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firmware_loader: enhance Kconfig documentation over FW_LOADER
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If you try to read FW_LOADER today it speaks of old riddles and
unless you have been following development closely you will lose
track of what is what. Even the documentation for PREVENT_FIRMWARE_BUILD
is a bit fuzzy and how it fits into this big picture.

Give the FW_LOADER kconfig documentation some love with more up to
date developments and recommendations. While at it, wrap the FW_LOADER
code into its own menu to compartmentalize and make it clearer which
components really are part of the FW_LOADER. This should also make
it easier to later move these kconfig entries into the firmware_loader/
directory later.

This also now recommends using firmwared [0] for folks left needing a
uevent handler in userspace for the sysfs firmware fallback mechanis
given udev's uevent firmware mechanism was ripped out a while ago.

[0] https://github.com/teg/firmwared

Reviewed-by: Kees Cook <[email protected]>
Signed-off-by: Luis R. Rodriguez <[email protected]>
Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <[email protected]>
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mcgrof authored and gregkh committed May 14, 2018
1 parent 84b5c4f commit 02c3993
Showing 1 changed file with 131 additions and 34 deletions.
165 changes: 131 additions & 34 deletions drivers/base/Kconfig
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
Expand Up @@ -70,39 +70,64 @@ config STANDALONE
If unsure, say Y.

config PREVENT_FIRMWARE_BUILD
bool "Prevent firmware from being built"
bool "Disable drivers features which enable custom firmware building"
default y
help
Say yes to avoid building firmware. Firmware is usually shipped
with the driver and only when updating the firmware should a
rebuild be made.
If unsure, say Y here.
Say yes to disable driver features which enable building a custom
driver firmware at kernel build time. These drivers do not use the
kernel firmware API to load firmware (CONFIG_FW_LOADER), instead they
use their own custom loading mechanism. The required firmware is
usually shipped with the driver, building the driver firmware
should only be needed if you have an updated firmware source.

Firmware should not be being built as part of kernel, these days
you should always prevent this and say Y here. There are only two
old drivers which enable building of its firmware at kernel build
time:

o CONFIG_WANXL through CONFIG_WANXL_BUILD_FIRMWARE
o CONFIG_SCSI_AIC79XX through CONFIG_AIC79XX_BUILD_FIRMWARE

menu "Firmware loader"

config FW_LOADER
tristate "Userspace firmware loading support" if EXPERT
tristate "Firmware loading facility" if EXPERT
default y
---help---
This option is provided for the case where none of the in-tree modules
require userspace firmware loading support, but a module built
out-of-tree does.
This enables the firmware loading facility in the kernel. The kernel
will first look for built-in firmware, if it has any. Next, it will
look for the requested firmware in a series of filesystem paths:

o firmware_class path module parameter or kernel boot param
o /lib/firmware/updates/UTS_RELEASE
o /lib/firmware/updates
o /lib/firmware/UTS_RELEASE
o /lib/firmware

Enabling this feature only increases your kernel image by about
828 bytes, enable this option unless you are certain you don't
need firmware.

You typically want this built-in (=y) but you can also enable this
as a module, in which case the firmware_class module will be built.
You also want to be sure to enable this built-in if you are going to
enable built-in firmware (CONFIG_EXTRA_FIRMWARE).

if FW_LOADER

config EXTRA_FIRMWARE
string "External firmware blobs to build into the kernel binary"
depends on FW_LOADER
string "Build named firmware blobs into the kernel binary"
help
Various drivers in the kernel source tree may require firmware,
which is generally available in your distribution's linux-firmware
package.
Device drivers which require firmware can typically deal with
having the kernel load firmware from the various supported
/lib/firmware/ paths. This option enables you to build into the
kernel firmware files. Built-in firmware searches are preceded
over firmware lookups using your filesystem over the supported
/lib/firmware paths documented on CONFIG_FW_LOADER.

The linux-firmware package should install firmware into
/lib/firmware/ on your system, so they can be loaded by userspace
helpers on request.

This option allows firmware to be built into the kernel for the case
where the user either cannot or doesn't want to provide it from
userspace at runtime (for example, when the firmware in question is
required for accessing the boot device, and the user doesn't want to
use an initrd).
This may be useful for testing or if the firmware is required early on
in boot and cannot rely on the firmware being placed in an initrd or
initramfs.

This option is a string and takes the (space-separated) names of the
firmware files -- the same names that appear in MODULE_FIRMWARE()
Expand All @@ -113,7 +138,7 @@ config EXTRA_FIRMWARE
For example, you might set CONFIG_EXTRA_FIRMWARE="usb8388.bin", copy
the usb8388.bin file into /lib/firmware, and build the kernel. Then
any request_firmware("usb8388.bin") will be satisfied internally
without needing to call out to userspace.
inside the kernel without ever looking at your filesystem at runtime.

WARNING: If you include additional firmware files into your binary
kernel image that are not available under the terms of the GPL,
Expand All @@ -130,22 +155,94 @@ config EXTRA_FIRMWARE_DIR
looks for the firmware files listed in the EXTRA_FIRMWARE option.

config FW_LOADER_USER_HELPER
bool
bool "Enable the firmware sysfs fallback mechanism"
help
This option enables a sysfs loading facility to enable firmware
loading to the kernel through userspace as a fallback mechanism
if and only if the kernel's direct filesystem lookup for the
firmware failed using the different /lib/firmware/ paths, or the
path specified in the firmware_class path module parameter, or the
firmware_class path kernel boot parameter if the firmware_class is
built-in. For details on how to work with the sysfs fallback mechanism
refer to Documentation/driver-api/firmware/fallback-mechanisms.rst.

The direct filesystem lookup for firmware is always used first now.

If the kernel's direct filesystem lookup for firmware fails to find
the requested firmware a sysfs fallback loading facility is made
available and userspace is informed about this through uevents.
The uevent can be suppressed if the driver explicitly requested it,
this is known as the driver using the custom fallback mechanism.
If the custom fallback mechanism is used userspace must always
acknowledge failure to find firmware as the timeout for the fallback
mechanism is disabled, and failed requests will linger forever.

This used to be the default firmware loading facility, and udev used
to listen for uvents to load firmware for the kernel. The firmware
loading facility functionality in udev has been removed, as such it
can no longer be relied upon as a fallback mechanism. Linux no longer
relies on or uses a fallback mechanism in userspace. If you need to
rely on one refer to the permissively licensed firmwared:

https://github.com/teg/firmwared

Since this was the default firmware loading facility at one point,
old userspace may exist which relies upon it, and as such this
mechanism can never be removed from the kernel.

You should only enable this functionality if you are certain you
require a fallback mechanism and have a userspace mechanism ready to
load firmware in case it is not found. One main reason for this may
be if you have drivers which require firmware built-in and for
whatever reason cannot place the required firmware in initramfs.
Another reason kernels may have this feature enabled is to support a
driver which explicitly relies on this fallback mechanism. Only two
drivers need this today:

o CONFIG_LEDS_LP55XX_COMMON
o CONFIG_DELL_RBU

Outside of supporting the above drivers, another reason for needing
this may be that your firmware resides outside of the paths the kernel
looks for and cannot possibly be specified using the firmware_class
path module parameter or kernel firmware_class path boot parameter
if firmware_class is built-in.

A modern use case may be to temporarily mount a custom partition
during provisioning which is only accessible to userspace, and then
to use it to look for and fetch the required firmware. Such type of
driver functionality may not even ever be desirable upstream by
vendors, and as such is only required to be supported as an interface
for provisioning. Since udev's firmware loading facility has been
removed you can use firmwared or a fork of it to customize how you
want to load firmware based on uevents issued.

Enabling this option will increase your kernel image size by about
13436 bytes.

If you are unsure about this, say N here, unless you are Linux
distribution and need to support the above two drivers, or you are
certain you need to support some really custom firmware loading
facility in userspace.

config FW_LOADER_USER_HELPER_FALLBACK
bool "Fallback user-helper invocation for firmware loading"
depends on FW_LOADER
select FW_LOADER_USER_HELPER
bool "Force the firmware sysfs fallback mechanism when possible"
depends on FW_LOADER_USER_HELPER
help
This option enables / disables the invocation of user-helper
(e.g. udev) for loading firmware files as a fallback after the
direct file loading in kernel fails. The user-mode helper is
no longer required unless you have a special firmware file that
resides in a non-standard path. Moreover, the udev support has
been deprecated upstream.
Enabling this option forces a sysfs userspace fallback mechanism
to be used for all firmware requests which explicitly do not disable a
a fallback mechanism. Firmware calls which do prohibit a fallback
mechanism is request_firmware_direct(). This option is kept for
backward compatibility purposes given this precise mechanism can also
be enabled by setting the proc sysctl value to true:

/proc/sys/kernel/firmware_config/force_sysfs_fallback

If you are unsure about this, say N here.

endif # FW_LOADER
endmenu

config WANT_DEV_COREDUMP
bool
help
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