• Peter Delevoryas's avatar
    net/ncsi: Fix netlink major/minor version numbers · 3084b58b
    Peter Delevoryas authored
    The netlink interface for major and minor version numbers doesn't actually
    return the major and minor version numbers.
    
    It reports a u32 that contains the (major, minor, update, alpha1)
    components as the major version number, and then alpha2 as the minor
    version number.
    
    For whatever reason, the u32 byte order was reversed (ntohl): maybe it was
    assumed that the encoded value was a single big-endian u32, and alpha2 was
    the minor version.
    
    The correct way to get the supported NC-SI version from the network
    controller is to parse the Get Version ID response as described in 8.4.44
    of the NC-SI spec[1].
    
        Get Version ID Response Packet Format
    
                  Bits
                +--------+--------+--------+--------+
         Bytes  | 31..24 | 23..16 | 15..8  | 7..0   |
        +-------+--------+--------+--------+--------+
        | 0..15 | NC-SI Header                      |
        +-------+--------+--------+--------+--------+
        | 16..19| Response code   | Reason code     |
        +-------+--------+--------+--------+--------+
        |20..23 | Major  | Minor  | Update | Alpha1 |
        +-------+--------+--------+--------+--------+
        |24..27 |         reserved         | Alpha2 |
        +-------+--------+--------+--------+--------+
        |            .... other stuff ....          |
    
    The major, minor, and update fields are all binary-coded decimal (BCD)
    encoded [2]. The spec provides examples below the Get Version ID response
    format in section 8.4.44.1, but for practical purposes, this is an example
    from a live network card:
    
        root@bmc:~# ncsi-util 0x15
        NC-SI Command Response:
        cmd: GET_VERSION_ID(0x15)
        Response: COMMAND_COMPLETED(0x0000)  Reason: NO_ERROR(0x0000)
        Payload length = 40
    
        20: 0xf1 0xf1 0xf0 0x00 <<<<<<<<< (major, minor, update, alpha1)
        24: 0x00 0x00 0x00 0x00 <<<<<<<<< (_, _, _, alpha2)
    
        28: 0x6d 0x6c 0x78 0x30
        32: 0x2e 0x31 0x00 0x00
        36: 0x00 0x00 0x00 0x00
        40: 0x16 0x1d 0x07 0xd2
        44: 0x10 0x1d 0x15 0xb3
        48: 0x00 0x17 0x15 0xb3
        52: 0x00 0x00 0x81 0x19
    
    This should be parsed as "1.1.0".
    
    "f" in the upper-nibble means to ignore it, contributing zero.
    
    If both nibbles are "f", I think the whole field is supposed to be ignored.
    Major and minor are "required", meaning they're not supposed to be "ff",
    but the update field is "optional" so I think it can be ff. I think the
    simplest thing to do is just set the major and minor to zero instead of
    juggling some conditional logic or something.
    
    bcd2bin() from "include/linux/bcd.h" seems to assume both nibbles are 0-9,
    so I've provided a custom BCD decoding function.
    
    Alpha1 and alpha2 are ISO/IEC 8859-1 encoded, which just means ASCII
    characters as far as I can tell, although the full encoding table for
    non-alphabetic characters is slightly different (I think).
    
    I imagine the alpha fields are just supposed to be alphabetic characters,
    but I haven't seen any network cards actually report a non-zero value for
    either.
    
    If people wrote software against this netlink behavior, and were parsing
    the major and minor versions themselves from the u32, then this would
    definitely break their code.
    
    [1] https://www.dmtf.org/sites/default/files/standards/documents/DSP0222_1.0.0.pdf
    [2] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Binary-coded_decimal
    [2] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO/IEC_8859-1Signed-off-by: default avatarPeter Delevoryas <peter@pjd.dev>
    Fixes: 138635cc ("net/ncsi: NCSI response packet handler")
    Signed-off-by: default avatarDavid S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
    3084b58b
ncsi-pkt.h 20.6 KB