
On 9/26/22 06:56, Ilias Apalodimas wrote:
Hi Sean
On Sat, 17 Sept 2022 at 19:55, Sean Anderson seanga2@gmail.com wrote:
On 9/16/22 16:30, Ilias Apalodimas wrote:
Hi Simon,
[...]
Signed-off-by: Ilias Apalodimas ilias.apalodimas@linaro.org
lib/smbios.c | 17 +++-------------- 1 file changed, 3 insertions(+), 14 deletions(-)
Perhaps a better fix is to drop the smbios info?
Unfortunately there's a ton of userspace tools still using it. So I think we still need it
What upstream projects use this information to show things to the user? You showed a screenshot of some sort of system-info app. We could teach it about falling back to the device tree. That way we are not adding fake information to SMBIOS.
What's fake here? The model and compatible are taken directly from the DT and that should be accurate. I'd rather fix the DT if that's problematic. What would make sense for me to change is take the first token of the compatible node instead of the entire string as it's format is expected to be <manufacturer, model> anyway.
Manufacturer: socionext,developer-box Product Name: Socionext Developer Box
Well, firstly, the manufacturer is "Socionext", not "socionext,developer-box". Compatibles are not suitable for user-visible identifiers. The product name should also be something like "Socionext Developerbox" or maybe "SynQuacer E-series", but this more of a "bug" in the devicetree model property.
Yea as I said we can get rid of the everything after the ',' on the compatible node. Ideally if vendors followed the DT spec, we could also just use manufacturer node, the reality is that we can't though.
This is another one of the problems with this approach. There's no consistency in existing device trees, because at most this info is printed in the boot log.
The whole point of the patchset is provide something reasonable without having to add a .dtsi smbios node for all our devices. We can then go back to fixing the DT with proper values if it's a DT "bug".
Second, these identifiers are not suitable for all structures you want to use it for. For example, the chassis is really a "INWIN industrial PC case: MicroATX mini-tower case IW-BK623/300-H E USB 3.0 Black with 300W SFX power supply" [1]. I would describe this as something like
The chassis isn't even addressed in the series. IIRC it's currently hardcoded in smbios.c.
You showed it as different in the commit message.
Handle 0x0003, DMI type 3, 21 bytes Chassis Information Manufacturer: INWIN Type: Mini Tower Lock: Not Present Version: Unknown Serial Number: Not Specified Asset Tag: Not Specified Boot-up State: Safe Power Supply State: Safe Thermal State: Safe Security Status: None OEM Information: 0x00000000 Height: Unspecified Number Of Power Cords: 1 Contained Elements: 0
The exact values are not particularly important, but I would certainly classify a manufacturer of "socionext,developer-box" as fake. We might not even know what the chassis is; what's to stop a user from using a different case?
But the chassis isn't even addressed in the series? Again I am mostly interested in a sane fallback for device and manufacturer.
ditto
[1] https://www.96boards.org/documentation/enterprise/developerbox/hardware-docs...
Also, SMBIOS is a legacy thing and a PITA to work with. How about we use the device tree binding for the same info:
smbios { compatible = "u-boot,sysinfo-smbios"; smbios { system { manufacturer = "pine64"; product = "rock64_rk3328"; }; baseboard { manufacturer = "pine64"; product = "rock64_rk3328"; }; chassis { manufacturer = "pine64"; product = "rock64_rk3328"; }; }; };
This is easy to parse and gets us away from all this legacy junk that we don't need.
That's the exact opposite of the patch description. Most of these info are already included in the DT in it's standard properties. So if U-Boot ends up with a DT without these we get a usable smbios table. For example a DT handed over by the previous stage bootloader would not include these nodes.
I agree. I think a better example would fill in these fields with descriptive values.
We are off to a chicken and egg problem now. Can you provide U-Boot with a 'configuration' DT, which would be disjoint from the DT that describes hardware?
Sorry, I misread the context there.
I still don't think this is the right approach for this... better to fix the prior stage's devicetree.
As far as sysinfo-smbios node is concerned, it's only present in 13 boards, so it's not like it's used by the majority of boards. Yes we could fix them, but imho we are better off re-using what's already there and defined on the DT spec at least for the simplistic values.
IMO SYS_VENDOR and SYS_BOARD are more descriptive than the devicetree values, but neither is good...
Didn't we use to do that? IOW fill in smbios nodes based on Kconfig values. But then we moved away from that in favor of the sysinfo-smbios node, but a very small amount of boards got converted.
I mean that SYS_VENDOR and SYS_BOARD have content which more closely matches the content of the SMBios tables, not that we should use them ("neither is good...").
How many boards do we have which actually use the SMBIOS tables? There are a lot of boards with EFI_LOADER enabled by default, but I suspect most never boot anything EFI.
I don't see how that's relevant? If someone for any reason enables smbios it shouldn't report always "Unknown".
I'm mostly trying to figure out how much effort it would be to just add nodes for all devices which boot with SMBios. I know that most boards which have it enabled don't actually use it, since it's enabled by default.
--Sean