Currently supports reading and writing the SBR and booting the card in host boot mode.
Use lsiutil to crossflash between IT/IR firmwares from Linux, without vendor/product ID restrictions.
# lsiutil -e
Select your adapter.
46. Upload FLASH section
→ 5. Complete (all sections)
Make a complete Flash backup to be safe.
67. Dump all port state
68. Show port state summary
Copy and paste these somewhere safe. Take special note of the SAS WWID.
33. Erase non-volatile adapter storage
→ 3. FLASH
, then also
8. Persistent manufacturing config pages
Wipe the whole Flash. This will take a while. Option number 3 excludes the manufacturing config pages, so you need both.
2. Download firmware (update the FLASH)
Flash the new firmware. Optionally, use
4. Download/erase BIOS and/or FCode (update the FLASH)
to flash the BIOS/EFI
module (not necessary if you're not booting from the adapter).
Exit lsiutil.
# ./lsirec 0000:01:00.0 readsbr sbr_backup.bin
Where 0000:01:00.0 is your PCI device ID.
# python3 sbrtool.py parse sbr_backup.bin sbr.cfg
Edit sbr.cfg with your favorite text editor. You may want to add
SASAddr = 0xYOUR_SAS_WWID
to make the SAS WWID persist in the SBR (I'm not
sure which firmwares use this, but I've seen it in some SBRs). You may want to
change the Subsystem VID/PID, or use another SBR as a template.
# python3 sbrtool.py build sbr.cfg sbr_new.bin
# ./lsirec 0000:01:00.0 writesbr sbr_new.bin
Reboot and cross your fingers.
When the system comes back up, if all went well, launch lsiutil -e
again and
use 18. Change SAS WWID
to update the WWID if necessary, then reboot again
(this writes it to the config section in Flash, not to the SBR).
NEW: instead of rebooting, you can use:
# ./lsirec 0000:01:00.0 reset
# ./lsirec 0000:01:00.0 rescan
Make sure your disks are not in use if you do this. reset
might fail if you
have just flashed a new firmware. This is normal, as the adapter takes a while
to copy the firmware to the backup area on first boot. Wait a few seconds and
use # ./lsirec 0000:01:00.0 info
until it returns IOC is READY
.
WARNING: this is completely untested. Host boot support has only been tested so far on a card that was already IT/IR. Please report back if you try this. This process initially boots the IT/IR firwmare without touching Flash, and I'm not sure if it might balk at whatever MegaRAID stuff was left there before we have a chance to wipe it.
This procedure (obviously) resets the adapter, so make sure your disks are not in use and any dm/md/lvm mappings have been removed!
This mode requires HugeTLB support enabled in your kernel:
# echo 16 > /proc/sys/vm/nr_hugepages
This process is also incompatible with IOMMUs. If you have one, make sure it
is not active (e.g. check that /sys/kernel/iommu_groups
is an empty
directory).
Make note of your SAS WWID (e.g. using MegaCLI or the kernel interfaces).
# ./lsirec 0000:01:00.0 unbind
Where 0000:01:00.0 is your PCI device ID. Unbind the kernel driver (if any).
# ./lsirec 0000:01:00.0 halt
Halt the IOP, so that the firmware will not interfere with subsequent operations.
# ./lsirec 0000:01:00.0 readsbr sbr_backup.bin
Back up your MegaRAID SBR.
# python3 sbrtool.py parse sbr_backup.bin sbr.cfg
Edit sbr.cfg with your favorite text editor. You'll probably want to use an IT
SBR as a template, such as
sbr_sas9211-8i_itir.cfg. At the very
least you need to set PCIPID
properly (0x0072
for SAS2008-based cards) and
set Interface
to 0x00
for IT/IR mode. You may want to add
SASAddr = 0xYOUR_SAS_WWID
to make the SAS WWID persist in the SBR (I'm not
sure which firmwares use this, but I've seen it in some SBRs).
# python3 sbrtool.py build sbr.cfg sbr_new.bin
# ./lsirec 0000:01:00.0 writesbr sbr_new.bin
Write the new IT/IR mode SBR. This does not immediately take effect.
# ./lsirec 0000:01:00.0 hostboot 2118it.bin
Where 2118it.bin is your desired firmware. If all went well, you should see something like this:
# ./lsirec 0000:01:00.0 hostboot 2118it.bin
Device in MPT mode
Resetting adapter in HCB mode...
Trying unlock in MPT mode...
Device in MPT mode
IOC is RESET
Setting up HCB...
HCDW virtual: 0x7fca79e00000
HCDW physical: 0x439a00000
Loading firmware...
Loaded 722708 bytes
Booting IOC...
IOC is READY
IOC Host Boot successful.
At this point the PCI VID/PID should've changed, but the kernel will not have noticed. Check with lspci:
# lspci -vns 0000:01:00.0 -A linux-sysfs | head -n 2
# lspci -vns 0000:01:00.0 -A intel-conf1 | head -n 2
The first command should still show the old VID/PID, but the second one should show the new (MPT mode) ones. To make the kernel notice:
# ./lsirec 0000:01:00.0 rescan
This removes the PCI device from the kernel and requests a rescan. At this point
the mpt3sas kernel driver should load. Check dmesg
for any errors.
If all went well, you can use lsiutil to wipe Flash and flash your new firmware:
# lsiutil -e
Select your adapter.
46. Upload FLASH section
→ 5. Complete (all sections)
Make a complete Flash backup to be safe.
33. Erase non-volatile adapter storage
→ 3. FLASH
, then also
8. Persistent manufacturing config pages
Wipe the whole Flash. This will take a while. Option number 3 excludes the manufacturing config pages, so you need both.
2. Download firmware (update the FLASH)
Flash the new firmware. Optionally, use
4. Download/erase BIOS and/or FCode (update the FLASH)
to flash the BIOS/EFI
module (not necessary if you're not booting from the adapter).
Exit lsiutil.
Finally, if all went well, reset into normal mode:
# ./lsirec 0000:01:00.0 reset
This might complain about IOC not becoming ready, but this is normal, as the
first boot takes longer. Use ./lsirec 0000:01:00.0 info
after a few seconds
and check for IOC is READY
.
# ./lsirec 0000:01:00.0 rescan
If all went well, dmesg
should show the driver loading again successfully.
Launch lsiutil -e
again and use 18. Change SAS WWID
to update the WWID
if necessary, then reset
and rescan
again to make sure the kernel sees the
new WWID.
Enjoy your shiny new IT/IR-mode HBA.
This has barely been tested a couple of cards. Don't blame me if this bricks or smokes your HBA.
DO NOT attempt to use this tool on non-SAS2x08 chipsets. It probably won't work and may do horrible things. This tool deliberately does not check the VID/PID so it can be used on cards with wacky SBRs, but that means it will happily try to write the SBR into any random PCI device too.
I have tested this on an LSI SAS2108-based MegaRAID card (Fujitsu D2616) with MegaRAID firmware and it successfully backed up the SBR, but the action triggered a PCI error in syslog (though the controller kept working). Your mileage may vary. I have not yet tried crossflashing it live to IT/IR mode.
2-clause BSD. See the LICENSE file.