Message ID | 20240416091509.19995-1-johan+linaro@kernel.org (mailing list archive) |
---|---|
State | Accepted |
Commit | 00567f70051a41c2323dbce1c8fc22514202bd26 |
Headers | show |
Series | Bluetooth: qca: fix invalid device address check | expand |
Context | Check | Description |
---|---|---|
tedd_an/pre-ci_am | success | Success |
tedd_an/CheckPatch | warning | WARNING: Reported-by: should be immediately followed by Closes: with a URL to the report #85: Reported-by: Janaki Ramaiah Thota <quic_janathot@quicinc.com> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/124a7d54-5a18-4be7-9a76-a12017f6cce5@quicinc.com/ total: 0 errors, 1 warnings, 64 lines checked NOTE: For some of the reported defects, checkpatch may be able to mechanically convert to the typical style using --fix or --fix-inplace. /github/workspace/src/src/13631544.patch has style problems, please review. NOTE: Ignored message types: UNKNOWN_COMMIT_ID NOTE: If any of the errors are false positives, please report them to the maintainer, see CHECKPATCH in MAINTAINERS. |
tedd_an/GitLint | fail | WARNING: I3 - ignore-body-lines: gitlint will be switching from using Python regex 'match' (match beginning) to 'search' (match anywhere) semantics. Please review your ignore-body-lines.regex option accordingly. To remove this warning, set general.regex-style-search=True. More details: https://jorisroovers.github.io/gitlint/configuration/#regex-style-search 23: B1 Line exceeds max length (81>80): "Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/124a7d54-5a18-4be7-9a76-a12017f6cce5@quicinc.com/" 24: B3 Line contains hard tab characters (\t): "Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org # 6.5" |
tedd_an/SubjectPrefix | success | Gitlint PASS |
tedd_an/BuildKernel | success | BuildKernel PASS |
tedd_an/CheckAllWarning | success | CheckAllWarning PASS |
tedd_an/CheckSparse | success | CheckSparse PASS |
tedd_an/CheckSmatch | fail | CheckSparse: FAIL: Segmentation fault (core dumped) make[4]: *** [scripts/Makefile.build:244: net/bluetooth/hci_core.o] Error 139 make[4]: *** Deleting file 'net/bluetooth/hci_core.o' make[3]: *** [scripts/Makefile.build:485: net/bluetooth] Error 2 make[2]: *** [scripts/Makefile.build:485: net] Error 2 make[2]: *** Waiting for unfinished jobs.... Segmentation fault (core dumped) make[4]: *** [scripts/Makefile.build:244: drivers/bluetooth/bcm203x.o] Error 139 make[4]: *** Deleting file 'drivers/bluetooth/bcm203x.o' make[4]: *** Waiting for unfinished jobs.... make[3]: *** [scripts/Makefile.build:485: drivers/bluetooth] Error 2 make[2]: *** [scripts/Makefile.build:485: drivers] Error 2 make[1]: *** [/github/workspace/src/src/Makefile:1919: .] Error 2 make: *** [Makefile:240: __sub-make] Error 2 |
tedd_an/BuildKernel32 | success | BuildKernel32 PASS |
tedd_an/TestRunnerSetup | success | TestRunnerSetup PASS |
tedd_an/TestRunner_l2cap-tester | success | TestRunner PASS |
tedd_an/TestRunner_iso-tester | success | TestRunner PASS |
tedd_an/TestRunner_bnep-tester | success | TestRunner PASS |
tedd_an/TestRunner_mgmt-tester | success | TestRunner PASS |
tedd_an/TestRunner_rfcomm-tester | success | TestRunner PASS |
tedd_an/TestRunner_sco-tester | success | TestRunner PASS |
tedd_an/TestRunner_ioctl-tester | success | TestRunner PASS |
tedd_an/TestRunner_mesh-tester | success | TestRunner PASS |
tedd_an/TestRunner_smp-tester | success | TestRunner PASS |
tedd_an/TestRunner_userchan-tester | success | TestRunner PASS |
tedd_an/IncrementalBuild | success | Incremental Build PASS |
This is automated email and please do not reply to this email! Dear submitter, Thank you for submitting the patches to the linux bluetooth mailing list. This is a CI test results with your patch series: PW Link:https://patchwork.kernel.org/project/bluetooth/list/?series=844980 ---Test result--- Test Summary: CheckPatch FAIL 1.22 seconds GitLint FAIL 0.50 seconds SubjectPrefix PASS 0.10 seconds BuildKernel PASS 30.99 seconds CheckAllWarning PASS 33.15 seconds CheckSparse PASS 39.27 seconds CheckSmatch FAIL 35.66 seconds BuildKernel32 PASS 29.47 seconds TestRunnerSetup PASS 531.53 seconds TestRunner_l2cap-tester PASS 20.80 seconds TestRunner_iso-tester PASS 31.43 seconds TestRunner_bnep-tester PASS 4.94 seconds TestRunner_mgmt-tester PASS 112.59 seconds TestRunner_rfcomm-tester PASS 7.62 seconds TestRunner_sco-tester PASS 15.30 seconds TestRunner_ioctl-tester PASS 7.89 seconds TestRunner_mesh-tester PASS 6.04 seconds TestRunner_smp-tester PASS 7.04 seconds TestRunner_userchan-tester PASS 5.12 seconds IncrementalBuild PASS 28.25 seconds Details ############################## Test: CheckPatch - FAIL Desc: Run checkpatch.pl script Output: Bluetooth: qca: fix invalid device address check WARNING: Reported-by: should be immediately followed by Closes: with a URL to the report #85: Reported-by: Janaki Ramaiah Thota <quic_janathot@quicinc.com> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/124a7d54-5a18-4be7-9a76-a12017f6cce5@quicinc.com/ total: 0 errors, 1 warnings, 64 lines checked NOTE: For some of the reported defects, checkpatch may be able to mechanically convert to the typical style using --fix or --fix-inplace. /github/workspace/src/src/13631544.patch has style problems, please review. NOTE: Ignored message types: UNKNOWN_COMMIT_ID NOTE: If any of the errors are false positives, please report them to the maintainer, see CHECKPATCH in MAINTAINERS. ############################## Test: GitLint - FAIL Desc: Run gitlint Output: Bluetooth: qca: fix invalid device address check WARNING: I3 - ignore-body-lines: gitlint will be switching from using Python regex 'match' (match beginning) to 'search' (match anywhere) semantics. Please review your ignore-body-lines.regex option accordingly. To remove this warning, set general.regex-style-search=True. More details: https://jorisroovers.github.io/gitlint/configuration/#regex-style-search 23: B1 Line exceeds max length (81>80): "Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/124a7d54-5a18-4be7-9a76-a12017f6cce5@quicinc.com/" 24: B3 Line contains hard tab characters (\t): "Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org # 6.5" ############################## Test: CheckSmatch - FAIL Desc: Run smatch tool with source Output: Segmentation fault (core dumped) make[4]: *** [scripts/Makefile.build:244: net/bluetooth/hci_core.o] Error 139 make[4]: *** Deleting file 'net/bluetooth/hci_core.o' make[3]: *** [scripts/Makefile.build:485: net/bluetooth] Error 2 make[2]: *** [scripts/Makefile.build:485: net] Error 2 make[2]: *** Waiting for unfinished jobs.... Segmentation fault (core dumped) make[4]: *** [scripts/Makefile.build:244: drivers/bluetooth/bcm203x.o] Error 139 make[4]: *** Deleting file 'drivers/bluetooth/bcm203x.o' make[4]: *** Waiting for unfinished jobs.... make[3]: *** [scripts/Makefile.build:485: drivers/bluetooth] Error 2 make[2]: *** [scripts/Makefile.build:485: drivers] Error 2 make[1]: *** [/github/workspace/src/src/Makefile:1919: .] Error 2 make: *** [Makefile:240: __sub-make] Error 2 --- Regards, Linux Bluetooth
Hello: This patch was applied to bluetooth/bluetooth-next.git (master) by Luiz Augusto von Dentz <luiz.von.dentz@intel.com>: On Tue, 16 Apr 2024 11:15:09 +0200 you wrote: > Qualcomm Bluetooth controllers may not have been provisioned with a > valid device address and instead end up using the default address > 00:00:00:00:5a:ad. > > This was previously believed to be due to lack of persistent storage for > the address but it may also be due to integrators opting to not use the > on-chip OTP memory and instead store the address elsewhere (e.g. in > storage managed by secure world firmware). > > [...] Here is the summary with links: - Bluetooth: qca: fix invalid device address check https://git.kernel.org/bluetooth/bluetooth-next/c/00567f70051a You are awesome, thank you!
Hi, On Tue, Apr 16, 2024 at 2:17 AM Johan Hovold <johan+linaro@kernel.org> wrote: > > Qualcomm Bluetooth controllers may not have been provisioned with a > valid device address and instead end up using the default address > 00:00:00:00:5a:ad. > > This was previously believed to be due to lack of persistent storage for > the address but it may also be due to integrators opting to not use the > on-chip OTP memory and instead store the address elsewhere (e.g. in > storage managed by secure world firmware). > > According to Qualcomm, at least WCN6750, WCN6855 and WCN7850 have > on-chip OTP storage for the address. > > As the device type alone cannot be used to determine when the address is > valid, instead read back the address during setup() and only set the > HCI_QUIRK_USE_BDADDR_PROPERTY flag when needed. > > This specifically makes sure that controllers that have been provisioned > with an address do not start as unconfigured. > > Reported-by: Janaki Ramaiah Thota <quic_janathot@quicinc.com> > Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/124a7d54-5a18-4be7-9a76-a12017f6cce5@quicinc.com/ > Fixes: 5971752de44c ("Bluetooth: hci_qca: Set HCI_QUIRK_USE_BDADDR_PROPERTY for wcn3990") > Fixes: e668eb1e1578 ("Bluetooth: hci_core: Don't stop BT if the BD address missing in dts") > Fixes: 6945795bc81a ("Bluetooth: fix use-bdaddr-property quirk") > Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org # 6.5 > Cc: Matthias Kaehlcke <mka@chromium.org> > Signed-off-by: Johan Hovold <johan+linaro@kernel.org> > --- > drivers/bluetooth/btqca.c | 38 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ > drivers/bluetooth/hci_qca.c | 2 -- > 2 files changed, 38 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-) > > > Matthias and Doug, > > As Chromium is the only known user of the 'local-bd-address' property, > could you please confirm that your controllers use the 00:00:00:00:5a:ad > address by default so that the quirk continues to be set as intended? I was at EOSS last week so didn't get a chance to test this, but I just tested it now and I can confirm that it breaks trogdor. It appears that trogdor devices seem to have a variant of your "default" address. Instead of: 00:00:00:00:5a:ad We seem to have a default of this: 39:98:00:00:5a:ad ...so almost the same, but not enough the same to make it work with your code. I checked 3 different trogdor boards and they were all the same, though I can't 100% commit to saying that every trogdor device out there has that same default address... Given that this breaks devices and also that it's already landed and tagged for stable, what's the plan here? Do we revert? Do we add the second address in and hope that there aren't trogdor devices out in the wild that somehow have a different default? -Doug
Hi Doug and Janaki, On Mon, Apr 22, 2024 at 10:50:33AM -0700, Doug Anderson wrote: > On Tue, Apr 16, 2024 at 2:17 AM Johan Hovold <johan+linaro@kernel.org> wrote: > > As Chromium is the only known user of the 'local-bd-address' property, > > could you please confirm that your controllers use the 00:00:00:00:5a:ad > > address by default so that the quirk continues to be set as intended? > > I was at EOSS last week so didn't get a chance to test this, but I > just tested it now and I can confirm that it breaks trogdor. It > appears that trogdor devices seem to have a variant of your "default" > address. Instead of: > > 00:00:00:00:5a:ad > > We seem to have a default of this: > > 39:98:00:00:5a:ad > > ...so almost the same, but not enough the same to make it work with > your code. I checked 3 different trogdor boards and they were all the > same, though I can't 100% commit to saying that every trogdor device > out there has that same default address... > > Given that this breaks devices and also that it's already landed and > tagged for stable, what's the plan here? Do we revert? Do we add the > second address in and hope that there aren't trogdor devices out in > the wild that somehow have a different default? This patch is currently queued for 6.10 so there should be time to get this sorted. My fallback plan was to add further (device-specific) default addresses in case this turned out to be needed (e.g. this is what the Broadcom driver does). I assume all Trogdor boards use the same controller, WCN3991 IIUC, but if you're worried about there being devices out there using a different address we could possibly also use the new "qcom,local-bd-address-broken" DT property as an indicator to set the bdaddr quirk. We have Qualcomm on CC here so perhaps Janaki, who should have access to the documentation, can tell us what the default address on these older controllers looks like? Janaki, are there further default addresses out there that we need to consider? Perhaps "39:98" can even be inferred from the hardware id somehow (cf. bcm4377_is_valid_bdaddr())? Doug, could you please also post the QCA version info for Trogdor that's printed on boot? Johan
Hi, On Tue, Apr 23, 2024 at 2:08 AM Johan Hovold <johan@kernel.org> wrote: > > Hi Doug and Janaki, > > On Mon, Apr 22, 2024 at 10:50:33AM -0700, Doug Anderson wrote: > > On Tue, Apr 16, 2024 at 2:17 AM Johan Hovold <johan+linaro@kernel.org> wrote: > > > > As Chromium is the only known user of the 'local-bd-address' property, > > > could you please confirm that your controllers use the 00:00:00:00:5a:ad > > > address by default so that the quirk continues to be set as intended? > > > > I was at EOSS last week so didn't get a chance to test this, but I > > just tested it now and I can confirm that it breaks trogdor. It > > appears that trogdor devices seem to have a variant of your "default" > > address. Instead of: > > > > 00:00:00:00:5a:ad > > > > We seem to have a default of this: > > > > 39:98:00:00:5a:ad > > > > ...so almost the same, but not enough the same to make it work with > > your code. I checked 3 different trogdor boards and they were all the > > same, though I can't 100% commit to saying that every trogdor device > > out there has that same default address... > > > > Given that this breaks devices and also that it's already landed and > > tagged for stable, what's the plan here? Do we revert? Do we add the > > second address in and hope that there aren't trogdor devices out in > > the wild that somehow have a different default? > > This patch is currently queued for 6.10 so there should be time to get > this sorted. > > My fallback plan was to add further (device-specific) default addresses > in case this turned out to be needed (e.g. this is what the Broadcom > driver does). > > I assume all Trogdor boards use the same controller, WCN3991 IIUC, but > if you're worried about there being devices out there using a different > address we could possibly also use the new > "qcom,local-bd-address-broken" DT property as an indicator to set the > bdaddr quirk. They all should use the same controller, but I'm just worried because I don't personally know anything about how this address gets programmed nor if there is any guarantee from Qualcomm that it'll be consistent. There are a whole pile of boards in the field, so unless we have some certainty that they all have the same address it feels risky. > We have Qualcomm on CC here so perhaps Janaki, who should have access to > the documentation, can tell us what the default address on these older > controllers looks like? > > Janaki, are there further default addresses out there that we need to > consider? > > Perhaps "39:98" can even be inferred from the hardware id somehow (cf. > bcm4377_is_valid_bdaddr())? > > Doug, could you please also post the QCA version info for Trogdor that's > printed on boot? You want this: [ 9.610575] ath10k_snoc 18800000.wifi: qmi chip_id 0x320 chip_family 0x4001 board_id 0x67 soc_id 0x400c0000 [ 9.620634] ath10k_snoc 18800000.wifi: qmi fw_version 0x322102f2 fw_build_timestamp 2021-08-02 05:27 fw_build_id QC_IMAGE_VERSION_STRING=WLAN.HL.3.2.2.c10-00754-QCAHLSWMTPL-1 [ 14.607163] ath10k_snoc 18800000.wifi: wcn3990 hw1.0 target 0x00000008 chip_id 0x00000000 sub 0000:0000 [ 14.616917] ath10k_snoc 18800000.wifi: kconfig debug 1 debugfs 1 tracing 0 dfs 0 testmode 1 [ 14.625543] ath10k_snoc 18800000.wifi: firmware ver api 5 features wowlan,mfp,mgmt-tx-by-reference,non-bmi,single-chan-info-per-channel crc32 3f19f7c1 [ 14.682372] ath10k_snoc 18800000.wifi: htt-ver 3.87 wmi-op 4 htt-op 3 cal file max-sta 32 raw 0 hwcrypto 1 [ 14.797210] ath: EEPROM regdomain: 0x406c [ 14.797223] ath: EEPROM indicates we should expect a direct regpair map [ 14.797231] ath: Country alpha2 being used: 00 [ 14.797236] ath: Regpair used: 0x6c ...or this... [ 12.899095] Bluetooth: hci0: setting up wcn399x [ 13.526154] Bluetooth: hci0: QCA Product ID :0x0000000a [ 13.531805] Bluetooth: hci0: QCA SOC Version :0x40010320 [ 13.537384] Bluetooth: hci0: QCA ROM Version :0x00000302 [ 13.543002] Bluetooth: hci0: QCA Patch Version:0x00000de9 [ 13.565775] Bluetooth: hci0: QCA controller version 0x03200302 [ 13.571838] Bluetooth: hci0: QCA Downloading qca/crbtfw32.tlv [ 14.096362] Bluetooth: hci0: QCA Downloading qca/crnv32.bin [ 14.770148] Bluetooth: hci0: QCA setup on UART is completed [ 14.805807] Bluetooth: hci0: AOSP extensions version v0.98 [ 14.814793] Bluetooth: hci0: AOSP quality report is supported [ 15.011398] Bluetooth: hci0: unsupported parameter 28 [ 15.016649] Bluetooth: hci0: unsupported parameter 28 Just as a random guess from looking at "8" in the logs, maybe the extra 8 in 3998 is the "target" above? ...though that also makes me think that perhaps this chip doesn't actually have space for a MAC address at all. Maybe they decided to re-use the space to store the hardware ID and other information on all of these devices? -Doug
On Tue, Apr 23, 2024 at 08:09:55AM -0700, Doug Anderson wrote: > On Tue, Apr 23, 2024 at 2:08 AM Johan Hovold <johan@kernel.org> wrote: > > On Mon, Apr 22, 2024 at 10:50:33AM -0700, Doug Anderson wrote: > > > On Tue, Apr 16, 2024 at 2:17 AM Johan Hovold <johan+linaro@kernel.org> wrote: > > > > > > As Chromium is the only known user of the 'local-bd-address' property, > > > > could you please confirm that your controllers use the 00:00:00:00:5a:ad > > > > address by default so that the quirk continues to be set as intended? > > > > > > I was at EOSS last week so didn't get a chance to test this, but I > > > just tested it now and I can confirm that it breaks trogdor. It > > > appears that trogdor devices seem to have a variant of your "default" > > > address. Instead of: > > > > > > 00:00:00:00:5a:ad > > > > > > We seem to have a default of this: > > > > > > 39:98:00:00:5a:ad > > > > > > ...so almost the same, but not enough the same to make it work with > > > your code. I checked 3 different trogdor boards and they were all the > > > same, though I can't 100% commit to saying that every trogdor device > > > out there has that same default address... > > > > > > Given that this breaks devices and also that it's already landed and > > > tagged for stable, what's the plan here? Do we revert? Do we add the > > > second address in and hope that there aren't trogdor devices out in > > > the wild that somehow have a different default? > > > > This patch is currently queued for 6.10 so there should be time to get > > this sorted. > > > > My fallback plan was to add further (device-specific) default addresses > > in case this turned out to be needed (e.g. this is what the Broadcom > > driver does). The offending commit was just sent on to the networking tree for 6.9 so I went ahead and added the Trogdor default address to the address check for now: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20240425075503.24357-1-johan+linaro@kernel.org/ We can always amend this later if it turns out to be needed. > > I assume all Trogdor boards use the same controller, WCN3991 IIUC, but > > if you're worried about there being devices out there using a different > > address we could possibly also use the new > > "qcom,local-bd-address-broken" DT property as an indicator to set the > > bdaddr quirk. > > They all should use the same controller, but I'm just worried because > I don't personally know anything about how this address gets > programmed nor if there is any guarantee from Qualcomm that it'll be > consistent. There are a whole pile of boards in the field, so unless > we have some certainty that they all have the same address it feels > risky. Hopefully Janaki and Qualcomm will provide some answers soon. And otherwise we have another fall back in that we can use the "qcom,local-bd-address-broken" property for Trogdor. > > We have Qualcomm on CC here so perhaps Janaki, who should have access to > > the documentation, can tell us what the default address on these older > > controllers looks like? > > > > Janaki, are there further default addresses out there that we need to > > consider? > > > > Perhaps "39:98" can even be inferred from the hardware id somehow (cf. > > bcm4377_is_valid_bdaddr())? > > > > Doug, could you please also post the QCA version info for Trogdor that's > > printed on boot? > > You want this: > > [ 9.610575] ath10k_snoc 18800000.wifi: qmi chip_id 0x320 > chip_family 0x4001 board_id 0x67 soc_id 0x400c0000 > [ 9.620634] ath10k_snoc 18800000.wifi: qmi fw_version 0x322102f2 > fw_build_timestamp 2021-08-02 05:27 fw_build_id > QC_IMAGE_VERSION_STRING=WLAN.HL.3.2.2.c10-00754-QCAHLSWMTPL-1 > [ 14.607163] ath10k_snoc 18800000.wifi: wcn3990 hw1.0 target > 0x00000008 chip_id 0x00000000 sub 0000:0000 > ...or this... > > [ 12.899095] Bluetooth: hci0: setting up wcn399x > [ 13.526154] Bluetooth: hci0: QCA Product ID :0x0000000a > [ 13.531805] Bluetooth: hci0: QCA SOC Version :0x40010320 > [ 13.537384] Bluetooth: hci0: QCA ROM Version :0x00000302 > [ 13.543002] Bluetooth: hci0: QCA Patch Version:0x00000de9 > [ 13.565775] Bluetooth: hci0: QCA controller version 0x03200302 Thanks, the Bluetooth driver output was what I was looking for but the wifi output may also provide some insight. > Just as a random guess from looking at "8" in the logs, maybe the > extra 8 in 3998 is the "target" above? Yeah, possibly, but it seems we won't be able to use the version info without further details from Qualcomm. > ...though that also makes me think that perhaps this chip doesn't > actually have space for a MAC address at all. Maybe they decided to > re-use the space to store the hardware ID and other information on all > of these devices? All of these controllers apparently have storage for the hardware ids so I'd be surprised if they didn't have room also for the address. Looking at the backstory for this, it seems like Qualcomm intentionally broke the bdaddr quirk so that controllers which had been provisioned with a valid address would continue to work back when WCN3990 was the only device that set the quirk. So presumably WCN3990 and later controllers all have OTP storage for the address (even if I guess in theory it could have been done just for, say, WCN3998 which was added just after): 5971752de44c ("Bluetooth: hci_qca: Set HCI_QUIRK_USE_BDADDR_PROPERTY for wcn3990") (2019-02-19, matthias) e668eb1e1578 ("Bluetooth: hci_core: Don't stop BT if the BD address missing in dts") (2019-04-18, qcom) 523760b7ff88 ("Bluetooth: hci_qca: Added support for WCN3998") (2019-04-26, qcom) Johan
Hi Johan, Apologies for the delay. As of now, we have observed the following values in the upstream firmware files for default BD addresses. We will confirm ASAP if there are any changes. --------------------------------------------------------- | BDA | Chipset | --------------------------------------------------------- | 20 00 00 10 80 39 | WCN3988 with ROM Version 0x0200 | --------------------------------------------------------- | 00 08 74 12 80 39 | WCN3988 with ROM Version 0x0201 | --------------------------------------------------------- | 00 07 64 21 90 39 | WCN3990 | --------------------------------------------------------- On 4/25/2024 2:10 PM, Johan Hovold wrote: > On Tue, Apr 23, 2024 at 08:09:55AM -0700, Doug Anderson wrote: >> On Tue, Apr 23, 2024 at 2:08 AM Johan Hovold <johan@kernel.org> wrote: >>> On Mon, Apr 22, 2024 at 10:50:33AM -0700, Doug Anderson wrote: >>>> On Tue, Apr 16, 2024 at 2:17 AM Johan Hovold <johan+linaro@kernel.org> wrote: >>> >>>>> As Chromium is the only known user of the 'local-bd-address' property, >>>>> could you please confirm that your controllers use the 00:00:00:00:5a:ad >>>>> address by default so that the quirk continues to be set as intended? >>>> >>>> I was at EOSS last week so didn't get a chance to test this, but I >>>> just tested it now and I can confirm that it breaks trogdor. It >>>> appears that trogdor devices seem to have a variant of your "default" >>>> address. Instead of: >>>> >>>> 00:00:00:00:5a:ad >>>> >>>> We seem to have a default of this: >>>> >>>> 39:98:00:00:5a:ad >>>> >>>> ...so almost the same, but not enough the same to make it work with >>>> your code. I checked 3 different trogdor boards and they were all the >>>> same, though I can't 100% commit to saying that every trogdor device >>>> out there has that same default address... >>>> >>>> Given that this breaks devices and also that it's already landed and >>>> tagged for stable, what's the plan here? Do we revert? Do we add the >>>> second address in and hope that there aren't trogdor devices out in >>>> the wild that somehow have a different default? >>> >>> This patch is currently queued for 6.10 so there should be time to get >>> this sorted. >>> >>> My fallback plan was to add further (device-specific) default addresses >>> in case this turned out to be needed (e.g. this is what the Broadcom >>> driver does). > > The offending commit was just sent on to the networking tree for 6.9 so > I went ahead and added the Trogdor default address to the address check > for now: > > https://lore.kernel.org/r/20240425075503.24357-1-johan+linaro@kernel.org/ > > We can always amend this later if it turns out to be needed. > >>> I assume all Trogdor boards use the same controller, WCN3991 IIUC, but >>> if you're worried about there being devices out there using a different >>> address we could possibly also use the new >>> "qcom,local-bd-address-broken" DT property as an indicator to set the >>> bdaddr quirk. >> >> They all should use the same controller, but I'm just worried because >> I don't personally know anything about how this address gets >> programmed nor if there is any guarantee from Qualcomm that it'll be >> consistent. There are a whole pile of boards in the field, so unless >> we have some certainty that they all have the same address it feels >> risky. > > Hopefully Janaki and Qualcomm will provide some answers soon. > > And otherwise we have another fall back in that we can use the > "qcom,local-bd-address-broken" property for Trogdor. > >>> We have Qualcomm on CC here so perhaps Janaki, who should have access to >>> the documentation, can tell us what the default address on these older >>> controllers looks like? >>> >>> Janaki, are there further default addresses out there that we need to >>> consider? >>> >>> Perhaps "39:98" can even be inferred from the hardware id somehow (cf. >>> bcm4377_is_valid_bdaddr())? >>> >>> Doug, could you please also post the QCA version info for Trogdor that's >>> printed on boot? >> >> You want this: >> >> [ 9.610575] ath10k_snoc 18800000.wifi: qmi chip_id 0x320 >> chip_family 0x4001 board_id 0x67 soc_id 0x400c0000 >> [ 9.620634] ath10k_snoc 18800000.wifi: qmi fw_version 0x322102f2 >> fw_build_timestamp 2021-08-02 05:27 fw_build_id >> QC_IMAGE_VERSION_STRING=WLAN.HL.3.2.2.c10-00754-QCAHLSWMTPL-1 >> [ 14.607163] ath10k_snoc 18800000.wifi: wcn3990 hw1.0 target >> 0x00000008 chip_id 0x00000000 sub 0000:0000 > >> ...or this... >> >> [ 12.899095] Bluetooth: hci0: setting up wcn399x >> [ 13.526154] Bluetooth: hci0: QCA Product ID :0x0000000a >> [ 13.531805] Bluetooth: hci0: QCA SOC Version :0x40010320 >> [ 13.537384] Bluetooth: hci0: QCA ROM Version :0x00000302 >> [ 13.543002] Bluetooth: hci0: QCA Patch Version:0x00000de9 >> [ 13.565775] Bluetooth: hci0: QCA controller version 0x03200302 > > Thanks, the Bluetooth driver output was what I was looking for but the > wifi output may also provide some insight. > >> Just as a random guess from looking at "8" in the logs, maybe the >> extra 8 in 3998 is the "target" above? > > Yeah, possibly, but it seems we won't be able to use the version info > without further details from Qualcomm. > >> ...though that also makes me think that perhaps this chip doesn't >> actually have space for a MAC address at all. Maybe they decided to >> re-use the space to store the hardware ID and other information on all >> of these devices? > > All of these controllers apparently have storage for the hardware ids so > I'd be surprised if they didn't have room also for the address. > > Looking at the backstory for this, it seems like Qualcomm intentionally > broke the bdaddr quirk so that controllers which had been provisioned > with a valid address would continue to work back when WCN3990 was the > only device that set the quirk. So presumably WCN3990 and later > controllers all have OTP storage for the address (even if I guess in > theory it could have been done just for, say, WCN3998 which was added > just after): > > 5971752de44c ("Bluetooth: hci_qca: Set HCI_QUIRK_USE_BDADDR_PROPERTY for wcn3990") (2019-02-19, matthias) > e668eb1e1578 ("Bluetooth: hci_core: Don't stop BT if the BD address missing in dts") (2019-04-18, qcom) > 523760b7ff88 ("Bluetooth: hci_qca: Added support for WCN3998") (2019-04-26, qcom) > > Johan Thanks, Janaki Ram
Hi, On Thu, Apr 25, 2024 at 4:40 PM Johan Hovold <johan@kernel.org> wrote: > > > > I assume all Trogdor boards use the same controller, WCN3991 IIUC, but > > > if you're worried about there being devices out there using a different > > > address we could possibly also use the new > > > "qcom,local-bd-address-broken" DT property as an indicator to set the > > > bdaddr quirk. > > > > They all should use the same controller, but I'm just worried because > > I don't personally know anything about how this address gets > > programmed nor if there is any guarantee from Qualcomm that it'll be > > consistent. There are a whole pile of boards in the field, so unless > > we have some certainty that they all have the same address it feels > > risky. > > Hopefully Janaki and Qualcomm will provide some answers soon. > > And otherwise we have another fall back in that we can use the > "qcom,local-bd-address-broken" property for Trogdor. Quick question. I haven't spent lots of time digging into the Bluetooth subsystem, but it seems like if the device tree property is there it should take precedence anyway, shouldn't it? In other words: if we think there is built-in storage for the MAC address but we also see a device tree property then we need to decide which of the two we are going to use. Are there any instances where there's a bogus DT property and we want the built-in storage to override it? -Doug
Hi Janaki, On Thu, Apr 25, 2024 at 08:31:50PM +0530, Janaki Ramaiah Thota wrote: > Apologies for the delay. As of now, we have observed the following > values in the upstream firmware files for default BD addresses. > We will confirm ASAP if there are any changes. > > --------------------------------------------------------- > | BDA | Chipset | > --------------------------------------------------------- > | 20 00 00 10 80 39 | WCN3988 with ROM Version 0x0200 | > --------------------------------------------------------- > | 00 08 74 12 80 39 | WCN3988 with ROM Version 0x0201 | > --------------------------------------------------------- > | 00 07 64 21 90 39 | WCN3990 | > --------------------------------------------------------- Thanks a lot for these. I see now that the default Trogdor address Doug reported (39:98:00:00:5a:ad) appears to comes from the fw too: $ od -x crnv32.bin | grep 5aad 0000020 0000 0000 5aad 0000 3998 0008 0008 0000 which means that patch I sent this morning should be all that is needed for those machines at least. Can you please confirm that all the WCN39xx have OTP storage for an address that an OEM can choose to use? If that's not the case then we could simplify things by always marking their addresses as invalid, but I assume that they all have address storage. Johan
On Thu, Apr 25, 2024 at 11:22:50PM +0800, Doug Anderson wrote: > Quick question. I haven't spent lots of time digging into the > Bluetooth subsystem, but it seems like if the device tree property is > there it should take precedence anyway, shouldn't it? In other words: > if we think there is built-in storage for the MAC address but we also > see a device tree property then we need to decide which of the two we > are going to use. Are there any instances where there's a bogus DT > property and we want the built-in storage to override it? I guess we could decide to implement something like that, but note that a devicetree may have an all-zero address defined by default which the boot firmware may or may not fill in. So we can't just use the presence of the address property as an indication that the device has an address, but we could of course parse it and see if it's non-zero first. (Actually, I think this bit about checking for a non-zero address is already implemented.) Note however that we still need to determine when the controller address is invalid for the common case where there is no devicetree property and user space needs to provide an address before the controller can be used. Johan
Hi, On Thu, Apr 25, 2024 at 9:13 AM Johan Hovold <johan@kernel.org> wrote: > > On Thu, Apr 25, 2024 at 11:22:50PM +0800, Doug Anderson wrote: > > > Quick question. I haven't spent lots of time digging into the > > Bluetooth subsystem, but it seems like if the device tree property is > > there it should take precedence anyway, shouldn't it? In other words: > > if we think there is built-in storage for the MAC address but we also > > see a device tree property then we need to decide which of the two we > > are going to use. Are there any instances where there's a bogus DT > > property and we want the built-in storage to override it? > > I guess we could decide to implement something like that, but note that > a devicetree may have an all-zero address defined by default which the > boot firmware may or may not fill in. > > So we can't just use the presence of the address property as an > indication that the device has an address, but we could of course parse > it and see if it's non-zero first. (Actually, I think this bit about > checking for a non-zero address is already implemented.) This would make me feel safer. Given that you've now found that the MAC address is in the firmware, I worry that someone will update the firmware and change the default and we'll forget to update here. _Hopefully_ someone would notice before pushing the firmware out to the world, but it still seems like a more fragile solution than just seeing that there's a perfectly valid BT address in the device tree and using that. > Note however that we still need to determine when the controller address > is invalid for the common case where there is no devicetree property and > user space needs to provide an address before the controller can be used. Fair enough. -Doug
On 4/25/2024 9:28 PM, Johan Hovold wrote: > Hi Janaki, > > On Thu, Apr 25, 2024 at 08:31:50PM +0530, Janaki Ramaiah Thota wrote: > >> Apologies for the delay. As of now, we have observed the following >> values in the upstream firmware files for default BD addresses. >> We will confirm ASAP if there are any changes. >> >> --------------------------------------------------------- >> | BDA | Chipset | >> --------------------------------------------------------- >> | 20 00 00 10 80 39 | WCN3988 with ROM Version 0x0200 | >> --------------------------------------------------------- >> | 00 08 74 12 80 39 | WCN3988 with ROM Version 0x0201 | >> --------------------------------------------------------- >> | 00 07 64 21 90 39 | WCN3990 | >> --------------------------------------------------------- > > Thanks a lot for these. I see now that the default Trogdor address Doug > reported (39:98:00:00:5a:ad) appears to comes from the fw too: > > $ od -x crnv32.bin | grep 5aad > > 0000020 0000 0000 5aad 0000 3998 0008 0008 0000 > > which means that patch I sent this morning should be all that is needed > for those machines at least. > Yes correct, it will work for Trogdor > Can you please confirm that all the WCN39xx have OTP storage for an > address that an OEM can choose to use? > We are checking with internal FW team, will confirm on it. > If that's not the case then we could simplify things by always marking > their addresses as invalid, but I assume that they all have address > storage. > > Johan -Janakiram
Hi Johan, Please note BDA values listed below are in the firmware (FW) data order, but the actual BDA value should be in the reverse of that order. On 4/26/2024 11:53 AM, Janaki Ramaiah Thota wrote: > > > On 4/25/2024 9:28 PM, Johan Hovold wrote: >> Hi Janaki, >> >> On Thu, Apr 25, 2024 at 08:31:50PM +0530, Janaki Ramaiah Thota wrote: >> >>> Apologies for the delay. As of now, we have observed the following >>> values in the upstream firmware files for default BD addresses. >>> We will confirm ASAP if there are any changes. >>> >>> --------------------------------------------------------- >>> | BDA | Chipset | >>> --------------------------------------------------------- >>> | 20 00 00 10 80 39 | WCN3988 with ROM Version 0x0200 | >>> --------------------------------------------------------- >>> | 00 08 74 12 80 39 | WCN3988 with ROM Version 0x0201 | >>> --------------------------------------------------------- >>> | 00 07 64 21 90 39 | WCN3990 | >>> --------------------------------------------------------- >> >> Thanks a lot for these. I see now that the default Trogdor address Doug >> reported (39:98:00:00:5a:ad) appears to comes from the fw too: >> >> $ od -x crnv32.bin | grep 5aad >> >> 0000020 0000 0000 5aad 0000 3998 0008 0008 0000 >> >> which means that patch I sent this morning should be all that is needed >> for those machines at least. >> > > Yes correct, it will work for Trogdor > >> Can you please confirm that all the WCN39xx have OTP storage for an >> address that an OEM can choose to use? >> > > We are checking with internal FW team, will confirm on it. > >> If that's not the case then we could simplify things by always marking >> their addresses as invalid, but I assume that they all have address >> storage. >> >> Johan > > -Janakiram -Janaki Ram
On Fri, Apr 26, 2024 at 04:12:07PM +0530, Janaki Ramaiah Thota wrote: > Please note BDA values listed below are in the firmware (FW) data > order, but the actual BDA value should be in the reverse of that order. Thanks for clarifying. I realised this when I looked at the hexdump for the Trogdor firmware. > On 4/26/2024 11:53 AM, Janaki Ramaiah Thota wrote: > > On 4/25/2024 9:28 PM, Johan Hovold wrote: > >>> --------------------------------------------------------- > >>> | BDA | Chipset | > >>> --------------------------------------------------------- > >>> | 20 00 00 10 80 39 | WCN3988 with ROM Version 0x0200 | > >>> --------------------------------------------------------- > >>> | 00 08 74 12 80 39 | WCN3988 with ROM Version 0x0201 | > >>> --------------------------------------------------------- > >>> | 00 07 64 21 90 39 | WCN3990 | > >>> --------------------------------------------------------- > >> > >> Thanks a lot for these. I see now that the default Trogdor address Doug > >> reported (39:98:00:00:5a:ad) appears to comes from the fw too: > >> > >> $ od -x crnv32.bin | grep 5aad > >> > >> 0000020 0000 0000 5aad 0000 3998 0008 0008 0000 It seems the most significant bytes here indeed do reflect the hardware even if it's not entirely consistent: WCN3988 39:80 WCN3990 39:90 WCN3991 39:98 but I guess that doesn't help much unless also the remaining bytes on WCN3988 and WCN3990 can be inferred somehow. Johan
On Fri, Apr 26, 2024 at 02:45:26PM +0200, Johan Hovold wrote: > On Fri, Apr 26, 2024 at 04:12:07PM +0530, Janaki Ramaiah Thota wrote: > > On 4/26/2024 11:53 AM, Janaki Ramaiah Thota wrote: > > > On 4/25/2024 9:28 PM, Johan Hovold wrote: > > >>> --------------------------------------------------------- > > >>> | BDA | Chipset | > > >>> --------------------------------------------------------- > > >>> | 20 00 00 10 80 39 | WCN3988 with ROM Version 0x0200 | > > >>> --------------------------------------------------------- > > >>> | 00 08 74 12 80 39 | WCN3988 with ROM Version 0x0201 | > > >>> --------------------------------------------------------- > > >>> | 00 07 64 21 90 39 | WCN3990 | > > >>> --------------------------------------------------------- > > >> > > >> Thanks a lot for these. I see now that the default Trogdor address Doug > > >> reported (39:98:00:00:5a:ad) appears to comes from the fw too: > > >> > > >> $ od -x crnv32.bin | grep 5aad > > >> > > >> 0000020 0000 0000 5aad 0000 3998 0008 0008 0000 I took a closer look at the configuration file format and it seems we can just fetch the default address from the file. The driver is already parsing it so this should be straight forward. I'll cook up a patch. Johan
diff --git a/drivers/bluetooth/btqca.c b/drivers/bluetooth/btqca.c index 19cfc342fc7b..216826c31ee3 100644 --- a/drivers/bluetooth/btqca.c +++ b/drivers/bluetooth/btqca.c @@ -15,6 +15,8 @@ #define VERSION "0.1" +#define QCA_BDADDR_DEFAULT (&(bdaddr_t) {{ 0xad, 0x5a, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00 }}) + int qca_read_soc_version(struct hci_dev *hdev, struct qca_btsoc_version *ver, enum qca_btsoc_type soc_type) { @@ -612,6 +614,38 @@ int qca_set_bdaddr_rome(struct hci_dev *hdev, const bdaddr_t *bdaddr) } EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(qca_set_bdaddr_rome); +static int qca_check_bdaddr(struct hci_dev *hdev) +{ + struct hci_rp_read_bd_addr *bda; + struct sk_buff *skb; + int err; + + if (bacmp(&hdev->public_addr, BDADDR_ANY)) + return 0; + + skb = __hci_cmd_sync(hdev, HCI_OP_READ_BD_ADDR, 0, NULL, + HCI_INIT_TIMEOUT); + if (IS_ERR(skb)) { + err = PTR_ERR(skb); + bt_dev_err(hdev, "Failed to read device address (%d)", err); + return err; + } + + if (skb->len != sizeof(*bda)) { + bt_dev_err(hdev, "Device address length mismatch"); + kfree_skb(skb); + return -EIO; + } + + bda = (struct hci_rp_read_bd_addr *)skb->data; + if (!bacmp(&bda->bdaddr, QCA_BDADDR_DEFAULT)) + set_bit(HCI_QUIRK_USE_BDADDR_PROPERTY, &hdev->quirks); + + kfree_skb(skb); + + return 0; +} + static void qca_generate_hsp_nvm_name(char *fwname, size_t max_size, struct qca_btsoc_version ver, u8 rom_ver, u16 bid) { @@ -818,6 +852,10 @@ int qca_uart_setup(struct hci_dev *hdev, uint8_t baudrate, break; } + err = qca_check_bdaddr(hdev); + if (err) + return err; + bt_dev_info(hdev, "QCA setup on UART is completed"); return 0; diff --git a/drivers/bluetooth/hci_qca.c b/drivers/bluetooth/hci_qca.c index ecbc52eaf101..92fa20f5ac7d 100644 --- a/drivers/bluetooth/hci_qca.c +++ b/drivers/bluetooth/hci_qca.c @@ -1905,8 +1905,6 @@ static int qca_setup(struct hci_uart *hu) case QCA_WCN6750: case QCA_WCN6855: case QCA_WCN7850: - set_bit(HCI_QUIRK_USE_BDADDR_PROPERTY, &hdev->quirks); - qcadev = serdev_device_get_drvdata(hu->serdev); if (qcadev->bdaddr_property_broken) set_bit(HCI_QUIRK_BDADDR_PROPERTY_BROKEN, &hdev->quirks);
Qualcomm Bluetooth controllers may not have been provisioned with a valid device address and instead end up using the default address 00:00:00:00:5a:ad. This was previously believed to be due to lack of persistent storage for the address but it may also be due to integrators opting to not use the on-chip OTP memory and instead store the address elsewhere (e.g. in storage managed by secure world firmware). According to Qualcomm, at least WCN6750, WCN6855 and WCN7850 have on-chip OTP storage for the address. As the device type alone cannot be used to determine when the address is valid, instead read back the address during setup() and only set the HCI_QUIRK_USE_BDADDR_PROPERTY flag when needed. This specifically makes sure that controllers that have been provisioned with an address do not start as unconfigured. Reported-by: Janaki Ramaiah Thota <quic_janathot@quicinc.com> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/124a7d54-5a18-4be7-9a76-a12017f6cce5@quicinc.com/ Fixes: 5971752de44c ("Bluetooth: hci_qca: Set HCI_QUIRK_USE_BDADDR_PROPERTY for wcn3990") Fixes: e668eb1e1578 ("Bluetooth: hci_core: Don't stop BT if the BD address missing in dts") Fixes: 6945795bc81a ("Bluetooth: fix use-bdaddr-property quirk") Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org # 6.5 Cc: Matthias Kaehlcke <mka@chromium.org> Signed-off-by: Johan Hovold <johan+linaro@kernel.org> --- drivers/bluetooth/btqca.c | 38 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ drivers/bluetooth/hci_qca.c | 2 -- 2 files changed, 38 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-) Matthias and Doug, As Chromium is the only known user of the 'local-bd-address' property, could you please confirm that your controllers use the 00:00:00:00:5a:ad address by default so that the quirk continues to be set as intended? Johan