Current ATF uses a direct physical-to-virtual mapping, that is, a physical
address is mapped to the same address in the virtual space. For example,
physical address 0x8000_0000 is mapped to 0x8000_0000 virtual. This
approach works fine for FVP as all its physical addresses fall into 0 to
4GB range. But for other platform where all I/O addresses are 48-bit long,
If we follow the same direct mapping, we would need virtual address range
from 0 to 0x8fff_ffff_ffff, which is about 144TB. This requires a
significant amount of memory for MMU tables and it is not necessary to use
that much virtual space in ATF.
The patch is to enable mapping a physical address range to an arbitrary
virtual address range (instead of flat mapping)
Changed "base" to "base_va" and added "base_pa" in mmap_region_t and
modified functions such as mmap_add_region and init_xlation_table etc.
FixesARM-software/tf-issues#158
This patch modifies and adds to the existing documentation
for the crash reporting implementation in BL3-1.
Change-Id: I2cfbfeeeb64996ec7d19a9ddf95295482899b4bd
Following recent refactoring changes to platform.h, this commit updates
porting-guide.md to correctly refer to platform.h and platform_def.h where
appropriate.
Change-Id: Idf1e77503c24358696f8f3c14caa0cc1d579deb4
This patch fixes the compilation issue for trusted firmware when the
IMF_READ_INTERRUPT_ID is enabled.
Change-Id: I94ab613b9bc96a7c1935796c674dc42246aaafee
The interrupt handling routine in BL3-1 expects a cookie as its last
parameter which was not being passed when invoking the interrupt
handler in BL3-1. This patch fixes that by passing a dummy cookie
parameter in the x3 register.
FixesARM-software/tf-issues#171
Change-Id: Ic98abbbd9f849e6f1c55343e865b5e0a4904a1c5
bl2_main() was overwriting any platform set X1 parameter for BL3-1
with the value zero.
This patch ensure that any platform set value is correctly passed
to BL3-1. The FVP port adds a check to verify this parameter is
being passed correctly.
FixesARM-software/tf-issues#173
Change-Id: Ifbcda73d3d41d2b04a4baf5614e9d2d21f1717c8
At present the arguments for BL3-3 in the entry_point_info
structure are not being transferred to X0-X7 before starting
execution of this image
This patch saves the args for BL3-3 into cpu context used
for its entry
FixesARM-software/tf-issues#172
Change-Id: I001b4b9bff6a264336f0d01d377619ae719f928b
Rename the ic_* platform porting functions to plat_ic_* to be
consistent with the other functions in platform.h. Also rename
bl31_get_next_image_info() to bl31_plat_get_next_image_ep_info()
and remove the duplicate declaration in bl31.h.
Change-Id: I4851842069d3cff14c0a468daacc0a891a7ede84
Previously, the enable_mmu_elX() functions were implicitly part of
the platform porting layer since they were included by generic
code. These functions have been placed behind 2 new platform
functions, bl31_plat_enable_mmu() and bl32_plat_enable_mmu().
These are weakly defined so that they can be optionally overridden
by platform ports.
Also, the enable_mmu_elX() functions have been moved to
lib/aarch64/xlat_tables.c for optional re-use by platform ports.
These functions are tightly coupled with the translation table
initialization code.
FixesARM-software/tf-issues#152
Change-Id: I0a2251ce76acfa3c27541f832a9efaa49135cc1c
FVP specific files and functions containing the word "plat" have been
renamed to use the word "fvp" to distinguish them from the common
platform functionality and porting functions.
Change-Id: I39f9673dab3ee9c74bd18b3e62b7c21027232f7d
Some platform porting functions were in BL specific header files.
These have been moved to platform.h so that all porting functions
are in the same place. The functions are now grouped by BL.
Obsolete BL headers files have been removed.
Also, the weak declaration of the init_bl2_mem_layout() function
has been moved out the header file and into the source file
(bl_common.c) using the more succinct #pragma syntax. This
mitigates the risk of 2 weak definitions being created and the
wrong one being picked up by the compiler.
Change-Id: Ib19934939fd755f3e5a5a5bceec88da684308a83
Previously, platform.h contained many declarations and definitions
used for different purposes. This file has been split so that:
* Platform definitions used by common code that must be defined
by the platform are now in platform_def.h. The exact include
path is exported through $PLAT_INCLUDES in the platform makefile.
* Platform definitions specific to the FVP platform are now in
/plat/fvp/fvp_def.h.
* Platform API declarations specific to the FVP platform are now
in /plat/fvp/fvp_private.h.
* The remaining platform API declarations that must be ported by
each platform are still in platform.h but this file has been
moved to /include/plat/common since this can be shared by all
platforms.
Change-Id: Ieb3bb22fbab3ee8027413c6b39a783534aee474a
Rework the "Memory layout on FVP platforms" section in the Firmware
Design document. Add information about where the TSP image fits
in the memory layout when present.
Add documentation for the base addresses of each bootloader image
in the porting guide.
Change-Id: I4afb2605e008a1cb28c44a697804f2cb6bb4c9aa
Currently the platform code gets to define the base address of each
boot loader image. However, the linker scripts couteract this
flexibility by enforcing a fixed overall layout of the different
images. For example, they require that the BL3-1 image sits below
the BL2 image. Choosing BL3-1 and BL2 base addresses in such a way
that it violates this constraint makes the build fail at link-time.
This patch requires the platform code to now define a limit address
for each image. The linker scripts check that the image fits within
these bounds so they don't rely anymore on the position of a given
image in regard to the others.
FixesARM-software/tf-issues#163
Change-Id: I8c108646825da19a6a8dfb091b613e1dd4ae133c
BL1 RO and RW base address used to be fixed, respectively to the first
address of the Trusted ROM and the first address of the Trusted RAM.
Introduce new platform defines to configure the BL1 RO and RW base
addresses.
Change-Id: If26616513a47798593a4bb845a4b0fb37c867cd6
At present BL3-1 has access to all of the SRAM, including
regions that are mapped as read-only and non-cacheable by other
firmware images.
This patch restricts BL3-1 to only be able to read/write from
memory used for its own data sections
Change-Id: I26cda1b9ba803d91a9eacda768f3ce7032c6db94
Conflicts:
plat/fvp/bl31_plat_setup.c
The TSP has a number of entrypoints used by the TSP on different
occasions. These were provided to the TSPD as a table of function
pointers, and required the TSPD to read the entry in the table,
which is in TSP memory, in order to program the exception return
address.
Ideally, the TSPD has no access to the TSP memory.
This patch changes the table of function pointers into a vector
table of single instruction entrypoints. This allows the TSPD to
calculate the entrypoint address instead of read it.
FixesARM-software/tf-issues#160
Change-Id: Iec6e055d537ade78a45799fbc6f43765a4725ad3
Implements support for Non Secure Interrupts preempting the
Standard SMC call in EL1. Whenever an IRQ is trapped in the
Secure world we securely handover to the Normal world
to process the interrupt. The normal world then issues
"resume" smc call to resume the previous interrupted SMC call.
FixesARM-software/tf-issues#105
Change-Id: I72b760617dee27438754cdfc9fe9bcf4cc024858
The generic image loading and IO FIP code no longer forces the
platform to create BL3-2 (Secure-EL1 Payload) specific
definitions. The BL3-2 loading code in bl2/bl2main.c is wrapped
by a #ifdef BL32_BASE blocks, allowing the BL3-2 definitions to
be optional. Similarly for the name_uuid array defintion in
drivers/io/io_fip.c.
Also update the porting guide to reflect this change.
The BL3-2 platform definitions remain non-configurably present
in the FVP port.
FixesARM-software/tf-issues#68
Change-Id: Iea28b4e94d87a31f5522f271e290919a8a955460
This patch enables secure physical timer during TSP initialisation and
maintains it across power management operations so that a timer
interrupt is generated every half second.
FixesARM-software/tf-issues#104FixesARM-software/tf-issues#134
Change-Id: I66c6cfd24bd5e6035ba75ebf0f047e568770a369
This patch adds support in the TSPD for registering a handler for
S-EL1 interrupts. This handler ferries the interrupts generated in the
non-secure state to the TSP at 'tsp_fiq_entry'. Support has been added
to the smc handler to resume execution in the non-secure state once
interrupt handling has been completed by the TSP.
There is also support for resuming execution in the normal world if
the TSP receives a EL3 interrupt. This code is currently unused.
Change-Id: I816732595a2635e299572965179f11aa0bf93b69
This patch adds support in the TSP to handle FIQ interrupts that are
generated when execution is in the TSP. S-EL1 interrupt are handled
normally and execution resumes at the instruction where the exception
was originally taken. S-EL3 interrupts i.e. any interrupt not
recognized by the TSP are handed to the TSPD. Execution resumes
normally once such an interrupt has been handled at EL3.
Change-Id: Ia3ada9a4fb15670afcc12538a6456f21efe58a8f
This patch adds support in the TSP for handling S-EL1 interrupts
handed over by the TSPD. It includes GIC support in its platform port,
updates various statistics related to FIQ handling, exports an entry
point that the TSPD can use to hand over interrupts and defines the
handover protocol w.r.t what context is the TSP expected to preserve
and the state in which the entry point is invoked by the TSPD.
Change-Id: I93b22e5a8133400e4da366f5fc862f871038df39
This patch adds support in the TSP to program the secure physical
generic timer to generate a EL-1 interrupt every half second. It also
adds support for maintaining the timer state across power management
operations. The TSPD ensures that S-EL1 can access the timer by
programming the SCR_EL3.ST bit.
This patch does not actually enable the timer. This will be done in a
subsequent patch once the complete framework for handling S-EL1
interrupts is in place.
Change-Id: I1b3985cfb50262f60824be3a51c6314ce90571bc
This patch adds a common handler for FIQ and IRQ exceptions in the
BL3-1 runtime exception vector table. This function determines the
interrupt type and calls its handler. A crash is reported if an
inconsistency in the interrupt management framework is detected. In
the event of a spurious interrupt, execution resumes from the
instruction where the interrupt was generated.
This patch also removes 'cm_macros.S' as its contents have been moved
to 'runtime_exceptions.S'
Change-Id: I3c85ecf8eaf43a3fac429b119ed0bd706d2e2093
This patch introduces a set of functions which allow generic firmware
code e.g. the interrupt management framework to access the platform
interrupt controller. APIs for finding the type and id of the highest
pending interrupt, acknowledging and EOIing an interrupt and finding
the security state of an interrupt have been added. It is assumed that
the platform interrupt controller implements the v2.0 of the ARM GIC
architecture specification. Support for v3.0 of the specification for
managing interrupts in EL3 and the platform port will be added in the
future.
Change-Id: Ib3a01c2cf3e3ab27806930f1be79db2b29f91bcf
This patch introduces a framework for registering interrupts routed to
EL3. The interrupt routing model is governed by the SCR_EL3.IRQ and
FIQ bits and the security state an interrupt is generated in. The
framework recognizes three type of interrupts depending upon which
exception level and security state they should be handled in
i.e. Secure EL1 interrupts, Non-secure interrupts and EL3
interrupts. It provides an API and macros that allow a runtime service
to register an handler for a type of interrupt and specify the routing
model. The framework validates the routing model and uses the context
management framework to ensure that it is applied to the SCR_EL3 prior
to entry into the target security state. It saves the handler in
internal data structures. An API is provided to retrieve the handler
when an interrupt of a particular type is asserted. Registration is
expected to be done once by the primary CPU. The same handler and
routing model is used for all CPUs.
Support for EL3 interrupts will be added to the framework in the
future. A makefile flag has been added to allow the FVP port choose
between ARM GIC v2 and v3 support in EL3. The latter version is
currently unsupported.
A framework for handling interrupts in BL3-1 will be introduced in
subsequent patches. The default routing model in the absence of any
handlers expects no interrupts to be routed to EL3.
Change-Id: Idf7c023b34fcd4800a5980f2bef85e4b5c29e649
This patch adds an API to write to any bit in the SCR_EL3 member of
the 'cpu_context' structure of the current CPU for a specified
security state. This API will be used in subsequent patches which
introduce interrupt management in EL3 to specify the interrupt routing
model when execution is not in EL3.
It also renames the cm_set_el3_elr() function to cm_set_elr_el3()
which is more in line with the system register name being targeted by
the API.
Change-Id: I310fa7d8f827ad3f350325eca2fb28cb350a85ed
This patch lays the foundation for using the per-cpu 'state' field in
the 'tsp_context' structure for other flags apart from the power state
of the TSP.
It allocates 2 bits for the power state, introduces the necessary
macros to manipulate the power state in the 'state' field and
accordingly reworks all use of the TSP_STATE_* states.
It also allocates a flag bit to determine if the TSP is handling a
standard SMC. If this flag is set then the TSP was interrupted due to
non-secure or EL3 interupt depending upon the chosen routing
model. Macros to get, set and clear this flag have been added as
well. This flag will be used by subsequent patches.
Change-Id: Ic6ee80bd5895812c83b35189cf2c3be70a9024a6
Add a section in the user guide explaining how to compile the TSP
image and include it into the FIP. This includes instructions to make
the TSP run from Trusted DRAM (rather than Trusted SRAM) on FVP.
Change-Id: I04780757a149eeb5482a12a61e821be947b882c0
The TSP used to execute from secure DRAM on the FVPs because there was
not enough space in Trusted SRAM to fit it in. Thanks to recent RAM
usage enhancements being implemented, we have made enough savings for
the TSP to execute in SRAM.
However, there is no contiguous free chunk of SRAM big enough to hold
the TSP. Therefore, the different bootloader images need to be moved
around to reduce memory fragmentation. This patch keeps the overall
memory layout (i.e. keeping BL1 R/W at the bottom, BL2 at the top and
BL3-1 in between) but moves the base addresses of all the bootloader
images in such a way that:
- memory fragmentation is reduced enough to fit BL3-2 in;
- new base addresses are suitable for release builds as well as debug
ones;
- each image has a few extra kilobytes for future growth.
BL3-1 and BL3-2 are the images which received the biggest slice
of the cake since they will most probably grow the most.
A few useful numbers for reference (valid at the time of this patch):
|-----------------------|-------------------------------
| image size (debug) | extra space for the future
--------|-----------------------|-------------------------------
BL1 R/W | 20 KB | 4 KB
BL2 | 44 KB | 4 KB
BL3-1 | 108 KB | 12 KB
BL3-2 | 56 KB | 8 KB
--------|-----------------------|-------------------------------
Total | 228 KB | 28 KB = 256 KB
--------|-----------------------|-------------------------------
Although on FVPs the TSP now executes from Trusted SRAM by default,
this patch keeps the option to execute it from Trusted DRAM. This is
controlled by the build configuration 'TSP_RAM_LOCATION'.
FixesARM-Software/tf-issues#81
Change-Id: Ifb9ef2befa9a2d5ac0813f7f79834df7af992b94