 2 & region 3) on the device, it is not used to access device memory once the faster chip-to-chip interconnect is initialized (occurs at the time of host system boot). The device memory is accessed instead using the chip-to-chip interconnect that is exposed as a contiguous physically addressable region on the host. This device memory aperture can be obtained from host ACPI table using device_property_read_u64(), according to the FW specification. Since the device memory is cache coherent with the CPU, it can be mmap into the user VMA with a cacheable mapping using remap_pfn_range() and used like a regular RAM. The device memory is not added to the host kernel, but mapped directly as this reduces memory wastage due to struct pages. There is also a requirement of a minimum reserved 1G uncached region (termed as resmem) to support the Multi-Instance GPU (MIG) feature [1]. This is to work around a HW defect. Based on [2], the requisite properties (uncached, unaligned access) can be achieved through a VM mapping (S1) of NORMAL_NC and host (S2) mapping with MemAttr[2:0]=0b101. To provide a different non-cached property to the reserved 1G region, it needs to be carved out from the device memory and mapped as a separate region in Qemu VMA with pgprot_writecombine(). pgprot_writecombine() sets the Qemu VMA page properties (pgprot) as NORMAL_NC. Provide a VFIO PCI variant driver that adapts the unique device memory representation into a more standard PCI representation facing userspace. The variant driver exposes these two regions - the non-cached reserved (resmem) and the cached rest of the device memory (termed as usemem) as separate VFIO 64b BAR regions. This is divergent from the baremetal approach, where the device memory is exposed as a device memory region. The decision for a different approach was taken in view of the fact that it would necessiate additional code in Qemu to discover and insert those regions in the VM IPA, along with the additional VM ACPI DSDT changes to communicate the device memory region IPA to the VM workloads. Moreover, this behavior would have to be added to a variety of emulators (beyond top of tree Qemu) out there desiring grace hopper support. Since the device implements 64-bit BAR0, the VFIO PCI variant driver maps the uncached carved out region to the next available PCI BAR (i.e. comprising of region 2 and 3). The cached device memory aperture is assigned BAR region 4 and 5. Qemu will then naturally generate a PCI device in the VM with the uncached aperture reported as BAR2 region, the cacheable as BAR4. The variant driver provides emulation for these fake BARs' PCI config space offset registers. The hardware ensures that the system does not crash when the memory is accessed with the memory enable turned off. It synthesis ~0 reads and dropped writes on such access. So there is no need to support the disablement/enablement of BAR through PCI_COMMAND config space register. The memory layout on the host looks like the following: devmem (memlength) |--------------------------------------------------| |-------------cached------------------------|--NC--| | | usemem.memphys resmem.memphys PCI BARs need to be aligned to the power-of-2, but the actual memory on the device may not. A read or write access to the physical address from the last device PFN up to the next power-of-2 aligned physical address results in reading ~0 and dropped writes. Note that the GPU device driver [6] is capable of knowing the exact device memory size through separate means. The device memory size is primarily kept in the system ACPI tables for use by the VFIO PCI variant module. Note that the usemem memory is added by the VM Nvidia device driver [5] to the VM kernel as memblocks. Hence make the usable memory size memblock (MEMBLK_SIZE) aligned. This is a hardwired ABI value between the GPU FW and VFIO driver. The VM device driver make use of the same value for its calculation to determine USEMEM size. Currently there is no provision in KVM for a S2 mapping with MemAttr[2:0]=0b101, but there is an ongoing effort to provide the same [3]. As previously mentioned, resmem is mapped pgprot_writecombine(), that sets the Qemu VMA page properties (pgprot) as NORMAL_NC. Using the proposed changes in [3] and [4], KVM marks the region with MemAttr[2:0]=0b101 in S2. If the device memory properties are not present, the driver registers the vfio-pci-core function pointers. Since there are no ACPI memory properties generated for the VM, the variant driver inside the VM will only use the vfio-pci-core ops and hence try to map the BARs as non cached. This is not a problem as the CPUs have FWB enabled which blocks the VM mapping's ability to override the cacheability set by the host mapping. This goes along with a qemu series [6] to provides the necessary implementation of the Grace Hopper Superchip firmware specification so that the guest operating system can see the correct ACPI modeling for the coherent GPU device. Verified with the CUDA workload in the VM. [1] https://www.nvidia.com/en-in/technologies/multi-instance-gpu/ [2] section D8.5.5 of https://developer.arm.com/documentation/ddi0487/latest/ [3] https://lore.kernel.org/all/20240211174705.31992-1-ankita@nvidia.com/ [4] https://lore.kernel.org/all/20230907181459.18145-2-ankita@nvidia.com/ [5] https://github.com/NVIDIA/open-gpu-kernel-modules [6] https://lore.kernel.org/all/20231203060245.31593-1-ankita@nvidia.com/ Reviewed-by: Kevin Tian <kevin.tian@intel.com> Reviewed-by: Yishai Hadas <yishaih@nvidia.com> Reviewed-by: Zhi Wang <zhi.wang.linux@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Aniket Agashe <aniketa@nvidia.com> Signed-off-by: Ankit Agrawal <ankita@nvidia.com> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20240220115055.23546-4-ankita@nvidia.com Signed-off-by: Alex Williamson <alex.williamson@redhat.com> diff 701ab935 Tue Feb 20 04:50:55 MST 2024 Ankit Agrawal <ankita@nvidia.com> vfio/nvgrace-gpu: Add vfio pci variant module for grace hopper NVIDIA's upcoming Grace Hopper Superchip provides a PCI-like device for the on-chip GPU that is the logical OS representation of the internal proprietary chip-to-chip cache coherent interconnect. The device is peculiar compared to a real PCI device in that whilst there is a real 64b PCI BAR1 (comprising region 2 & region 3) on the device, it is not used to access device memory once the faster chip-to-chip interconnect is initialized (occurs at the time of host system boot). The device memory is accessed instead using the chip-to-chip interconnect that is exposed as a contiguous physically addressable region on the host. This device memory aperture can be obtained from host ACPI table using device_property_read_u64(), according to the FW specification. Since the device memory is cache coherent with the CPU, it can be mmap into the user VMA with a cacheable mapping using remap_pfn_range() and used like a regular RAM. The device memory is not added to the host kernel, but mapped directly as this reduces memory wastage due to struct pages. There is also a requirement of a minimum reserved 1G uncached region (termed as resmem) to support the Multi-Instance GPU (MIG) feature [1]. This is to work around a HW defect. Based on [2], the requisite properties (uncached, unaligned access) can be achieved through a VM mapping (S1) of NORMAL_NC and host (S2) mapping with MemAttr[2:0]=0b101. To provide a different non-cached property to the reserved 1G region, it needs to be carved out from the device memory and mapped as a separate region in Qemu VMA with pgprot_writecombine(). pgprot_writecombine() sets the Qemu VMA page properties (pgprot) as NORMAL_NC. Provide a VFIO PCI variant driver that adapts the unique device memory representation into a more standard PCI representation facing userspace. The variant driver exposes these two regions - the non-cached reserved (resmem) and the cached rest of the device memory (termed as usemem) as separate VFIO 64b BAR regions. This is divergent from the baremetal approach, where the device memory is exposed as a device memory region. The decision for a different approach was taken in view of the fact that it would necessiate additional code in Qemu to discover and insert those regions in the VM IPA, along with the additional VM ACPI DSDT changes to communicate the device memory region IPA to the VM workloads. Moreover, this behavior would have to be added to a variety of emulators (beyond top of tree Qemu) out there desiring grace hopper support. Since the device implements 64-bit BAR0, the VFIO PCI variant driver maps the uncached carved out region to the next available PCI BAR (i.e. comprising of region 2 and 3). The cached device memory aperture is assigned BAR region 4 and 5. Qemu will then naturally generate a PCI device in the VM with the uncached aperture reported as BAR2 region, the cacheable as BAR4. The variant driver provides emulation for these fake BARs' PCI config space offset registers. The hardware ensures that the system does not crash when the memory is accessed with the memory enable turned off. It synthesis ~0 reads and dropped writes on such access. So there is no need to support the disablement/enablement of BAR through PCI_COMMAND config space register. The memory layout on the host looks like the following: devmem (memlength) |--------------------------------------------------| |-------------cached------------------------|--NC--| | | usemem.memphys resmem.memphys PCI BARs need to be aligned to the power-of-2, but the actual memory on the device may not. A read or write access to the physical address from the last device PFN up to the next power-of-2 aligned physical address results in reading ~0 and dropped writes. Note that the GPU device driver [6] is capable of knowing the exact device memory size through separate means. The device memory size is primarily kept in the system ACPI tables for use by the VFIO PCI variant module. Note that the usemem memory is added by the VM Nvidia device driver [5] to the VM kernel as memblocks. Hence make the usable memory size memblock (MEMBLK_SIZE) aligned. This is a hardwired ABI value between the GPU FW and VFIO driver. The VM device driver make use of the same value for its calculation to determine USEMEM size. Currently there is no provision in KVM for a S2 mapping with MemAttr[2:0]=0b101, but there is an ongoing effort to provide the same [3]. As previously mentioned, resmem is mapped pgprot_writecombine(), that sets the Qemu VMA page properties (pgprot) as NORMAL_NC. Using the proposed changes in [3] and [4], KVM marks the region with MemAttr[2:0]=0b101 in S2. If the device memory properties are not present, the driver registers the vfio-pci-core function pointers. Since there are no ACPI memory properties generated for the VM, the variant driver inside the VM will only use the vfio-pci-core ops and hence try to map the BARs as non cached. This is not a problem as the CPUs have FWB enabled which blocks the VM mapping's ability to override the cacheability set by the host mapping. This goes along with a qemu series [6] to provides the necessary implementation of the Grace Hopper Superchip firmware specification so that the guest operating system can see the correct ACPI modeling for the coherent GPU device. Verified with the CUDA workload in the VM. [1] https://www.nvidia.com/en-in/technologies/multi-instance-gpu/ [2] section D8.5.5 of https://developer.arm.com/documentation/ddi0487/latest/ [3] https://lore.kernel.org/all/20240211174705.31992-1-ankita@nvidia.com/ [4] https://lore.kernel.org/all/20230907181459.18145-2-ankita@nvidia.com/ [5] https://github.com/NVIDIA/open-gpu-kernel-modules [6] https://lore.kernel.org/all/20231203060245.31593-1-ankita@nvidia.com/ Reviewed-by: Kevin Tian <kevin.tian@intel.com> Reviewed-by: Yishai Hadas <yishaih@nvidia.com> Reviewed-by: Zhi Wang <zhi.wang.linux@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Aniket Agashe <aniketa@nvidia.com> Signed-off-by: Ankit Agrawal <ankita@nvidia.com> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20240220115055.23546-4-ankita@nvidia.com Signed-off-by: Alex Williamson <alex.williamson@redhat.com> diff 701ab935 Tue Feb 20 04:50:55 MST 2024 Ankit Agrawal <ankita@nvidia.com> vfio/nvgrace-gpu: Add vfio pci variant module for grace hopper NVIDIA's upcoming Grace Hopper Superchip provides a PCI-like device for the on-chip GPU that is the logical OS representation of the internal proprietary chip-to-chip cache coherent interconnect. The device is peculiar compared to a real PCI device in that whilst there is a real 64b PCI BAR1 (comprising region 2 & region 3) on the device, it is not used to access device memory once the faster chip-to-chip interconnect is initialized (occurs at the time of host system boot). The device memory is accessed instead using the chip-to-chip interconnect that is exposed as a contiguous physically addressable region on the host. This device memory aperture can be obtained from host ACPI table using device_property_read_u64(), according to the FW specification. Since the device memory is cache coherent with the CPU, it can be mmap into the user VMA with a cacheable mapping using remap_pfn_range() and used like a regular RAM. The device memory is not added to the host kernel, but mapped directly as this reduces memory wastage due to struct pages. There is also a requirement of a minimum reserved 1G uncached region (termed as resmem) to support the Multi-Instance GPU (MIG) feature [1]. This is to work around a HW defect. Based on [2], the requisite properties (uncached, unaligned access) can be achieved through a VM mapping (S1) of NORMAL_NC and host (S2) mapping with MemAttr[2:0]=0b101. To provide a different non-cached property to the reserved 1G region, it needs to be carved out from the device memory and mapped as a separate region in Qemu VMA with pgprot_writecombine(). pgprot_writecombine() sets the Qemu VMA page properties (pgprot) as NORMAL_NC. Provide a VFIO PCI variant driver that adapts the unique device memory representation into a more standard PCI representation facing userspace. The variant driver exposes these two regions - the non-cached reserved (resmem) and the cached rest of the device memory (termed as usemem) as separate VFIO 64b BAR regions. This is divergent from the baremetal approach, where the device memory is exposed as a device memory region. The decision for a different approach was taken in view of the fact that it would necessiate additional code in Qemu to discover and insert those regions in the VM IPA, along with the additional VM ACPI DSDT changes to communicate the device memory region IPA to the VM workloads. Moreover, this behavior would have to be added to a variety of emulators (beyond top of tree Qemu) out there desiring grace hopper support. Since the device implements 64-bit BAR0, the VFIO PCI variant driver maps the uncached carved out region to the next available PCI BAR (i.e. comprising of region 2 and 3). The cached device memory aperture is assigned BAR region 4 and 5. Qemu will then naturally generate a PCI device in the VM with the uncached aperture reported as BAR2 region, the cacheable as BAR4. The variant driver provides emulation for these fake BARs' PCI config space offset registers. The hardware ensures that the system does not crash when the memory is accessed with the memory enable turned off. It synthesis ~0 reads and dropped writes on such access. So there is no need to support the disablement/enablement of BAR through PCI_COMMAND config space register. The memory layout on the host looks like the following: devmem (memlength) |--------------------------------------------------| |-------------cached------------------------|--NC--| | | usemem.memphys resmem.memphys PCI BARs need to be aligned to the power-of-2, but the actual memory on the device may not. A read or write access to the physical address from the last device PFN up to the next power-of-2 aligned physical address results in reading ~0 and dropped writes. Note that the GPU device driver [6] is capable of knowing the exact device memory size through separate means. The device memory size is primarily kept in the system ACPI tables for use by the VFIO PCI variant module. Note that the usemem memory is added by the VM Nvidia device driver [5] to the VM kernel as memblocks. Hence make the usable memory size memblock (MEMBLK_SIZE) aligned. This is a hardwired ABI value between the GPU FW and VFIO driver. The VM device driver make use of the same value for its calculation to determine USEMEM size. Currently there is no provision in KVM for a S2 mapping with MemAttr[2:0]=0b101, but there is an ongoing effort to provide the same [3]. As previously mentioned, resmem is mapped pgprot_writecombine(), that sets the Qemu VMA page properties (pgprot) as NORMAL_NC. Using the proposed changes in [3] and [4], KVM marks the region with MemAttr[2:0]=0b101 in S2. If the device memory properties are not present, the driver registers the vfio-pci-core function pointers. Since there are no ACPI memory properties generated for the VM, the variant driver inside the VM will only use the vfio-pci-core ops and hence try to map the BARs as non cached. This is not a problem as the CPUs have FWB enabled which blocks the VM mapping's ability to override the cacheability set by the host mapping. This goes along with a qemu series [6] to provides the necessary implementation of the Grace Hopper Superchip firmware specification so that the guest operating system can see the correct ACPI modeling for the coherent GPU device. Verified with the CUDA workload in the VM. [1] https://www.nvidia.com/en-in/technologies/multi-instance-gpu/ [2] section D8.5.5 of https://developer.arm.com/documentation/ddi0487/latest/ [3] https://lore.kernel.org/all/20240211174705.31992-1-ankita@nvidia.com/ [4] https://lore.kernel.org/all/20230907181459.18145-2-ankita@nvidia.com/ [5] https://github.com/NVIDIA/open-gpu-kernel-modules [6] https://lore.kernel.org/all/20231203060245.31593-1-ankita@nvidia.com/ Reviewed-by: Kevin Tian <kevin.tian@intel.com> Reviewed-by: Yishai Hadas <yishaih@nvidia.com> Reviewed-by: Zhi Wang <zhi.wang.linux@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Aniket Agashe <aniketa@nvidia.com> Signed-off-by: Ankit Agrawal <ankita@nvidia.com> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20240220115055.23546-4-ankita@nvidia.com Signed-off-by: Alex Williamson <alex.williamson@redhat.com> diff 701ab935 Tue Feb 20 04:50:55 MST 2024 Ankit Agrawal <ankita@nvidia.com> vfio/nvgrace-gpu: Add vfio pci variant module for grace hopper NVIDIA's upcoming Grace Hopper Superchip provides a PCI-like device for the on-chip GPU that is the logical OS representation of the internal proprietary chip-to-chip cache coherent interconnect. The device is peculiar compared to a real PCI device in that whilst there is a real 64b PCI BAR1 (comprising region 2 & region 3) on the device, it is not used to access device memory once the faster chip-to-chip interconnect is initialized (occurs at the time of host system boot). The device memory is accessed instead using the chip-to-chip interconnect that is exposed as a contiguous physically addressable region on the host. This device memory aperture can be obtained from host ACPI table using device_property_read_u64(), according to the FW specification. Since the device memory is cache coherent with the CPU, it can be mmap into the user VMA with a cacheable mapping using remap_pfn_range() and used like a regular RAM. The device memory is not added to the host kernel, but mapped directly as this reduces memory wastage due to struct pages. There is also a requirement of a minimum reserved 1G uncached region (termed as resmem) to support the Multi-Instance GPU (MIG) feature [1]. This is to work around a HW defect. Based on [2], the requisite properties (uncached, unaligned access) can be achieved through a VM mapping (S1) of NORMAL_NC and host (S2) mapping with MemAttr[2:0]=0b101. To provide a different non-cached property to the reserved 1G region, it needs to be carved out from the device memory and mapped as a separate region in Qemu VMA with pgprot_writecombine(). pgprot_writecombine() sets the Qemu VMA page properties (pgprot) as NORMAL_NC. Provide a VFIO PCI variant driver that adapts the unique device memory representation into a more standard PCI representation facing userspace. The variant driver exposes these two regions - the non-cached reserved (resmem) and the cached rest of the device memory (termed as usemem) as separate VFIO 64b BAR regions. This is divergent from the baremetal approach, where the device memory is exposed as a device memory region. The decision for a different approach was taken in view of the fact that it would necessiate additional code in Qemu to discover and insert those regions in the VM IPA, along with the additional VM ACPI DSDT changes to communicate the device memory region IPA to the VM workloads. Moreover, this behavior would have to be added to a variety of emulators (beyond top of tree Qemu) out there desiring grace hopper support. Since the device implements 64-bit BAR0, the VFIO PCI variant driver maps the uncached carved out region to the next available PCI BAR (i.e. comprising of region 2 and 3). The cached device memory aperture is assigned BAR region 4 and 5. Qemu will then naturally generate a PCI device in the VM with the uncached aperture reported as BAR2 region, the cacheable as BAR4. The variant driver provides emulation for these fake BARs' PCI config space offset registers. The hardware ensures that the system does not crash when the memory is accessed with the memory enable turned off. It synthesis ~0 reads and dropped writes on such access. So there is no need to support the disablement/enablement of BAR through PCI_COMMAND config space register. The memory layout on the host looks like the following: devmem (memlength) |--------------------------------------------------| |-------------cached------------------------|--NC--| | | usemem.memphys resmem.memphys PCI BARs need to be aligned to the power-of-2, but the actual memory on the device may not. A read or write access to the physical address from the last device PFN up to the next power-of-2 aligned physical address results in reading ~0 and dropped writes. Note that the GPU device driver [6] is capable of knowing the exact device memory size through separate means. The device memory size is primarily kept in the system ACPI tables for use by the VFIO PCI variant module. Note that the usemem memory is added by the VM Nvidia device driver [5] to the VM kernel as memblocks. Hence make the usable memory size memblock (MEMBLK_SIZE) aligned. This is a hardwired ABI value between the GPU FW and VFIO driver. The VM device driver make use of the same value for its calculation to determine USEMEM size. Currently there is no provision in KVM for a S2 mapping with MemAttr[2:0]=0b101, but there is an ongoing effort to provide the same [3]. As previously mentioned, resmem is mapped pgprot_writecombine(), that sets the Qemu VMA page properties (pgprot) as NORMAL_NC. Using the proposed changes in [3] and [4], KVM marks the region with MemAttr[2:0]=0b101 in S2. If the device memory properties are not present, the driver registers the vfio-pci-core function pointers. Since there are no ACPI memory properties generated for the VM, the variant driver inside the VM will only use the vfio-pci-core ops and hence try to map the BARs as non cached. This is not a problem as the CPUs have FWB enabled which blocks the VM mapping's ability to override the cacheability set by the host mapping. This goes along with a qemu series [6] to provides the necessary implementation of the Grace Hopper Superchip firmware specification so that the guest operating system can see the correct ACPI modeling for the coherent GPU device. Verified with the CUDA workload in the VM. [1] https://www.nvidia.com/en-in/technologies/multi-instance-gpu/ [2] section D8.5.5 of https://developer.arm.com/documentation/ddi0487/latest/ [3] https://lore.kernel.org/all/20240211174705.31992-1-ankita@nvidia.com/ [4] https://lore.kernel.org/all/20230907181459.18145-2-ankita@nvidia.com/ [5] https://github.com/NVIDIA/open-gpu-kernel-modules [6] https://lore.kernel.org/all/20231203060245.31593-1-ankita@nvidia.com/ Reviewed-by: Kevin Tian <kevin.tian@intel.com> Reviewed-by: Yishai Hadas <yishaih@nvidia.com> Reviewed-by: Zhi Wang <zhi.wang.linux@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Aniket Agashe <aniketa@nvidia.com> Signed-off-by: Ankit Agrawal <ankita@nvidia.com> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20240220115055.23546-4-ankita@nvidia.com Signed-off-by: Alex Williamson <alex.williamson@redhat.com> diff 701ab935 Tue Feb 20 04:50:55 MST 2024 Ankit Agrawal <ankita@nvidia.com> vfio/nvgrace-gpu: Add vfio pci variant module for grace hopper NVIDIA's upcoming Grace Hopper Superchip provides a PCI-like device for the on-chip GPU that is the logical OS representation of the internal proprietary chip-to-chip cache coherent interconnect. The device is peculiar compared to a real PCI device in that whilst there is a real 64b PCI BAR1 (comprising region 2 & region 3) on the device, it is not used to access device memory once the faster chip-to-chip interconnect is initialized (occurs at the time of host system boot). The device memory is accessed instead using the chip-to-chip interconnect that is exposed as a contiguous physically addressable region on the host. This device memory aperture can be obtained from host ACPI table using device_property_read_u64(), according to the FW specification. Since the device memory is cache coherent with the CPU, it can be mmap into the user VMA with a cacheable mapping using remap_pfn_range() and used like a regular RAM. The device memory is not added to the host kernel, but mapped directly as this reduces memory wastage due to struct pages. There is also a requirement of a minimum reserved 1G uncached region (termed as resmem) to support the Multi-Instance GPU (MIG) feature [1]. This is to work around a HW defect. Based on [2], the requisite properties (uncached, unaligned access) can be achieved through a VM mapping (S1) of NORMAL_NC and host (S2) mapping with MemAttr[2:0]=0b101. To provide a different non-cached property to the reserved 1G region, it needs to be carved out from the device memory and mapped as a separate region in Qemu VMA with pgprot_writecombine(). pgprot_writecombine() sets the Qemu VMA page properties (pgprot) as NORMAL_NC. Provide a VFIO PCI variant driver that adapts the unique device memory representation into a more standard PCI representation facing userspace. The variant driver exposes these two regions - the non-cached reserved (resmem) and the cached rest of the device memory (termed as usemem) as separate VFIO 64b BAR regions. This is divergent from the baremetal approach, where the device memory is exposed as a device memory region. The decision for a different approach was taken in view of the fact that it would necessiate additional code in Qemu to discover and insert those regions in the VM IPA, along with the additional VM ACPI DSDT changes to communicate the device memory region IPA to the VM workloads. Moreover, this behavior would have to be added to a variety of emulators (beyond top of tree Qemu) out there desiring grace hopper support. Since the device implements 64-bit BAR0, the VFIO PCI variant driver maps the uncached carved out region to the next available PCI BAR (i.e. comprising of region 2 and 3). The cached device memory aperture is assigned BAR region 4 and 5. Qemu will then naturally generate a PCI device in the VM with the uncached aperture reported as BAR2 region, the cacheable as BAR4. The variant driver provides emulation for these fake BARs' PCI config space offset registers. The hardware ensures that the system does not crash when the memory is accessed with the memory enable turned off. It synthesis ~0 reads and dropped writes on such access. So there is no need to support the disablement/enablement of BAR through PCI_COMMAND config space register. The memory layout on the host looks like the following: devmem (memlength) |--------------------------------------------------| |-------------cached------------------------|--NC--| | | usemem.memphys resmem.memphys PCI BARs need to be aligned to the power-of-2, but the actual memory on the device may not. A read or write access to the physical address from the last device PFN up to the next power-of-2 aligned physical address results in reading ~0 and dropped writes. Note that the GPU device driver [6] is capable of knowing the exact device memory size through separate means. The device memory size is primarily kept in the system ACPI tables for use by the VFIO PCI variant module. Note that the usemem memory is added by the VM Nvidia device driver [5] to the VM kernel as memblocks. Hence make the usable memory size memblock (MEMBLK_SIZE) aligned. This is a hardwired ABI value between the GPU FW and VFIO driver. The VM device driver make use of the same value for its calculation to determine USEMEM size. Currently there is no provision in KVM for a S2 mapping with MemAttr[2:0]=0b101, but there is an ongoing effort to provide the same [3]. As previously mentioned, resmem is mapped pgprot_writecombine(), that sets the Qemu VMA page properties (pgprot) as NORMAL_NC. Using the proposed changes in [3] and [4], KVM marks the region with MemAttr[2:0]=0b101 in S2. If the device memory properties are not present, the driver registers the vfio-pci-core function pointers. Since there are no ACPI memory properties generated for the VM, the variant driver inside the VM will only use the vfio-pci-core ops and hence try to map the BARs as non cached. This is not a problem as the CPUs have FWB enabled which blocks the VM mapping's ability to override the cacheability set by the host mapping. This goes along with a qemu series [6] to provides the necessary implementation of the Grace Hopper Superchip firmware specification so that the guest operating system can see the correct ACPI modeling for the coherent GPU device. Verified with the CUDA workload in the VM. [1] https://www.nvidia.com/en-in/technologies/multi-instance-gpu/ [2] section D8.5.5 of https://developer.arm.com/documentation/ddi0487/latest/ [3] https://lore.kernel.org/all/20240211174705.31992-1-ankita@nvidia.com/ [4] https://lore.kernel.org/all/20230907181459.18145-2-ankita@nvidia.com/ [5] https://github.com/NVIDIA/open-gpu-kernel-modules [6] https://lore.kernel.org/all/20231203060245.31593-1-ankita@nvidia.com/ Reviewed-by: Kevin Tian <kevin.tian@intel.com> Reviewed-by: Yishai Hadas <yishaih@nvidia.com> Reviewed-by: Zhi Wang <zhi.wang.linux@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Aniket Agashe <aniketa@nvidia.com> Signed-off-by: Ankit Agrawal <ankita@nvidia.com> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20240220115055.23546-4-ankita@nvidia.com Signed-off-by: Alex Williamson <alex.williamson@redhat.com> diff 701ab935 Tue Feb 20 04:50:55 MST 2024 Ankit Agrawal <ankita@nvidia.com> vfio/nvgrace-gpu: Add vfio pci variant module for grace hopper NVIDIA's upcoming Grace Hopper Superchip provides a PCI-like device for the on-chip GPU that is the logical OS representation of the internal proprietary chip-to-chip cache coherent interconnect. The device is peculiar compared to a real PCI device in that whilst there is a real 64b PCI BAR1 (comprising region 2 & region 3) on the device, it is not used to access device memory once the faster chip-to-chip interconnect is initialized (occurs at the time of host system boot). The device memory is accessed instead using the chip-to-chip interconnect that is exposed as a contiguous physically addressable region on the host. This device memory aperture can be obtained from host ACPI table using device_property_read_u64(), according to the FW specification. Since the device memory is cache coherent with the CPU, it can be mmap into the user VMA with a cacheable mapping using remap_pfn_range() and used like a regular RAM. The device memory is not added to the host kernel, but mapped directly as this reduces memory wastage due to struct pages. There is also a requirement of a minimum reserved 1G uncached region (termed as resmem) to support the Multi-Instance GPU (MIG) feature [1]. This is to work around a HW defect. Based on [2], the requisite properties (uncached, unaligned access) can be achieved through a VM mapping (S1) of NORMAL_NC and host (S2) mapping with MemAttr[2:0]=0b101. To provide a different non-cached property to the reserved 1G region, it needs to be carved out from the device memory and mapped as a separate region in Qemu VMA with pgprot_writecombine(). pgprot_writecombine() sets the Qemu VMA page properties (pgprot) as NORMAL_NC. Provide a VFIO PCI variant driver that adapts the unique device memory representation into a more standard PCI representation facing userspace. The variant driver exposes these two regions - the non-cached reserved (resmem) and the cached rest of the device memory (termed as usemem) as separate VFIO 64b BAR regions. This is divergent from the baremetal approach, where the device memory is exposed as a device memory region. The decision for a different approach was taken in view of the fact that it would necessiate additional code in Qemu to discover and insert those regions in the VM IPA, along with the additional VM ACPI DSDT changes to communicate the device memory region IPA to the VM workloads. Moreover, this behavior would have to be added to a variety of emulators (beyond top of tree Qemu) out there desiring grace hopper support. Since the device implements 64-bit BAR0, the VFIO PCI variant driver maps the uncached carved out region to the next available PCI BAR (i.e. comprising of region 2 and 3). The cached device memory aperture is assigned BAR region 4 and 5. Qemu will then naturally generate a PCI device in the VM with the uncached aperture reported as BAR2 region, the cacheable as BAR4. The variant driver provides emulation for these fake BARs' PCI config space offset registers. The hardware ensures that the system does not crash when the memory is accessed with the memory enable turned off. It synthesis ~0 reads and dropped writes on such access. So there is no need to support the disablement/enablement of BAR through PCI_COMMAND config space register. The memory layout on the host looks like the following: devmem (memlength) |--------------------------------------------------| |-------------cached------------------------|--NC--| | | usemem.memphys resmem.memphys PCI BARs need to be aligned to the power-of-2, but the actual memory on the device may not. A read or write access to the physical address from the last device PFN up to the next power-of-2 aligned physical address results in reading ~0 and dropped writes. Note that the GPU device driver [6] is capable of knowing the exact device memory size through separate means. The device memory size is primarily kept in the system ACPI tables for use by the VFIO PCI variant module. Note that the usemem memory is added by the VM Nvidia device driver [5] to the VM kernel as memblocks. Hence make the usable memory size memblock (MEMBLK_SIZE) aligned. This is a hardwired ABI value between the GPU FW and VFIO driver. The VM device driver make use of the same value for its calculation to determine USEMEM size. Currently there is no provision in KVM for a S2 mapping with MemAttr[2:0]=0b101, but there is an ongoing effort to provide the same [3]. As previously mentioned, resmem is mapped pgprot_writecombine(), that sets the Qemu VMA page properties (pgprot) as NORMAL_NC. Using the proposed changes in [3] and [4], KVM marks the region with MemAttr[2:0]=0b101 in S2. If the device memory properties are not present, the driver registers the vfio-pci-core function pointers. Since there are no ACPI memory properties generated for the VM, the variant driver inside the VM will only use the vfio-pci-core ops and hence try to map the BARs as non cached. This is not a problem as the CPUs have FWB enabled which blocks the VM mapping's ability to override the cacheability set by the host mapping. This goes along with a qemu series [6] to provides the necessary implementation of the Grace Hopper Superchip firmware specification so that the guest operating system can see the correct ACPI modeling for the coherent GPU device. Verified with the CUDA workload in the VM. [1] https://www.nvidia.com/en-in/technologies/multi-instance-gpu/ [2] section D8.5.5 of https://developer.arm.com/documentation/ddi0487/latest/ [3] https://lore.kernel.org/all/20240211174705.31992-1-ankita@nvidia.com/ [4] https://lore.kernel.org/all/20230907181459.18145-2-ankita@nvidia.com/ [5] https://github.com/NVIDIA/open-gpu-kernel-modules [6] https://lore.kernel.org/all/20231203060245.31593-1-ankita@nvidia.com/ Reviewed-by: Kevin Tian <kevin.tian@intel.com> Reviewed-by: Yishai Hadas <yishaih@nvidia.com> Reviewed-by: Zhi Wang <zhi.wang.linux@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Aniket Agashe <aniketa@nvidia.com> Signed-off-by: Ankit Agrawal <ankita@nvidia.com> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20240220115055.23546-4-ankita@nvidia.com Signed-off-by: Alex Williamson <alex.williamson@redhat.com> diff 701ab935 Tue Feb 20 04:50:55 MST 2024 Ankit Agrawal <ankita@nvidia.com> vfio/nvgrace-gpu: Add vfio pci variant module for grace hopper NVIDIA's upcoming Grace Hopper Superchip provides a PCI-like device for the on-chip GPU that is the logical OS representation of the internal proprietary chip-to-chip cache coherent interconnect. The device is peculiar compared to a real PCI device in that whilst there is a real 64b PCI BAR1 (comprising region 2 & region 3) on the device, it is not used to access device memory once the faster chip-to-chip interconnect is initialized (occurs at the time of host system boot). The device memory is accessed instead using the chip-to-chip interconnect that is exposed as a contiguous physically addressable region on the host. This device memory aperture can be obtained from host ACPI table using device_property_read_u64(), according to the FW specification. Since the device memory is cache coherent with the CPU, it can be mmap into the user VMA with a cacheable mapping using remap_pfn_range() and used like a regular RAM. The device memory is not added to the host kernel, but mapped directly as this reduces memory wastage due to struct pages. There is also a requirement of a minimum reserved 1G uncached region (termed as resmem) to support the Multi-Instance GPU (MIG) feature [1]. This is to work around a HW defect. Based on [2], the requisite properties (uncached, unaligned access) can be achieved through a VM mapping (S1) of NORMAL_NC and host (S2) mapping with MemAttr[2:0]=0b101. To provide a different non-cached property to the reserved 1G region, it needs to be carved out from the device memory and mapped as a separate region in Qemu VMA with pgprot_writecombine(). pgprot_writecombine() sets the Qemu VMA page properties (pgprot) as NORMAL_NC. Provide a VFIO PCI variant driver that adapts the unique device memory representation into a more standard PCI representation facing userspace. The variant driver exposes these two regions - the non-cached reserved (resmem) and the cached rest of the device memory (termed as usemem) as separate VFIO 64b BAR regions. This is divergent from the baremetal approach, where the device memory is exposed as a device memory region. The decision for a different approach was taken in view of the fact that it would necessiate additional code in Qemu to discover and insert those regions in the VM IPA, along with the additional VM ACPI DSDT changes to communicate the device memory region IPA to the VM workloads. Moreover, this behavior would have to be added to a variety of emulators (beyond top of tree Qemu) out there desiring grace hopper support. Since the device implements 64-bit BAR0, the VFIO PCI variant driver maps the uncached carved out region to the next available PCI BAR (i.e. comprising of region 2 and 3). The cached device memory aperture is assigned BAR region 4 and 5. Qemu will then naturally generate a PCI device in the VM with the uncached aperture reported as BAR2 region, the cacheable as BAR4. The variant driver provides emulation for these fake BARs' PCI config space offset registers. The hardware ensures that the system does not crash when the memory is accessed with the memory enable turned off. It synthesis ~0 reads and dropped writes on such access. So there is no need to support the disablement/enablement of BAR through PCI_COMMAND config space register. The memory layout on the host looks like the following: devmem (memlength) |--------------------------------------------------| |-------------cached------------------------|--NC--| | | usemem.memphys resmem.memphys PCI BARs need to be aligned to the power-of-2, but the actual memory on the device may not. A read or write access to the physical address from the last device PFN up to the next power-of-2 aligned physical address results in reading ~0 and dropped writes. Note that the GPU device driver [6] is capable of knowing the exact device memory size through separate means. The device memory size is primarily kept in the system ACPI tables for use by the VFIO PCI variant module. Note that the usemem memory is added by the VM Nvidia device driver [5] to the VM kernel as memblocks. Hence make the usable memory size memblock (MEMBLK_SIZE) aligned. This is a hardwired ABI value between the GPU FW and VFIO driver. The VM device driver make use of the same value for its calculation to determine USEMEM size. Currently there is no provision in KVM for a S2 mapping with MemAttr[2:0]=0b101, but there is an ongoing effort to provide the same [3]. As previously mentioned, resmem is mapped pgprot_writecombine(), that sets the Qemu VMA page properties (pgprot) as NORMAL_NC. Using the proposed changes in [3] and [4], KVM marks the region with MemAttr[2:0]=0b101 in S2. If the device memory properties are not present, the driver registers the vfio-pci-core function pointers. Since there are no ACPI memory properties generated for the VM, the variant driver inside the VM will only use the vfio-pci-core ops and hence try to map the BARs as non cached. This is not a problem as the CPUs have FWB enabled which blocks the VM mapping's ability to override the cacheability set by the host mapping. This goes along with a qemu series [6] to provides the necessary implementation of the Grace Hopper Superchip firmware specification so that the guest operating system can see the correct ACPI modeling for the coherent GPU device. Verified with the CUDA workload in the VM. [1] https://www.nvidia.com/en-in/technologies/multi-instance-gpu/ [2] section D8.5.5 of https://developer.arm.com/documentation/ddi0487/latest/ [3] https://lore.kernel.org/all/20240211174705.31992-1-ankita@nvidia.com/ [4] https://lore.kernel.org/all/20230907181459.18145-2-ankita@nvidia.com/ [5] https://github.com/NVIDIA/open-gpu-kernel-modules [6] https://lore.kernel.org/all/20231203060245.31593-1-ankita@nvidia.com/ Reviewed-by: Kevin Tian <kevin.tian@intel.com> Reviewed-by: Yishai Hadas <yishaih@nvidia.com> Reviewed-by: Zhi Wang <zhi.wang.linux@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Aniket Agashe <aniketa@nvidia.com> Signed-off-by: Ankit Agrawal <ankita@nvidia.com> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20240220115055.23546-4-ankita@nvidia.com Signed-off-by: Alex Williamson <alex.williamson@redhat.com> diff 701ab935 Tue Feb 20 04:50:55 MST 2024 Ankit Agrawal <ankita@nvidia.com> vfio/nvgrace-gpu: Add vfio pci variant module for grace hopper NVIDIA's upcoming Grace Hopper Superchip provides a PCI-like device for the on-chip GPU that is the logical OS representation of the internal proprietary chip-to-chip cache coherent interconnect. The device is peculiar compared to a real PCI device in that whilst there is a real 64b PCI BAR1 (comprising region 2 & region 3) on the device, it is not used to access device memory once the faster chip-to-chip interconnect is initialized (occurs at the time of host system boot). The device memory is accessed instead using the chip-to-chip interconnect that is exposed as a contiguous physically addressable region on the host. This device memory aperture can be obtained from host ACPI table using device_property_read_u64(), according to the FW specification. Since the device memory is cache coherent with the CPU, it can be mmap into the user VMA with a cacheable mapping using remap_pfn_range() and used like a regular RAM. The device memory is not added to the host kernel, but mapped directly as this reduces memory wastage due to struct pages. There is also a requirement of a minimum reserved 1G uncached region (termed as resmem) to support the Multi-Instance GPU (MIG) feature [1]. This is to work around a HW defect. Based on [2], the requisite properties (uncached, unaligned access) can be achieved through a VM mapping (S1) of NORMAL_NC and host (S2) mapping with MemAttr[2:0]=0b101. To provide a different non-cached property to the reserved 1G region, it needs to be carved out from the device memory and mapped as a separate region in Qemu VMA with pgprot_writecombine(). pgprot_writecombine() sets the Qemu VMA page properties (pgprot) as NORMAL_NC. Provide a VFIO PCI variant driver that adapts the unique device memory representation into a more standard PCI representation facing userspace. The variant driver exposes these two regions - the non-cached reserved (resmem) and the cached rest of the device memory (termed as usemem) as separate VFIO 64b BAR regions. This is divergent from the baremetal approach, where the device memory is exposed as a device memory region. The decision for a different approach was taken in view of the fact that it would necessiate additional code in Qemu to discover and insert those regions in the VM IPA, along with the additional VM ACPI DSDT changes to communicate the device memory region IPA to the VM workloads. Moreover, this behavior would have to be added to a variety of emulators (beyond top of tree Qemu) out there desiring grace hopper support. Since the device implements 64-bit BAR0, the VFIO PCI variant driver maps the uncached carved out region to the next available PCI BAR (i.e. comprising of region 2 and 3). The cached device memory aperture is assigned BAR region 4 and 5. Qemu will then naturally generate a PCI device in the VM with the uncached aperture reported as BAR2 region, the cacheable as BAR4. The variant driver provides emulation for these fake BARs' PCI config space offset registers. The hardware ensures that the system does not crash when the memory is accessed with the memory enable turned off. It synthesis ~0 reads and dropped writes on such access. So there is no need to support the disablement/enablement of BAR through PCI_COMMAND config space register. The memory layout on the host looks like the following: devmem (memlength) |--------------------------------------------------| |-------------cached------------------------|--NC--| | | usemem.memphys resmem.memphys PCI BARs need to be aligned to the power-of-2, but the actual memory on the device may not. A read or write access to the physical address from the last device PFN up to the next power-of-2 aligned physical address results in reading ~0 and dropped writes. Note that the GPU device driver [6] is capable of knowing the exact device memory size through separate means. The device memory size is primarily kept in the system ACPI tables for use by the VFIO PCI variant module. Note that the usemem memory is added by the VM Nvidia device driver [5] to the VM kernel as memblocks. Hence make the usable memory size memblock (MEMBLK_SIZE) aligned. This is a hardwired ABI value between the GPU FW and VFIO driver. The VM device driver make use of the same value for its calculation to determine USEMEM size. Currently there is no provision in KVM for a S2 mapping with MemAttr[2:0]=0b101, but there is an ongoing effort to provide the same [3]. As previously mentioned, resmem is mapped pgprot_writecombine(), that sets the Qemu VMA page properties (pgprot) as NORMAL_NC. Using the proposed changes in [3] and [4], KVM marks the region with MemAttr[2:0]=0b101 in S2. If the device memory properties are not present, the driver registers the vfio-pci-core function pointers. Since there are no ACPI memory properties generated for the VM, the variant driver inside the VM will only use the vfio-pci-core ops and hence try to map the BARs as non cached. This is not a problem as the CPUs have FWB enabled which blocks the VM mapping's ability to override the cacheability set by the host mapping. This goes along with a qemu series [6] to provides the necessary implementation of the Grace Hopper Superchip firmware specification so that the guest operating system can see the correct ACPI modeling for the coherent GPU device. Verified with the CUDA workload in the VM. [1] https://www.nvidia.com/en-in/technologies/multi-instance-gpu/ [2] section D8.5.5 of https://developer.arm.com/documentation/ddi0487/latest/ [3] https://lore.kernel.org/all/20240211174705.31992-1-ankita@nvidia.com/ [4] https://lore.kernel.org/all/20230907181459.18145-2-ankita@nvidia.com/ [5] https://github.com/NVIDIA/open-gpu-kernel-modules [6] https://lore.kernel.org/all/20231203060245.31593-1-ankita@nvidia.com/ Reviewed-by: Kevin Tian <kevin.tian@intel.com> Reviewed-by: Yishai Hadas <yishaih@nvidia.com> Reviewed-by: Zhi Wang <zhi.wang.linux@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Aniket Agashe <aniketa@nvidia.com> Signed-off-by: Ankit Agrawal <ankita@nvidia.com> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20240220115055.23546-4-ankita@nvidia.com Signed-off-by: Alex Williamson <alex.williamson@redhat.com> |
H A D | CREDITS | diff 0fe8ff51 Wed Jan 17 11:21:52 MST 2024 Yosry Ahmed <yosryahmed@google.com> MAINTAINERS: supplement of zswap maintainers update As discussed on the mailing list [1], merge the zpool maintainers entry into the zswap one. Also, add CREDITS entries for previous zswap/zpool maintainers. [1] https://lore.kernel.org/linux-mm/CAJD7tkYx4YWhGoVwnSeGc8dY_1aRRxxg8PzWBV==A6iqG_OgFw@mail.gmail.com/ Link: https://lkml.kernel.org/r/20240117182152.1439822-1-yosryahmed@google.com Signed-off-by: Yosry Ahmed <yosryahmed@google.com> Acked-by: Nhat Pham <nphamcs@gmail.com> Acked-by: Dan Streetman <ddstreet@ieee.org> Acked-by: Seth Jennings <sjenning@redhat.com> Acked-by: Johannes Weiner <hannes@cmpxchg.org> Cc: Vitaly Wool <vitaly.wool@konsulko.com> Signed-off-by: Andrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org> diff 0bfcdce8 Tue Jan 09 09:45:15 MST 2024 Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org> MAINTAINERS: Bluetooth: retire Johan (for now?) Johan moved to maintaining the Zephyr Bluetooth stack, and we haven't heard from him on the ML in 3 years (according to lore), and seen any tags in git in 4 years. Trade the MAINTAINER entry for CREDITS, we can revert whenever Johan comes back to Linux hacking :) Subsystem BLUETOOTH SUBSYSTEM Changes 173 / 986 (17%) Last activity: 2023-12-22 Marcel Holtmann <marcel@holtmann.org>: Author 91cb4c19118a 2022-01-27 00:00:00 52 Committer edcb185fa9c4 2022-05-23 00:00:00 446 Tags 000c2fa2c144 2023-04-23 00:00:00 523 Johan Hedberg <johan.hedberg@gmail.com>: Luiz Augusto von Dentz <luiz.dentz@gmail.com>: Author d03376c18592 2023-12-22 00:00:00 241 Committer da9065caa594 2023-12-22 00:00:00 341 Tags da9065caa594 2023-12-22 00:00:00 493 Top reviewers: [33]: alainm@chromium.org [31]: mcchou@chromium.org [27]: abhishekpandit@chromium.org INACTIVE MAINTAINER Johan Hedberg <johan.hedberg@gmail.com> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20240109164517.3063131-6-kuba@kernel.org Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org> diff 0ee2030a Tue Dec 26 17:43:03 MST 2023 Bjorn Helgaas <bhelgaas@google.com> MAINTAINERS: Orphan Cadence PCIe IP Tom Joseph <tjoseph@cadence.com> is listed as the maintainer of the Cadence PCIe IP, but email to that address bounces and lore has no correspondence from Tom in the past two years (https://lore.kernel.org/all/?q=f%3Atjoseph). Mark the Cadence IP orphaned and add Tom to CREDITS. Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20240102182157.GA1732664@bhelgaas Signed-off-by: Bjorn Helgaas <bhelgaas@google.com> diff 0cd8a731 Wed Jun 29 22:12:17 MDT 2022 Krzysztof Kozlowski <krzysztof.kozlowski@linaro.org> drm/exynos: MAINTAINERS: move Joonyoung Shim to credits Emails to Joonyoung Shim bounce ("550 5.1.1 Recipient address rejected: User unknown"), so move him to credits file. Signed-off-by: Krzysztof Kozlowski <krzysztof.kozlowski@linaro.org> Signed-off-by: Inki Dae <inki.dae@samsung.com> diff 0e4ed0b6 Wed Jan 13 18:49:10 MST 2021 Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org> MAINTAINERS: tls: move Aviad to CREDITS Aviad wrote parts of the initial TLS implementation but hasn't been contributing to TLS since. Subsystem NETWORKING [TLS] Changes 123 / 308 (39%) Last activity: 2020-12-01 Boris Pismenny <borisp@nvidia.com>: Tags 138559b9f99d 2020-11-17 00:00:00 1 Aviad Yehezkel <aviadye@nvidia.com>: John Fastabend <john.fastabend@gmail.com>: Author e91de6afa81c 2020-06-01 00:00:00 22 Tags e91de6afa81c 2020-06-01 00:00:00 29 Daniel Borkmann <daniel@iogearbox.net>: Author c16ee04c9b30 2018-10-20 00:00:00 7 Committer b8e202d1d1d0 2020-02-21 00:00:00 19 Tags b8e202d1d1d0 2020-02-21 00:00:00 28 Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>: Author 5c39f26e67c9 2020-11-27 00:00:00 89 Committer d31c08007523 2020-12-01 00:00:00 15 Tags d31c08007523 2020-12-01 00:00:00 117 Top reviewers: [50]: dirk.vandermerwe@netronome.com [26]: simon.horman@netronome.com [14]: john.hurley@netronome.com INACTIVE MAINTAINER Aviad Yehezkel <aviadye@nvidia.com> Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org> diff 0b658a1e Tue Oct 24 06:12:51 MDT 2017 James Hogan <jhogan@kernel.org> MAINTAINERS/CREDITS: Drop METAG ARCHITECTURE The core Meta architecture support has now been removed, so drop the MAINTAINERS entry and add an entry to CREDITS. Signed-off-by: James Hogan <jhogan@kernel.org> Cc: linux-metag@vger.kernel.org diff 0c59d281 Mon Feb 13 10:15:44 MST 2017 Arnaldo Carvalho de Melo <acme@kernel.org> MAINTAINERS: Remove old e-mail address The ghostprotocols.net domain is not working, remove it from CREDITS and MAINTAINERS, and change the status to "Odd fixes", and since I haven't been maintaining those, remove my address from there. Signed-off-by: Arnaldo Carvalho de Melo <acme@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net> diff 0f861e8c Tue Mar 31 12:15:31 MDT 2009 Bartlomiej Zolnierkiewicz <bzolnier@gmail.com> MAINTAINERS: move old ide-{floppy,tape} entries to CREDITS (take 2) Ben Hutchings noticed that MAINTAINERS somehow still contain old ide-{floppy,tape} entries. Fix it by moving them to CREDITS (kudos to Gadi and Paul for all the early hard work on ide-{floppy,tape}). v2: Rename IDE/ATAPI CDROM DRIVER entry to IDE/ATAPI DRIVERS one. Cc: Gadi Oxman <gadio@netvision.net.il> Cc: Paul Bristow <paul@paulbristow.net> Acked-by: Borislav Petkov <petkovbb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Bartlomiej Zolnierkiewicz <bzolnier@gmail.com> diff 0f861e8c Tue Mar 31 12:15:31 MDT 2009 Bartlomiej Zolnierkiewicz <bzolnier@gmail.com> MAINTAINERS: move old ide-{floppy,tape} entries to CREDITS (take 2) Ben Hutchings noticed that MAINTAINERS somehow still contain old ide-{floppy,tape} entries. Fix it by moving them to CREDITS (kudos to Gadi and Paul for all the early hard work on ide-{floppy,tape}). v2: Rename IDE/ATAPI CDROM DRIVER entry to IDE/ATAPI DRIVERS one. Cc: Gadi Oxman <gadio@netvision.net.il> Cc: Paul Bristow <paul@paulbristow.net> Acked-by: Borislav Petkov <petkovbb@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Bartlomiej Zolnierkiewicz <bzolnier@gmail.com> diff 0abb8b6a Tue Dec 23 02:07:39 MST 2008 Jesper Juhl <jj@chaosbits.net> trivial: update Jesper Juhl CREDITS entry with new email Old email no longer exists, this updates CREDITS with my new one. Signed-off-by: Jesper Juhl <jj@chaosbits.net> Signed-off-by: Jiri Kosina <jkosina@suse.cz> |
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