Compiling BL31 for the Rockchip platform now produces a message about
the deprecation of gic_common.c.
Follow the advice and use include gicv2.mk instead.
Signed-off-by: Heiko Stuebner <heiko.stuebner@theobroma-systems.com>
Change-Id: I396b977d57975dba27cfed801ad5264bbbde2b5e
The calls to secure ddr regions on rk3288 and rk3399 use parameters of
base and size - as it custom for specifying memory regions, but the
functions themself expect start and endpoints of the area.
This only works by chance for the TZRAM, as it starts a 0x0 and therefore
its end location is the same as its size.
To not fall into a trap later on adapt the functions to really take
base+size parameters.
Signed-off-by: Heiko Stuebner <heiko.stuebner@theobroma-systems.com>
Change-Id: Idb9fab38aa081f3335a4eca971e7b7f6757fbbab
Rockchip platform is using the first 1MB of DRAM as secure ram space,
and there is a vendor loader who loads and runs the BL31/BL32/BL33,
this loader is usually load by SoC BootRom to the start addres of DRAM,
we need to reserve enough space for this loader so that it doesn't need
to do the relocate when loading the BL31. eg.
We use U-Boot SPL to load ATF BL31 and U-Boot proper as BL33, the SPL
TEXT BASE is offset 0 of DRAM which is decide by Bootrom; if we update
the BL31_BASE to offset 0x40000(256KB), then the 0~0x40000 should be
enough for SPL and no need to do the relocate while the space size
0x10000(64KB) may not enough for SPL.
After this update, the BL31 can use the rest 768KB of the first 1MB,
which is also enough, and the loader who is using BL31 elf file can
support this update without any change.
Change-Id: I66dc685594d77f10f9a49c3be015fd6729250ece
Signed-off-by: Kever Yang <kever.yang@rock-chips.com>
The Rockchip platform is a prime candidate for switching to the new
bl31_params_parse_helper(), so switch it over. This will allow BL2
implementations on this platform to transparently switch over to the
version 2 parameter structure.
Change-Id: I540741d2425c93f66c8697ce749a351eb2b3a7e8
Signed-off-by: Julius Werner <jwerner@chromium.org>
This patch changes all Rockchip platforms to use the new common BL aux
parameter helpers. Since the parameter space is now cleanly split in
generic and vendor-specific parameters and the COREBOOT_TABLE
parameter is now generic, the parameter type number for that parameter
has to change. Since it only affects coreboot which always builds TF as
a submodule and includes its headers directly to get these constants,
this should not cause any issues. In general, after this point, we
should avoid changing already assigned parameter type numbers whenever
possible.
Change-Id: Ic99ddd1e91ff5e5fe212fa30c793a0b8394c9dad
Signed-off-by: Julius Werner <jwerner@chromium.org>
All supported Rockchip SoCs (RK3288, RK3328, RK3368 and RK3399)
have non-continuous memory areas in the linker script with a huge
gap between them. This results in extremely padded binary images
with a size of about 4 GiB.
E.g. on the RK3399 we have the following memory areas (and base addresses):
RAM (0x1000), SRAM (0xFF8C0000), and PMUSRAM (0xFF3B0000).
Consumers of the TF-A project (e.g. coreboot or U-Boot) therefore
use the ELF image instead, which has a size of a few hundred kBs.
In order to prevent the generation of a huge and useless file,
this patch disables the binary generation for all affected Rockchip
SoCs.
Signed-off-by: Christoph Müllner <christophm30@gmail.com>
Change-Id: I4ac65bdf1e598c3e1a59507897d183aee9a36916
In order to set the UART base during bootup in common code of
plat/rockchip, we need to streamline the way the UART base addresses
are defined and add the missing definitions and mappings.
This patch does so by following the pattern UARTn_BASE, which is
already in use on RK3399 and RK3328. The numbering itself is derived
from the upstream Linux DTS files of the individual SoCs.
Signed-off-by: Christoph Müllner <christophm30@gmail.com>
Change-Id: I341a1996f4ceed5f82a2f6687d4dead9d7cc5c1f
While mainline u-boot always expects to submit the devicetree
as platform param, coreboot always uses the existing parameter
structure. As libfdt is somewhat big, it makes sense to limit
its inclusion to where necessary and thus only to non-coreboot
builds.
libfdt itself will get build in all cases, but only the non-
coreboot build will actually reference and thus include it.
Signed-off-by: Heiko Stuebner <heiko@sntech.de>
Change-Id: I4c5bc28405a14e6070917e48a526bfe77bab2fb7
The rk3288 is a 4-core Cortex-A12 SoC and shares a lot of features
with later SoCs.
Working features are general non-secure mode (the gic needs special
love for that), psci-based smp bringing cpu cores online and also
taking them offline again, psci-based suspend (the simpler variant
also included in the linux kernel, deeper suspend following later)
and I was also already able to test HYP-mode and was able to boot
a virtual kernel using kvm.
Signed-off-by: Heiko Stuebner <heiko@sntech.de>
Change-Id: Ibaaa583b2e78197591a91d254339706fe732476a