Replace placeholder by actual implementation.
Change-Id: I0861b1ac5304b0d2d7c32d7d9a48bd985e258e92
Signed-off-by: Antonio Nino Diaz <antonio.ninodiaz@arm.com>
Include missing plat_helpers.S into pl011_console.S, to build successfully
when MULTI_CONSOLE_API is enabled.
Signed-off-by: Michalis Pappas <mpappas@fastmail.fm>
Emit runtime warnings when intializing the GIC drivers using the
deprecated method of defining integer interrupt arrays in the GIC driver
data structures; interrupt_prop_t arrays should be used instead. This
helps platforms detect that they have migration work to do. Previously,
no warning was emitted in this case. This affects both the GICv2 and GICv3
drivers.
Also use the __deprecated attribute to emit a build time warning if these
deprecated fields are used. These warnings are suppressed in the GIC
driver compatibility functions but will be visible if platforms use them.
Change-Id: I6b6b8f6c3b4920c448b6dcb82fc18442cfdf6c7a
Signed-off-by: Dan Handley <dan.handley@arm.com>
For platforms that have not migrated to MULTI_CONSOLE_API == 1, there
are a lot of confusing deprecated declaration warnings relating to
use of console_init() and console_uninit(). Some of these relate to use
by the generic code, not the platform code. These functions are not really
deprecated but *removed* when MULTI_CONSOLE_API == 1.
This patch consolidates these warnings into a single preprocessor warning.
The __deprecated attribute is removed from the console_init() and
console_uninit() declarations.
For preprocessor warnings like this to not cause fatal build errors,
this patch adds -Wno-error=cpp to the build flags when
ERROR_DEPRECATED == 0.
This option (and -Wno-error=deprecated-declarations) is now added to
CPPFLAGS instead of TF_CFLAGS to ensure the build flags are used in the
assembler as well as the compiler.
This patch also disentangles the MULTI_CONSOLE_API and ERROR_DEPRECATED
build flags by defaulting MULTI_CONSOLE_API to 0 instead of
ERROR_DEPRECATED. This allows platforms that have not migrated to
MULTI_CONSOLE_API to use ERROR_DEPRECATED == 1 to emit a more meaningful
build error.
Finally, this patch bans use of MULTI_CONSOLE_API == 1 and AARCH32, since
the AArch32 console implementation does not support
MULTI_CONSOLE_API == 1.
Change-Id: If762165ddcb90c28aa7a4951aba70cb15c2b709c
Signed-off-by: Dan Handley <dan.handley@arm.com>
Rule 8.4: A compatible declaration shall be visible when
an object or function with external linkage is defined
Fixed for:
make DEBUG=1 PLAT=fvp LOG_LEVEL=50 all
Change-Id: I7c2ad3f5c015411c202605851240d5347e4cc8c7
Signed-off-by: Roberto Vargas <roberto.vargas@arm.com>
Rule 8.4: A compatible declaration shall be visible when
an object or function with external linkage is defined.
Change-Id: I26e042cb251a6f9590afa1340fdac73e42f23979
Signed-off-by: Roberto Vargas <roberto.vargas@arm.com>
Rule 8.3: All declarations of an object or function shall
use the same names and type qualifiers.
Change-Id: Iff384187c74a598a4e73f350a1893b60e9d16cec
Signed-off-by: Roberto Vargas <roberto.vargas@arm.com>
This patch adds image IDs to `hw_config` and `tb_fw_config` and
includes them in the default Chain Of Trust (CoT).
Change-Id: If7bb3e9be8a5e48be76614b35bf43d58fc7fed12
Signed-off-by: Soby Mathew <soby.mathew@arm.com>
Hynix ufs has deviations on hi36xx platform which will result
in ufs bursts transfer failures at a very low probability.
To fix the problem, the Hynix device must set the register
VS_DebugSaveConfigTime to 0x10, which will set time reference
for SaveConfigTime is 250 ns. The time reference for SaveConfigTime
is 40 ns by default.
Signed-off-by: fengbaopeng <fengbaopeng@hisilicon.com>
Previously the definition of `_tzc_read_peripheral_id()` was wrapped
in ENABLE_ASSERTIONS build flag. This causes build issue for TZC400 driver
when DEBUG=1 and ENABLE_ASSERTIONS=0. This patch fixes the same by
moving the definitions outside the ENABLE_ASSERTIONS build flag.
Change-Id: Ic1cad69f02ce65ac34aefd39eaa96d5781043152
Signed-off-by: Soby Mathew <soby.mathew@arm.com>
This fixes all defects according to MISRA Rule 3.1: "The character
sequences /* and // shall not be used within a comment". This affects
all URLs in comments, so they have been removed:
- The link in `sdei_state.c` can also be found in the documentation file
`docs/sdei.rst`.
- The bug that the file `io_fip.c` talks about doesn't affect the
currently supported version of GCC, so it doesn't make sense to keep
the comment. Note that the version of GCC officially supported is the
one that comes with Linaro Release 17.10, which is GCC 6.2.
- The link in `tzc400.c` was broken, and it didn't correctly direct to
the Technical Reference Manual it should. The link has been replaced
by the title of the document, which is more convenient when looking
for the document.
Change-Id: I89f60c25f635fd4c008a5d3a14028f814c147bbe
Signed-off-by: Antonio Nino Diaz <antonio.ninodiaz@arm.com>
Delay functions like udelay() are often used to ensure that the
necessary time passed to allow some asynchronous event to finish, such
as the stabilization delay for a power rail. For these use cases it is
not very problematic if the delay is slightly longer than requested,
but it is critical that the delay must never be shorter.
The current udelay() implementation contains two hazards that may cause
the delay to be slightly shorter than intended: Firstly, the amount of
ticks to wait is calculated with an integer division, which may cut off
the last fraction of ticks needed. Secondly, the delay may be short by a
fraction of a tick because we do not know whether the initial ("start")
sample of the timer was near the start or near the end of the current
tick. Thus, if the code intends to wait for one tick, it might read the
timer value close to the end of the current tick and then read it again
right after the start of the next tick, concluding that the duration of
a full tick has passed when it in fact was just a fraction of it.
This patch rounds up the division and always adds one extra tick to
counteract both problems and ensure that delays will always be larger
but never smaller than requested.
Change-Id: Ic5fe5f858b5cdf3c0dbf3e488d4d5702d9569433
Signed-off-by: Julius Werner <jwerner@chromium.org>
If the GIC loses power during suspend, which the restore code was
written for, exit early in the post restore power sequence. This
prevents an assert from tripping, and the power sequence isn't needed
in this case anyways.
Signed-off-by: Derek Basehore <dbasehore@chromium.org>
coreboot supports an in-memory console to store firmware logs even when
no serial console is available. It is widely supported by
coreboot-compatible bootloaders (including SeaBIOS and GRUB) and can be
read by the Linux kernel.
This patch allows BL31 to add its own log messages to this console. The
driver will be registered automatically if coreboot support is compiled
in and detects the presence of a console buffer in the coreboot tables.
Change-Id: I31254dfa0c2fdeb7454634134b5707b4b4154907
Signed-off-by: Julius Werner <jwerner@chromium.org>
This patch updates the Cadence CDNS console driver to support the new
console API. The driver will continue to support the old API as well by
checking the MULTI_CONSOLE_API compile-time flag.
Change-Id: I2ef8fb0d6ab72696997db1e0243a533499569d6b
Signed-off-by: Julius Werner <jwerner@chromium.org>
This patch updates the ARM PL011 console driver to support the new
console API. The driver will continue to support the old API as well by
checking the MULTI_CONSOLE_API compile-time flag.
Change-Id: Ic34e4158addbb0c5fae500c9cff899c05a4f4206
Signed-off-by: Julius Werner <jwerner@chromium.org>
This patch updates the TI 16550 console driver to support the new
console API. The driver will continue to support the old API as well by
checking the MULTI_CONSOLE_API compile-time flag.
Change-Id: I60a44b7ba3c35c74561824c04b8dbe3e3039324c
Signed-off-by: Julius Werner <jwerner@chromium.org>
This patch modifies the makefiles to avoid the definition
of BL1_SOURCES and BL2_SOURCES in the tbbr makefiles, and
it lets to the platform makefiles to define them if they
actually need these images. In the case of BL2_AT_EL3
BL1 will not be needed usually because the Boot ROM will
jump directly to BL2.
Change-Id: Ib6845a260633a22a646088629bcd7387fe35dcf9
Signed-off-by: Roberto Vargas <roberto.vargas@arm.com>
Add some macros according to JEDEC Standard Embedded Multi-Media
Card (eMMC) Electrical Standard (5.1)": Table 145 - Bus Mode
Selection.
Change-Id: Iaa45e0582653ef4290efd60d039f0bdc420eeb47
Signed-off-by: Qixiang Xu <qixiang.xu@arm.com>
The block operations were trying to optimize the number of memory
copies, and it tried to use directly the buffer supplied by the user
to them. This was a mistake because it created too many corner cases:
1- It was possible to generate unaligned
operations to unaligned buffers. Drivers that were using
DMA transfer failed in that case.
2- It was possible to generate read operations
with sizes that weren't a multiple of the block size. Some
low level drivers assumed that condition and they calculated
the number of blocks dividing the number of bytes by the
size of the block, without considering the remaining bytes.
3- The block_* operations didn't control the
number of bytes actually copied to memory, because the
low level drivers were writing directly to the user buffer.
This patch rewrite block_read and block_write to use always the device
buffer, which the platform ensures that has the correct aligment and
the correct size.
Change-Id: I5e479bb7bc137e6ec205a8573eb250acd5f40420
Signed-off-by: Qixiang Xu <qixiang.xu@arm.com>
Signed-off-by: Roberto Vargas <roberto.vargas@arm.com>
This patch overhauls the console API to allow for multiple console
instances of different drivers that are active at the same time. Instead
of binding to well-known function names (like console_core_init),
consoles now provide a register function (e.g. console_16550_register())
that will hook them into the list of active consoles. All console
operations will be dispatched to all consoles currently in the list.
The new API will be selected by the build-time option MULTI_CONSOLE_API,
which defaults to ${ERROR_DEPRECATED} for now. The old console API code
will be retained to stay backwards-compatible to older platforms, but
should no longer be used for any newly added platforms and can hopefully
be removed at some point in the future.
The new console API is intended to be used for both normal (bootup) and
crash use cases, freeing platforms of the need to set up the crash
console separately. Consoles can be individually configured to be active
active at boot (until first handoff to EL2), at runtime (after first
handoff to EL2), and/or after a crash. Console drivers should set a sane
default upon registration that can be overridden with the
console_set_scope() call. Code to hook up the crash reporting mechanism
to this framework will be added with a later patch.
This patch only affects AArch64, but the new API could easily be ported
to AArch32 as well if desired.
Change-Id: I35c5aa2cb3f719cfddd15565eb13c7cde4162549
Signed-off-by: Julius Werner <jwerner@chromium.org>
The flag support the following values:
- sha256 (default)
- sha384
- sha512
Change-Id: I7a49d858c361e993949cf6ada0a86575c3291066
Signed-off-by: Qixiang Xu <qixiang.xu@arm.com>
At present, the GIC drivers enable Group 0 interrupts only if there are
Secure SPIs listed in the interrupt properties/list. This means that,
even if there are Group 0 SGIs/PPIs configured, the group remained
disabled in the absence of a Group 0 SPI.
Modify both GICv2 and GICv3 SGI/PPI configuration to enable Group 0 when
corresponding SGIs/PPIs are present.
Change-Id: Id123e8aaee0c22b476eebe3800340906d83bbc6d
Signed-off-by: Jeenu Viswambharan <jeenu.viswambharan@arm.com>
This patch brings in the following fixes:
- The per-PE target data initialized during power up needs to be
flushed so as to be visible to other PEs.
- Setup per-PE target data for the primary PE as well. At present,
this was only setup for secondary PEs when they were powered on.
Change-Id: Ibe3a57c14864e37b2326dd7ab321a5c7bf80e8af
Signed-off-by: Jeenu Viswambharan <jeenu.viswambharan@arm.com>
Some SoCs integrate a GIC in version 1 that is currently not supported
by the trusted firmware. This change hijacks GICv2 driver to handle the
GICv1 as GICv1 is compatible enough with GICv2 as far as the platform
does not attempt to play with virtualization support or some GICv2
specific power features.
Note that current trusted firmware does not use these GICv2 features
that are not available in GICv1 Security Extension.
Change-Id: Ic2cb3055f1319a83455571d6d918661da583f179
Signed-off-by: Etienne Carriere <etienne.carriere@linaro.org>
The GIC driver initialization currently allows an array of interrupts to
be configured as secure. Future use cases would require more interrupt
configuration other than just security, such as priority.
This patch introduces a new interrupt property array as part of both
GICv2 and GICv3 driver data. The platform can populate the array with
interrupt numbers and respective properties. The corresponding driver
initialization iterates through the array, and applies interrupt
configuration as required.
This capability, and the current way of supplying array (or arrays, in
case of GICv3) of secure interrupts, are however mutually exclusive.
Henceforth, the platform should supply either:
- A list of interrupts to be mapped as secure (the current way).
Platforms that do this will continue working as they were. With this
patch, this scheme is deprecated.
- A list of interrupt properties (properties include interrupt group).
Individual interrupt properties are specified via. descriptors of
type 'interrupt_prop_desc_t', which can be populated with the macro
INTR_PROP_DESC().
A run time assert checks that the platform doesn't specify both.
Henceforth the old scheme of providing list of secure interrupts is
deprecated. When built with ERROR_DEPRECATED=1, GIC drivers will require
that the interrupt properties are supplied instead of an array of secure
interrupts.
Add a section to firmware design about configuring secure interrupts.
FixesARM-software/tf-issues#262
Change-Id: I8eec29e72eb69dbb6bce77879febf32c95376942
Signed-off-by: Jeenu Viswambharan <jeenu.viswambharan@arm.com>
The helpers perform read-modify-write on GIC*_ICFGR registers, but don't
serialise callers. Any serialisation must be taken care of by the
callers.
Change-Id: I71995f82ff2c7f70d37af0ede30d6ee18682fd3f
Signed-off-by: Jeenu Viswambharan <jeenu.viswambharan@arm.com>
SPIs can be routed to either a specific PE, or to any one of all
available PEs.
API documentation updated.
Change-Id: I28675f634568aaf4ea1aa8aa7ebf25b419a963ed
Co-authored-by: Yousuf A <yousuf.sait@arm.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeenu Viswambharan <jeenu.viswambharan@arm.com>
The back end GIC driver converts and assigns the interrupt type to
suitable group.
For GICv2, a build option GICV2_G0_FOR_EL3 is introduced, which
determines to which type Group 0 interrupts maps to.
- When the build option is set 0 (the default), Group 0 interrupts are
meant for Secure EL1. This is presently the case.
- Otherwise, Group 0 interrupts are meant for EL3. This means the SPD
will have to synchronously hand over the interrupt to Secure EL1.
The query API allows the platform to query whether the platform supports
interrupts of a given type.
API documentation updated.
Change-Id: I60fdb4053ffe0bd006b3b20914914ebd311fc858
Co-authored-by: Yousuf A <yousuf.sait@arm.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeenu Viswambharan <jeenu.viswambharan@arm.com>
The PE target mask is used to translate linear PE index (returned by
platform core position) to a bit mask used when targeting interrupts to
a PE, viz. when raising SGIs and routing SPIs.
The platform shall:
- Populate the driver data with a pointer to array that's to contain
per-PE target masks.
- Invoke the new driver API 'gicv2_set_pe_target_mask()' during
per-CPU initialization so that the driver populates the target mask
for that CPU.
Platforms that don't intend to target interrupts or raise SGIs need not
populate this.
Change-Id: Ic0db54da86915e9dccd82fff51479bc3c1fdc968
Signed-off-by: Jeenu Viswambharan <jeenu.viswambharan@arm.com>
Document the API in separate platform interrupt controller API document.
Change-Id: If18f208e10a8a243f5c59d226fcf48e985941949
Co-authored-by: Yousuf A <yousuf.sait@arm.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeenu Viswambharan <jeenu.viswambharan@arm.com>
This patch fixes an assertion check in the GICv3 ITS helper function.
Change-Id: I75f50d7bf6d87c12c6e24a07c9a9889e5facf4a5
Signed-off-by: Soby Mathew <soby.mathew@arm.com>
This patch adds functions to save and restore GICv3 ITS registers during
system suspend. Please note that the power management of GIC ITS is
implementation defined. These functions only implements the
architectural part of the ITS power management and they do not restore
memory structures or register content required to support ITS. Even if
the ITS implementation stores structures in memory, an implementation
defined power down sequence is likely to be required to flush some
internal ITS caches to memory. If such implementation defined sequence
is not followed, the platform must ensure that the ITS is not power
gated during system suspend.
Change-Id: I5f31e5541975aa7dcaab69b0b7f67583c0e27678
Signed-off-by: Soby Mathew <soby.mathew@arm.com>
Signed-off-by: Douglas Raillard <douglas.raillard@arm.com>
During system suspend, the GICv3 Distributor and Redistributor context
can be lost due to power gating of the system power domain. This means
that the GICv3 context needs to be saved prior to system suspend and
restored on wakeup. Currently the consensus is that the Firmware should
be in charge of this. See tf-issues#464 for more details.
This patch introduces helper APIs in the GICv3 driver to save and
restore the Distributor and Redistributor contexts. The GICv3 ITS
context is not considered in this patch because the specification says
that the details of ITS power management is implementation-defined.
These APIs are expected to be appropriately invoked by the platform
layer during system suspend.
FixesARM-software/tf-issues#464
Change-Id: Iebb9c6770ab8c4d522546f161fa402d2fe02ec00
Signed-off-by: Soby Mathew <soby.mathew@arm.com>
Signed-off-by: Douglas Raillard <douglas.raillard@arm.com>
Tidy up the code a bit by turning some macros into inline functions
which allows to remove the do/while(0) idiom and backslashes at the end
of the line.
Change-Id: Ie41a4ea4a4da507f7b925247b53e85019101d717
Signed-off-by: Douglas Raillard <douglas.raillard@arm.com>
Reindent the file using tabs as the mix of spaces and tabs confuses some
editors and leads them to use spaces instead of tabs for new code
although the coding style mandates tabs.
Change-Id: I87fa4a5d368a048340054b9b3622325f3f7befba
Signed-off-by: Douglas Raillard <douglas.raillard@arm.com>
Add new option rsa+ecdsa for TF_MBEDTLS_KEY_ALG, which selects
rsa or ecdsa depending on the certificate used.
Change-Id: I08d9e99bdbba361ed2ec5624248dc382c750ad47
Signed-off-by: Qixiang Xu <qixiang.xu@arm.com>
The type `unsigned long` is 32 bit wide in AArch32, but 64 bit wide in
AArch64. This is inconsistent and that's why we avoid using it as per
the Coding Guidelines. This patch changes all `UL` occurrences to `U`
or `ULL` depending on the context so that the size of the constant is
clear.
This problem affected the macro `BIT(nr)`. As long as this macro is used
to fill fields of registers, that's not a problem, since all registers
are 32 bit wide in AArch32 and 64 bit wide in AArch64. However, if the
macro is used to fill the fields of a 64-bit integer, it won't be able
to set the upper 32 bits in AArch32.
By changing the type of this macro to `unsigned long long` the behaviour
is always the same regardless of the architecture, as this type is
64-bit wide in both cases.
Some Tegra platform files have been modified by this patch.
Change-Id: I918264c03e7d691a931f0d1018df25a2796cc221
Signed-off-by: Antonio Nino Diaz <antonio.ninodiaz@arm.com>
This patch enables choice of RSA version at run time to be used for
generating signatures by the cert_tool. The RSA PSS as defined in
PKCS#1 v2.1 becomes the default version and this patch enables to specify
the RSA PKCS#1 v1.5 algorithm to `cert_create` through the command line
-a option. Also, the build option `KEY_ALG` can be used to pass this
option from the build system. Please note that RSA PSS is mandated
by Trusted Board Boot requirements (TBBR) and legacy RSA support is
being added for compatibility reasons.
FixesARM-Software/tf-issues#499
Change-Id: Ifaa3f2f7c9b43f3d7b3effe2cde76bf6745a5d73
Co-Authored-By: Eleanor Bonnici <Eleanor.bonnici@arm.com>
Signed-off-by: Soby Mathew <soby.mathew@arm.com>
The `KEY_ALG` variable is used to select the algorithm for key
generation by `cert_create` tool for signing the certificates. This
variable was previously undocumented and did not have a global default
value. This patch corrects this and also adds changes to derive the
value of `TF_MBEDTLS_KEY_ALG` based on `KEY_ALG` if it not set by the
platform. The corresponding assignment of these variables are also now
removed from the `arm_common.mk` makefile.
Signed-off-by: Soby Mathew <soby.mathew@arm.com>
Change-Id: I78e2d6f4fc04ed5ad35ce2266118afb63127a5a4
Since Trusted OS firmware may have extra images, need to
assign new uuid and image id for them.
The TBBR chain of trust has been extended to add support
for the new images within the existing Trusted OS firmware
content certificate.
Change-Id: I678dac7ba1137e85c5779b05e0c4331134c10e06
Signed-off-by: Summer Qin <summer.qin@arm.com>
The driver has only one API: to initialize an SMMUv3 device. This
operates on a device that implements secure state, by invalidating
secure caches and TLBs.
Change-Id: Ief32800419ddf0f1fe38c8f0da8f5ba75c72c826
Signed-off-by: Jeenu Viswambharan <jeenu.viswambharan@arm.com>