Previously exception handlers in BL3-1, X19-X29 were not saved
and restored on every SMC/trap into EL3. Instead these registers
were 'saved as needed' as a side effect of the A64 ABI used by the C
compiler.
That approach failed when world switching but was not visible
with the TSP/TSPD code because the TSP is 64-bit, did not
clobber these registers when running and did not support pre-emption
by normal world interrupts. These scenarios showed
that the values in these registers can be passed through a world
switch, which broke the normal and trusted world assumptions
about these registers being preserved.
The Ideal solution saves and restores these registers when a
world switch occurs - but that type of implementation is more complex.
So this patch always saves and restores these registers on entry and
exit of EL3.
FixesARM-software/tf-issues#141
Change-Id: I9a727167bbc594454e81cf78a97ca899dfb11c27
'PL011_BASE' macro is no longer used because the right UART base
address is now directly given to the 'console_init()' function.
This patch removes it.
Change-Id: I94759c99602df4876291a56f9f6a75de337a65ec
The data cache clean and invalidate operations dcsw_op_all()
and dcsw_op_loius() were implemented to invoke a DSB and ISB
barrier for every set/way operation. This adds a substantial
performance penalty to an already expensive operation.
These functions have been reworked to provide an optimised
implementation derived from the code in section D3.4 of the
ARMv8 ARM. The helper macro setup_dcsw_op_args has been moved
and reworked alongside the implementation.
FixesARM-software/tf-issues#146
Change-Id: Icd5df57816a83f0a842fce935320a369f7465c7f
There are a small number of non-EL specific helper functions
which are no longer used, and also some unusable helper
functions for non-existant registers.
This change removes all of these functions.
Change-Id: Idd656cef3b59cf5c46fe2be4029d72288b649c24
Instead of using the system register helper functions to read
or write system registers, assembler coded functions should
use MRS/MSR instructions. This results in faster and more
compact code.
This change replaces all usage of the helper functions with
direct register accesses.
Change-Id: I791d5f11f257010bb3e6a72c6c5ab8779f1982b3
disable_mmu() cannot work as a C function as there is no control
over data accesses generated by the compiler between disabling and
cleaning the data cache. This results in reading stale data from
main memory.
As assembler version is provided for EL3, and a variant that also
disables the instruction cache which is now used by the BL1
exception handling function.
FixesARM-software/tf-issues#147
Change-Id: I0cf394d2579a125a23c2f2989c2e92ace6ddb1a6
Update code base to remove variables from the .data section,
mainly by using const static data where possible and adding
the const specifier as required. Most changes are to the IO
subsystem, including the framework APIs. The FVP power
management code is also affected.
Delay initialization of the global static variable,
next_image_type in bl31_main.c, until it is realy needed.
Doing this moves the variable from the .data to the .bss
section.
Also review the IO interface for inconsistencies, using
uintptr_t where possible instead of void *. Remove the
io_handle and io_dev_handle typedefs, which were
unnecessary, replacing instances with uintptr_t.
FixesARM-software/tf-issues#107.
Change-Id: I085a62197c82410b566e4698e5590063563ed304
Reduce the number of header files included from other header
files as much as possible without splitting the files. Use forward
declarations where possible. This allows removal of some unnecessary
"#ifndef __ASSEMBLY__" statements.
Also, review the .c and .S files for which header files really need
including and reorder the #include statements alphabetically.
FixesARM-software/tf-issues#31
Change-Id: Iec92fb976334c77453e010b60bcf56f3be72bd3e
Add tag names to all unnamed structs in header files. This
allows forward declaration of structs, which is necessary to
reduce header file nesting (to be implemented in a subsequent
commit).
Also change the typedef names across the codebase to use the _t
suffix to be more conformant with the Linux coding style. The
coding style actually prefers us not to use typedefs at all but
this is considered a step too far for Trusted Firmware.
Also change the IO framework structs defintions to use typedef'd
structs to be consistent with the rest of the codebase.
Change-Id: I722b2c86fc0d92e4da3b15e5cab20373dd26786f
Move the PSCI global functions out of psci_private.h and into
psci.h to allow the standard service to only depend on psci.h.
Change-Id: I8306924a3814b46e70c1dcc12524c7aefe06eed1
Move the BL function prototypes out of arch.h and into the
appropriate header files to allow more efficient header file
inclusion. Create new BL private header files where there is no
sensible existing header file.
Change-Id: I45f3e10b72b5d835254a6f25a5e47cf4cfb274c3
Move the function prototypes from gic.h into either gic_v2.h or
gic_v3.h as appropriate. Update the source files to include the
correct headers.
Change-Id: I368cfda175cdcbd3a68f46e2332738ec49048e19
Separate out the CASSERT macro out of bl_common.h into its own
header to allow more efficient header inclusion.
Change-Id: I291be0b6b8f9879645e839a8f0dd1ec9b3db9639
Make codebase consistent in its use of #include "" syntax for
user includes and #include <> syntax for system includes.
FixesARM-software/tf-issues#65
Change-Id: If2f7c4885173b1fd05ac2cde5f1c8a07000c7a33
Move the FVP power driver to a directory under the FVP platform
port as this is not a generically usable driver.
Change-Id: Ibc78bd88752eb3e3964336741488349ac345f4f0
Move almost all system include files to a logical sub-directory
under ./include. The only remaining system include directories
not under ./include are specific to the platform. Move the
corresponding source files to match the include directory
structure.
Also remove pm.h as it is no longer used.
Change-Id: Ie5ea6368ec5fad459f3e8a802ad129135527f0b3
This patch saves the 'power_state' parameter prior to suspending
a cpu and invalidates it upon its resumption. The 'affinity level'
and 'state id' fields of this parameter can be read using a set of
public and private apis. Validation of power state parameter is
introduced which checks for SBZ bits are zero.
This change also takes care of flushing the parameter from the cache
to main memory. This ensures that it is available after cpu reset
when the caches and mmu are turned off. The earlier support for
saving only the 'affinity level' field of the 'power_state' parameter
has also been reworked.
FixesARM-Software/tf-issues#26FixesARM-Software/tf-issues#130
Change-Id: Ic007ccb5e39bf01e0b67390565d3b4be33f5960a
The TZC-400 performs security checks on transactions to memory or
peripherals. Separate regions can be created in the address space each
with individual security settings.
Limitations:
This driver does not currently support raising an interrupt on access
violation.
Change-Id: Idf8ed64b4d8d218fc9b6f9d75acdb2cd441d2449
The BL images share common stack management code which provides
one coherent and one cacheable stack for every CPU. BL1 and BL2
just execute on the primary CPU during boot and do not require
the additional CPU stacks. This patch provides separate stack
support code for UP and MP images, substantially reducing the
RAM usage for BL1 and BL2 for the FVP platform.
This patch also provides macros for declaring stacks and
calculating stack base addresses to improve consistency where
this has to be done in the firmware.
The stack allocation source files are now included via
platform.mk rather than the common BLx makefiles. This allows
each platform to select the appropriate MP/UP stack support
for each BL image.
Each platform makefile must be updated when including this
commit.
FixesARM-software/tf-issues#76
Change-Id: Ia251f61b8148ffa73eae3f3711f57b1ffebfa632
BL3-1 architecture setup code programs the system counter frequency
into the CNTFRQ_EL0 register. This frequency is defined by the
platform, though. This patch introduces a new platform hook that
the architecture setup code can call to retrieve this information.
In the ARM FVP port, this returns the first entry of the frequency
modes table from the memory mapped generic timer.
All system counter setup code has been removed from BL1 as some
platforms may not have initialized the system counters at this stage.
The platform specific settings done exclusively in BL1 have been moved
to BL3-1. In the ARM FVP port, this consists in enabling and
initializing the System level generic timer. Also, the frequency change
request in the counter control register has been set to 0 to make it
explicit it's using the base frequency. The CNTCR_FCREQ() macro has been
fixed in this context to give an entry number rather than a bitmask.
In future, when support for firmware update is implemented, there
is a case where BL1 platform specific code will need to program
the counter frequency. This should be implemented at that time.
This patch also updates the relevant documentation.
It properly fixesARM-software/tf-issues#24
Change-Id: If95639b279f75d66ac0576c48a6614b5ccb0e84b
This extends the --gc-sections behaviour to the many assembler
support functions in the firmware images by placing each function
into its own code section. This is achieved by creating a 'func'
macro used to declare each function label.
FixesARM-software/tf-issues#80
Change-Id: I301937b630add292d2dec6d2561a7fcfa6fec690
This patch adds support in the generic PSCI implementation to call a
platform specific function to enter a standby state using an example
implementation in ARM FVP port
FixesARM-software/tf-issues#94
Change-Id: Ic1263fcf25f28e09162ad29dca954125f9aa8cc9
Each ARM Trusted Firmware image should know in which EL it is running
and it should use the corresponding register directly instead of reading
currentEL and knowing which asm register to read/write
Change-Id: Ief35630190b6f07c8fbb7ba6cb20db308f002945
Current implementation of Bakery Lock does tight-loop waiting upon lock
contention.
This commit reworks the implementation to use WFE instruction for
waiting, and SEV to signal lock availability. It also adds the rationale
for choosing Bakery Locks instead of exclusion primitives, and more
comments for the lock algorithm.
FixesARM-software/tf-issue#67
Change-Id: Ie351d3dbb27ec8e64dbc9507c84af07bd385a7df
Co-authored-by: Vikram Kanigiri <vikram.kanigiri@arm.com>
This patch adds call count, UID and version information SMC calls for
the Trusted OS, as specified by the SMC calling convention.
Change-Id: I9a3e84ac1bb046051db975d853dcbe9612aba6a9
This patch implements ARM Standard Service as a runtime service and adds
support for call count, UID and revision information SMCs. The existing
PSCI implementation is subsumed by the Standard Service calls and all
PSCI calls are therefore dispatched by the Standard Service to the PSCI
handler.
At present, PSCI is the only specification under Standard Service. Thus
call count returns the number of PSCI calls implemented. As this is the
initial implementation, a revision number of 0.1 is returned for call
revision.
FixesARM-software/tf-issues#62
Change-Id: I6d4273f72ad6502636efa0f872e288b191a64bc1
FixesARM-software/tf-issues#42
Some callers of load_image() may need to get the size of the image
before/after loading it.
Change-Id: I8dc067b69fc711433651a560ba5a8c3519445857
Signed-off-by: Ryan Harkin <ryan.harkin@linaro.org>
So it updates each time a bootloader changes, not just when bl*_main.c
files are recompiled.
FixesARM-software/tf-issues#33
Change-Id: Ie8e1a7bd7e1913d2e96ac268606284f76af8c5ab
Signed-off-by: Jon Medhurst <tixy@linaro.org>
bakery_lock_release() expects an mpidr as the first argument however
bakery_lock_release() is calling it with the 'entry' argument it has
calculated. Rather than fixing this to pass the mpidr value it would be
much more efficient to just replace the call with
assert(bakery->owner == entry)
As this leaves no remaining users of bakery_lock_held(), we might as
well delete it.
FixesARM-software/tf-issues#27
Signed-off-by: Jon Medhurst <tixy@linaro.org>
At present SPD power management hooks and BL3-2 entry are implemented
using weak references. This would have the handlers bound and registered
with the core framework at build time, but leaves them dangling if a
service fails to initialize at runtime.
This patch replaces implementation by requiring runtime handlers to
register power management and deferred initialization hooks with the
core framework at runtime. The runtime services are to register the
hooks only as the last step, after having all states successfully
initialized.
Change-Id: Ibe788a2a381ef39aec1d4af5ba02376e67269782
Fixes issues #10:
https://github.com/ARM-software/tf-issues/issues/10
This patch changes all/most variables of type int to be size_t or long
to fix the sizing and alignment problems found when building with the
newer toolchains such as Linaro GCC 13.12 or later.
Change-Id: Idc9d48eb2ff9b8c5bbd5b227e6907263d1ea188b
Signed-off-by: Ryan Harkin <ryan.harkin@linaro.org>
This patch implements a set of handlers in the SPD which are called by
the PSCI runtime service upon receiving a power management
operation. These handlers in turn pass control to the Secure Payload
image if required before returning control to PSCI. This ensures that
the Secure Payload has complete visibility of all power transitions in
the system and can prepare accordingly.
Change-Id: I2d1dba5629b7cf2d53999d39fe807dfcf3f62fe2
This patch adds a simple TSP as the BL3-2 image. The secure payload
executes in S-EL1. It paves the way for the addition of the TSP
dispatcher runtime service to BL3-1. The TSP and the dispatcher service
will serve as an example of the runtime firmware's ability to toggle
execution between the non-secure and secure states in response to SMC
request from the non-secure state. The TSP will be replaced by a
Trusted OS in a real system.
The TSP also exports a set of handlers which should be called in
response to a PSCI power management event e.g a cpu being suspended or
turned off. For now it runs out of Secure DRAM on the ARM FVP port and
will be moved to Secure SRAM later. The default translation table setup
code assumes that the caller is executing out of secure SRAM. Hence the
TSP exports its own translation table setup function.
The TSP only services Fast SMCs, is non-reentrant and non-interruptible.
It does arithmetic operations on two sets of four operands, one set
supplied by the non-secure client, and the other supplied by the TSP
dispatcher in EL3. It returns the result according to the Secure Monitor
Calling convention standard.
This TSP has two functional entry points:
- An initial, one-time entry point through which the TSP is initialized
and prepares for receiving further requests from secure
monitor/dispatcher
- A fast SMC service entry point through which the TSP dispatcher
requests secure services on behalf of the non-secure client
Change-Id: I24377df53399307e2560a025eb2c82ce98ab3931
Co-authored-by: Jeenu Viswambharan <jeenu.viswambharan@arm.com>
This patch factors out the ARM FVP specific code to create MMU
translation tables so that it is possible for a boot loader stage to
create a different set of tables instead of using the default ones.
The default translation tables are created with the assumption that
the calling boot loader stage executes out of secure SRAM. This might
not be true for the BL3_2 stage in the future.
A boot loader stage can define the `fill_xlation_tables()` function as
per its requirements. It returns a reference to the level 1
translation table which is used by the common platform code to setup
the TTBR_EL3.
This patch is a temporary solution before a larger rework of
translation table creation logic is introduced.
Change-Id: I09a075d5da16822ee32a411a9dbe284718fb4ff6
This patch adds the following support to the BL3-1 stage:
1. BL3-1 allows runtime services to specify and determine the security
state of the next image after BL3-1. This has been done by adding
the `bl31_set_next_image_type()` & `bl31_get_next_image_type()`
apis. The default security state is non-secure. The platform api
`bl31_get_next_image_info()` has been modified to let the platform
decide which is the next image in the desired security state.
2. BL3-1 exports the `bl31_prepare_next_image_entry()` function to
program entry into the target security state. It uses the apis
introduced in 1. to do so.
3. BL3-1 reads the information populated by BL2 about the BL3-2 image
into its internal data structures.
4. BL3-1 introduces a weakly defined reference `bl32_init()` to allow
initialisation of a BL3-2 image. A runtime service like the Secure
payload dispatcher will define this function if present.
Change-Id: Icc46dcdb9e475ce6575dd3f9a5dc7a48a83d21d1
This patch reworks BL2 to BL3-1 hand over interface by introducing a
composite structure (bl31_args) that holds the superset of information
that needs to be passed from BL2 to BL3-1.
- The extents of secure memory available to BL3-1
- The extents of memory available to BL3-2 (not yet implemented) and
BL3-3
- Information to execute BL3-2 (not yet implemented) and BL3-3 images
This patch also introduces a new platform API (bl2_get_bl31_args_ptr)
that needs to be implemented by the platform code to export reference to
bl31_args structure which has been allocated in platform-defined memory.
The platform will initialize the extents of memory available to BL3-3
during early platform setup in bl31_args structure. This obviates the
need for bl2_get_ns_mem_layout platform API.
BL2 calls the bl2_get_bl31_args_ptr function to get a reference to
bl31_args structure. It uses the 'bl33_meminfo' field of this structure
to load the BL3-3 image. It sets the entry point information for the
BL3-3 image in the 'bl33_image_info' field of this structure. The
reference to this structure is passed to the BL3-1 image.
Also fixes issue ARM-software/tf-issues#25
Change-Id: Ic36426196dd5ebf89e60ff42643bed01b3500517
This patch adds guards so that an exception vector exceeding 32
instructions will generate a compile-time error. This keeps the
exception handlers in check from spilling over.
Change-Id: I7aa56dd0071a333664e2814c656d3896032046fe
This patch uses the reworked exception handling support to handle
runtime service requests through SMCs following the SMC calling
convention. This is a giant commit since all the changes are
inter-related. It does the following:
1. Replace the old exception handling mechanism with the new one
2. Enforce that SP_EL0 is used C runtime stacks.
3. Ensures that the cold and warm boot paths use the 'cpu_context'
structure to program an ERET into the next lower EL.
4. Ensures that SP_EL3 always points to the next 'cpu_context'
structure prior to an ERET into the next lower EL
5. Introduces a PSCI SMC handler which completes the use of PSCI as a
runtime service
Change-Id: I661797f834c0803d2c674d20f504df1b04c2b852
Co-authored-by: Achin Gupta <achin.gupta@arm.com>
This patch introduces the reworked exception handling logic which lays
the foundation for accessing runtime services in later patches. The
type of an exception has a greater say in the way it is
handled. SP_EL3 is used as the stack pointer for:
1. Determining the type of exception and handling the unexpected ones
on the exception stack
2. Saving and restoring the essential general purpose and system
register state after exception entry and prior to exception exit.
SP_EL0 is used as the stack pointer for handling runtime service
requests e.g. SMCs. A new structure for preserving general purpose
register state has been added to the 'cpu_context' structure. All
assembler ensures that it does not use callee saved registers
(x19-x29). The C runtime preserves them across functions calls. Hence
EL3 code does not have to save and restore them explicitly.
Since the exception handling framework has undergone substantial change,
the changes have been kept in separate files to aid readability. These
files will replace the existing ones in subsequent patches.
Change-Id: Ice418686592990ff7a4260771e8d6676e6c8c5ef
This patch introduces the framework to enable registration and
initialisation of runtime services. PSCI is registered and initialised
as a runtime service. Handling of runtime service requests will be
implemented in subsequent patches.
Change-Id: Id21e7ddc5a33d42b7d6e455b41155fc5441a9547
This patch uses the context library to save and restore EL3 state on
the 'cpu_context' data structures allocated by PSCI for managing
non-secure state context on each cpu.
Change-Id: I19c1f26578204a7cd9e0a6c582ced0d97ee4cf80
This patch adds support for a cpu context management library. This
library will be used to:
1. Share pointers to secure and non-secure state cpu contexts between
runtime services e.g. PSCI and Secure Payload Dispatcher services
2. Set SP_EL3 to a context structure which will be used for
programming an ERET into a lower EL
3. Provide wrapper functions to save and restore EL3 & EL1
state. These functions will in turn use the helper functions in
context.S
Change-Id: I655eeef83dcd2a0c6f2eb2ac23efab866ac83ca0
This patch introduces functions for saving and restoring shared system
registers between secure and non-secure EL1 exception levels, VFP
registers and essential EL3 system register and other state. It also
defines the 'cpu_context' data structure which will used for saving and
restoring execution context for a given security state. These functions
will allow runtime services like PSCI and Secure payload dispatcher to
implement logic for switching between the secure and non-secure states.
The save and restore functions follow AArch64 PCS and only use
caller-saved temporary registers.
Change-Id: I8ee3aaa061d3caaedb28ae2c5becb9a206b6fd74