arm-trusted-firmware/docs/change-log.md

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ARM Trusted Firmware - version 0.4
==================================
New features
------------
* Makefile improvements:
* Improved dependency checking when building.
* Removed `dump` target (build now always produces dump files).
* Enabled platform ports to optionally make use of parts of the Trusted
Firmware (e.g. BL3-1 only), rather than being forced to use all parts.
Also made the `fip` target optional.
* Specified the full path to source files and removed use of the `vpath`
keyword.
* Provided translation table library code for potential re-use by platforms
other than the FVPs.
* Moved architectural timer setup to platform-specific code.
* Added standby state support to PSCI cpu_suspend implementation.
* SRAM usage improvements:
* Started using the `-ffunction-sections`, `-fdata-sections` and
`--gc-sections` compiler/linker options to remove unused code and data
from the images. Previously, all common functions were being built into
all binary images, whether or not they were actually used.
* Placed all assembler functions in their own section to allow more unused
functions to be removed from images.
* Updated BL1 and BL2 to use a single coherent stack each, rather than one
per CPU.
* Changed variables that were unnecessarily declared and initialized as
non-const (i.e. in the .data section) so they are either uninitialized
(zero init) or const.
* Moved the Test Secure-EL1 Payload (BL3-2) to execute in Trusted SRAM by
default. The option for it to run in Trusted DRAM remains.
* Implemented a TrustZone Address Space Controller (TZC-400) driver. A
default configuration is provided for the Base FVPs. This means the model
parameter `-C bp.secure_memory=1` is now supported.
* Started saving the PSCI cpu_suspend 'power_state' parameter prior to
suspending a CPU. This allows platforms that implement multiple power-down
states at the same affinity level to identify a specific state.
* Refactored the entire codebase to reduce the amount of nesting in header
files and to make the use of system/user includes more consistent. Also
split platform.h to separate out the platform porting declarations from the
required platform porting definitions and the definitions/declarations
specific to the platform port.
* Optimized the data cache clean/invalidate operations.
* Improved the BL3-1 unhandled exception handling and reporting. Unhandled
exceptions now result in a dump of registers to the console.
* Major rework to the handover interface between BL stages, in particular the
interface to BL3-1. The interface now conforms to a specification and is
more future proof.
* Added support for optionally making the BL3-1 entrypoint a reset handler
(instead of BL1). This allows platforms with an alternative image loading
architecture to re-use BL3-1 with fewer modifications to generic code.
* Reserved some DDR DRAM for secure use on FVP platforms to avoid future
compatibility problems with non-secure software.
* Added support for secure interrupts targeting the Secure-EL1 Payload (SP)
(using GICv2 routing only). Demonstrated this working by adding an interrupt
target and supporting test code to the TSP. Also demonstrated non-secure
interrupt handling during TSP processing.
Issues resolved since last release
----------------------------------
* Now support use of the model parameter `-C bp.secure_memory=1` in the Base
FVPs (see **New features**).
* Support for secure world interrupt handling now available (see **New
features**).
* Made enough SRAM savings (see **New features**) to enable the Test Secure-EL1
Payload (BL3-2) to execute in Trusted SRAM by default.
* The tested filesystem used for this release (Linaro AArch64 OpenEmbedded
14.04) now correctly reports progress in the console.
* Improved the Makefile structure to make it easier to separate out parts of
the Trusted Firmware for re-use in platform ports. Also, improved target
dependency checking.
Known issues
------------
* GICv3 support is experimental. The Linux kernel patches to support this are
not widely available. There are known issues with GICv3 initialization in
the ARM Trusted Firmware.
* Dynamic image loading is not available yet. The current image loader
implementation (used to load BL2 and all subsequent images) has some
limitations. Changing BL2 or BL3-1 load addresses in certain ways can lead
to loading errors, even if the images should theoretically fit in memory.
* The ARM Trusted Firmware still uses too much on-chip Trusted SRAM. A number
of RAM usage enhancements have been identified to rectify this situation.
* CPU idle does not work on the advertised version of the Foundation FVP.
Some FVP fixes are required that are not available externally at the time
of writing. This can be worked around by disabling CPU idle in the Linux
kernel.
* Various bugs in ARM Trusted Firmware, UEFI and the Linux kernel have been
observed when using Linaro toolchain versions later than 13.11. Although
most of these have been fixed, some remain at the time of writing. These
mainly seem to relate to a subtle change in the way the compiler converts
between 64-bit and 32-bit values (e.g. during casting operations), which
reveals previously hidden bugs in client code.
* The firmware design documentation for the Test Secure-EL1 Payload (TSP) and
its dispatcher (TSPD) is incomplete. Similarly for the PSCI section.
ARM Trusted Firmware - version 0.3
==================================
New features
------------
* Support for Foundation FVP Version 2.0 added.
The documented UEFI configuration disables some devices that are unavailable
in the Foundation FVP, including MMC and CLCD. The resultant UEFI binary can
be used on the AEMv8 and Cortex-A57-A53 Base FVPs, as well as the Foundation
FVP.
NOTE: The software will not work on Version 1.0 of the Foundation FVP.
* Enabled third party contributions. Added a new contributing.md containing
instructions for how to contribute and updated copyright text in all files
to acknowledge contributors.
* The PSCI CPU_SUSPEND API has been stabilised to the extent where it can be
used for entry into power down states with the following restrictions:
- Entry into standby states is not supported.
- The API is only supported on the AEMv8 and Cortex-A57-A53 Base FVPs.
* The PSCI AFFINITY_INFO api has undergone limited testing on the Base FVPs to
allow experimental use.
* Required C library and runtime header files are now included locally in ARM
Trusted Firmware instead of depending on the toolchain standard include
paths. The local implementation has been cleaned up and reduced in scope.
* Added I/O abstraction framework, primarily to allow generic code to load
images in a platform-independent way. The existing image loading code has
been reworked to use the new framework. Semi-hosting and NOR flash I/O
drivers are provided.
* Introduced Firmware Image Package (FIP) handling code and tools. A FIP
combines multiple firmware images with a Table of Contents (ToC) into a
single binary image. The new FIP driver is another type of I/O driver. The
Makefile builds a FIP by default and the FVP platform code expect to load a
FIP from NOR flash, although some support for image loading using semi-
hosting is retained.
NOTE: Building a FIP by default is a non-backwards-compatible change.
NOTE: Generic BL2 code now loads a BL3-3 (non-trusted firmware) image into
DRAM instead of expecting this to be pre-loaded at known location. This is
also a non-backwards-compatible change.
NOTE: Some non-trusted firmware (e.g. UEFI) will need to be rebuilt so that
it knows the new location to execute from and no longer needs to copy
particular code modules to DRAM itself.
* Reworked BL2 to BL3-1 handover interface. A new composite structure
(bl31_args) holds the superset of information that needs to be passed from
BL2 to BL3-1, including information on how handover execution control to
BL3-2 (if present) and BL3-3 (non-trusted firmware).
* Added library support for CPU context management, allowing the saving and
restoring of
- Shared system registers between Secure-EL1 and EL1.
- VFP registers.
- Essential EL3 system registers.
* Added a framework for implementing EL3 runtime services. Reworked the PSCI
implementation to be one such runtime service.
* Reworked the exception handling logic, making use of both SP_EL0 and SP_EL3
stack pointers for determining the type of exception, managing general
purpose and system register context on exception entry/exit, and handling
SMCs. SMCs are directed to the correct EL3 runtime service.
* Added support for a Test Secure-EL1 Payload (TSP) and a corresponding
Dispatcher (TSPD), which is loaded as an EL3 runtime service. The TSPD
implements Secure Monitor functionality such as world switching and
EL1 context management, and is responsible for communication with the TSP.
NOTE: The TSPD does not yet contain support for secure world interrupts.
NOTE: The TSP/TSPD is not built by default.
Issues resolved since last release
----------------------------------
* Support has been added for switching context between secure and normal
worlds in EL3.
* PSCI API calls `AFFINITY_INFO` & `PSCI_VERSION` have now been tested (to
a limited extent).
* The ARM Trusted Firmware build artifacts are now placed in the `./build`
directory and sub-directories instead of being placed in the root of the
project.
* The ARM Trusted Firmware is now free from build warnings. Build warnings
are now treated as errors.
* The ARM Trusted Firmware now provides C library support locally within the
project to maintain compatibility between toolchains/systems.
* The PSCI locking code has been reworked so it no longer takes locks in an
incorrect sequence.
* The RAM-disk method of loading a Linux file-system has been confirmed to
work with the ARM Trusted Firmware and Linux kernel version (based on
version 3.13) used in this release, for both Foundation and Base FVPs.
Known issues
------------
The following is a list of issues which are expected to be fixed in the future
releases of the ARM Trusted Firmware.
* The TrustZone Address Space Controller (TZC-400) is not being programmed
yet. Use of model parameter `-C bp.secure_memory=1` is not supported.
* No support yet for secure world interrupt handling.
* GICv3 support is experimental. The Linux kernel patches to support this are
not widely available. There are known issues with GICv3 initialization in
the ARM Trusted Firmware.
* Dynamic image loading is not available yet. The current image loader
implementation (used to load BL2 and all subsequent images) has some
limitations. Changing BL2 or BL3-1 load addresses in certain ways can lead
to loading errors, even if the images should theoretically fit in memory.
* The ARM Trusted Firmware uses too much on-chip Trusted SRAM. Currently the
Test Secure-EL1 Payload (BL3-2) executes in Trusted DRAM since there is not
enough SRAM. A number of RAM usage enhancements have been identified to
rectify this situation.
* CPU idle does not work on the advertised version of the Foundation FVP.
Some FVP fixes are required that are not available externally at the time
of writing.
* Various bugs in ARM Trusted Firmware, UEFI and the Linux kernel have been
observed when using Linaro toolchain versions later than 13.11. Although
most of these have been fixed, some remain at the time of writing. These
mainly seem to relate to a subtle change in the way the compiler converts
between 64-bit and 32-bit values (e.g. during casting operations), which
reveals previously hidden bugs in client code.
* The tested filesystem used for this release (Linaro AArch64 OpenEmbedded
14.01) does not report progress correctly in the console. It only seems to
produce error output, not standard output. It otherwise appears to function
correctly. Other filesystem versions on the same software stack do not
exhibit the problem.
* The Makefile structure doesn't make it easy to separate out parts of the
Trusted Firmware for re-use in platform ports, for example if only BL3-1 is
required in a platform port. Also, dependency checking in the Makefile is
flawed.
* The firmware design documentation for the Test Secure-EL1 Payload (TSP) and
its dispatcher (TSPD) is incomplete. Similarly for the PSCI section.
psci: fix affinity level upgrade issue The psci implementation does not track target affinity level requests specified during cpu_suspend calls correctly as per the following example. 1. cpu0.cluster0 calls cpu_suspend with the target affinity level as 0 2. Only the cpu0.cluster0 is powered down while cluster0 remains powered up 3. cpu1.cluster0 calls cpu_off to power itself down to highest possible affinity level 4. cluster0 will be powered off even though cpu0.cluster0 does not allow cluster shutdown This patch introduces reference counts at affinity levels > 0 to track the number of cpus which want an affinity instance at level X to remain powered up. This instance can be turned off only if its reference count is 0. Cpus still undergo the normal state transitions (ON, OFF, ON_PENDING, SUSPEND) but the higher levels can only be either ON or OFF depending upon their reference count. The above issue is thus fixed as follows: 1. cluster0's reference count is incremented by two when cpu0 and cpu1 are initially powered on. 2. cpu0.cluster0 calls cpu_suspend with the target affinity level as 0. This does not affect the cluster0 reference count. 3. Only the cpu0.cluster0 is powered down while cluster0 remains powered up as it has a non-zero reference count. 4. cpu1.cluster0 call cpu_off to power itself down to highest possible affinity level. This decrements the cluster0 reference count. 5. cluster0 is still not powered off since its reference count will at least be 1 due to the restriction placed by cpu0. Change-Id: I433dfe82b946f5f6985b1602c2de87800504f7a9
2013-12-05 16:33:10 +00:00
2013-10-25 09:08:21 +01:00
ARM Trusted Firmware - version 0.2
==================================
New features
------------
* First source release.
* Code for the PSCI suspend feature is supplied, although this is not enabled
by default since there are known issues (see below).
Issues resolved since last release
----------------------------------
* The "psci" nodes in the FDTs provided in this release now fully comply
with the recommendations made in the PSCI specification.
Known issues
------------
The following is a list of issues which are expected to be fixed in the future
releases of the ARM Trusted Firmware.
* The TrustZone Address Space Controller (TZC-400) is not being programmed
yet. Use of model parameter `-C bp.secure_memory=1` is not supported.
* No support yet for secure world interrupt handling or for switching context
between secure and normal worlds in EL3.
* GICv3 support is experimental. The Linux kernel patches to support this are
not widely available. There are known issues with GICv3 initialization in
the ARM Trusted Firmware.
* Dynamic image loading is not available yet. The current image loader
implementation (used to load BL2 and all subsequent images) has some
limitations. Changing BL2 or BL3-1 load addresses in certain ways can lead
to loading errors, even if the images should theoretically fit in memory.
* Although support for PSCI `CPU_SUSPEND` is present, it is not yet stable
and ready for use.
* PSCI API calls `AFFINITY_INFO` & `PSCI_VERSION` are implemented but have not
2013-10-25 09:08:21 +01:00
been tested.
* The ARM Trusted Firmware make files result in all build artifacts being
placed in the root of the project. These should be placed in appropriate
sub-directories.
* The compilation of ARM Trusted Firmware is not free from compilation
warnings. Some of these warnings have not been investigated yet so they
could mask real bugs.
* The ARM Trusted Firmware currently uses toolchain/system include files like
stdio.h. It should provide versions of these within the project to maintain
compatibility between toolchains/systems.
* The PSCI code takes some locks in an incorrect sequence. This may cause
problems with suspend and hotplug in certain conditions.
* The Linux kernel used in this release is based on version 3.12-rc4. Using
this kernel with the ARM Trusted Firmware fails to start the file-system as
a RAM-disk. It fails to execute user-space `init` from the RAM-disk. As an
alternative, the VirtioBlock mechanism can be used to provide a file-system
to the kernel.
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_Copyright (c) 2013-2014, ARM Limited and Contributors. All rights reserved._