Passed the address of fw_config instead of soc_fw_config
as arg1 to BL31 from BL2 for ARM fvp platform.
BL31 then retrieve load-address of other device trees
from fw_config device tree.
Signed-off-by: Louis Mayencourt <louis.mayencourt@arm.com>
Signed-off-by: Manish V Badarkhe <Manish.Badarkhe@arm.com>
Change-Id: Ib7e9581cd765d76111dcc3b7e0dafc12503c83c1
Increased the size of firmware configuration area to accommodate
all configs.
Updated maximum size of following bootloaders due to increase
in firmware configs size and addition of the code in the BL2.
1. Increased maximum size of BL2 for Juno platform in no
optimisation case.
2. Reduced maximum size of BL31 for fvp and Juno platform.
3. Reduced maximum size of BL32 for Juno platform.
Change-Id: Ifba0564df0d1fe86175bed9fae87fdcf013b1831
Signed-off-by: Manish V Badarkhe <Manish.Badarkhe@arm.com>
Query clock frequency in runtime using FCONF getter API
Signed-off-by: Lauren Wehrmeister <lauren.wehrmeister@arm.com>
Change-Id: Ie6a8a62d8d190b9994feffb167a1d48829913e9b
Extract Timer clock frequency from the timer node in
HW_CONFIG dtb. The first timer is a per-core architected timer attached
to a GIC to deliver its per-processor interrupts via PPIs.
Signed-off-by: Lauren Wehrmeister <lauren.wehrmeister@arm.com>
Change-Id: I2f4b27c48e4c79208dab9f03c768d9221ba6ca86
Cleaned up confused naming between TB_FW and FW_CONFIG.
Signed-off-by: Louis Mayencourt <louis.mayencourt@arm.com>
Signed-off-by: Manish V Badarkhe <Manish.Badarkhe@arm.com>
Change-Id: I9e9f6e6ca076d38fee0388f97d370431ae067f08
Moved BL2 configuration nodes from fw_config to newly
created tb_fw_config device tree.
fw_config device tree's main usage is to hold properties shared
across all BLx images.
An example is the "dtb-registry" node, which contains the
information about the other device tree configurations
(load-address, size).
Also, Updated load-address of tb_fw_config which is now located
after fw_config in SRAM.
Signed-off-by: Manish V Badarkhe <Manish.Badarkhe@arm.com>
Change-Id: Ic398c86a4d822dacd55b5e25fd41d4fe3888d79a
Load address of tb_fw_config is incorrectly mentioned
in below device trees:
1. rdn1edge_fw_config.dts
2. tc0_fw_config.dts
Till now, tb_fw_config load-address is not being retrieved from
device tree and hence never exeprienced any issue for tc0 and
rdn1edge platform.
For tc0 and rdn1edge platform, Load-address of tb_fw_config should
be the SRAM base address + 0x300 (size of fw_config device tree)
Hence updated these platform's fw_config.dts accordingly to reflect
this load address change.
Change-Id: I2ef8b05d49be10767db31384329f516df11ca817
Signed-off-by: Manish V Badarkhe <Manish.Badarkhe@arm.com>
Using the fconf framework, the Group 0 and Group 1 secure interrupt
descriptors are moved to device tree and retrieved in runtime. This
feature is enabled by the build flag SEC_INT_DESC_IN_FCONF.
Change-Id: I360c63a83286c7ecc2426cd1ff1b4746d61e633c
Signed-off-by: Madhukar Pappireddy <madhukar.pappireddy@arm.com>
The only difference between GIC-500 and GIC-600 relevant to TF-A is the
differing power management sequence.
A certain GIC implementation is detectable at runtime, for instance by
checking the IIDR register. Let's add that test before initiating the
GIC-600 specific sequence, so the code can be used on both GIC-600 and
GIC-500 chips alike, without deciding on a GIC chip at compile time.
This means that the GIC-500 "driver" is now redundant. To allow minimal
platform support, add a switch to disable GIC-600 support.
Change-Id: I17ea97d9fb05874772ebaa13e6678b4ba3415557
Signed-off-by: Andre Przywara <andre.przywara@arm.com>
A new certificate "sip-sp-cert" has been added for Silicon Provider(SiP)
owned Secure Partitions(SP). A similar support for Platform owned SP can
be added in future. The certificate is also protected against anti-
rollback using the trusted Non-Volatile counter.
To avoid deviating from TBBR spec, support for SP CoT is only provided
in dualroot.
Secure Partition content certificate is assigned image ID 31 and SP
images follows after it.
The CoT for secure partition look like below.
+------------------+ +-------------------+
| ROTPK/ROTPK Hash |------>| Trusted Key |
+------------------+ | Certificate |
| (Auth Image) |
/+-------------------+
/ |
/ |
/ |
/ |
L v
+------------------+ +-------------------+
| Trusted World |------>| SiP owned SPs |
| Public Key | | Content Cert |
+------------------+ | (Auth Image) |
/ +-------------------+
/ |
/ v|
+------------------+ L +-------------------+
| SP_PKG1 Hash |------>| SP_PKG1 |
| | | (Data Image) |
+------------------+ +-------------------+
. .
. .
. .
+------------------+ +-------------------+
| SP_PKG8 Hash |------>| SP_PKG8 |
| | | (Data Image) |
+------------------+ +-------------------+
Signed-off-by: Manish Pandey <manish.pandey2@arm.com>
Change-Id: Ia31546bac1327a3e0b5d37e8b99c808442d5e53f
As per "include/export/README", TF-A code should never include export
headers directly. Instead, it should include a wrapper header that
ensures the export header is included in the right manner.
"tbbr_img_def_exp.h" is directly included in TF-A code, this patch
replaces it with its wrapper header "tbbr_img_def.h".
Signed-off-by: Manish Pandey <manish.pandey2@arm.com>
Change-Id: I31c1a42e6a7bcac4c396bb17e8548567ecd8147d
This should allow git to easily track file moves
Signed-off-by: Jimmy Brisson <jimmy.brisson@arm.com>
Change-Id: I1592cf39a4f94209c560dc6d1a8bc1bfb21d8327
This patch adds support for Total Compute (TC0) platform. It is an
initial port and additional features are expected to be added later.
TC0 has a SCP which brings the primary Cortex-A out of reset
which starts executing BL1. TF-A optionally authenticates the SCP
ram-fw available in FIP and makes it available for SCP to copy.
Some of the major features included and tested in this platform
port include TBBR, PSCI, MHUv2 and DVFS.
Change-Id: I1675e9d200ca7687c215009eef483d9b3ee764ef
Signed-off-by: Usama Arif <usama.arif@arm.com>
SPCI is renamed as PSA FF-A which stands for Platform Security
Architecture Firmware Framework for A class processors.
This patch replaces the occurrence of SPCI with PSA FF-A(in documents)
or simply FFA(in code).
Change-Id: I4ab10adb9ffeef1ff784641dfafd99f515133760
Signed-off-by: J-Alves <joao.alves@arm.com>
We query the UART base address and clk frequency in runtime
using fconf getter APIs.
Change-Id: I5f4e84953be5f384472bf90720b706d45cb86260
Signed-off-by: Madhukar Pappireddy <madhukar.pappireddy@arm.com>
This patch introduces the populate function which leverages
a new driver to extract base address and clk frequency properties
of the uart serial node from HW_CONFIG device tree.
This patch also introduces fdt helper API fdtw_translate_address()
which helps in performing address translation.
Change-Id: I053628065ebddbde0c9cb3aa93d838619f502ee3
Signed-off-by: Madhukar Pappireddy <madhukar.pappireddy@arm.com>
Query the GICD and GICR base addresses in runtime using fconf getter
APIs.
Signed-off-by: Lauren Wehrmeister <lauren.wehrmeister@arm.com>
Change-Id: I309fb2874f3329ddeb8677ddb53ed4c02199a1e9
This patch introduces dynamic configuration for SDEI setup and is supported
when the new build flag SDEI_IN_FCONF is enabled. Instead of using C arrays
and processing the configuration at compile time, the config is moved to
dts files. It will be retrieved at runtime during SDEI init, using the fconf
layer.
Change-Id: If5c35a7517ba00a9f258d7f3e7c8c20cee169a31
Signed-off-by: Balint Dobszay <balint.dobszay@arm.com>
Co-authored-by: Madhukar Pappireddy <madhukar.pappireddy@arm.com>
The arm_fpga port requires a DTB, to launch a BL33 payload.
To make this port more flexible, we can also use the information in the
DT to configure the console driver.
For a start, find the DT node pointed to by the stdout-path property, and
read the base address from there.
This assumes for now that the stdout-path points to a PL011 UART.
This allows to remove platform specific addresses from the image. We
keep the original base address for the crash console.
Change-Id: I46a990de2315f81cae4d7913ae99a07b0bec5cb1
Signed-off-by: Andre Przywara <andre.przywara@arm.com>
Since we use a DTB with all platform information to pass this on to a
kernel loaded as BL33, we can as well make use of it for our own
purposes.
Every DT would contain a node for the GIC(v3) interrupt controller, so
we can read the base address for the distributor and redistributors from
there.
This avoids hard coding this information in the code and allows for a more
flexible binary.
Change-Id: Ic530e223a21a45bc30a07a21048116d5af69e972
Signed-off-by: Andre Przywara <andre.przywara@arm.com>
The stdout-path property in the /chosen node of a DTB points to a device
node, which is used for boot console output.
On most (if not all) ARM based platforms this is the debug UART.
The ST platform code contains a function to parse this property and
chase down eventual aliases to learn the node offset of this UART node.
Introduce a slightly more generalised version of this ST platform function
in the generic fdt_wrappers code. This will be useful for other platforms
as well.
Change-Id: Ie6da47ace7833861b5e35fe8cba49835db3659a5
Signed-off-by: Andre Przywara <andre.przywara@arm.com>
The ARM Generic Timer DT binding describes an (optional) property to
declare the counter frequency. Its usage is normally discouraged, as the
value should be read from the CNTFRQ_EL0 system register.
However in our case we can use it to program this register in the first
place, which avoids us to hard code a counter frequency into the code.
We keep some default value in, if the DT lacks that property for
whatever reason.
Change-Id: I5b71176db413f904f21eb16f3302fbb799cb0305
Signed-off-by: Andre Przywara <andre.przywara@arm.com>
The STM32 platform port parse DT nodes to find base address to
peripherals. It does this by using its own implementation, even though
this functionality is generic and actually widely useful outside of the
STM32 code.
Re-implement fdt_get_reg_props_by_name() on top of the newly introduced
fdt_get_reg_props_by_index() function, and move it to fdt_wrapper.c.
This is removes the assumption that #address-cells and #size-cells are
always one.
Change-Id: I6d584930262c732b6e0356d98aea50b2654f789d
Signed-off-by: Andre Przywara <andre.przywara@arm.com>
The SCP firmware on the ARM FPGA initialises the UART already. This allows
us to treat the PL011 as an SBSA Generic UART, which does not require
any further setup.
This in particular removes the need for any baudrate and base clock related
settings to be hard coded into the BL31 image.
Change-Id: I16fc943526267356b97166a7068459e06ff77f0f
Signed-off-by: Andre Przywara <andre.przywara@arm.com>
At the moment the fconf_populate_gicv3_config() implementation is
somewhat incomplete: First it actually fails to store the retrieved
information (the local addr[] array is going nowhere), but also it makes
quite some assumptions about the device tree passed to it: it needs to
use two address-cells and two size-cells, and also requires all five
register regions to be specified, where actually only the first two
are mandatory according to the binding (and needed by our code).
Fix this by introducing a proper generic function to retrieve "reg"
property information from a DT node:
We retrieve the #address-cells and #size-cells properties from the
parent node, then use those to extract the right values from the "reg"
property. The function takes an index to select one region of a reg
property.
This is loosely based on the STM32 implementation using "reg-names",
which we will subsume in a follow-up patch.
Change-Id: Ia59bfdf80aea4e36876c7b6ed4d153e303f482e8
Signed-off-by: Andre Przywara <andre.przywara@arm.com>
Dynamic configuration properties are fconf properties. Modify the
compatible string from "arm,.." to "fconf,.." to reflect this.
Signed-off-by: Louis Mayencourt <louis.mayencourt@arm.com>
Change-Id: I85eb75cf877c5f4d3feea3936d4c348ca843bc6c
Our fdtw_read_cells() implementation goes to great lengths to
sanity-check every parameter and result, but leaves a big hole open:
The size of the storage the value pointer points at needs to match the
number of cells given. This can't be easily checked at compile time,
since we lose the size information by using a void pointer.
Regardless the current usage of this function is somewhat wrong anyways,
since we use it on single-element, fixed-length properties only, for
which the DT binding specifies the size.
Typically we use those functions dealing with a number of cells in DT
context to deal with *dynamically* sized properties, which depend on
other properties (#size-cells, #clock-cells, ...), to specify the number
of cells needed.
Another problem with the current implementation is the use of
ambiguously sized types (uintptr_t, size_t) together with a certain
expectation about their size. In general there is no relation between
the length of a DT property and the bitness of the code that parses the
DTB: AArch64 code could encounter 32-bit addresses (where the physical
address space is limited to 4GB [1]), while AArch32 code could read
64-bit sized properties (/memory nodes on LPAE systems, [2]).
To make this more clear, fix the potential issues and also align more
with other DT users (Linux and U-Boot), introduce functions to explicitly
read uint32 and uint64 properties. As the other DT consumers, we do this
based on the generic "read array" function.
Convert all users to use either of those two new functions, and make
sure we never use a pointer to anything other than uint32_t or uint64_t
variables directly.
This reveals (and fixes) a bug in plat_spmd_manifest.c, where we write
4 bytes into a uint16_t variable (passed via a void pointer).
Also we change the implementation of the function to better align with
other libfdt users, by using the right types (fdt32_t) and common
variable names (*prop, prop_names).
[1] https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/tree/arch/arm64/boot/dts/allwinner/sun50i-a64.dtsi#n874
[2] https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/tree/arch/arm/boot/dts/ecx-2000.dts
Change-Id: I718de960515117ac7a3331a1b177d2ec224a3890
Signed-off-by: Andre Przywara <andre.przywara@arm.com>
Currently our fdtw_read_array() implementation requires the length of
the property to exactly match the requested size, which makes it less
flexible for parsing generic device trees.
Also the name is slightly misleading, since we treat the cells of the
array as 32 bit unsigned integers, performing the endianess conversion.
To fix those issues and align the code more with other DT users (Linux
kernel or U-Boot), rename the function to "fdt_read_uint32_array", and
relax the length check to only check if the property covers at least the
number of cells we request.
This also changes the variable names to be more in-line with other DT
users, and switches to the proper data types.
This makes this function more useful in later patches.
Change-Id: Id86f4f588ffcb5106d4476763ecdfe35a735fa6c
Signed-off-by: Andre Przywara <andre.przywara@arm.com>
RD-Daniel Config-XLR platform has four identical chips connected via a
high speed coherent CCIX link. Each chip has four Neoverse cores
connected via coherent CMN interconnect.
Change-Id: I37d1b91f2b6ba08f61c64d0288bc16a429836c08
Signed-off-by: Aditya Angadi <aditya.angadi@arm.com>
This commit fixes an assertion that was triggering in certain contexts:
ERROR: mmap_add_region_check() failed. error -22
ASSERT: lib/xlat_tables_v2/xlat_tables_core.c:790
Change-Id: Ia55b3fb4f496c8cd791ea6093d122edae0a7e92a
Signed-off-by: Chris Kay <chris.kay@arm.com>
Signed-off-by: Sandrine Bailleux <sandrine.bailleux@arm.com>
By writing 0 to CLUSTERPWRDN DSU register bit 0, we send an
advisory to the power controller that cluster power is not required
when all cores are powered down.
The AArch32 CLUSTERPWRDN register is architecturally mapped to the
AArch64 CLUSTERPWRDN_EL1 register
Change-Id: Ie6e67c1c7d811fa25c51e2e405ca7f59bd20c81b
Signed-off-by: Madhukar Pappireddy <madhukar.pappireddy@arm.com>
The arm_fpga platform code contains an dubious line to initialise some
timer. On closer inspection this turn out to be bogus, as this was only
needed on some special (older) FPGA board, and is actually not needed on
the current model. Also the base address was wrong anyways.
Remove the code entirely.
Change-Id: I02e71aea645051b5addb42d972d7a79f04b81106
Signed-off-by: Andre Przywara <andre.przywara@arm.com>
RD-Daniel uses GIC-Clayton as its interrupt controller which is an
implementation of GICv4.1 architecture. Hence for RD-Daniel, enable
GICv4 extension support.
Change-Id: I45ae8c82376f8fe8fc0666306822ae2db74e71b8
Signed-off-by: Vijayenthiran Subramaniam <vijayenthiran.subramaniam@arm.com>
This patch adds support for GICv4 extension for FVP platform.
Change-Id: Ia389b61266af669b1ca9b999a8b76476cab214f4
Signed-off-by: Alexei Fedorov <Alexei.Fedorov@arm.com>
Increased the maximum size of BL2 image in order to
accommodate the BL2 image when TF-A build with no compiler
optimization for ARM platform.
Note: As of now, "no compiler optimization" build works
only when TRUSTED_BOOT_BOARD option is set to 0.
This change is verified using below CI configuration:
1. juno-no-optimize-default:juno-linux.uboot
2. fvp-no-optimize-default,fvp-default:fvp-tftf-fip.tftf-aemv8a-debug
Change-Id: I5932621237f8acd1b510682388f3ba78eae90ea4
Signed-off-by: Manish V Badarkhe <Manish.Badarkhe@arm.com>
with commit a6ea06f5, the way platform includes gicv3 files has been
modified, this patch adapts to new method of including gicv3 files
for arm_fpga platform.
Signed-off-by: Manish Pandey <manish.pandey2@arm.com>
Change-Id: Ic5ccae842b39b7db06d4f23c5738b174c42edf63
As GCC manual says, -D option defines a macro as 1, if =<value> is omitted.
-D <name>
Predefine <name> as a macro, with definition 1.
The same applied with Clang, too.
In the context of -D option, =1 is always redundant.
Change-Id: I487489a1ea3eb51e734741619c1e65dab1420bc4
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
-D is a preprocessor flag that defines a macro. So, adding it to
BL*_CPPFLAGS makes more sense. You can reference it not only from
.c files but also from .S files.
Change-Id: Ib4f2f27a3ed3eae476a6a32da7ab5225ad0649de
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
1. Necessary changes to platform makefile to include fw_config
device tree and package it in fip.bin
2. Removed hw_config node from fw_config dts as there is no
HW_CONFIG device tree source for sgm775
3. Added mbedtls_heap related properties for TBBR functionality
Change-Id: I26b940c65b17ad2fb5537141f8649785bb0fd4ad
Signed-off-by: Madhukar Pappireddy <madhukar.pappireddy@arm.com>
Moved SMCCC defines from plat_arm.h to new <smccc_def.h> header
and include this header in all ARM platforms.
Signed-off-by: Manish V Badarkhe <Manish.Badarkhe@arm.com>
Change-Id: I4cbc69c7b9307461de87b7c7bf200dd9b810e485
This patch moves all GICv3 driver files into new added
'gicv3.mk' makefile for the benefit of the generic driver
which can evolve in the future without affecting platforms.
The patch adds GICv3 driver configuration flags
'GICV3_IMPL', 'GICV3_IMPL_GIC600_MULTICHIP' and
'GICV3_OVERRIDE_DISTIF_PWR_OPS' described in
'GICv3 driver options' section of 'build-option.rst'
document.
NOTE: Platforms with GICv3 driver need to be modified to
include 'drivers/arm/gic/v3/gicv3.mk' in their makefiles.
Change-Id: If055f6770ff20f5dee5a3c99ae7ced7cdcac5c44
Signed-off-by: Alexei Fedorov <Alexei.Fedorov@arm.com>
This change is part of the goal of enabling the port to be compatible
with multiple FPGA images.
BL31 behaves differently depending on whether or not the CPUs in the
system use cache coherency, and as a result any CPU libraries that are
compiled together must serve processors that are consistent in this
regard.
This compiles a different set of CPU libraries depending on whether or
not the HW_ASSISTED_COHERENCY is enabled at build-time to indicate the
CPUs support hardware-level support for cache coherency. This build
flag is used in the makefile in the same way as the Arm FVP port.
Signed-off-by: Oliver Swede <oli.swede@arm.com>
Change-Id: I18300b4443176b89767015e3688c0f315a91c27e
This allows the BL31 port to run with position-independent execution
enabled so that it can be ran from any address in the system.
This increases the flexibility of the image, allowing it to be ran from
other locations rather than only its hardcoded absolute address
(currently set to the typical DRAM base of 2GB). This may be useful for
future images that describe system configurations with other memory
layouts (e.g. where SRAM is included).
It does this by setting ENABLE_PIE=1 and changing the absolute
address to 0. The load address of bl31.bin can then be specified by
the -l [load address] argument in the fpga-run command (additionally,
this address is required by any preceding payloads that specify the
start address. For ELF payloads this is usually extracted automatically
by reading the entrypoint address in the header, however bl31.bin is a
different file format so has this additional dependency).
Signed-off-by: Oliver Swede <oli.swede@arm.com>
Change-Id: Idd74787796ab0cf605fe2701163d9c4b3223a143
This change is part of the goal of enabling the port to be compatible
with multiple FPGA images.
The BL31 port that is uploaded as a payload to the FPGA with an image
should cater for a wide variety of system configurations. This patch
makes the necessary changes to enable it to function with images whose
cluster configurations may be larger (either by utilizing more
clusters, more CPUs per cluster, more threads in each CPU, or a
combination) than the initial image being used for testing.
As part of this, the hard-coded values that configure the size of the
array describing the topology of the power domain tree are increased
to max. 8 clusters, max. 8 cores per cluster & max 4 threads per core.
This ensures the port works with cluster configurations up to these
sizes. When there are too many entries for the number of available PEs,
e.g. if there is a variable number of CPUs between clusters, then there
will be empty entries in the array. This is permitted and the PSCI
library will still function as expected. While this increases its size,
this shouldn't be an issue in the context of the size of BL31, and is
worth the trade-off for the extra compatibility.
Signed-off-by: Oliver Swede <oli.swede@arm.com>
Change-Id: I7d4ae1e20b2e99fdbac428d122a2cf9445394363
This initializes the GIC using the Arm GIC drivers in TF-A.
The initial FPGA image uses a GIC600 implementation, and so that its
power controller is enabled, this platform port calls the corresponding
implementation-specific routines.
Signed-off-by: Oliver Swede <oli.swede@arm.com>
Change-Id: I88d5a073eead4b653b1ca73273182cd98a95e4c5
This sets the frequency of the system counter so that the Delay Timer
driver programs the correct value to CNTCRL. This value depends on
the FPGA image being used, and is 10MHz for the initial test image.
Once configured, the BL31 platform setup sequence then enables the
system counter.
Signed-off-by: Oliver Swede <oli.swede@arm.com>
Change-Id: Ieb036a36fd990f350b5953357424a255b8ac5d5a
This adds a basic PSCI implementation allow secondary CPUs to be
released from an initial state and continue through to the warm boot
entrypoint.
Each secondary CPU is kept in a holding pen, whereby it polls the value
representing its hold state, by reading this from an array that acts as
a table for all the PEs. The hold states are initially set to 0 for all
cores to indicate that the executing core should continue polling.
To prevent the secondary CPUs from interfering with the platform's
initialization, they are only updated by the primary CPU once the cold
boot sequence has completed and fpga_pwr_domain_on(mpidr) is called.
The polling target CPU will then read 1 (which indicates that it should
branch to the warm reset entrypoint) and then jump to that address
rather than continue polling.
In addition to the initial polling behaviour of the secondary CPUs
before their warm boot reset sequence, they are also placed in a
low-power wfe() state at the end of each poll; accordingly, the PSCI
fpga_pwr_domain_on(mpidr) function also signals an event to all cores
(after updating the target CPU's hold entry) to wake them from this
state, allowing any secondary CPUs that are still polling to check
their hold state again.
This method is in accordance with both the PSCI and Linux kernel
recommendations, as the lessened overhead reduces the energy
consumption associated with the busy-loop.
The table of hold entries is implemented by a global array as shared SRAM
(which is used by other platforms in similar implementations) is not
available on the FPGA images.
Signed-off-by: Oliver Swede <oli.swede@arm.com>
Change-Id: I65cfd1892f8be1dfcb285f0e1e94e7a9870cdf5a
This makes use of the PRELOADED_BL33_BASE flag to indicate to BL31 that
the BL33 payload (kernel) has already been loaded and resides in memory;
BL31 will then jump to the non-secure address.
For this port the BL33 payload is the Linux kernel, and in accordance
with the pre-kernel setup requirements (as specified in the `Booting
AArch64 Linux' documentation:
https://www.kernel.org/doc/Documentation/arm64/booting.txt),
this change also sets up the primary CPU's registers x0-x3 so they are
the expected values, which includes the address of the DTB at x0.
An external linker script is currently required to combine BL31, the
BL33 payload, and any other software images to create an ELF file that
can be uploaded to the FPGA board along with the bit file. It therefore
has dependencies on the value of PRELOADED_BL33_BASE (kernel base) and
the DTB base (plus any other relevant base addresses used to
distinguish the different ELF sections), both of which are set in this
patch.
Signed-off-by: Oliver Swede <oli.swede@arm.com>
Change-Id: If7ae8ee82d1e09fb05f553f6077ae13680dbf66b