1# OP-TEE Trusted OS 2## Contents 31. [Introduction](#1-introduction) 42. [License](#2-license) 53. [Platforms supported](#3-platforms-supported) 6 3. [Development board for community user] (#31-development-board-for-community-user) 74. [Get and build OP-TEE software](#4-get-and-build-op-tee-software) 8 4. [Prerequisites](#41-prerequisites) 9 4. [Basic setup](#42-basic-setup) 10 4. [STMicroelectronics boards](#44-stmicroelectronics-boards) 11 4. [Allwinner A80](#45-allwinner-a80) 12 4. [Freescale MX6UL EVK](#46-freescale-mx6ul-evk) 135. [repo manifests](#5-repo-manifests) 14 5. [Install repo](#51-install-repo) 15 5. [Get the source code](#52-get-the-source-code) 16 5. [Targets](#521-targets) 17 5. [Branches](#522-branches) 18 5. [Get the toolchains](#523-get-the-toolchains) 19 5. [QEMU](#53-qemu) 20 5. [FVP](#54-fvp) 21 5. [HiKey](#55-hikey) 22 5. [MT8173-EVB](#56-mt8173-evb) 23 5. [Juno](#57-juno) 24 5. [Update flash and its layout](#571-update-flash-and-its-layout) 25 5. [GlobalPlatform testsuite support](#572-globalplatform-testsuite-support) 26 5. [GCC5 support](#573-gcc5-support) 27 5. [Raspberry Pi 3](#58-raspberry-pi-3) 28 5. [Tips and tricks](#59-tips-and-tricks) 29 5. [Reference existing project to speed up repo sync](#581-reference-existing-project-to-speed-up-repo-sync) 30 5. [Use ccache](#582-use-ccache) 316. [Load driver, tee-supplicant and run xtest](#6-load-driver-tee-supplicant-and-run-xtest) 327. [Coding standards](#7-coding-standards) 33 7. [checkpatch](#71-checkpatch) 34 35# 1. Introduction 36The `optee_os git`, contains the source code for the TEE in Linux using the 37ARM® TrustZone® technology. This component meets the GlobalPlatform 38TEE System Architecture specification. It also provides the TEE Internal core API 39v1.1 as defined by the GlobalPlatform TEE Standard for the development of 40Trusted Applications. For a general overview of OP-TEE and to find out how to 41contribute, please see the [Notice.md](Notice.md) file. 42 43The Trusted OS is accessible from the Rich OS (Linux) using the 44[GlobalPlatform TEE Client API Specification v1.0](http://www.globalplatform.org/specificationsdevice.asp), 45which also is used to trigger secure execution of applications within the TEE. 46 47--- 48## 2. License 49The software is distributed mostly under the 50[BSD 2-Clause](http://opensource.org/licenses/BSD-2-Clause) open source 51license, apart from some files in the `optee_os/lib/libutils` directory 52which are distributed under the 53[BSD 3-Clause](http://opensource.org/licenses/BSD-3-Clause) or public domain 54licenses. 55 56--- 57## 3. Platforms supported 58Several platforms are supported. In order to manage slight differences 59between platforms, a `PLATFORM_FLAVOR` flag has been introduced. 60The `PLATFORM` and `PLATFORM_FLAVOR` flags define the whole configuration 61for a chip the where the Trusted OS runs. Note that there is also a 62composite form which makes it possible to append `PLATFORM_FLAVOR` directly, 63by adding a dash in-between the names. The composite form is shown below 64for the different boards. For more specific details about build flags etc, 65please read the file [build_system.md](documentation/build_system.md). Some 66platforms have different sub-maintainers, please refer to the file 67[MAINTAINERS.md](MAINTAINERS.md) for contact details for various platforms. 68 69<!-- Please keep this list sorted in alphabetic order --> 70| Platform | Composite PLATFORM flag | Publicly available? | 71|----------|-------------------------|---------------------| 72| [Allwinner A80 Board](http://www.allwinnertech.com/en/clq/processora/A80.html)|`PLATFORM=sunxi`| No | 73| [ARM Juno Board](http://www.arm.com/products/tools/development-boards/versatile-express/juno-arm-development-platform.php) |`PLATFORM=vexpress-juno`| Yes | 74| [FSL ls1021a](http://www.freescale.com/tools/embedded-software-and-tools/hardware-development-tools/tower-development-boards/mcu-and-processor-modules/powerquicc-and-qoriq-modules/qoriq-ls1021a-tower-system-module:TWR-LS1021A?lang_cd=en)|`PLATFORM=ls-ls1021atwr`| Yes | 75| [FSL i.MX6 Quad SABRE Lite Board](https://boundarydevices.com/product/sabre-lite-imx6-sbc/) |`PLATFORM=imx`| Yes | 76| [FSL i.MX6 Quad SABRE SD Board](http://www.nxp.com/products/software-and-tools/hardware-development-tools/sabre-development-system/sabre-board-for-smart-devices-based-on-the-i.mx-6quad-applications-processors:RD-IMX6Q-SABRE) |`PLATFORM=imx`| Yes | 77| [FSL i.MX6 UltraLite EVK Board](http://www.freescale.com/products/arm-processors/i.mx-applications-processors-based-on-arm-cores/i.mx-6-processors/i.mx6qp/i.mx6ultralite-evaluation-kit:MCIMX6UL-EVK) |`PLATFORM=imx`| Yes | 78| [ARM Foundation FVP](http://www.arm.com/fvp) |`PLATFORM=vexpress-fvp`| Yes | 79| [HiSilicon D02](http://open-estuary.org/d02-2)|`PLATFORM=d02`| No | 80| [HiKey Board (HiSilicon Kirin 620)](https://www.96boards.org/products/hikey)|`PLATFORM=hikey`| Yes | 81| [MediaTek MT8173 EVB Board](http://www.mediatek.com/en/products/mobile-communications/tablet/mt8173)|`PLATFORM=mediatek-mt8173`| No | 82| [QEMU](http://wiki.qemu.org/Main_Page) |`PLATFORM=vexpress-qemu_virt`| Yes | 83| [QEMUv8](http://wiki.qemu.org/Main_Page) |`PLATFORM=vexpress-qemu_armv8a`| Yes | 84| [Raspberry Pi 3](https://www.raspberrypi.org/products/raspberry-pi-3-model-b) |`PLATFORM=rpi3`| Yes | 85| [Renesas RCAR](https://www.renesas.com/en-sg/solutions/automotive/products/rcar-h3.html)|`PLATFORM=rcar`| No | 86| [STMicroelectronics b2260 - h410 (96boards fmt)](http://www.st.com/web/en/catalog/mmc/FM131/SC999/SS1628/PF258776) |`PLATFORM=stm-b2260`| No | 87| [STMicroelectronics b2120 - h310 / h410](http://www.st.com/web/en/catalog/mmc/FM131/SC999/SS1628/PF258776) |`PLATFORM=stm-cannes`| No | 88| [Texas Instruments DRA7xx](http://www.ti.com/product/DRA746)|`PLATFORM=ti-dra7xx`| Yes | 89| [Xilinx Zynq UltraScale+ MPSOC](http://www.xilinx.com/products/silicon-devices/soc/zynq-ultrascale-mpsoc.html)|`PLATFORM=zynqmp-zcu102`| Yes | 90| [Spreadtrum SC9860](http://www.spreadtrum.com/en/SC9860GV.html)|`PLATFORM=sprd-sc9860`| No | 91 92### 3.1 Development board for community user 93For community users, we suggest using [HiKey board](https://www.96boards.org/products/ce/hikey/) 94as development board. It provides detailed documentation including chip 95datasheet, board schematics, source code, binaries etc on the download link at 96the website. 97 98--- 99## 4. Get and build OP-TEE software 100There are a couple of different build options depending on the target you are 101going to use. If you just want to get the software and compile it, then you 102should follow the instructions under the "Basic setup" below. In case you are 103going to run for a certain hardware or FVP, QEMU for example, then please follow 104the respective section found below instead, having that said, we are moving from 105the shell script based setups to instead use 106[repo](https://source.android.com/source/downloading.html), so for some targets 107you will see that we are using repo ([section 5](#5-repo-manifests)) and for 108others we are still using the shell script based setup 109([section 4](#4-get-and-build-op-tee-software)), please see this transitions as 110work in progress. 111 112--- 113### 4.1 Prerequisites 114We believe that you can use any Linux distribution to build OP-TEE, but as 115maintainers of OP-TEE we are mainly using Ubuntu-based distributions and to be 116able to build and run OP-TEE there are a few packages that needs to be installed 117to start with. Therefore install the following packages regardless of what 118target you will use in the end. 119``` 120$ sudo apt-get install android-tools-adb android-tools-fastboot autoconf bc \ 121 bison cscope curl flex gdisk libc6:i386 libfdt-dev libftdi-dev \ 122 libglib2.0-dev libhidapi-dev libncurses5-dev libpixman-1-dev \ 123 libstdc++6:i386 libtool libz1:i386 mtools netcat python-crypto \ 124 python-serial python-wand unzip uuid-dev xdg-utils xz-utils zlib1g-dev 125``` 126 127--- 128### 4.2 Basic setup 129#### 4.2.1 Get the compiler 130We strive to use the latest available compiler from Linaro. Start by downloading 131and unpacking the compiler. Then export the `PATH` to the compilers `bin` 132folder. Beware that we are using a couple of different toolchains depending on 133the target device. This includes both 64- and 32-bit toolchains. For the exact 134toolchain in use, please have a look at [toolchain.mk](https://github.com/OP-TEE/build/blob/master/toolchain.mk) 135and then look at the targets makefile (see [build.git](https://github.com/OP-TEE/build)) 136to find out where the respective toolchain will be used. For example in the 137[QEMU makefile](https://github.com/OP-TEE/build/blob/master/qemu.mk#L12-L15) you 138will see: 139``` 140CROSS_COMPILE_NS_USER ?= "$(CCACHE)$(AARCH32_CROSS_COMPILE)" 141CROSS_COMPILE_NS_KERNEL ?= "$(CCACHE)$(AARCH32_CROSS_COMPILE)" 142CROSS_COMPILE_S_USER ?= "$(CCACHE)$(AARCH32_CROSS_COMPILE)" 143CROSS_COMPILE_S_KERNEL ?= "$(CCACHE)$(AARCH32_CROSS_COMPILE)" 144``` 145 146However, if you only want to compile optee_os, then you can do like this: 147``` 148$ cd $HOME 149$ mkdir toolchains 150$ cd toolchains 151$ wget http://releases.linaro.org/14.08/components/toolchain/binaries/gcc-linaro-arm-linux-gnueabihf-4.9-2014.08_linux.tar.xz 152$ tar xvf gcc-linaro-arm-linux-gnueabihf-4.9-2014.08_linux.tar.xz 153$ export PATH=$HOME/toolchains/gcc-linaro-arm-linux-gnueabihf-4.9-2014.08_linux/bin:$PATH 154``` 155 156#### 4.2.2 Download the source code 157``` 158$ cd $HOME 159$ mkdir devel 160$ cd devel 161$ git clone https://github.com/OP-TEE/optee_os.git 162``` 163 164#### 4.2.3 Build 165``` 166$ cd $HOME/devel/optee_os 167$ CROSS_COMPILE=arm-linux-gnueabihf- make 168``` 169 170#### 4.2.4 Compiler flags 171To be able to see the full command when building you could build using 172following flag: 173``` 174$ make V=1 175``` 176 177To enable debug builds use the following flag: 178``` 179$ make DEBUG=1 180``` 181 182OP-TEE supports a couple of different levels of debug prints for both TEE core 183itself and for the Trusted Applications. The level ranges from 1 to 4, where 184four is the most verbose. To set the level you use the following flag: 185``` 186$ make CFG_TEE_CORE_LOG_LEVEL=4 187``` 188 189--- 190### 4.4 STMicroelectronics boards 191Currently OP-TEE is supported Cannes family (`b2120` both `h310` and `h410` 192chips) and the 96boards/cannes board (`b2260-h410`). 193 194#### 4.4.1 Get the compiler 195Follow the instructions in the "4.2 Basic setup". 196 197#### 4.4.2 Download the source code 198See section "4.2.2 Download the source code". 199 200#### 4.4.3 Build the images and files 201For the 96boards/cannes: 202``` 203$ make PLATFORM=stm-b2260 204``` 205For the legacy cannes family: 206``` 207$ make PLATFORM=stm-cannes 208``` 209 210#### 4.4.4 Prepare, install and run the software 211For 96board/cannes: 212Copy the generated 'optee.bin' on target SD or USB stick and insure the boot 213media boot scripts defines optee and non-secure worlds boot. 214 215More info to come... 216 217--- 218### 4.5 Allwinner A80 219 220#### 4.5.1 Locked versus unlocked A80 boards 221**Important!** All A80 boards sold to the general public are boards where secure 222side has been locked down, which means that you **cannot** use them for secure 223side development, i.e, it will not be possible to put OP-TEE on those devices. 224If you want to use A80 board for secure side development, then you will need to 225talk to 226[Allwinner](https://github.com/OP-TEE/optee_os/blob/master/MAINTAINERS.md) 227directly and ask if it is possible get a device from them. 228 229#### 4.5.2 Get the compiler and source 230Follow the instructions in the "4.2 Basic setup". 231 232#### 4.5.3 Build 233``` 234$ cd optee_os 235$ export PLATFORM=sunxi 236$ export CROSS_COMPILE=arm-linux-gnueabihf- 237$ make 238``` 239 240#### 4.5.4 Prepare the images to run on A80 Board 241 242Download Allwinner A80 platform SDK, the SDK refers to Allwinner A80 platform 243SDK root directory. A80 SDK directory tree looks like this: 244``` 245SDK/ 246 Android 247 lichee 248``` 249`Android` contains all source code related to Android and `lichee` 250contains the bootloader and Linux kernel. 251 252##### 4.5.4.1 Copy OP-TEE output to package directory 253Copy the OP-TEE output binary to `SDK/lichee/tools/pack/sun9i/bin` 254 255``` 256$ cd optee_os 257$ cp ./out/arm32-plat-sunxi/core/tee.bin SDK/lichee/tools/pack/sun9i/bin 258``` 259 260##### 4.5.4.2 Build Linux kernel 261In the `lichee` directory, run the following commands: 262``` 263$ cd SDK/lichee 264$ ./build.sh 265``` 266 267##### 4.5.4.3 Build Android 268In the Android directory, run the following commands: 269``` 270$ cd SDK/android 271$ extract-bsp 272$ make -j 273``` 274 275##### 4.5.4.4 Create the Android image 276In the Android directory, run the following commands: 277``` 278$ cd SDK/android 279$ pack 280``` 281The output image will been signed internally when packed. The output image name 282is `a80_android_board.img`. 283 284##### 4.5.4.5 Download the Android image 285Use `Allwinner PhoenixSuit` tool to download to A80 board. 286Choose the output image(`a80_android_board.img`), select download and wait 287for the download to complete. 288 289#### 4.5.5 Boot and run the software on A80 Board 290When the host platform is Windows, use a console application to connect A80 291board `uart0`. In the console window, You can install OP-TEE linux kernel 292driver `optee.ko`, load OP-TEE-Client daemon `tee-supplicant` and run 293the example "hello world" Trusted Application, do this by running: 294``` 295$ insmod /system/vendor/modules/optee.ko 296$ /system/bin/tee-supplicant & 297$ /system/bin/tee-helloworld 298``` 299 300--- 301### 4.6 Freescale MX6UL EVK 302 303Get U-Boot source: 304https://github.com/MrVan/uboot/commit/4f016adae573aaadd7bf6a37f8c58a882b391ae6 305 306Build U-Boot: 307``` 308 make ARCH=arm mx6ul_14x14_evk_optee_defconfig 309 make ARCH=arm 310 Burn u-boot.imx to offset 0x400 of SD card 311``` 312 313Get Kernel source: https://github.com/linaro-swg/linux/tree/optee 314 315Patch kernel: 316```c 317 diff --git a/arch/arm/boot/dts/imx6ul-14x14-evk.dts b/arch/arm/boot/dts/imx6ul-14x14-evk.dts 318 index 6aaa5ec..2ac9c80 100644 319 --- a/arch/arm/boot/dts/imx6ul-14x14-evk.dts 320 +++ b/arch/arm/boot/dts/imx6ul-14x14-evk.dts 321 @@ -23,6 +23,13 @@ 322 reg = <0x80000000 0x20000000>; 323 }; 324 325 + firmware { 326 + optee { 327 + compatible = "linaro,optee-tz"; 328 + method = "smc"; 329 + }; 330 + }; 331 + 332 regulators { 333 compatible = "simple-bus"; 334 #address-cells = <1>; 335``` 336 337Compile the Kernel: 338 339``` 340make ARCH=arm imx_v6_v7_defconfig 341make menuconfig 342select the two entries 343 CONFIG_TEE=y 344 CONFIG_OPTEE 345make ARCH=arm 346``` 347Copy zImage and imx6ul_14x14_evk.dtb to SD card. 348 349OPTEE OS Build: 350``` 351 PLATFORM_FLAVOR=mx6ulevk make PLATFORM=imx 352 ${CROSS_COMPILE}-objcopy -O binary out/arm-plat-imx/core/tee.elf optee.bin 353 copy optee.bin to the first partition of SD card which is used for boot. 354``` 355 356Run using U-Boot: 357``` 358 run loadfdt; 359 run loadimage; 360 fatload mmc 1:1 0x9c100000 optee.bin; 361 run mmcargs; 362 bootz ${loadaddr} - ${fdt_addr}; 363``` 364 365Note: 366 CAAM is not implemented now, this will be added later. 367 368More steps: http://mrvan.github.io/optee-imx6ul 369 370--- 371## 5. repo manifests 372 373A Git repository is available at https://github.com/OP-TEE/manifest where you 374will find XML-files for use with the Android 'repo' tool. 375 376### 5.1. Install repo 377Follow the instructions under the "Installing Repo" section 378[here](https://source.android.com/source/downloading.html). 379 380### 5.2. Get the source code 381First ensure that you have the necessary Ubuntu packages installed, see [4.1 382Prerequisites](#41-prerequisites) (this is the only important step from section 3834 in case you are setting up any of the target devices mentioned below). 384 385``` 386$ mkdir -p $HOME/devel/optee 387$ cd $HOME/devel/optee 388$ repo init -u https://github.com/OP-TEE/manifest.git -m ${TARGET}.xml [-b ${BRANCH}] 389$ repo sync 390``` 391**Notes**<br> 392* The folder could be at any location, we are just giving a suggestion by 393 saying `$HOME/devel/optee`. 394* `repo sync` can take an additional parameter -j to sync multiple remotes. For 395 example `repo sync -j3` will sync three remotes in parallel. 396 397#### 5.2.1 Targets 398| Target | Latest | Stable | 399|--------|--------|--------| 400| QEMU | `default.xml` | `default_stable.xml` | 401| QEMUv8 | `qemu_v8.xml` | `qemu_v8_stable.xml` | 402| FVP | `fvp.xml` | `fvp_stable.xml` | 403| HiKey | `hikey.xml` | `hikey_stable.xml` | 404| HiKey Debian | `hikey_debian.xml` | `hikey_debian_stable.xml` | 405| MediaTek MT8173 EVB Board | `mt8173-evb.xml` | `mt8173-evb_stable.xml` | 406| ARM Juno board| `juno.xml` | `juno_stable.xml` | 407| Raspberry Pi 3 | `rpi3.xml` | `rpi3_stable.xml` | 408 409#### 5.2.2 Branches 410Currently we are only using one branch, i.e, the `master` branch. 411 412#### 5.2.3 Get the toolchains 413This is a one time thing you run only once after getting all the source code 414using repo. 415``` 416$ cd build 417$ make toolchains 418``` 419 420##### Note : 421If you have been using GCC4.9 and are upgrading to GCC5 via [this commit] (https://github.com/OP-TEE/build/commit/69a8a37bc417d28d62ae57e7ca2a8df4bdec93c8), please make sure that you delete the `toolchains` directory before running `make toolchains` again, or else the toolchain binaries can get mixed up or corrupted, and generate errors during builds. 422 423--- 424### 5.3. QEMU 425After getting the source and toolchain, just run (from the `build` folder) 426``` 427$ make all run 428``` 429and everything should compile and at the end QEMU should start. 430 431--- 432### 5.4. FVP 433After getting the source and toolchain you must also obtain Foundation Model 434([link](http://www.arm.com/products/tools/models/fast-models/foundation-model.php)) 435binaries and untar it to the forest root, then just run (from the `build` folder) 436 437``` 438$ make all run 439``` 440and everything should compile and at the end FVP should start. 441 442--- 443### 5.5. HiKey 444#### 5.5.1 Initramfs based 445After getting the source and toolchain, just run (from the `build` folder) 446``` 447$ make all 448``` 449 450After that connect the board and flash the binaries by running: 451``` 452$ make flash 453``` 454 455(more information about how to flash individual binaries could be found 456[here](https://github.com/96boards/documentation/wiki/HiKeyUEFI#flash-binaries-to-emmc-)) 457 458The board is ready to be booted. 459#### 5.5.2 Debian based / 96boards RPB 460Start by getting the source and toolchain (see above), then continue by 461downloading the system image (root fs). Note that this step is something you 462only should do once. 463 464``` 465$ make system-img 466``` 467 468Which should be followed by 469``` 470$ make all 471``` 472 473When everything has been built, flash the files to the device: 474``` 475$ make flash 476``` 477 478Now you can boot up the device, note that OP-TEE normal world binaries still 479hasn't been put on the device at this stage. So by now you're basically booting 480up an RPB build. When you have a prompt, the next step is to connect the device 481to the network. WiFi is preferable, since HiKey has no Ethernet jack. Easiest is 482to edit `/etc/network/interfaces`. To find out what to add, run: 483``` 484$ make help 485``` 486 487When that's been added, reboot and when you have a prompt again, you're ready to 488push the OP-TEE client binaries and the kernel with OP-TEE support. First find 489out the IP for your device (`ifconfig`). Then send the files to HiKey by 490running: 491``` 492$ IP=111.222.333.444 make send 493 494Credentials for the image are: 495username: linaro 496password: linaro 497``` 498 499When the files has been transfered, please follow the commands from the `make 500send` command which will install the debian packages on the device. Typically it 501tells you to run something like this on the device itself: 502``` 503$ dpkg --force-all -i /tmp/out/optee_2.0-1.deb 504$ dpkg --force-all -i /tmp/linux-image-*.deb 505``` 506 507Now you are ready to use OP-TEE on HiKey using Debian, please goto step 6 below 508to continue. 509 510##### Good to know 511Just want to update secure side? Put the device in fastboot mode and 512``` 513$ make arm-tf 514$ make flash-fip 515 516``` 517 518Just want to update OP-TEE client software? Put the device in fastboot mode and 519``` 520$ make optee-client 521$ make xtest 522``` 523 524Boot up the device and follow the instructions from make send 525``` 526$ IP=111.222.333.444 make send 527``` 528 529--- 530### 5.6. MT8173-EVB 531After getting the source and toolchain, just run (from the `build` folder) 532 533``` 534$ make all run 535``` 536 537When `< waiting for device >` prompt appears, press reset button and the 538flashing procedure should begin. 539 540--- 541### 5.7 Juno 542After getting the source and toolchain, just run (from the `build` folder) 543``` 544$ make all 545``` 546 547Enter the firmware console on the juno board and press enter to stop 548the auto boot flow 549``` 550ARM V2M_Juno Firmware v1.3.9 551Build Date: Nov 11 2015 552 553Time : 12:50:45 554Date : 29:03:2016 555 556Press Enter to stop auto boot... 557 558``` 559Enable ftp at the firmware prompt 560``` 561Cmd> ftp_on 562Enabling ftp server... 563 MAC address: xxxxxxxxxxxx 564 565 IP address: 192.168.1.158 566 567 Local host name = V2M-JUNO-A2 568``` 569 570Flash the binary by running (note the IP address from above): 571``` 572make JUNO_IP=192.168.1.158 flash 573``` 574 575Once the binaries are transferred, reboot the board: 576``` 577Cmd> reboot 578 579``` 580 581#### 5.7.1 Update flash and its layout 582The flash in the board may need to be updated for the flashing above to 583work. If the flashing fails or if ARM-TF refuses to boot due to wrong 584version of the SCP binary the flash needs to be updated. To update the 585flash please follow the instructions at [Using Linaro's deliverable on 586Juno](https://community.arm.com/docs/DOC-10804) selecting one of the zips 587under "4.1 Prebuilt configurations" flashing it as described under "5. 588Running the software". 589 590#### 5.7.2 GlobalPlatform testsuite support 591##### Warning : 592Depending on the Juno pre-built configuration, the built ramdisk.img 593size with GlobalPlatform testsuite may exceed its pre-defined Juno flash 594memory reserved location (image.txt file). 595In that case, you will need to extend the Juno flash block size reserved 596location for the ramdisk.img in the image.txt file accordingly and 597follow the instructions under "5.7.1 Update flash and its layout". 598 599##### Example with juno-latest-busybox-uboot.zip: 600The current ramdisk.img size with GlobalPlatform testsuite 601is 8.6 MBytes. 602 603###### Updated file is /JUNO/SITE1/HBI0262B/images.txt (limited to 8.3 MB) 604``` 605NOR4UPDATE: AUTO ;Image Update:NONE/AUTO/FORCE 606NOR4ADDRESS: 0x01800000 ;Image Flash Address 607NOR4FILE: \SOFTWARE\ramdisk.img ;Image File Name 608NOR4NAME: ramdisk.img 609NOR4LOAD: 00000000 ;Image Load Address 610NOR4ENTRY: 00000000 ;Image Entry Point 611``` 612 613###### Extended to 16MB 614``` 615NOR4UPDATE: AUTO ;Image Update:NONE/AUTO/FORCE 616NOR4ADDRESS: 0x01000000 ;Image Flash Address 617NOR4FILE: \SOFTWARE\ramdisk.img ;Image File Name 618NOR4NAME: ramdisk.img 619NOR4LOAD: 00000000 ;Image Load Address 620NOR4ENTRY: 00000000 ;Image Entry Point 621``` 622 623#### 5.7.3 GCC5 support 624##### Note : 625In case you are using the **Latest version** of the ARM Juno board (this is 626`juno.xml` manifest), the built `ramdisk.img` size with GCC5 compiler, at 627the moment, exceeds its pre-defined Juno flash memory reserved location 628(`image.txt` file). 629 630To solve this problem you will need to extend the Juno flash block size 631reserved location for the `ramdisk.img` and decrease the size for other 632images in the `image.txt` file accordingly and then follow the instructions 633under "5.7.1 Update flash and its layout". 634 635##### Example with juno-latest-busybox-uboot.zip: 636The current `ramdisk.img` size with GCC5 compiler is 29.15 MBytes we will 637extend it to 32 MBytes. The only changes that you need to do are those in 638**bold** 639 640###### File to update is /JUNO/SITE1/HBI0262B/images.txt 641<pre> 642NOR2UPDATE: AUTO ;Image Update:NONE/AUTO/FORCE 643NOR2ADDRESS: <b>0x00100000</b> ;Image Flash Address 644NOR2FILE: \SOFTWARE\Image ;Image File Name 645NOR2NAME: norkern ;Rename kernel to norkern 646NOR2LOAD: 00000000 ;Image Load Address 647NOR2ENTRY: 00000000 ;Image Entry Point 648 649NOR3UPDATE: AUTO ;Image Update:NONE/AUTO/FORCE 650NOR3ADDRESS: <b>0x02C00000</b> ;Image Flash Address 651NOR3FILE: \SOFTWARE\juno.dtb ;Image File Name 652NOR3NAME: board.dtb ;Specify target filename to preserve file extension 653NOR3LOAD: 00000000 ;Image Load Address 654NOR3ENTRY: 00000000 ;Image Entry Point 655 656NOR4UPDATE: AUTO ;Image Update:NONE/AUTO/FORCE 657NOR4ADDRESS: <b>0x00D00000</b> ;Image Flash Address 658NOR4FILE: \SOFTWARE\ramdisk.img ;Image File Name 659NOR4NAME: ramdisk.img 660NOR4LOAD: 00000000 ;Image Load Address 661NOR4ENTRY: 00000000 ;Image Entry Point 662 663NOR5UPDATE: AUTO ;Image Update:NONE/AUTO/FORCE 664NOR5ADDRESS: <b>0x02D00000</b> ;Image Flash Address 665NOR5FILE: \SOFTWARE\hdlcdclk.dat ;Image File Name 666NOR5LOAD: 00000000 ;Image Load Address 667NOR5ENTRY: 00000000 ;Image Entry Point 668</pre> 669 670--- 671### 5.8 Raspberry Pi 3 672There is a separate document for Raspberry Pi 3 [here](documentation/rpi3.md). 673That document will tell you how to flash, how to debug, known problems and 674things still to be done. 675 676--- 677### 5.9 Tips and tricks 678#### 5.9.1 Reference existing project to speed up repo sync 679Doing a `repo init`, `repo sync` from scratch can take a fair amount of time. 680The main reason for that is simply because of the size of some of the gits we 681are using, like for the Linux kernel and EDK2. With repo you can reference an 682existing forest and by doing so you can speed up repo sync to instead taking ~20 683seconds instead of an hour. The way to do this are as follows. 684 6851. Start by setup a clean forest that you will not touch, in this example, let 686 us call that `optee-ref` and put that under for `$HOME/devel/optee-ref`. This 687 step will take roughly an hour. 6882. Then setup a cronjob (`crontab -e`) that does a `repo sync` in this folder 689 particular folder once a night (that is more than enough). 6903. Now you should setup your actual tree which you are going to use as your 691 working tree. The way to do this is almost the same as stated in the 692 instructions above, the only difference is that you reference the other local 693 forest when running `repo init`, like this 694 ``` 695 repo init -u https://github.com/OP-TEE/manifest.git --reference /home/jbech/devel/optee-ref 696 ``` 6974. The rest is the same above, but now it will only take a couple of seconds to 698 clone a forest. 699 700Normally step 1 and 2 above is something you will only do once. Also if you 701ignore step 2, then you will still get the latest from official git trees, since 702repo will also check for updates that aren't at the local reference. 703 704#### 5.9.2. Use ccache 705ccache is a tool that caches build object-files etc locally on the disc and can 706speed up build time significantly in subsequent builds. On Debian-based systems 707(Ubuntu, Mint etc) you simply install it by running: 708``` 709$ sudo apt-get install ccache 710``` 711 712The helper makefiles are configured to automatically find and use ccache if 713ccache is installed on your system, so other than having it installed you don't 714have to think about anything. 715 716#### 5.9.3 Host-Guest folder sharing in QEMU/QEMUv8 configurations 717To avoid changing rootfs CPIO archive each time you need to add additional 718files to it, you can also use VirtFS QEMU feature to share a folder between 719the guest and host operating systems. To use this feature enable VirtFS 720QEMU build in `build/common.mk` (set `QEMU_VIRTFS_ENABLE ?= y`), adjust 721`QEMU_VIRTFS_HOST_DIR` and rebuild QEMU. 722 723To mount host folder in QEMU, simply run: 724``` 725$ mount_shared <mount_point> 726``` 727--- 728## 6. Load driver, tee-supplicant and run xtest 729Since release v2.0.0 you don't have to load the kernel driver explicitly. In the 730standard configuration it will be built into the kernel directly. To actually 731run something on a device you however need to run tee-supplicant. This is the 732same for all platforms, so when a device has booted, then run 733``` 734$ tee-supplicant & 735``` 736and OP-TEE is ready to be used. 737 738In case you want to try run something that triggers both normal and secure side 739code you could run xtest (the main test suite for OP-TEE), run 740``` 741$ xtest 742``` 743 744--- 745## 7. Coding standards 746In this project we are trying to adhere to the same coding convention as used in 747the Linux kernel (see 748[CodingStyle](https://www.kernel.org/doc/Documentation/CodingStyle)). We achieve this by running 749[checkpatch](http://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/tree/scripts/checkpatch.pl) 750from Linux kernel. However there are a few exceptions that we had to make since 751the code also follows GlobalPlatform standards. The exceptions are as follows: 752 753- CamelCase for GlobalPlatform types are allowed. 754- And we also exclude checking third party code that we might use in this 755 project, such as LibTomCrypt, MPA, newlib (not in this particular git, but 756 those are also part of the complete TEE solution). The reason for excluding 757 and not fixing third party code is because we would probably deviate too much 758 from upstream and therefore it would be hard to rebase against those projects 759 later on (and we don't expect that it is easy to convince other software 760 projects to change coding style). 761 762### 7.1 checkpatch 763Since checkpatch is licensed under the terms of GNU GPL License Version 2, we 764cannot include this script directly into this project. Therefore we have 765written the Makefile so you need to explicitly point to the script by exporting 766an environment variable, namely CHECKPATCH. So, suppose that the source code for 767the Linux kernel is at `$HOME/devel/linux`, then you have to export like follows: 768 769 $ export CHECKPATCH=$HOME/devel/linux/scripts/checkpatch.pl 770thereafter it should be possible to use one of the different checkpatch targets 771in the [Makefile](Makefile). There are targets for checking all files, checking 772against latest commit, against a certain base-commit etc. For the details, read 773the [Makefile](Makefile). 774