Commit graph

71 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
John Baldwin
4361c4eb6e cryptosoft: Fix support for variable tag lengths in AES-CCM.
The tag length is included as one of the values in the flags byte of
block 0 passed to CBC_MAC, so merely copying the first N bytes is
insufficient.

To avoid adding more sideband data to the CBC MAC software context,
pull the generation of block 0, the AAD length, and AAD padding out of
cbc_mac.c and into cryptosoft.c.  This matches how GCM/GMAC are
handled where the length block is constructed in cryptosoft.c and
passed as an input to the Update callback.  As a result, the CBC MAC
Update() routine is now much simpler and simply performs the
XOR-and-encrypt step on each input block.

While here, avoid a copy to the staging block in the Update routine
when one or more full blocks are passed as input to the Update
callback.

Reviewed by:	sef
Sponsored by:	The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D32120
2021-10-06 14:08:48 -07:00
John Baldwin
e148e407df ccr: Support AES-CCM requests with truncated tags.
Sponsored by:	Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D32117
2021-10-06 14:08:48 -07:00
John Baldwin
3e6a97b3a7 ccr: Support multiple nonce lengths for AES-CCM.
Sponsored by:	Chelsio Communications, The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D32116
2021-10-06 14:08:48 -07:00
John Baldwin
5ae5ed5b8f cryptosoft, ccr: Use crp_iv directly for AES-CCM and AES-GCM.
Rather than copying crp_iv to a local array on the stack that is then
passed to xform reinit routines, pass crp_iv directly and remove the
local copy.

Reviewed by:	markj
Sponsored by:	Chelsio Communications, The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D32106
2021-10-06 14:08:46 -07:00
John Baldwin
1833d6042c crypto: Permit variable-sized IVs for ciphers with a reinit hook.
Add a 'len' argument to the reinit hook in 'struct enc_xform' to
permit support for AEAD ciphers such as AES-CCM and Chacha20-Poly1305
which support different nonce lengths.

Reviewed by:	markj
Sponsored by:	Chelsio Communications, The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D32105
2021-10-06 14:08:46 -07:00
John Baldwin
cb128893b9 ccp, ccr: Simplify drivers to assume an AES-GCM IV length of 12.
While here, use crypto_read_iv() in a few more places in ccr(4) that I
missed previously.

Sponsored by:	Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D32104
2021-10-06 14:08:46 -07:00
Kristof Provost
de2a0fafe6 cxgbe: fix LINT-NOIP builds
The -NOIP builds fail because cxgbe_tls_tag_free() has no prototype (if
neither INET nor INET6 are defined). The function isn't actually used
in that case, so we can just remove the stub implementation.

Sponsored by:	Rubicon Communications, LLC ("Netgate")
2021-09-24 14:21:18 +02:00
John Baldwin
c782ea8bb5 Add a switch structure for send tags.
Move the type and function pointers for operations on existing send
tags (modify, query, next, free) out of 'struct ifnet' and into a new
'struct if_snd_tag_sw'.  A pointer to this structure is added to the
generic part of send tags and is initialized by m_snd_tag_init()
(which now accepts a switch structure as a new argument in place of
the type).

Previously, device driver ifnet methods switched on the type to call
type-specific functions.  Now, those type-specific functions are saved
in the switch structure and invoked directly.  In addition, this more
gracefully permits multiple implementations of the same tag within a
driver.  In particular, NIC TLS for future Chelsio adapters will use a
different implementation than the existing NIC TLS support for T6
adapters.

Reviewed by:	gallatin, hselasky, kib (older version)
Sponsored by:	Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D31572
2021-09-14 11:43:41 -07:00
Mark Johnston
d8787d4f78 crypto: Constify all transform descriptors
No functional change intended.

Reviewed by:	ae, jhb
MFC after:	1 week
Sponsored by:	The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D31196
2021-07-26 16:41:05 -04:00
John Baldwin
18c69734e9 cxgbe: De-duplicate some of the code for managing TLS key contexts.
The NIC TLS and TOE TLS modes in cxgbe(4) both work with TLS key
contexts.  Previously, TOE TLS supported TLS key contexts created by
two different methods, and NIC TLS had a separate bit of code copied
from NIC TLS but specific to KTLS.  Now that TOE TLS only supports
KTLS, pull common code for creating TLS key contexts and programming
them into on-card memory into t4_keyctx.c.

Sponsored by:	Chelsio Communications
2021-06-15 17:45:32 -07:00
John Baldwin
883a0196b6 crypto: Add a new type of crypto buffer for a single mbuf.
This is intended for use in KTLS transmit where each TLS record is
described by a single mbuf that is itself queued in the socket buffer.
Using the existing CRYPTO_BUF_MBUF would result in
bus_dmamap_load_crp() walking additional mbufs in the socket buffer
that are not relevant, but generating a S/G list that potentially
exceeds the limit of the tag (while also wasting CPU cycles).

Reviewed by:	markj
Sponsored by:	Netflix
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D30136
2021-05-25 16:59:18 -07:00
Navdeep Parhar
24b98f288d cxgbe(4): Overhaul CLIP (Compressed Local IPv6) table management.
- Process the list of local IPs once instead of once per adapter.  Add
  addresses from all VNETs to the driver's list but leave hardware
  updates for later when the global VNET/IFADDR list locks have been
  released.

- Add address to the hardware table synchronously when a CLIP entry is
  requested for an address that's not already in there.

- Provide ioctls that allow userspace tools to manage addresses in the
  CLIP table.

- Add a knob (hw.cxgbe.clip_db_auto) that controls whether local IPs are
  automatically added to the CLIP table or not.

MFC after:	2 weeks
Sponsored by:	Chelsio Communications
2021-05-23 16:07:29 -07:00
John Baldwin
5fe0cd6503 ccr: Disable requests on port 1 when needed to workaround a firmware bug.
Completions for crypto requests on port 1 can sometimes return a stale
cookie value due to a firmware bug.  Disable requests on port 1 by
default on affected firmware.

Reviewed by:	np
Sponsored by:	Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26581
2021-03-12 10:59:35 -08:00
John Baldwin
9c5137beb5 ccr: Add per-port stats of queued and completed requests.
Reviewed by:	np
Sponsored by:	Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D29176
2021-03-12 10:59:35 -08:00
John Baldwin
8f885fd1f3 ccr: Set the RX channel ID correctly in work requests.
These fixes are only relevant for requests on the second port.  In
some cases, the crypto completion data, completion message, and
receive descriptor could be written in the wrong order.

- Add a separate rx_channel_id that is a copy of the port's rx_c_chan
  and use it when an RX channel ID is required in crypto requests
  instead of using the tx_channel_id.

- Set the correct rx_channel_id in the CPL_RX_PHYS_ADDR used to write
  the crypto result.

- Set the FID to the first rx queue ID on the adapter rather than the
  queue ID of the first rx queue for the port.

- While here, use tx_chan to set the tx_channel_id though this is
  identical to the previous value.

Reviewed by:	np
Reported by:	Chelsio QA
Sponsored by:	Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D29175
2021-03-12 10:59:35 -08:00
John Baldwin
56fb710f1b Store the send tag type in the common send tag header.
Both cxgbe(4) and mlx5(4) wrapped the existing send tag header with
their own identical headers that stored the type that the
type-specific tag structures inherited from, so in practice it seems
drivers need this in the tag anyway.  This permits removing these
extra header indirections (struct cxgbe_snd_tag and struct
mlx5e_snd_tag).

In addition, this permits driver-independent code to query the type of
a tag, e.g. to know what type of tag is being queried via
if_snd_query.

Reviewed by:	gallatin, hselasky, np, kib
Sponsored by:	Netflix
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26689
2020-10-06 17:58:56 +00:00
John Baldwin
0e99339684 Fallback to software for more GCM and CCM requests.
ccr(4) uses software to handle GCM and CCM requests not supported by
the crypto engine (e.g. with only AAD and no payload).  This change
adds a fallback for a few more requests such as those with more SGL
entries than can fit in a work request (this can happen for GCM when
decrypting a TLS record split across 15 or more packets).

Reported by:	Chelsio QA
Reviewed by:	np
Sponsored by:	Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26582
2020-09-29 21:51:32 +00:00
Alan Somers
e6f6d0c9bc crypto(9): add CRYPTO_BUF_VMPAGE
crypto(9) functions can now be used on buffers composed of an array of
vm_page_t structures, such as those stored in an unmapped struct bio.  It
requires the running to kernel to support the direct memory map, so not all
architectures can use it.

Reviewed by:	markj, kib, jhb, mjg, mat, bcr (manpages)
MFC after:	1 week
Sponsored by:	Axcient
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D25671
2020-08-26 02:37:42 +00:00
John Baldwin
94578db218 Reduce contention on per-adapter lock.
- Move temporary sglists into the session structure and protect them
  with a per-session lock instead of a per-adapter lock.

- Retire an unused session field, and move a debugging field under
  INVARIANTS to avoid using the session lock for completion handling
  when INVARIANTS isn't enabled.

- Use counter_u64 for per-adapter statistics.

Note that this helps for cases where multiple sessions are used
(e.g. multiple IPsec SAs or multiple KTLS connections).  It does not
help for workloads that use a single session (e.g. a single GELI
volume).

Reviewed by:	np
Sponsored by:	Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D25457
2020-06-26 00:01:31 +00:00
John Baldwin
4a711b8d04 Use zfree() instead of explicit_bzero() and free().
In addition to reducing lines of code, this also ensures that the full
allocation is always zeroed avoiding possible bugs with incorrect
lengths passed to explicit_bzero().

Suggested by:	cem
Reviewed by:	cem, delphij
Approved by:	csprng (cem)
Sponsored by:	Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D25435
2020-06-25 20:17:34 +00:00
Navdeep Parhar
7c228be30b cxgbe(4): Add a pointer to the adapter softc in vi_info.
There were quite a few places where port_info was being accessed only to
get to the adapter.

Reviewed by:	jhb@
MFC after:	1 week
Sponsored by:	Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D25432
2020-06-25 17:04:22 +00:00
Navdeep Parhar
0cadedfc46 cxgbe(4): Add a tx_len16_to_desc helper.
No functional change.

MFC after:	1 week
Sponsored by:	Chelsio Communications
2020-06-23 07:33:29 +00:00
John Baldwin
6deb4131b8 Add support for requests with separate AAD to ccr(4).
Sponsored by:	Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D25290
2020-06-22 23:41:33 +00:00
John Baldwin
1a4a7e98eb Explicitly zero IVs on the stack.
Reviewed by:	delphij
Sponsored by:	Netflix
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D25057
2020-06-03 22:19:52 +00:00
John Baldwin
0065d9a47f Explicitly zero AES key schedules on the stack.
Reviewed by:	delphij
MFC after:	1 week
Sponsored by:	Netflix
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D25057
2020-06-03 22:18:21 +00:00
John Baldwin
20c128da91 Add explicit bzero's of sensitive data in software crypto consumers.
Explicitly zero IVs, block buffers, and hashes/digests.

Reviewed by:	delphij
Sponsored by:	Netflix
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D25057
2020-06-03 22:11:05 +00:00
John Baldwin
2adc3c9417 Support separate output buffers in ccr(4).
Sponsored by:	Netflix
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24545
2020-05-25 22:23:13 +00:00
John Baldwin
9c0e3d3a53 Add support for optional separate output buffers to in-kernel crypto.
Some crypto consumers such as GELI and KTLS for file-backed sendfile
need to store their output in a separate buffer from the input.
Currently these consumers copy the contents of the input buffer into
the output buffer and queue an in-place crypto operation on the output
buffer.  Using a separate output buffer avoids this copy.

- Create a new 'struct crypto_buffer' describing a crypto buffer
  containing a type and type-specific fields.  crp_ilen is gone,
  instead buffers that use a flat kernel buffer have a cb_buf_len
  field for their length.  The length of other buffer types is
  inferred from the backing store (e.g. uio_resid for a uio).
  Requests now have two such structures: crp_buf for the input buffer,
  and crp_obuf for the output buffer.

- Consumers now use helper functions (crypto_use_*,
  e.g. crypto_use_mbuf()) to configure the input buffer.  If an output
  buffer is not configured, the request still modifies the input
  buffer in-place.  A consumer uses a second set of helper functions
  (crypto_use_output_*) to configure an output buffer.

- Consumers must request support for separate output buffers when
  creating a crypto session via the CSP_F_SEPARATE_OUTPUT flag and are
  only permitted to queue a request with a separate output buffer on
  sessions with this flag set.  Existing drivers already reject
  sessions with unknown flags, so this permits drivers to be modified
  to support this extension without requiring all drivers to change.

- Several data-related functions now have matching versions that
  operate on an explicit buffer (e.g. crypto_apply_buf,
  crypto_contiguous_subsegment_buf, bus_dma_load_crp_buf).

- Most of the existing data-related functions operate on the input
  buffer.  However crypto_copyback always writes to the output buffer
  if a request uses a separate output buffer.

- For the regions in input/output buffers, the following conventions
  are followed:
  - AAD and IV are always present in input only and their
    fields are offsets into the input buffer.
  - payload is always present in both buffers.  If a request uses a
    separate output buffer, it must set a new crp_payload_start_output
    field to the offset of the payload in the output buffer.
  - digest is in the input buffer for verify operations, and in the
    output buffer for compute operations.  crp_digest_start is relative
    to the appropriate buffer.

- Add a crypto buffer cursor abstraction.  This is a more general form
  of some bits in the cryptosoft driver that tried to always use uio's.
  However, compared to the original code, this avoids rewalking the uio
  iovec array for requests with multiple vectors.  It also avoids
  allocate an iovec array for mbufs and populating it by instead walking
  the mbuf chain directly.

- Update the cryptosoft(4) driver to support separate output buffers
  making use of the cursor abstraction.

Sponsored by:	Netflix
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24545
2020-05-25 22:12:04 +00:00
John Baldwin
3e9470482a Various cleanups to the software encryption transform interface.
- Consistently use 'void *' for key schedules / key contexts instead
  of a mix of 'caddr_t', 'uint8_t *', and 'void *'.

- Add a ctxsize member to enc_xform similar to what auth transforms use
  and require callers to malloc/zfree the context.  The setkey callback
  now supplies the caller-allocated context pointer and the zerokey
  callback is removed.  Callers now always use zfree() to ensure
  key contexts are zeroed.

- Consistently use C99 initializers for all statically-initialized
  instances of 'struct enc_xform'.

- Change the encrypt and decrypt functions to accept separate in and
  out buffer pointers.  Almost all of the backend crypto functions
  already supported separate input and output buffers and this makes
  it simpler to support separate buffers in OCF.

- Remove xform_userland.h shim to permit transforms to be compiled in
  userland.  Transforms no longer call malloc/free directly.

Reviewed by:	cem (earlier version)
Sponsored by:	Netflix
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24855
2020-05-20 21:21:01 +00:00
Gleb Smirnoff
365e8da44a Mechanically rename MBUF_EXT_PGS_ASSERT() to M_ASSERTEXTPG() to match
classical M_ASSERTPKTHDR.

Reviewed by:	gallatin
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24598
2020-05-03 00:27:41 +00:00
Gleb Smirnoff
6edfd179c8 Step 4.1: mechanically rename M_NOMAP to M_EXTPG
Reviewed by:	gallatin
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24598
2020-05-03 00:21:11 +00:00
Gleb Smirnoff
7b6c99d08d Step 3: anonymize struct mbuf_ext_pgs and move all its fields into mbuf
within m_epg namespace.
All edits except the 'struct mbuf' declaration and mb_dupcl() were done
mechanically with sed:

s/->m_ext_pgs.nrdy/->m_epg_nrdy/g
s/->m_ext_pgs.hdr_len/->m_epg_hdrlen/g
s/->m_ext_pgs.trail_len/->m_epg_trllen/g
s/->m_ext_pgs.first_pg_off/->m_epg_1st_off/g
s/->m_ext_pgs.last_pg_len/->m_epg_last_len/g
s/->m_ext_pgs.flags/->m_epg_flags/g
s/->m_ext_pgs.record_type/->m_epg_record_type/g
s/->m_ext_pgs.enc_cnt/->m_epg_enc_cnt/g
s/->m_ext_pgs.tls/->m_epg_tls/g
s/->m_ext_pgs.so/->m_epg_so/g
s/->m_ext_pgs.seqno/->m_epg_seqno/g
s/->m_ext_pgs.stailq/->m_epg_stailq/g

Reviewed by:	gallatin
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24598
2020-05-03 00:12:56 +00:00
Gleb Smirnoff
6fbcdeb6f1 Step 2.4: Stop using 'struct mbuf_ext_pgs' in drivers.
Reviewed by:	gallatin, hselasky
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24598
2020-05-02 23:58:20 +00:00
Gleb Smirnoff
49b6b60e22 Step 2.2:
o Shrink sglist(9) functions to work with multipage mbufs down from
  four functions to two.
o Don't use 'struct mbuf_ext_pgs *' as argument, use struct mbuf.
o Rename to something matching _epg.

Reviewed by:	gallatin
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24598
2020-05-02 23:46:29 +00:00
Gleb Smirnoff
0c1032665c Continuation of multi page mbuf redesign from r359919.
The following series of patches addresses three things:

Now that array of pages is embedded into mbuf, we no longer need
separate structure to pass around, so struct mbuf_ext_pgs is an
artifact of the first implementation. And struct mbuf_ext_pgs_data
is a crutch to accomodate the main idea r359919 with minimal churn.

Also, M_EXT of type EXT_PGS are just a synonym of M_NOMAP.

The namespace for the newfeature is somewhat inconsistent and
sometimes has a lengthy prefixes. In these patches we will
gradually bring the namespace to "m_epg" prefix for all mbuf
fields and most functions.

Step 1 of 4:

 o Anonymize mbuf_ext_pgs_data, embed in m_ext
 o Embed mbuf_ext_pgs
 o Start documenting all this entanglement

Reviewed by:	gallatin
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24598
2020-05-02 22:39:26 +00:00
Navdeep Parhar
55eae197fc cxgbe/crypto: Fix the key size in a couple of places to catch up with
the recent OCF refactor.

Sponsored by:	Chelsio Communications
2020-04-23 23:54:23 +00:00
John Baldwin
29fe41ddd7 Retire the CRYPTO_F_IV_GENERATE flag.
The sole in-tree user of this flag has been retired, so remove this
complexity from all drivers.  While here, add a helper routine drivers
can use to read the current request's IV into a local buffer.  Use
this routine to replace duplicated code in nearly all drivers.

Reviewed by:	cem
Sponsored by:	Netflix
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24450
2020-04-20 22:24:49 +00:00
Andrew Gallatin
23feb56348 KTLS: Re-work unmapped mbufs to carry ext_pgs in the mbuf itself.
While the original implementation of unmapped mbufs was a large
step forward in terms of reducing cache misses by enabling mbufs
to carry more than a single page for sendfile, they are rather
cache unfriendly when accessing the ext_pgs metadata and
data. This is because the ext_pgs part of the mbuf is allocated
separately, and almost guaranteed to be cold in cache.

This change takes advantage of the fact that unmapped mbufs
are never used at the same time as pkthdr mbufs. Given this
fact, we can overlap the ext_pgs metadata with the mbuf
pkthdr, and carry the ext_pgs meta directly in the mbuf itself.
Similarly, we can carry the ext_pgs data (TLS hdr/trailer/array
of pages) directly after the existing m_ext.

In order to be able to carry 5 pages (which is the minimum
required for a 16K TLS record which is not perfectly aligned) on
LP64, I've had to steal ext_arg2. The only user of this in the
xmit path is sendfile, and I've adjusted it to use arg1 when
using unmapped mbufs.

This change is almost entirely mechanical, except that we
change mb_alloc_ext_pgs() to no longer allow allocating
pkthdrs, the change to avoid ext_arg2 as mentioned above,
and the removal of the ext_pgs zone,

This change saves roughly 2% "raw" CPU (~59% -> 57%), or over
3% "scaled" CPU on a Netflix 100% software kTLS workload at
90+ Gb/s on Broadwell Xeons.

In a follow-on commit, I plan to remove some hacks to avoid
access ext_pgs fields of mbufs, since they will now be in
cache.

Many thanks to glebius for helping to make this better in
the Netflix tree.

Reviewed by:	hselasky, jhb, rrs, glebius (early version)
Sponsored by:	Netflix
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24213
2020-04-14 14:46:06 +00:00
John Baldwin
94fad5ffc6 Use both crypto engines on a T6.
A T6 adapter contains two crypto engines on separate channels.  This
commit distributes sessions between the two engines.  Previously, only
the first engine was used.

Reviewed by:	np
Sponsored by:	Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24347
2020-04-10 22:27:45 +00:00
John Baldwin
c034143269 Refactor driver and consumer interfaces for OCF (in-kernel crypto).
- The linked list of cryptoini structures used in session
  initialization is replaced with a new flat structure: struct
  crypto_session_params.  This session includes a new mode to define
  how the other fields should be interpreted.  Available modes
  include:

  - COMPRESS (for compression/decompression)
  - CIPHER (for simply encryption/decryption)
  - DIGEST (computing and verifying digests)
  - AEAD (combined auth and encryption such as AES-GCM and AES-CCM)
  - ETA (combined auth and encryption using encrypt-then-authenticate)

  Additional modes could be added in the future (e.g. if we wanted to
  support TLS MtE for AES-CBC in the kernel we could add a new mode
  for that.  TLS modes might also affect how AAD is interpreted, etc.)

  The flat structure also includes the key lengths and algorithms as
  before.  However, code doesn't have to walk the linked list and
  switch on the algorithm to determine which key is the auth key vs
  encryption key.  The 'csp_auth_*' fields are always used for auth
  keys and settings and 'csp_cipher_*' for cipher.  (Compression
  algorithms are stored in csp_cipher_alg.)

- Drivers no longer register a list of supported algorithms.  This
  doesn't quite work when you factor in modes (e.g. a driver might
  support both AES-CBC and SHA2-256-HMAC separately but not combined
  for ETA).  Instead, a new 'crypto_probesession' method has been
  added to the kobj interface for symmteric crypto drivers.  This
  method returns a negative value on success (similar to how
  device_probe works) and the crypto framework uses this value to pick
  the "best" driver.  There are three constants for hardware
  (e.g. ccr), accelerated software (e.g. aesni), and plain software
  (cryptosoft) that give preference in that order.  One effect of this
  is that if you request only hardware when creating a new session,
  you will no longer get a session using accelerated software.
  Another effect is that the default setting to disallow software
  crypto via /dev/crypto now disables accelerated software.

  Once a driver is chosen, 'crypto_newsession' is invoked as before.

- Crypto operations are now solely described by the flat 'cryptop'
  structure.  The linked list of descriptors has been removed.

  A separate enum has been added to describe the type of data buffer
  in use instead of using CRYPTO_F_* flags to make it easier to add
  more types in the future if needed (e.g. wired userspace buffers for
  zero-copy).  It will also make it easier to re-introduce separate
  input and output buffers (in-kernel TLS would benefit from this).

  Try to make the flags related to IV handling less insane:

  - CRYPTO_F_IV_SEPARATE means that the IV is stored in the 'crp_iv'
    member of the operation structure.  If this flag is not set, the
    IV is stored in the data buffer at the 'crp_iv_start' offset.

  - CRYPTO_F_IV_GENERATE means that a random IV should be generated
    and stored into the data buffer.  This cannot be used with
    CRYPTO_F_IV_SEPARATE.

  If a consumer wants to deal with explicit vs implicit IVs, etc. it
  can always generate the IV however it needs and store partial IVs in
  the buffer and the full IV/nonce in crp_iv and set
  CRYPTO_F_IV_SEPARATE.

  The layout of the buffer is now described via fields in cryptop.
  crp_aad_start and crp_aad_length define the boundaries of any AAD.
  Previously with GCM and CCM you defined an auth crd with this range,
  but for ETA your auth crd had to span both the AAD and plaintext
  (and they had to be adjacent).

  crp_payload_start and crp_payload_length define the boundaries of
  the plaintext/ciphertext.  Modes that only do a single operation
  (COMPRESS, CIPHER, DIGEST) should only use this region and leave the
  AAD region empty.

  If a digest is present (or should be generated), it's starting
  location is marked by crp_digest_start.

  Instead of using the CRD_F_ENCRYPT flag to determine the direction
  of the operation, cryptop now includes an 'op' field defining the
  operation to perform.  For digests I've added a new VERIFY digest
  mode which assumes a digest is present in the input and fails the
  request with EBADMSG if it doesn't match the internally-computed
  digest.  GCM and CCM already assumed this, and the new AEAD mode
  requires this for decryption.  The new ETA mode now also requires
  this for decryption, so IPsec and GELI no longer do their own
  authentication verification.  Simple DIGEST operations can also do
  this, though there are no in-tree consumers.

  To eventually support some refcounting to close races, the session
  cookie is now passed to crypto_getop() and clients should no longer
  set crp_sesssion directly.

- Assymteric crypto operation structures should be allocated via
  crypto_getkreq() and freed via crypto_freekreq().  This permits the
  crypto layer to track open asym requests and close races with a
  driver trying to unregister while asym requests are in flight.

- crypto_copyback, crypto_copydata, crypto_apply, and
  crypto_contiguous_subsegment now accept the 'crp' object as the
  first parameter instead of individual members.  This makes it easier
  to deal with different buffer types in the future as well as
  separate input and output buffers.  It's also simpler for driver
  writers to use.

- bus_dmamap_load_crp() loads a DMA mapping for a crypto buffer.
  This understands the various types of buffers so that drivers that
  use DMA do not have to be aware of different buffer types.

- Helper routines now exist to build an auth context for HMAC IPAD
  and OPAD.  This reduces some duplicated work among drivers.

- Key buffers are now treated as const throughout the framework and in
  device drivers.  However, session key buffers provided when a session
  is created are expected to remain alive for the duration of the
  session.

- GCM and CCM sessions now only specify a cipher algorithm and a cipher
  key.  The redundant auth information is not needed or used.

- For cryptosoft, split up the code a bit such that the 'process'
  callback now invokes a function pointer in the session.  This
  function pointer is set based on the mode (in effect) though it
  simplifies a few edge cases that would otherwise be in the switch in
  'process'.

  It does split up GCM vs CCM which I think is more readable even if there
  is some duplication.

- I changed /dev/crypto to support GMAC requests using CRYPTO_AES_NIST_GMAC
  as an auth algorithm and updated cryptocheck to work with it.

- Combined cipher and auth sessions via /dev/crypto now always use ETA
  mode.  The COP_F_CIPHER_FIRST flag is now a no-op that is ignored.
  This was actually documented as being true in crypto(4) before, but
  the code had not implemented this before I added the CIPHER_FIRST
  flag.

- I have not yet updated /dev/crypto to be aware of explicit modes for
  sessions.  I will probably do that at some point in the future as well
  as teach it about IV/nonce and tag lengths for AEAD so we can support
  all of the NIST KAT tests for GCM and CCM.

- I've split up the exising crypto.9 manpage into several pages
  of which many are written from scratch.

- I have converted all drivers and consumers in the tree and verified
  that they compile, but I have not tested all of them.  I have tested
  the following drivers:

  - cryptosoft
  - aesni (AES only)
  - blake2
  - ccr

  and the following consumers:

  - cryptodev
  - IPsec
  - ktls_ocf
  - GELI (lightly)

  I have not tested the following:

  - ccp
  - aesni with sha
  - hifn
  - kgssapi_krb5
  - ubsec
  - padlock
  - safe
  - armv8_crypto (aarch64)
  - glxsb (i386)
  - sec (ppc)
  - cesa (armv7)
  - cryptocteon (mips64)
  - nlmsec (mips64)

Discussed with:	cem
Relnotes:	yes
Sponsored by:	Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D23677
2020-03-27 18:25:23 +00:00
Pawel Biernacki
7029da5c36 Mark more nodes as CTLFLAG_MPSAFE or CTLFLAG_NEEDGIANT (17 of many)
r357614 added CTLFLAG_NEEDGIANT to make it easier to find nodes that are
still not MPSAFE (or already are but aren’t properly marked).
Use it in preparation for a general review of all nodes.

This is non-functional change that adds annotations to SYSCTL_NODE and
SYSCTL_PROC nodes using one of the soon-to-be-required flags.

Mark all obvious cases as MPSAFE.  All entries that haven't been marked
as MPSAFE before are by default marked as NEEDGIANT

Approved by:	kib (mentor, blanket)
Commented by:	kib, gallatin, melifaro
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D23718
2020-02-26 14:26:36 +00:00
John Baldwin
ca3b3c573e Remove the per-TXQ tls_wrs stat.
It duplicated the kern_tls_records stat and was not conditional on NIC
TLS being enabled.

Reviewed by:	np
Sponsored by:	Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D23670
2020-02-13 22:55:45 +00:00
Navdeep Parhar
c0236bd93d cxgbe(4): Use the _XT variant of the CPL used to transmit NIC traffic.
CPL_TX_PKT_XT disables the internal parser on the chip and instead
relies on the driver to provide the exact length of the L2 and L3
headers.  This allows hw checksumming and TSO to be used with L2 and
L3 encapsulations that the chip doesn't understand directly.

Note that netmap tx still uses the old CPL as it never uses the hw
to generate the checksum on tx.

Reviewed by:	jhb@
MFC after:	1 month
Sponsored by:	Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D22788
2019-12-13 20:38:58 +00:00
John Baldwin
bddf73433e NIC KTLS for Chelsio T6 adapters.
This adds support for ifnet (NIC) KTLS using Chelsio T6 adapters.
Unlike the TOE-based KTLS in r353328, NIC TLS works with non-TOE
connections.

NIC KTLS on T6 is not able to use the normal TSO (LSO) path to segment
the encrypted TLS frames output by the crypto engine.  Instead, the
TOE is placed into a special setup to permit "dummy" connections to be
associated with regular sockets using KTLS.  This permits using the
TOE to segment the encrypted TLS records.  However, this approach does
have some limitations:

1) Regular TOE sockets cannot be used when the TOE is in this special
   mode.  One can use either TOE and TOE-based KTLS or NIC KTLS, but
   not both at the same time.

2) In NIC KTLS mode, the TOE is only able to accept a per-connection
   timestamp offset that varies in the upper 4 bits.  Put another way,
   only connections whose timestamp offset has the 28 lower bits
   cleared can use NIC KTLS and generate correct timestamps.  The
   driver will refuse to enable NIC KTLS on connections with a
   timestamp offset with any of the lower 28 bits set.  To use NIC
   KTLS, users can either disable TCP timestamps by setting the
   net.inet.tcp.rfc1323 sysctl to 0, or apply a local patch to the
   tcp_new_ts_offset() function to clear the lower 28 bits of the
   generated offset.

3) Because the TCP segmentation relies on fields mirrored in a TCB in
   the TOE, not all fields in a TCP packet can be sent in the TCP
   segments generated from a TLS record.  Specifically, for packets
   containing TCP options other than timestamps, the driver will
   inject an "empty" TCP packet holding the requested options (e.g. a
   SACK scoreboard) along with the segments from the TLS record.
   These empty TCP packets are counted by the
   dev.cc.N.txq.M.kern_tls_options sysctls.

Unlike TOE TLS which is able to buffer encrypted TLS records in
on-card memory to handle retransmits, NIC KTLS must re-encrypt TLS
records for retransmit requests as well as non-retransmit requests
that do not include the start of a TLS record but do include the
trailer.  The T6 NIC KTLS code tries to optimize some of the cases for
requests to transmit partial TLS records.  In particular it attempts
to minimize sending "waste" bytes that have to be given as input to
the crypto engine but are not needed on the wire to satisfy mbufs sent
from the TCP stack down to the driver.

TCP packets for TLS requests are broken down into the following
classes (with associated counters):

- Mbufs that send an entire TLS record in full do not have any waste
  bytes (dev.cc.N.txq.M.kern_tls_full).

- Mbufs that send a short TLS record that ends before the end of the
  trailer (dev.cc.N.txq.M.kern_tls_short).  For sockets using AES-CBC,
  the encryption must always start at the beginning, so if the mbuf
  starts at an offset into the TLS record, the offset bytes will be
  "waste" bytes.  For sockets using AES-GCM, the encryption can start
  at the 16 byte block before the starting offset capping the waste at
  15 bytes.

- Mbufs that send a partial TLS record that has a non-zero starting
  offset but ends at the end of the trailer
  (dev.cc.N.txq.M.kern_tls_partial).  In order to compute the
  authentication hash stored in the trailer, the entire TLS record
  must be sent as input to the crypto engine, so the bytes before the
  offset are always "waste" bytes.

In addition, other per-txq sysctls are provided:

- dev.cc.N.txq.M.kern_tls_cbc: Count of sockets sent via this txq
  using AES-CBC.

- dev.cc.N.txq.M.kern_tls_gcm: Count of sockets sent via this txq
  using AES-GCM.

- dev.cc.N.txq.M.kern_tls_fin: Count of empty FIN-only packets sent to
  compensate for the TOE engine not being able to set FIN on the last
  segment of a TLS record if the TLS record mbuf had FIN set.

- dev.cc.N.txq.M.kern_tls_records: Count of TLS records sent via this
  txq including full, short, and partial records.

- dev.cc.N.txq.M.kern_tls_octets: Count of non-waste bytes (TLS header
  and payload) sent for TLS record requests.

- dev.cc.N.txq.M.kern_tls_waste: Count of waste bytes sent for TLS
  record requests.

To enable NIC KTLS with T6, set the following tunables prior to
loading the cxgbe(4) driver:

hw.cxgbe.config_file=kern_tls
hw.cxgbe.kern_tls=1

Reviewed by:	np
Sponsored by:	Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D21962
2019-11-21 19:30:31 +00:00
John Baldwin
a1b2b6e184 Create a file to hold shared routines for dealing with T6 key contexts.
ccr(4) and TLS support in cxgbe(4) construct key contexts used by the
crypto engine in the T6.  This consolidates some duplicated code for
helper functions used to build key contexts.

Reviewed by:	np
MFC after:	1 month
Sponsored by:	Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D22156
2019-11-13 00:53:45 +00:00
John Baldwin
c59050aab5 Set the FID field in lookaside crypto requests to the rx queue ID.
The PCI block in the adapter requires this field to be set to a valid
queue ID.  It is not clear why it did not fail on all machines, but
the effect was that crypto operations reading input data via DMA
failed with an internal PCI read error on machines with 128G or more
of RAM.

Reported by:	gallatin
Reviewed by:	np
MFC after:	3 days
Sponsored by:	Chelsio Communications
2019-10-08 20:22:05 +00:00
John Baldwin
6b0451d603 Add support for AES-CCM to ccr(4).
This is fairly similar to the AES-GCM support in ccr(4) in that it will
fall back to software for certain cases (requests with only AAD and
requests that are too large).

Tested by:	cryptocheck, cryptotest.py
MFC after:	1 month
Sponsored by:	Chelsio Communications
2019-04-24 23:31:46 +00:00
John Baldwin
a2ad169e61 Fix requests for "plain" SHA digests of an empty buffer.
To workaround limitations in the crypto engine, empty buffers are
handled by manually constructing the final length block as the payload
passed to the crypto engine and disabling the normal "final" handling.
For HMAC this length block should hold the length of a single block
since the hash is actually the hash of the IPAD digest, but for
"plain" SHA the length should be zero instead.

Reported by:	NIST SHA1 test failure
MFC after:	2 weeks
Sponsored by:	Chelsio Communications
2019-04-24 23:18:10 +00:00
John Baldwin
475d54fac3 Reject new sessions if the necessary queues aren't initialized.
ccr reuses the control queue and first rx queue from the first port on
each adapter.  The driver cannot send requests until those queues are
initialized.  Refuse to create sessions for now if the queues aren't
ready.  This is a workaround until cxgbe allocates one or more
dedicated queues for ccr.

PR:		233851
MFC after:	1 week
Sponsored by:	Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D18478
2019-01-15 18:53:45 +00:00
John Baldwin
d09389fd05 Consolidate on a single set of constants for SCMD fields.
Both ccr(4) and the TOE TLS code had separate sets of constants for
fields in SCMD messages.

Sponsored by:	Chelsio Communications
2018-11-16 19:08:52 +00:00