18aa05055SPaul BeesleyFirmware Design 28aa05055SPaul Beesley=============== 340d553cfSPaul Beesley 440d553cfSPaul BeesleyTrusted Firmware-A (TF-A) implements a subset of the Trusted Board Boot 540d553cfSPaul BeesleyRequirements (TBBR) Platform Design Document (PDD) [1]_ for Arm reference 640d553cfSPaul Beesleyplatforms. The TBB sequence starts when the platform is powered on and runs up 740d553cfSPaul Beesleyto the stage where it hands-off control to firmware running in the normal 840d553cfSPaul Beesleyworld in DRAM. This is the cold boot path. 940d553cfSPaul Beesley 1040d553cfSPaul BeesleyTF-A also implements the Power State Coordination Interface PDD [2]_ as a 1140d553cfSPaul Beesleyruntime service. PSCI is the interface from normal world software to firmware 1240d553cfSPaul Beesleyimplementing power management use-cases (for example, secondary CPU boot, 1340d553cfSPaul Beesleyhotplug and idle). Normal world software can access TF-A runtime services via 1440d553cfSPaul Beesleythe Arm SMC (Secure Monitor Call) instruction. The SMC instruction must be 1540d553cfSPaul Beesleyused as mandated by the SMC Calling Convention [3]_. 1640d553cfSPaul Beesley 1740d553cfSPaul BeesleyTF-A implements a framework for configuring and managing interrupts generated 1840d553cfSPaul Beesleyin either security state. The details of the interrupt management framework 1940d553cfSPaul Beesleyand its design can be found in TF-A Interrupt Management Design guide [4]_. 2040d553cfSPaul Beesley 2140d553cfSPaul BeesleyTF-A also implements a library for setting up and managing the translation 22f6ad51c8SJohn Tsichritzistables. The details of this library can be found in `Translation tables design`_. 2340d553cfSPaul Beesley 2440d553cfSPaul BeesleyTF-A can be built to support either AArch64 or AArch32 execution state. 2540d553cfSPaul Beesley 2640d553cfSPaul BeesleyCold boot 2740d553cfSPaul Beesley--------- 2840d553cfSPaul Beesley 2940d553cfSPaul BeesleyThe cold boot path starts when the platform is physically turned on. If 3040d553cfSPaul Beesley``COLD_BOOT_SINGLE_CPU=0``, one of the CPUs released from reset is chosen as the 3140d553cfSPaul Beesleyprimary CPU, and the remaining CPUs are considered secondary CPUs. The primary 3240d553cfSPaul BeesleyCPU is chosen through platform-specific means. The cold boot path is mainly 3340d553cfSPaul Beesleyexecuted by the primary CPU, other than essential CPU initialization executed by 3440d553cfSPaul Beesleyall CPUs. The secondary CPUs are kept in a safe platform-specific state until 3540d553cfSPaul Beesleythe primary CPU has performed enough initialization to boot them. 3640d553cfSPaul Beesley 3740d553cfSPaul BeesleyRefer to the `Reset Design`_ for more information on the effect of the 3840d553cfSPaul Beesley``COLD_BOOT_SINGLE_CPU`` platform build option. 3940d553cfSPaul Beesley 4040d553cfSPaul BeesleyThe cold boot path in this implementation of TF-A depends on the execution 4140d553cfSPaul Beesleystate. For AArch64, it is divided into five steps (in order of execution): 4240d553cfSPaul Beesley 4340d553cfSPaul Beesley- Boot Loader stage 1 (BL1) *AP Trusted ROM* 4440d553cfSPaul Beesley- Boot Loader stage 2 (BL2) *Trusted Boot Firmware* 4540d553cfSPaul Beesley- Boot Loader stage 3-1 (BL31) *EL3 Runtime Software* 4640d553cfSPaul Beesley- Boot Loader stage 3-2 (BL32) *Secure-EL1 Payload* (optional) 4740d553cfSPaul Beesley- Boot Loader stage 3-3 (BL33) *Non-trusted Firmware* 4840d553cfSPaul Beesley 4940d553cfSPaul BeesleyFor AArch32, it is divided into four steps (in order of execution): 5040d553cfSPaul Beesley 5140d553cfSPaul Beesley- Boot Loader stage 1 (BL1) *AP Trusted ROM* 5240d553cfSPaul Beesley- Boot Loader stage 2 (BL2) *Trusted Boot Firmware* 5340d553cfSPaul Beesley- Boot Loader stage 3-2 (BL32) *EL3 Runtime Software* 5440d553cfSPaul Beesley- Boot Loader stage 3-3 (BL33) *Non-trusted Firmware* 5540d553cfSPaul Beesley 5640d553cfSPaul BeesleyArm development platforms (Fixed Virtual Platforms (FVPs) and Juno) implement a 5740d553cfSPaul Beesleycombination of the following types of memory regions. Each bootloader stage uses 5840d553cfSPaul Beesleyone or more of these memory regions. 5940d553cfSPaul Beesley 6040d553cfSPaul Beesley- Regions accessible from both non-secure and secure states. For example, 6140d553cfSPaul Beesley non-trusted SRAM, ROM and DRAM. 6240d553cfSPaul Beesley- Regions accessible from only the secure state. For example, trusted SRAM and 6340d553cfSPaul Beesley ROM. The FVPs also implement the trusted DRAM which is statically 6440d553cfSPaul Beesley configured. Additionally, the Base FVPs and Juno development platform 6540d553cfSPaul Beesley configure the TrustZone Controller (TZC) to create a region in the DRAM 6640d553cfSPaul Beesley which is accessible only from the secure state. 6740d553cfSPaul Beesley 6840d553cfSPaul BeesleyThe sections below provide the following details: 6940d553cfSPaul Beesley 7040d553cfSPaul Beesley- dynamic configuration of Boot Loader stages 7140d553cfSPaul Beesley- initialization and execution of the first three stages during cold boot 7240d553cfSPaul Beesley- specification of the EL3 Runtime Software (BL31 for AArch64 and BL32 for 7340d553cfSPaul Beesley AArch32) entrypoint requirements for use by alternative Trusted Boot 7440d553cfSPaul Beesley Firmware in place of the provided BL1 and BL2 7540d553cfSPaul Beesley 7640d553cfSPaul BeesleyDynamic Configuration during cold boot 7740d553cfSPaul Beesley~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 7840d553cfSPaul Beesley 7940d553cfSPaul BeesleyEach of the Boot Loader stages may be dynamically configured if required by the 8040d553cfSPaul Beesleyplatform. The Boot Loader stage may optionally specify a firmware 8140d553cfSPaul Beesleyconfiguration file and/or hardware configuration file as listed below: 8240d553cfSPaul Beesley 8340d553cfSPaul Beesley- HW_CONFIG - The hardware configuration file. Can be shared by all Boot Loader 8440d553cfSPaul Beesley stages and also by the Normal World Rich OS. 8540d553cfSPaul Beesley- TB_FW_CONFIG - Trusted Boot Firmware configuration file. Shared between BL1 8640d553cfSPaul Beesley and BL2. 8740d553cfSPaul Beesley- SOC_FW_CONFIG - SoC Firmware configuration file. Used by BL31. 8840d553cfSPaul Beesley- TOS_FW_CONFIG - Trusted OS Firmware configuration file. Used by Trusted OS 8940d553cfSPaul Beesley (BL32). 9040d553cfSPaul Beesley- NT_FW_CONFIG - Non Trusted Firmware configuration file. Used by Non-trusted 9140d553cfSPaul Beesley firmware (BL33). 9240d553cfSPaul Beesley 9340d553cfSPaul BeesleyThe Arm development platforms use the Flattened Device Tree format for the 9440d553cfSPaul Beesleydynamic configuration files. 9540d553cfSPaul Beesley 9640d553cfSPaul BeesleyEach Boot Loader stage can pass up to 4 arguments via registers to the next 9740d553cfSPaul Beesleystage. BL2 passes the list of the next images to execute to the *EL3 Runtime 9840d553cfSPaul BeesleySoftware* (BL31 for AArch64 and BL32 for AArch32) via `arg0`. All the other 9940d553cfSPaul Beesleyarguments are platform defined. The Arm development platforms use the following 10040d553cfSPaul Beesleyconvention: 10140d553cfSPaul Beesley 10240d553cfSPaul Beesley- BL1 passes the address of a meminfo_t structure to BL2 via ``arg1``. This 10340d553cfSPaul Beesley structure contains the memory layout available to BL2. 10440d553cfSPaul Beesley- When dynamic configuration files are present, the firmware configuration for 10540d553cfSPaul Beesley the next Boot Loader stage is populated in the first available argument and 10640d553cfSPaul Beesley the generic hardware configuration is passed the next available argument. 10740d553cfSPaul Beesley For example, 10840d553cfSPaul Beesley 10940d553cfSPaul Beesley - If TB_FW_CONFIG is loaded by BL1, then its address is passed in ``arg0`` 11040d553cfSPaul Beesley to BL2. 11140d553cfSPaul Beesley - If HW_CONFIG is loaded by BL1, then its address is passed in ``arg2`` to 11240d553cfSPaul Beesley BL2. Note, ``arg1`` is already used for meminfo_t. 11340d553cfSPaul Beesley - If SOC_FW_CONFIG is loaded by BL2, then its address is passed in ``arg1`` 11440d553cfSPaul Beesley to BL31. Note, ``arg0`` is used to pass the list of executable images. 11540d553cfSPaul Beesley - Similarly, if HW_CONFIG is loaded by BL1 or BL2, then its address is 11640d553cfSPaul Beesley passed in ``arg2`` to BL31. 11740d553cfSPaul Beesley - For other BL3x images, if the firmware configuration file is loaded by 11840d553cfSPaul Beesley BL2, then its address is passed in ``arg0`` and if HW_CONFIG is loaded 11940d553cfSPaul Beesley then its address is passed in ``arg1``. 12040d553cfSPaul Beesley 12140d553cfSPaul BeesleyBL1 12240d553cfSPaul Beesley~~~ 12340d553cfSPaul Beesley 12440d553cfSPaul BeesleyThis stage begins execution from the platform's reset vector at EL3. The reset 12540d553cfSPaul Beesleyaddress is platform dependent but it is usually located in a Trusted ROM area. 12640d553cfSPaul BeesleyThe BL1 data section is copied to trusted SRAM at runtime. 12740d553cfSPaul Beesley 12840d553cfSPaul BeesleyOn the Arm development platforms, BL1 code starts execution from the reset 12940d553cfSPaul Beesleyvector defined by the constant ``BL1_RO_BASE``. The BL1 data section is copied 13040d553cfSPaul Beesleyto the top of trusted SRAM as defined by the constant ``BL1_RW_BASE``. 13140d553cfSPaul Beesley 13240d553cfSPaul BeesleyThe functionality implemented by this stage is as follows. 13340d553cfSPaul Beesley 13440d553cfSPaul BeesleyDetermination of boot path 13540d553cfSPaul Beesley^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 13640d553cfSPaul Beesley 13740d553cfSPaul BeesleyWhenever a CPU is released from reset, BL1 needs to distinguish between a warm 13840d553cfSPaul Beesleyboot and a cold boot. This is done using platform-specific mechanisms (see the 13940d553cfSPaul Beesley``plat_get_my_entrypoint()`` function in the `Porting Guide`_). In the case of a 14040d553cfSPaul Beesleywarm boot, a CPU is expected to continue execution from a separate 14140d553cfSPaul Beesleyentrypoint. In the case of a cold boot, the secondary CPUs are placed in a safe 14240d553cfSPaul Beesleyplatform-specific state (see the ``plat_secondary_cold_boot_setup()`` function in 14340d553cfSPaul Beesleythe `Porting Guide`_) while the primary CPU executes the remaining cold boot path 14440d553cfSPaul Beesleyas described in the following sections. 14540d553cfSPaul Beesley 14640d553cfSPaul BeesleyThis step only applies when ``PROGRAMMABLE_RESET_ADDRESS=0``. Refer to the 14740d553cfSPaul Beesley`Reset Design`_ for more information on the effect of the 14840d553cfSPaul Beesley``PROGRAMMABLE_RESET_ADDRESS`` platform build option. 14940d553cfSPaul Beesley 15040d553cfSPaul BeesleyArchitectural initialization 15140d553cfSPaul Beesley^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 15240d553cfSPaul Beesley 15340d553cfSPaul BeesleyBL1 performs minimal architectural initialization as follows. 15440d553cfSPaul Beesley 15540d553cfSPaul Beesley- Exception vectors 15640d553cfSPaul Beesley 15740d553cfSPaul Beesley BL1 sets up simple exception vectors for both synchronous and asynchronous 15840d553cfSPaul Beesley exceptions. The default behavior upon receiving an exception is to populate 15940d553cfSPaul Beesley a status code in the general purpose register ``X0/R0`` and call the 16040d553cfSPaul Beesley ``plat_report_exception()`` function (see the `Porting Guide`_). The status 16140d553cfSPaul Beesley code is one of: 16240d553cfSPaul Beesley 16340d553cfSPaul Beesley For AArch64: 16440d553cfSPaul Beesley 16540d553cfSPaul Beesley :: 16640d553cfSPaul Beesley 16740d553cfSPaul Beesley 0x0 : Synchronous exception from Current EL with SP_EL0 16840d553cfSPaul Beesley 0x1 : IRQ exception from Current EL with SP_EL0 16940d553cfSPaul Beesley 0x2 : FIQ exception from Current EL with SP_EL0 17040d553cfSPaul Beesley 0x3 : System Error exception from Current EL with SP_EL0 17140d553cfSPaul Beesley 0x4 : Synchronous exception from Current EL with SP_ELx 17240d553cfSPaul Beesley 0x5 : IRQ exception from Current EL with SP_ELx 17340d553cfSPaul Beesley 0x6 : FIQ exception from Current EL with SP_ELx 17440d553cfSPaul Beesley 0x7 : System Error exception from Current EL with SP_ELx 17540d553cfSPaul Beesley 0x8 : Synchronous exception from Lower EL using aarch64 17640d553cfSPaul Beesley 0x9 : IRQ exception from Lower EL using aarch64 17740d553cfSPaul Beesley 0xa : FIQ exception from Lower EL using aarch64 17840d553cfSPaul Beesley 0xb : System Error exception from Lower EL using aarch64 17940d553cfSPaul Beesley 0xc : Synchronous exception from Lower EL using aarch32 18040d553cfSPaul Beesley 0xd : IRQ exception from Lower EL using aarch32 18140d553cfSPaul Beesley 0xe : FIQ exception from Lower EL using aarch32 18240d553cfSPaul Beesley 0xf : System Error exception from Lower EL using aarch32 18340d553cfSPaul Beesley 18440d553cfSPaul Beesley For AArch32: 18540d553cfSPaul Beesley 18640d553cfSPaul Beesley :: 18740d553cfSPaul Beesley 18840d553cfSPaul Beesley 0x10 : User mode 18940d553cfSPaul Beesley 0x11 : FIQ mode 19040d553cfSPaul Beesley 0x12 : IRQ mode 19140d553cfSPaul Beesley 0x13 : SVC mode 19240d553cfSPaul Beesley 0x16 : Monitor mode 19340d553cfSPaul Beesley 0x17 : Abort mode 19440d553cfSPaul Beesley 0x1a : Hypervisor mode 19540d553cfSPaul Beesley 0x1b : Undefined mode 19640d553cfSPaul Beesley 0x1f : System mode 19740d553cfSPaul Beesley 19840d553cfSPaul Beesley The ``plat_report_exception()`` implementation on the Arm FVP port programs 19940d553cfSPaul Beesley the Versatile Express System LED register in the following format to 20040d553cfSPaul Beesley indicate the occurrence of an unexpected exception: 20140d553cfSPaul Beesley 20240d553cfSPaul Beesley :: 20340d553cfSPaul Beesley 20440d553cfSPaul Beesley SYS_LED[0] - Security state (Secure=0/Non-Secure=1) 20540d553cfSPaul Beesley SYS_LED[2:1] - Exception Level (EL3=0x3, EL2=0x2, EL1=0x1, EL0=0x0) 20640d553cfSPaul Beesley For AArch32 it is always 0x0 20740d553cfSPaul Beesley SYS_LED[7:3] - Exception Class (Sync/Async & origin). This is the value 20840d553cfSPaul Beesley of the status code 20940d553cfSPaul Beesley 21040d553cfSPaul Beesley A write to the LED register reflects in the System LEDs (S6LED0..7) in the 21140d553cfSPaul Beesley CLCD window of the FVP. 21240d553cfSPaul Beesley 21340d553cfSPaul Beesley BL1 does not expect to receive any exceptions other than the SMC exception. 21440d553cfSPaul Beesley For the latter, BL1 installs a simple stub. The stub expects to receive a 21540d553cfSPaul Beesley limited set of SMC types (determined by their function IDs in the general 21640d553cfSPaul Beesley purpose register ``X0/R0``): 21740d553cfSPaul Beesley 21840d553cfSPaul Beesley - ``BL1_SMC_RUN_IMAGE``: This SMC is raised by BL2 to make BL1 pass control 21940d553cfSPaul Beesley to EL3 Runtime Software. 22040d553cfSPaul Beesley - All SMCs listed in section "BL1 SMC Interface" in the `Firmware Update`_ 22140d553cfSPaul Beesley Design Guide are supported for AArch64 only. These SMCs are currently 22240d553cfSPaul Beesley not supported when BL1 is built for AArch32. 22340d553cfSPaul Beesley 22440d553cfSPaul Beesley Any other SMC leads to an assertion failure. 22540d553cfSPaul Beesley 22640d553cfSPaul Beesley- CPU initialization 22740d553cfSPaul Beesley 22840d553cfSPaul Beesley BL1 calls the ``reset_handler()`` function which in turn calls the CPU 22940d553cfSPaul Beesley specific reset handler function (see the section: "CPU specific operations 23040d553cfSPaul Beesley framework"). 23140d553cfSPaul Beesley 23240d553cfSPaul Beesley- Control register setup (for AArch64) 23340d553cfSPaul Beesley 23440d553cfSPaul Beesley - ``SCTLR_EL3``. Instruction cache is enabled by setting the ``SCTLR_EL3.I`` 23540d553cfSPaul Beesley bit. Alignment and stack alignment checking is enabled by setting the 23640d553cfSPaul Beesley ``SCTLR_EL3.A`` and ``SCTLR_EL3.SA`` bits. Exception endianness is set to 23740d553cfSPaul Beesley little-endian by clearing the ``SCTLR_EL3.EE`` bit. 23840d553cfSPaul Beesley 23940d553cfSPaul Beesley - ``SCR_EL3``. The register width of the next lower exception level is set 24040d553cfSPaul Beesley to AArch64 by setting the ``SCR.RW`` bit. The ``SCR.EA`` bit is set to trap 24140d553cfSPaul Beesley both External Aborts and SError Interrupts in EL3. The ``SCR.SIF`` bit is 24240d553cfSPaul Beesley also set to disable instruction fetches from Non-secure memory when in 24340d553cfSPaul Beesley secure state. 24440d553cfSPaul Beesley 24540d553cfSPaul Beesley - ``CPTR_EL3``. Accesses to the ``CPACR_EL1`` register from EL1 or EL2, or the 24640d553cfSPaul Beesley ``CPTR_EL2`` register from EL2 are configured to not trap to EL3 by 24740d553cfSPaul Beesley clearing the ``CPTR_EL3.TCPAC`` bit. Access to the trace functionality is 24840d553cfSPaul Beesley configured not to trap to EL3 by clearing the ``CPTR_EL3.TTA`` bit. 24940d553cfSPaul Beesley Instructions that access the registers associated with Floating Point 25040d553cfSPaul Beesley and Advanced SIMD execution are configured to not trap to EL3 by 25140d553cfSPaul Beesley clearing the ``CPTR_EL3.TFP`` bit. 25240d553cfSPaul Beesley 25340d553cfSPaul Beesley - ``DAIF``. The SError interrupt is enabled by clearing the SError interrupt 25440d553cfSPaul Beesley mask bit. 25540d553cfSPaul Beesley 25640d553cfSPaul Beesley - ``MDCR_EL3``. The trap controls, ``MDCR_EL3.TDOSA``, ``MDCR_EL3.TDA`` and 25740d553cfSPaul Beesley ``MDCR_EL3.TPM``, are set so that accesses to the registers they control 25840d553cfSPaul Beesley do not trap to EL3. AArch64 Secure self-hosted debug is disabled by 25940d553cfSPaul Beesley setting the ``MDCR_EL3.SDD`` bit. Also ``MDCR_EL3.SPD32`` is set to 26040d553cfSPaul Beesley disable AArch32 Secure self-hosted privileged debug from S-EL1. 26140d553cfSPaul Beesley 26240d553cfSPaul Beesley- Control register setup (for AArch32) 26340d553cfSPaul Beesley 26440d553cfSPaul Beesley - ``SCTLR``. Instruction cache is enabled by setting the ``SCTLR.I`` bit. 26540d553cfSPaul Beesley Alignment checking is enabled by setting the ``SCTLR.A`` bit. 26640d553cfSPaul Beesley Exception endianness is set to little-endian by clearing the 26740d553cfSPaul Beesley ``SCTLR.EE`` bit. 26840d553cfSPaul Beesley 26940d553cfSPaul Beesley - ``SCR``. The ``SCR.SIF`` bit is set to disable instruction fetches from 27040d553cfSPaul Beesley Non-secure memory when in secure state. 27140d553cfSPaul Beesley 27240d553cfSPaul Beesley - ``CPACR``. Allow execution of Advanced SIMD instructions at PL0 and PL1, 27340d553cfSPaul Beesley by clearing the ``CPACR.ASEDIS`` bit. Access to the trace functionality 27440d553cfSPaul Beesley is configured not to trap to undefined mode by clearing the 27540d553cfSPaul Beesley ``CPACR.TRCDIS`` bit. 27640d553cfSPaul Beesley 27740d553cfSPaul Beesley - ``NSACR``. Enable non-secure access to Advanced SIMD functionality and 27840d553cfSPaul Beesley system register access to implemented trace registers. 27940d553cfSPaul Beesley 28040d553cfSPaul Beesley - ``FPEXC``. Enable access to the Advanced SIMD and floating-point 28140d553cfSPaul Beesley functionality from all Exception levels. 28240d553cfSPaul Beesley 28340d553cfSPaul Beesley - ``CPSR.A``. The Asynchronous data abort interrupt is enabled by clearing 28440d553cfSPaul Beesley the Asynchronous data abort interrupt mask bit. 28540d553cfSPaul Beesley 28640d553cfSPaul Beesley - ``SDCR``. The ``SDCR.SPD`` field is set to disable AArch32 Secure 28740d553cfSPaul Beesley self-hosted privileged debug. 28840d553cfSPaul Beesley 28940d553cfSPaul BeesleyPlatform initialization 29040d553cfSPaul Beesley^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 29140d553cfSPaul Beesley 29240d553cfSPaul BeesleyOn Arm platforms, BL1 performs the following platform initializations: 29340d553cfSPaul Beesley 29440d553cfSPaul Beesley- Enable the Trusted Watchdog. 29540d553cfSPaul Beesley- Initialize the console. 29640d553cfSPaul Beesley- Configure the Interconnect to enable hardware coherency. 29740d553cfSPaul Beesley- Enable the MMU and map the memory it needs to access. 29840d553cfSPaul Beesley- Configure any required platform storage to load the next bootloader image 29940d553cfSPaul Beesley (BL2). 30040d553cfSPaul Beesley- If the BL1 dynamic configuration file, ``TB_FW_CONFIG``, is available, then 30140d553cfSPaul Beesley load it to the platform defined address and make it available to BL2 via 30240d553cfSPaul Beesley ``arg0``. 30340d553cfSPaul Beesley- Configure the system timer and program the `CNTFRQ_EL0` for use by NS-BL1U 30440d553cfSPaul Beesley and NS-BL2U firmware update images. 30540d553cfSPaul Beesley 30640d553cfSPaul BeesleyFirmware Update detection and execution 30740d553cfSPaul Beesley^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 30840d553cfSPaul Beesley 30940d553cfSPaul BeesleyAfter performing platform setup, BL1 common code calls 31040d553cfSPaul Beesley``bl1_plat_get_next_image_id()`` to determine if `Firmware Update`_ is required or 31140d553cfSPaul Beesleyto proceed with the normal boot process. If the platform code returns 31240d553cfSPaul Beesley``BL2_IMAGE_ID`` then the normal boot sequence is executed as described in the 31340d553cfSPaul Beesleynext section, else BL1 assumes that `Firmware Update`_ is required and execution 31440d553cfSPaul Beesleypasses to the first image in the `Firmware Update`_ process. In either case, BL1 31540d553cfSPaul Beesleyretrieves a descriptor of the next image by calling ``bl1_plat_get_image_desc()``. 31640d553cfSPaul BeesleyThe image descriptor contains an ``entry_point_info_t`` structure, which BL1 31740d553cfSPaul Beesleyuses to initialize the execution state of the next image. 31840d553cfSPaul Beesley 31940d553cfSPaul BeesleyBL2 image load and execution 32040d553cfSPaul Beesley^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 32140d553cfSPaul Beesley 32240d553cfSPaul BeesleyIn the normal boot flow, BL1 execution continues as follows: 32340d553cfSPaul Beesley 32440d553cfSPaul Beesley#. BL1 prints the following string from the primary CPU to indicate successful 32540d553cfSPaul Beesley execution of the BL1 stage: 32640d553cfSPaul Beesley 32740d553cfSPaul Beesley :: 32840d553cfSPaul Beesley 32940d553cfSPaul Beesley "Booting Trusted Firmware" 33040d553cfSPaul Beesley 33140d553cfSPaul Beesley#. BL1 loads a BL2 raw binary image from platform storage, at a 33240d553cfSPaul Beesley platform-specific base address. Prior to the load, BL1 invokes 33340d553cfSPaul Beesley ``bl1_plat_handle_pre_image_load()`` which allows the platform to update or 33440d553cfSPaul Beesley use the image information. If the BL2 image file is not present or if 33540d553cfSPaul Beesley there is not enough free trusted SRAM the following error message is 33640d553cfSPaul Beesley printed: 33740d553cfSPaul Beesley 33840d553cfSPaul Beesley :: 33940d553cfSPaul Beesley 34040d553cfSPaul Beesley "Failed to load BL2 firmware." 34140d553cfSPaul Beesley 34240d553cfSPaul Beesley#. BL1 invokes ``bl1_plat_handle_post_image_load()`` which again is intended 34340d553cfSPaul Beesley for platforms to take further action after image load. This function must 34440d553cfSPaul Beesley populate the necessary arguments for BL2, which may also include the memory 34540d553cfSPaul Beesley layout. Further description of the memory layout can be found later 34640d553cfSPaul Beesley in this document. 34740d553cfSPaul Beesley 34840d553cfSPaul Beesley#. BL1 passes control to the BL2 image at Secure EL1 (for AArch64) or at 34940d553cfSPaul Beesley Secure SVC mode (for AArch32), starting from its load address. 35040d553cfSPaul Beesley 35140d553cfSPaul BeesleyBL2 35240d553cfSPaul Beesley~~~ 35340d553cfSPaul Beesley 35440d553cfSPaul BeesleyBL1 loads and passes control to BL2 at Secure-EL1 (for AArch64) or at Secure 35540d553cfSPaul BeesleySVC mode (for AArch32) . BL2 is linked against and loaded at a platform-specific 35640d553cfSPaul Beesleybase address (more information can be found later in this document). 35740d553cfSPaul BeesleyThe functionality implemented by BL2 is as follows. 35840d553cfSPaul Beesley 35940d553cfSPaul BeesleyArchitectural initialization 36040d553cfSPaul Beesley^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 36140d553cfSPaul Beesley 36240d553cfSPaul BeesleyFor AArch64, BL2 performs the minimal architectural initialization required 36340d553cfSPaul Beesleyfor subsequent stages of TF-A and normal world software. EL1 and EL0 are given 36440d553cfSPaul Beesleyaccess to Floating Point and Advanced SIMD registers by clearing the 36540d553cfSPaul Beesley``CPACR.FPEN`` bits. 36640d553cfSPaul Beesley 36740d553cfSPaul BeesleyFor AArch32, the minimal architectural initialization required for subsequent 36840d553cfSPaul Beesleystages of TF-A and normal world software is taken care of in BL1 as both BL1 36940d553cfSPaul Beesleyand BL2 execute at PL1. 37040d553cfSPaul Beesley 37140d553cfSPaul BeesleyPlatform initialization 37240d553cfSPaul Beesley^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 37340d553cfSPaul Beesley 37440d553cfSPaul BeesleyOn Arm platforms, BL2 performs the following platform initializations: 37540d553cfSPaul Beesley 37640d553cfSPaul Beesley- Initialize the console. 37740d553cfSPaul Beesley- Configure any required platform storage to allow loading further bootloader 37840d553cfSPaul Beesley images. 37940d553cfSPaul Beesley- Enable the MMU and map the memory it needs to access. 38040d553cfSPaul Beesley- Perform platform security setup to allow access to controlled components. 38140d553cfSPaul Beesley- Reserve some memory for passing information to the next bootloader image 38240d553cfSPaul Beesley EL3 Runtime Software and populate it. 38340d553cfSPaul Beesley- Define the extents of memory available for loading each subsequent 38440d553cfSPaul Beesley bootloader image. 38540d553cfSPaul Beesley- If BL1 has passed TB_FW_CONFIG dynamic configuration file in ``arg0``, 38640d553cfSPaul Beesley then parse it. 38740d553cfSPaul Beesley 38840d553cfSPaul BeesleyImage loading in BL2 38940d553cfSPaul Beesley^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 39040d553cfSPaul Beesley 39140d553cfSPaul BeesleyBL2 generic code loads the images based on the list of loadable images 39240d553cfSPaul Beesleyprovided by the platform. BL2 passes the list of executable images 39340d553cfSPaul Beesleyprovided by the platform to the next handover BL image. 39440d553cfSPaul Beesley 39540d553cfSPaul BeesleyThe list of loadable images provided by the platform may also contain 39640d553cfSPaul Beesleydynamic configuration files. The files are loaded and can be parsed as 39740d553cfSPaul Beesleyneeded in the ``bl2_plat_handle_post_image_load()`` function. These 39840d553cfSPaul Beesleyconfiguration files can be passed to next Boot Loader stages as arguments 39940d553cfSPaul Beesleyby updating the corresponding entrypoint information in this function. 40040d553cfSPaul Beesley 40140d553cfSPaul BeesleySCP_BL2 (System Control Processor Firmware) image load 40240d553cfSPaul Beesley^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 40340d553cfSPaul Beesley 40440d553cfSPaul BeesleySome systems have a separate System Control Processor (SCP) for power, clock, 40540d553cfSPaul Beesleyreset and system control. BL2 loads the optional SCP_BL2 image from platform 40640d553cfSPaul Beesleystorage into a platform-specific region of secure memory. The subsequent 40740d553cfSPaul Beesleyhandling of SCP_BL2 is platform specific. For example, on the Juno Arm 40840d553cfSPaul Beesleydevelopment platform port the image is transferred into SCP's internal memory 40940d553cfSPaul Beesleyusing the Boot Over MHU (BOM) protocol after being loaded in the trusted SRAM 41040d553cfSPaul Beesleymemory. The SCP executes SCP_BL2 and signals to the Application Processor (AP) 41140d553cfSPaul Beesleyfor BL2 execution to continue. 41240d553cfSPaul Beesley 41340d553cfSPaul BeesleyEL3 Runtime Software image load 41440d553cfSPaul Beesley^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 41540d553cfSPaul Beesley 41640d553cfSPaul BeesleyBL2 loads the EL3 Runtime Software image from platform storage into a platform- 41740d553cfSPaul Beesleyspecific address in trusted SRAM. If there is not enough memory to load the 41840d553cfSPaul Beesleyimage or image is missing it leads to an assertion failure. 41940d553cfSPaul Beesley 42040d553cfSPaul BeesleyAArch64 BL32 (Secure-EL1 Payload) image load 42140d553cfSPaul Beesley^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 42240d553cfSPaul Beesley 42340d553cfSPaul BeesleyBL2 loads the optional BL32 image from platform storage into a platform- 42440d553cfSPaul Beesleyspecific region of secure memory. The image executes in the secure world. BL2 42540d553cfSPaul Beesleyrelies on BL31 to pass control to the BL32 image, if present. Hence, BL2 42640d553cfSPaul Beesleypopulates a platform-specific area of memory with the entrypoint/load-address 42740d553cfSPaul Beesleyof the BL32 image. The value of the Saved Processor Status Register (``SPSR``) 42840d553cfSPaul Beesleyfor entry into BL32 is not determined by BL2, it is initialized by the 42940d553cfSPaul BeesleySecure-EL1 Payload Dispatcher (see later) within BL31, which is responsible for 43040d553cfSPaul Beesleymanaging interaction with BL32. This information is passed to BL31. 43140d553cfSPaul Beesley 43240d553cfSPaul BeesleyBL33 (Non-trusted Firmware) image load 43340d553cfSPaul Beesley^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 43440d553cfSPaul Beesley 43540d553cfSPaul BeesleyBL2 loads the BL33 image (e.g. UEFI or other test or boot software) from 43640d553cfSPaul Beesleyplatform storage into non-secure memory as defined by the platform. 43740d553cfSPaul Beesley 43840d553cfSPaul BeesleyBL2 relies on EL3 Runtime Software to pass control to BL33 once secure state 43940d553cfSPaul Beesleyinitialization is complete. Hence, BL2 populates a platform-specific area of 44040d553cfSPaul Beesleymemory with the entrypoint and Saved Program Status Register (``SPSR``) of the 44140d553cfSPaul Beesleynormal world software image. The entrypoint is the load address of the BL33 44240d553cfSPaul Beesleyimage. The ``SPSR`` is determined as specified in Section 5.13 of the 44340d553cfSPaul Beesley`PSCI PDD`_. This information is passed to the EL3 Runtime Software. 44440d553cfSPaul Beesley 44540d553cfSPaul BeesleyAArch64 BL31 (EL3 Runtime Software) execution 44640d553cfSPaul Beesley^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 44740d553cfSPaul Beesley 44840d553cfSPaul BeesleyBL2 execution continues as follows: 44940d553cfSPaul Beesley 45040d553cfSPaul Beesley#. BL2 passes control back to BL1 by raising an SMC, providing BL1 with the 45140d553cfSPaul Beesley BL31 entrypoint. The exception is handled by the SMC exception handler 45240d553cfSPaul Beesley installed by BL1. 45340d553cfSPaul Beesley 45440d553cfSPaul Beesley#. BL1 turns off the MMU and flushes the caches. It clears the 45540d553cfSPaul Beesley ``SCTLR_EL3.M/I/C`` bits, flushes the data cache to the point of coherency 45640d553cfSPaul Beesley and invalidates the TLBs. 45740d553cfSPaul Beesley 45840d553cfSPaul Beesley#. BL1 passes control to BL31 at the specified entrypoint at EL3. 45940d553cfSPaul Beesley 46040d553cfSPaul BeesleyRunning BL2 at EL3 execution level 46140d553cfSPaul Beesley~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 46240d553cfSPaul Beesley 46340d553cfSPaul BeesleySome platforms have a non-TF-A Boot ROM that expects the next boot stage 46440d553cfSPaul Beesleyto execute at EL3. On these platforms, TF-A BL1 is a waste of memory 46540d553cfSPaul Beesleyas its only purpose is to ensure TF-A BL2 is entered at S-EL1. To avoid 46640d553cfSPaul Beesleythis waste, a special mode enables BL2 to execute at EL3, which allows 46740d553cfSPaul Beesleya non-TF-A Boot ROM to load and jump directly to BL2. This mode is selected 46840d553cfSPaul Beesleywhen the build flag BL2_AT_EL3 is enabled. The main differences in this 46940d553cfSPaul Beesleymode are: 47040d553cfSPaul Beesley 47140d553cfSPaul Beesley#. BL2 includes the reset code and the mailbox mechanism to differentiate 47240d553cfSPaul Beesley cold boot and warm boot. It runs at EL3 doing the arch 47340d553cfSPaul Beesley initialization required for EL3. 47440d553cfSPaul Beesley 47540d553cfSPaul Beesley#. BL2 does not receive the meminfo information from BL1 anymore. This 47640d553cfSPaul Beesley information can be passed by the Boot ROM or be internal to the 47740d553cfSPaul Beesley BL2 image. 47840d553cfSPaul Beesley 47940d553cfSPaul Beesley#. Since BL2 executes at EL3, BL2 jumps directly to the next image, 48040d553cfSPaul Beesley instead of invoking the RUN_IMAGE SMC call. 48140d553cfSPaul Beesley 48240d553cfSPaul Beesley 48340d553cfSPaul BeesleyWe assume 3 different types of BootROM support on the platform: 48440d553cfSPaul Beesley 48540d553cfSPaul Beesley#. The Boot ROM always jumps to the same address, for both cold 48640d553cfSPaul Beesley and warm boot. In this case, we will need to keep a resident part 48740d553cfSPaul Beesley of BL2 whose memory cannot be reclaimed by any other image. The 48840d553cfSPaul Beesley linker script defines the symbols __TEXT_RESIDENT_START__ and 48940d553cfSPaul Beesley __TEXT_RESIDENT_END__ that allows the platform to configure 49040d553cfSPaul Beesley correctly the memory map. 49140d553cfSPaul Beesley#. The platform has some mechanism to indicate the jump address to the 49240d553cfSPaul Beesley Boot ROM. Platform code can then program the jump address with 49340d553cfSPaul Beesley psci_warmboot_entrypoint during cold boot. 49440d553cfSPaul Beesley#. The platform has some mechanism to program the reset address using 49540d553cfSPaul Beesley the PROGRAMMABLE_RESET_ADDRESS feature. Platform code can then 49640d553cfSPaul Beesley program the reset address with psci_warmboot_entrypoint during 49740d553cfSPaul Beesley cold boot, bypassing the boot ROM for warm boot. 49840d553cfSPaul Beesley 49940d553cfSPaul BeesleyIn the last 2 cases, no part of BL2 needs to remain resident at 50040d553cfSPaul Beesleyruntime. In the first 2 cases, we expect the Boot ROM to be able to 50140d553cfSPaul Beesleydifferentiate between warm and cold boot, to avoid loading BL2 again 50240d553cfSPaul Beesleyduring warm boot. 50340d553cfSPaul Beesley 50440d553cfSPaul BeesleyThis functionality can be tested with FVP loading the image directly 50540d553cfSPaul Beesleyin memory and changing the address where the system jumps at reset. 50640d553cfSPaul BeesleyFor example: 50740d553cfSPaul Beesley 50840d553cfSPaul Beesley -C cluster0.cpu0.RVBAR=0x4022000 50940d553cfSPaul Beesley --data cluster0.cpu0=bl2.bin@0x4022000 51040d553cfSPaul Beesley 51140d553cfSPaul BeesleyWith this configuration, FVP is like a platform of the first case, 51240d553cfSPaul Beesleywhere the Boot ROM jumps always to the same address. For simplification, 51340d553cfSPaul BeesleyBL32 is loaded in DRAM in this case, to avoid other images reclaiming 51440d553cfSPaul BeesleyBL2 memory. 51540d553cfSPaul Beesley 51640d553cfSPaul Beesley 51740d553cfSPaul BeesleyAArch64 BL31 51840d553cfSPaul Beesley~~~~~~~~~~~~ 51940d553cfSPaul Beesley 52040d553cfSPaul BeesleyThe image for this stage is loaded by BL2 and BL1 passes control to BL31 at 52140d553cfSPaul BeesleyEL3. BL31 executes solely in trusted SRAM. BL31 is linked against and 52240d553cfSPaul Beesleyloaded at a platform-specific base address (more information can be found later 52340d553cfSPaul Beesleyin this document). The functionality implemented by BL31 is as follows. 52440d553cfSPaul Beesley 52540d553cfSPaul BeesleyArchitectural initialization 52640d553cfSPaul Beesley^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 52740d553cfSPaul Beesley 52840d553cfSPaul BeesleyCurrently, BL31 performs a similar architectural initialization to BL1 as 52940d553cfSPaul Beesleyfar as system register settings are concerned. Since BL1 code resides in ROM, 53040d553cfSPaul Beesleyarchitectural initialization in BL31 allows override of any previous 53140d553cfSPaul Beesleyinitialization done by BL1. 53240d553cfSPaul Beesley 53340d553cfSPaul BeesleyBL31 initializes the per-CPU data framework, which provides a cache of 53440d553cfSPaul Beesleyfrequently accessed per-CPU data optimised for fast, concurrent manipulation 53540d553cfSPaul Beesleyon different CPUs. This buffer includes pointers to per-CPU contexts, crash 53640d553cfSPaul Beesleybuffer, CPU reset and power down operations, PSCI data, platform data and so on. 53740d553cfSPaul Beesley 53840d553cfSPaul BeesleyIt then replaces the exception vectors populated by BL1 with its own. BL31 53940d553cfSPaul Beesleyexception vectors implement more elaborate support for handling SMCs since this 54040d553cfSPaul Beesleyis the only mechanism to access the runtime services implemented by BL31 (PSCI 54140d553cfSPaul Beesleyfor example). BL31 checks each SMC for validity as specified by the 54240d553cfSPaul Beesley`SMC calling convention PDD`_ before passing control to the required SMC 54340d553cfSPaul Beesleyhandler routine. 54440d553cfSPaul Beesley 54540d553cfSPaul BeesleyBL31 programs the ``CNTFRQ_EL0`` register with the clock frequency of the system 54640d553cfSPaul Beesleycounter, which is provided by the platform. 54740d553cfSPaul Beesley 54840d553cfSPaul BeesleyPlatform initialization 54940d553cfSPaul Beesley^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 55040d553cfSPaul Beesley 55140d553cfSPaul BeesleyBL31 performs detailed platform initialization, which enables normal world 55240d553cfSPaul Beesleysoftware to function correctly. 55340d553cfSPaul Beesley 55440d553cfSPaul BeesleyOn Arm platforms, this consists of the following: 55540d553cfSPaul Beesley 55640d553cfSPaul Beesley- Initialize the console. 55740d553cfSPaul Beesley- Configure the Interconnect to enable hardware coherency. 55840d553cfSPaul Beesley- Enable the MMU and map the memory it needs to access. 55940d553cfSPaul Beesley- Initialize the generic interrupt controller. 56040d553cfSPaul Beesley- Initialize the power controller device. 56140d553cfSPaul Beesley- Detect the system topology. 56240d553cfSPaul Beesley 56340d553cfSPaul BeesleyRuntime services initialization 56440d553cfSPaul Beesley^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 56540d553cfSPaul Beesley 56640d553cfSPaul BeesleyBL31 is responsible for initializing the runtime services. One of them is PSCI. 56740d553cfSPaul Beesley 56840d553cfSPaul BeesleyAs part of the PSCI initializations, BL31 detects the system topology. It also 56940d553cfSPaul Beesleyinitializes the data structures that implement the state machine used to track 57040d553cfSPaul Beesleythe state of power domain nodes. The state can be one of ``OFF``, ``RUN`` or 57140d553cfSPaul Beesley``RETENTION``. All secondary CPUs are initially in the ``OFF`` state. The cluster 57240d553cfSPaul Beesleythat the primary CPU belongs to is ``ON``; any other cluster is ``OFF``. It also 57340d553cfSPaul Beesleyinitializes the locks that protect them. BL31 accesses the state of a CPU or 57440d553cfSPaul Beesleycluster immediately after reset and before the data cache is enabled in the 57540d553cfSPaul Beesleywarm boot path. It is not currently possible to use 'exclusive' based spinlocks, 57640d553cfSPaul Beesleytherefore BL31 uses locks based on Lamport's Bakery algorithm instead. 57740d553cfSPaul Beesley 57840d553cfSPaul BeesleyThe runtime service framework and its initialization is described in more 57940d553cfSPaul Beesleydetail in the "EL3 runtime services framework" section below. 58040d553cfSPaul Beesley 58140d553cfSPaul BeesleyDetails about the status of the PSCI implementation are provided in the 58240d553cfSPaul Beesley"Power State Coordination Interface" section below. 58340d553cfSPaul Beesley 58440d553cfSPaul BeesleyAArch64 BL32 (Secure-EL1 Payload) image initialization 58540d553cfSPaul Beesley^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 58640d553cfSPaul Beesley 58740d553cfSPaul BeesleyIf a BL32 image is present then there must be a matching Secure-EL1 Payload 58840d553cfSPaul BeesleyDispatcher (SPD) service (see later for details). During initialization 58940d553cfSPaul Beesleythat service must register a function to carry out initialization of BL32 59040d553cfSPaul Beesleyonce the runtime services are fully initialized. BL31 invokes such a 59140d553cfSPaul Beesleyregistered function to initialize BL32 before running BL33. This initialization 59240d553cfSPaul Beesleyis not necessary for AArch32 SPs. 59340d553cfSPaul Beesley 59440d553cfSPaul BeesleyDetails on BL32 initialization and the SPD's role are described in the 59540d553cfSPaul Beesley"Secure-EL1 Payloads and Dispatchers" section below. 59640d553cfSPaul Beesley 59740d553cfSPaul BeesleyBL33 (Non-trusted Firmware) execution 59840d553cfSPaul Beesley^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 59940d553cfSPaul Beesley 60040d553cfSPaul BeesleyEL3 Runtime Software initializes the EL2 or EL1 processor context for normal- 60140d553cfSPaul Beesleyworld cold boot, ensuring that no secure state information finds its way into 60240d553cfSPaul Beesleythe non-secure execution state. EL3 Runtime Software uses the entrypoint 60340d553cfSPaul Beesleyinformation provided by BL2 to jump to the Non-trusted firmware image (BL33) 60440d553cfSPaul Beesleyat the highest available Exception Level (EL2 if available, otherwise EL1). 60540d553cfSPaul Beesley 60640d553cfSPaul BeesleyUsing alternative Trusted Boot Firmware in place of BL1 & BL2 (AArch64 only) 60740d553cfSPaul Beesley~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 60840d553cfSPaul Beesley 60940d553cfSPaul BeesleySome platforms have existing implementations of Trusted Boot Firmware that 61040d553cfSPaul Beesleywould like to use TF-A BL31 for the EL3 Runtime Software. To enable this 61140d553cfSPaul Beesleyfirmware architecture it is important to provide a fully documented and stable 61240d553cfSPaul Beesleyinterface between the Trusted Boot Firmware and BL31. 61340d553cfSPaul Beesley 61440d553cfSPaul BeesleyFuture changes to the BL31 interface will be done in a backwards compatible 61540d553cfSPaul Beesleyway, and this enables these firmware components to be independently enhanced/ 61640d553cfSPaul Beesleyupdated to develop and exploit new functionality. 61740d553cfSPaul Beesley 61840d553cfSPaul BeesleyRequired CPU state when calling ``bl31_entrypoint()`` during cold boot 61940d553cfSPaul Beesley^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 62040d553cfSPaul Beesley 62140d553cfSPaul BeesleyThis function must only be called by the primary CPU. 62240d553cfSPaul Beesley 62340d553cfSPaul BeesleyOn entry to this function the calling primary CPU must be executing in AArch64 62440d553cfSPaul BeesleyEL3, little-endian data access, and all interrupt sources masked: 62540d553cfSPaul Beesley 62640d553cfSPaul Beesley:: 62740d553cfSPaul Beesley 62840d553cfSPaul Beesley PSTATE.EL = 3 62940d553cfSPaul Beesley PSTATE.RW = 1 63040d553cfSPaul Beesley PSTATE.DAIF = 0xf 63140d553cfSPaul Beesley SCTLR_EL3.EE = 0 63240d553cfSPaul Beesley 63340d553cfSPaul BeesleyX0 and X1 can be used to pass information from the Trusted Boot Firmware to the 63440d553cfSPaul Beesleyplatform code in BL31: 63540d553cfSPaul Beesley 63640d553cfSPaul Beesley:: 63740d553cfSPaul Beesley 63840d553cfSPaul Beesley X0 : Reserved for common TF-A information 63940d553cfSPaul Beesley X1 : Platform specific information 64040d553cfSPaul Beesley 64140d553cfSPaul BeesleyBL31 zero-init sections (e.g. ``.bss``) should not contain valid data on entry, 64240d553cfSPaul Beesleythese will be zero filled prior to invoking platform setup code. 64340d553cfSPaul Beesley 64440d553cfSPaul BeesleyUse of the X0 and X1 parameters 64540d553cfSPaul Beesley''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''' 64640d553cfSPaul Beesley 64740d553cfSPaul BeesleyThe parameters are platform specific and passed from ``bl31_entrypoint()`` to 64840d553cfSPaul Beesley``bl31_early_platform_setup()``. The value of these parameters is never directly 64940d553cfSPaul Beesleyused by the common BL31 code. 65040d553cfSPaul Beesley 65140d553cfSPaul BeesleyThe convention is that ``X0`` conveys information regarding the BL31, BL32 and 65240d553cfSPaul BeesleyBL33 images from the Trusted Boot firmware and ``X1`` can be used for other 65340d553cfSPaul Beesleyplatform specific purpose. This convention allows platforms which use TF-A's 65440d553cfSPaul BeesleyBL1 and BL2 images to transfer additional platform specific information from 65540d553cfSPaul BeesleySecure Boot without conflicting with future evolution of TF-A using ``X0`` to 65640d553cfSPaul Beesleypass a ``bl31_params`` structure. 65740d553cfSPaul Beesley 65840d553cfSPaul BeesleyBL31 common and SPD initialization code depends on image and entrypoint 65940d553cfSPaul Beesleyinformation about BL33 and BL32, which is provided via BL31 platform APIs. 66040d553cfSPaul BeesleyThis information is required until the start of execution of BL33. This 66140d553cfSPaul Beesleyinformation can be provided in a platform defined manner, e.g. compiled into 66240d553cfSPaul Beesleythe platform code in BL31, or provided in a platform defined memory location 66340d553cfSPaul Beesleyby the Trusted Boot firmware, or passed from the Trusted Boot Firmware via the 66440d553cfSPaul BeesleyCold boot Initialization parameters. This data may need to be cleaned out of 66540d553cfSPaul Beesleythe CPU caches if it is provided by an earlier boot stage and then accessed by 66640d553cfSPaul BeesleyBL31 platform code before the caches are enabled. 66740d553cfSPaul Beesley 66840d553cfSPaul BeesleyTF-A's BL2 implementation passes a ``bl31_params`` structure in 66940d553cfSPaul Beesley``X0`` and the Arm development platforms interpret this in the BL31 platform 67040d553cfSPaul Beesleycode. 67140d553cfSPaul Beesley 67240d553cfSPaul BeesleyMMU, Data caches & Coherency 67340d553cfSPaul Beesley'''''''''''''''''''''''''''' 67440d553cfSPaul Beesley 67540d553cfSPaul BeesleyBL31 does not depend on the enabled state of the MMU, data caches or 67640d553cfSPaul Beesleyinterconnect coherency on entry to ``bl31_entrypoint()``. If these are disabled 67740d553cfSPaul Beesleyon entry, these should be enabled during ``bl31_plat_arch_setup()``. 67840d553cfSPaul Beesley 67940d553cfSPaul BeesleyData structures used in the BL31 cold boot interface 68040d553cfSPaul Beesley'''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''' 68140d553cfSPaul Beesley 68240d553cfSPaul BeesleyThese structures are designed to support compatibility and independent 68340d553cfSPaul Beesleyevolution of the structures and the firmware images. For example, a version of 68440d553cfSPaul BeesleyBL31 that can interpret the BL3x image information from different versions of 68540d553cfSPaul BeesleyBL2, a platform that uses an extended entry_point_info structure to convey 68640d553cfSPaul Beesleyadditional register information to BL31, or a ELF image loader that can convey 68740d553cfSPaul Beesleymore details about the firmware images. 68840d553cfSPaul Beesley 68940d553cfSPaul BeesleyTo support these scenarios the structures are versioned and sized, which enables 69040d553cfSPaul BeesleyBL31 to detect which information is present and respond appropriately. The 69140d553cfSPaul Beesley``param_header`` is defined to capture this information: 69240d553cfSPaul Beesley 69340d553cfSPaul Beesley.. code:: c 69440d553cfSPaul Beesley 69540d553cfSPaul Beesley typedef struct param_header { 69640d553cfSPaul Beesley uint8_t type; /* type of the structure */ 69740d553cfSPaul Beesley uint8_t version; /* version of this structure */ 69840d553cfSPaul Beesley uint16_t size; /* size of this structure in bytes */ 69940d553cfSPaul Beesley uint32_t attr; /* attributes: unused bits SBZ */ 70040d553cfSPaul Beesley } param_header_t; 70140d553cfSPaul Beesley 70240d553cfSPaul BeesleyThe structures using this format are ``entry_point_info``, ``image_info`` and 70340d553cfSPaul Beesley``bl31_params``. The code that allocates and populates these structures must set 70440d553cfSPaul Beesleythe header fields appropriately, and the ``SET_PARAM_HEAD()`` a macro is defined 70540d553cfSPaul Beesleyto simplify this action. 70640d553cfSPaul Beesley 70740d553cfSPaul BeesleyRequired CPU state for BL31 Warm boot initialization 70840d553cfSPaul Beesley^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 70940d553cfSPaul Beesley 71040d553cfSPaul BeesleyWhen requesting a CPU power-on, or suspending a running CPU, TF-A provides 71140d553cfSPaul Beesleythe platform power management code with a Warm boot initialization 71240d553cfSPaul Beesleyentry-point, to be invoked by the CPU immediately after the reset handler. 71340d553cfSPaul BeesleyOn entry to the Warm boot initialization function the calling CPU must be in 71440d553cfSPaul BeesleyAArch64 EL3, little-endian data access and all interrupt sources masked: 71540d553cfSPaul Beesley 71640d553cfSPaul Beesley:: 71740d553cfSPaul Beesley 71840d553cfSPaul Beesley PSTATE.EL = 3 71940d553cfSPaul Beesley PSTATE.RW = 1 72040d553cfSPaul Beesley PSTATE.DAIF = 0xf 72140d553cfSPaul Beesley SCTLR_EL3.EE = 0 72240d553cfSPaul Beesley 72340d553cfSPaul BeesleyThe PSCI implementation will initialize the processor state and ensure that the 72440d553cfSPaul Beesleyplatform power management code is then invoked as required to initialize all 72540d553cfSPaul Beesleynecessary system, cluster and CPU resources. 72640d553cfSPaul Beesley 72740d553cfSPaul BeesleyAArch32 EL3 Runtime Software entrypoint interface 72840d553cfSPaul Beesley~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 72940d553cfSPaul Beesley 73040d553cfSPaul BeesleyTo enable this firmware architecture it is important to provide a fully 73140d553cfSPaul Beesleydocumented and stable interface between the Trusted Boot Firmware and the 73240d553cfSPaul BeesleyAArch32 EL3 Runtime Software. 73340d553cfSPaul Beesley 73440d553cfSPaul BeesleyFuture changes to the entrypoint interface will be done in a backwards 73540d553cfSPaul Beesleycompatible way, and this enables these firmware components to be independently 73640d553cfSPaul Beesleyenhanced/updated to develop and exploit new functionality. 73740d553cfSPaul Beesley 73840d553cfSPaul BeesleyRequired CPU state when entering during cold boot 73940d553cfSPaul Beesley^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 74040d553cfSPaul Beesley 74140d553cfSPaul BeesleyThis function must only be called by the primary CPU. 74240d553cfSPaul Beesley 74340d553cfSPaul BeesleyOn entry to this function the calling primary CPU must be executing in AArch32 74440d553cfSPaul BeesleyEL3, little-endian data access, and all interrupt sources masked: 74540d553cfSPaul Beesley 74640d553cfSPaul Beesley:: 74740d553cfSPaul Beesley 74840d553cfSPaul Beesley PSTATE.AIF = 0x7 74940d553cfSPaul Beesley SCTLR.EE = 0 75040d553cfSPaul Beesley 75140d553cfSPaul BeesleyR0 and R1 are used to pass information from the Trusted Boot Firmware to the 75240d553cfSPaul Beesleyplatform code in AArch32 EL3 Runtime Software: 75340d553cfSPaul Beesley 75440d553cfSPaul Beesley:: 75540d553cfSPaul Beesley 75640d553cfSPaul Beesley R0 : Reserved for common TF-A information 75740d553cfSPaul Beesley R1 : Platform specific information 75840d553cfSPaul Beesley 75940d553cfSPaul BeesleyUse of the R0 and R1 parameters 76040d553cfSPaul Beesley''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''' 76140d553cfSPaul Beesley 76240d553cfSPaul BeesleyThe parameters are platform specific and the convention is that ``R0`` conveys 76340d553cfSPaul Beesleyinformation regarding the BL3x images from the Trusted Boot firmware and ``R1`` 76440d553cfSPaul Beesleycan be used for other platform specific purpose. This convention allows 76540d553cfSPaul Beesleyplatforms which use TF-A's BL1 and BL2 images to transfer additional platform 76640d553cfSPaul Beesleyspecific information from Secure Boot without conflicting with future 76740d553cfSPaul Beesleyevolution of TF-A using ``R0`` to pass a ``bl_params`` structure. 76840d553cfSPaul Beesley 76940d553cfSPaul BeesleyThe AArch32 EL3 Runtime Software is responsible for entry into BL33. This 77040d553cfSPaul Beesleyinformation can be obtained in a platform defined manner, e.g. compiled into 77140d553cfSPaul Beesleythe AArch32 EL3 Runtime Software, or provided in a platform defined memory 77240d553cfSPaul Beesleylocation by the Trusted Boot firmware, or passed from the Trusted Boot Firmware 77340d553cfSPaul Beesleyvia the Cold boot Initialization parameters. This data may need to be cleaned 77440d553cfSPaul Beesleyout of the CPU caches if it is provided by an earlier boot stage and then 77540d553cfSPaul Beesleyaccessed by AArch32 EL3 Runtime Software before the caches are enabled. 77640d553cfSPaul Beesley 77740d553cfSPaul BeesleyWhen using AArch32 EL3 Runtime Software, the Arm development platforms pass a 77840d553cfSPaul Beesley``bl_params`` structure in ``R0`` from BL2 to be interpreted by AArch32 EL3 Runtime 77940d553cfSPaul BeesleySoftware platform code. 78040d553cfSPaul Beesley 78140d553cfSPaul BeesleyMMU, Data caches & Coherency 78240d553cfSPaul Beesley'''''''''''''''''''''''''''' 78340d553cfSPaul Beesley 78440d553cfSPaul BeesleyAArch32 EL3 Runtime Software must not depend on the enabled state of the MMU, 78540d553cfSPaul Beesleydata caches or interconnect coherency in its entrypoint. They must be explicitly 78640d553cfSPaul Beesleyenabled if required. 78740d553cfSPaul Beesley 78840d553cfSPaul BeesleyData structures used in cold boot interface 78940d553cfSPaul Beesley''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''' 79040d553cfSPaul Beesley 79140d553cfSPaul BeesleyThe AArch32 EL3 Runtime Software cold boot interface uses ``bl_params`` instead 79240d553cfSPaul Beesleyof ``bl31_params``. The ``bl_params`` structure is based on the convention 79340d553cfSPaul Beesleydescribed in AArch64 BL31 cold boot interface section. 79440d553cfSPaul Beesley 79540d553cfSPaul BeesleyRequired CPU state for warm boot initialization 79640d553cfSPaul Beesley^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 79740d553cfSPaul Beesley 79840d553cfSPaul BeesleyWhen requesting a CPU power-on, or suspending a running CPU, AArch32 EL3 79940d553cfSPaul BeesleyRuntime Software must ensure execution of a warm boot initialization entrypoint. 80040d553cfSPaul BeesleyIf TF-A BL1 is used and the PROGRAMMABLE_RESET_ADDRESS build flag is false, 80140d553cfSPaul Beesleythen AArch32 EL3 Runtime Software must ensure that BL1 branches to the warm 80240d553cfSPaul Beesleyboot entrypoint by arranging for the BL1 platform function, 80340d553cfSPaul Beesleyplat_get_my_entrypoint(), to return a non-zero value. 80440d553cfSPaul Beesley 80540d553cfSPaul BeesleyIn this case, the warm boot entrypoint must be in AArch32 EL3, little-endian 80640d553cfSPaul Beesleydata access and all interrupt sources masked: 80740d553cfSPaul Beesley 80840d553cfSPaul Beesley:: 80940d553cfSPaul Beesley 81040d553cfSPaul Beesley PSTATE.AIF = 0x7 81140d553cfSPaul Beesley SCTLR.EE = 0 81240d553cfSPaul Beesley 81340d553cfSPaul BeesleyThe warm boot entrypoint may be implemented by using TF-A 81440d553cfSPaul Beesley``psci_warmboot_entrypoint()`` function. In that case, the platform must fulfil 81540d553cfSPaul Beesleythe pre-requisites mentioned in the `PSCI Library integration guide`_. 81640d553cfSPaul Beesley 81740d553cfSPaul BeesleyEL3 runtime services framework 81840d553cfSPaul Beesley------------------------------ 81940d553cfSPaul Beesley 82040d553cfSPaul BeesleySoftware executing in the non-secure state and in the secure state at exception 82140d553cfSPaul Beesleylevels lower than EL3 will request runtime services using the Secure Monitor 82240d553cfSPaul BeesleyCall (SMC) instruction. These requests will follow the convention described in 82340d553cfSPaul Beesleythe SMC Calling Convention PDD (`SMCCC`_). The `SMCCC`_ assigns function 82440d553cfSPaul Beesleyidentifiers to each SMC request and describes how arguments are passed and 82540d553cfSPaul Beesleyreturned. 82640d553cfSPaul Beesley 82740d553cfSPaul BeesleyThe EL3 runtime services framework enables the development of services by 82840d553cfSPaul Beesleydifferent providers that can be easily integrated into final product firmware. 82940d553cfSPaul BeesleyThe following sections describe the framework which facilitates the 83040d553cfSPaul Beesleyregistration, initialization and use of runtime services in EL3 Runtime 83140d553cfSPaul BeesleySoftware (BL31). 83240d553cfSPaul Beesley 83340d553cfSPaul BeesleyThe design of the runtime services depends heavily on the concepts and 83440d553cfSPaul Beesleydefinitions described in the `SMCCC`_, in particular SMC Function IDs, Owning 83540d553cfSPaul BeesleyEntity Numbers (OEN), Fast and Yielding calls, and the SMC32 and SMC64 calling 83640d553cfSPaul Beesleyconventions. Please refer to that document for more detailed explanation of 83740d553cfSPaul Beesleythese terms. 83840d553cfSPaul Beesley 83940d553cfSPaul BeesleyThe following runtime services are expected to be implemented first. They have 84040d553cfSPaul Beesleynot all been instantiated in the current implementation. 84140d553cfSPaul Beesley 84240d553cfSPaul Beesley#. Standard service calls 84340d553cfSPaul Beesley 84440d553cfSPaul Beesley This service is for management of the entire system. The Power State 84540d553cfSPaul Beesley Coordination Interface (`PSCI`_) is the first set of standard service calls 84640d553cfSPaul Beesley defined by Arm (see PSCI section later). 84740d553cfSPaul Beesley 84840d553cfSPaul Beesley#. Secure-EL1 Payload Dispatcher service 84940d553cfSPaul Beesley 85040d553cfSPaul Beesley If a system runs a Trusted OS or other Secure-EL1 Payload (SP) then 85140d553cfSPaul Beesley it also requires a *Secure Monitor* at EL3 to switch the EL1 processor 85240d553cfSPaul Beesley context between the normal world (EL1/EL2) and trusted world (Secure-EL1). 85340d553cfSPaul Beesley The Secure Monitor will make these world switches in response to SMCs. The 85440d553cfSPaul Beesley `SMCCC`_ provides for such SMCs with the Trusted OS Call and Trusted 85540d553cfSPaul Beesley Application Call OEN ranges. 85640d553cfSPaul Beesley 85740d553cfSPaul Beesley The interface between the EL3 Runtime Software and the Secure-EL1 Payload is 85840d553cfSPaul Beesley not defined by the `SMCCC`_ or any other standard. As a result, each 85940d553cfSPaul Beesley Secure-EL1 Payload requires a specific Secure Monitor that runs as a runtime 86040d553cfSPaul Beesley service - within TF-A this service is referred to as the Secure-EL1 Payload 86140d553cfSPaul Beesley Dispatcher (SPD). 86240d553cfSPaul Beesley 86340d553cfSPaul Beesley TF-A provides a Test Secure-EL1 Payload (TSP) and its associated Dispatcher 86440d553cfSPaul Beesley (TSPD). Details of SPD design and TSP/TSPD operation are described in the 86540d553cfSPaul Beesley "Secure-EL1 Payloads and Dispatchers" section below. 86640d553cfSPaul Beesley 86740d553cfSPaul Beesley#. CPU implementation service 86840d553cfSPaul Beesley 86940d553cfSPaul Beesley This service will provide an interface to CPU implementation specific 87040d553cfSPaul Beesley services for a given platform e.g. access to processor errata workarounds. 87140d553cfSPaul Beesley This service is currently unimplemented. 87240d553cfSPaul Beesley 87340d553cfSPaul BeesleyAdditional services for Arm Architecture, SiP and OEM calls can be implemented. 87440d553cfSPaul BeesleyEach implemented service handles a range of SMC function identifiers as 87540d553cfSPaul Beesleydescribed in the `SMCCC`_. 87640d553cfSPaul Beesley 87740d553cfSPaul BeesleyRegistration 87840d553cfSPaul Beesley~~~~~~~~~~~~ 87940d553cfSPaul Beesley 88040d553cfSPaul BeesleyA runtime service is registered using the ``DECLARE_RT_SVC()`` macro, specifying 88140d553cfSPaul Beesleythe name of the service, the range of OENs covered, the type of service and 88240d553cfSPaul Beesleyinitialization and call handler functions. This macro instantiates a ``const struct rt_svc_desc`` for the service with these details (see ``runtime_svc.h``). 88340d553cfSPaul BeesleyThis structure is allocated in a special ELF section ``rt_svc_descs``, enabling 88440d553cfSPaul Beesleythe framework to find all service descriptors included into BL31. 88540d553cfSPaul Beesley 88640d553cfSPaul BeesleyThe specific service for a SMC Function is selected based on the OEN and call 88740d553cfSPaul Beesleytype of the Function ID, and the framework uses that information in the service 88840d553cfSPaul Beesleydescriptor to identify the handler for the SMC Call. 88940d553cfSPaul Beesley 89040d553cfSPaul BeesleyThe service descriptors do not include information to identify the precise set 89140d553cfSPaul Beesleyof SMC function identifiers supported by this service implementation, the 89240d553cfSPaul Beesleysecurity state from which such calls are valid nor the capability to support 89340d553cfSPaul Beesley64-bit and/or 32-bit callers (using SMC32 or SMC64). Responding appropriately 89440d553cfSPaul Beesleyto these aspects of a SMC call is the responsibility of the service 89540d553cfSPaul Beesleyimplementation, the framework is focused on integration of services from 89640d553cfSPaul Beesleydifferent providers and minimizing the time taken by the framework before the 89740d553cfSPaul Beesleyservice handler is invoked. 89840d553cfSPaul Beesley 89940d553cfSPaul BeesleyDetails of the parameters, requirements and behavior of the initialization and 90040d553cfSPaul Beesleycall handling functions are provided in the following sections. 90140d553cfSPaul Beesley 90240d553cfSPaul BeesleyInitialization 90340d553cfSPaul Beesley~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 90440d553cfSPaul Beesley 90540d553cfSPaul Beesley``runtime_svc_init()`` in ``runtime_svc.c`` initializes the runtime services 90640d553cfSPaul Beesleyframework running on the primary CPU during cold boot as part of the BL31 90740d553cfSPaul Beesleyinitialization. This happens prior to initializing a Trusted OS and running 90840d553cfSPaul BeesleyNormal world boot firmware that might in turn use these services. 90940d553cfSPaul BeesleyInitialization involves validating each of the declared runtime service 91040d553cfSPaul Beesleydescriptors, calling the service initialization function and populating the 91140d553cfSPaul Beesleyindex used for runtime lookup of the service. 91240d553cfSPaul Beesley 91340d553cfSPaul BeesleyThe BL31 linker script collects all of the declared service descriptors into a 91440d553cfSPaul Beesleysingle array and defines symbols that allow the framework to locate and traverse 91540d553cfSPaul Beesleythe array, and determine its size. 91640d553cfSPaul Beesley 91740d553cfSPaul BeesleyThe framework does basic validation of each descriptor to halt firmware 91840d553cfSPaul Beesleyinitialization if service declaration errors are detected. The framework does 91940d553cfSPaul Beesleynot check descriptors for the following error conditions, and may behave in an 92040d553cfSPaul Beesleyunpredictable manner under such scenarios: 92140d553cfSPaul Beesley 92240d553cfSPaul Beesley#. Overlapping OEN ranges 92340d553cfSPaul Beesley#. Multiple descriptors for the same range of OENs and ``call_type`` 92440d553cfSPaul Beesley#. Incorrect range of owning entity numbers for a given ``call_type`` 92540d553cfSPaul Beesley 92640d553cfSPaul BeesleyOnce validated, the service ``init()`` callback is invoked. This function carries 92740d553cfSPaul Beesleyout any essential EL3 initialization before servicing requests. The ``init()`` 92840d553cfSPaul Beesleyfunction is only invoked on the primary CPU during cold boot. If the service 92940d553cfSPaul Beesleyuses per-CPU data this must either be initialized for all CPUs during this call, 93040d553cfSPaul Beesleyor be done lazily when a CPU first issues an SMC call to that service. If 93140d553cfSPaul Beesley``init()`` returns anything other than ``0``, this is treated as an initialization 93240d553cfSPaul Beesleyerror and the service is ignored: this does not cause the firmware to halt. 93340d553cfSPaul Beesley 93440d553cfSPaul BeesleyThe OEN and call type fields present in the SMC Function ID cover a total of 93540d553cfSPaul Beesley128 distinct services, but in practice a single descriptor can cover a range of 93640d553cfSPaul BeesleyOENs, e.g. SMCs to call a Trusted OS function. To optimize the lookup of a 93740d553cfSPaul Beesleyservice handler, the framework uses an array of 128 indices that map every 93840d553cfSPaul Beesleydistinct OEN/call-type combination either to one of the declared services or to 93940d553cfSPaul Beesleyindicate the service is not handled. This ``rt_svc_descs_indices[]`` array is 94040d553cfSPaul Beesleypopulated for all of the OENs covered by a service after the service ``init()`` 94140d553cfSPaul Beesleyfunction has reported success. So a service that fails to initialize will never 94240d553cfSPaul Beesleyhave it's ``handle()`` function invoked. 94340d553cfSPaul Beesley 94440d553cfSPaul BeesleyThe following figure shows how the ``rt_svc_descs_indices[]`` index maps the SMC 94540d553cfSPaul BeesleyFunction ID call type and OEN onto a specific service handler in the 94640d553cfSPaul Beesley``rt_svc_descs[]`` array. 94740d553cfSPaul Beesley 94840d553cfSPaul Beesley|Image 1| 94940d553cfSPaul Beesley 95040d553cfSPaul BeesleyHandling an SMC 95140d553cfSPaul Beesley~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 95240d553cfSPaul Beesley 95340d553cfSPaul BeesleyWhen the EL3 runtime services framework receives a Secure Monitor Call, the SMC 95440d553cfSPaul BeesleyFunction ID is passed in W0 from the lower exception level (as per the 95540d553cfSPaul Beesley`SMCCC`_). If the calling register width is AArch32, it is invalid to invoke an 95640d553cfSPaul BeesleySMC Function which indicates the SMC64 calling convention: such calls are 95740d553cfSPaul Beesleyignored and return the Unknown SMC Function Identifier result code ``0xFFFFFFFF`` 95840d553cfSPaul Beesleyin R0/X0. 95940d553cfSPaul Beesley 96040d553cfSPaul BeesleyBit[31] (fast/yielding call) and bits[29:24] (owning entity number) of the SMC 96140d553cfSPaul BeesleyFunction ID are combined to index into the ``rt_svc_descs_indices[]`` array. The 96240d553cfSPaul Beesleyresulting value might indicate a service that has no handler, in this case the 96340d553cfSPaul Beesleyframework will also report an Unknown SMC Function ID. Otherwise, the value is 96440d553cfSPaul Beesleyused as a further index into the ``rt_svc_descs[]`` array to locate the required 96540d553cfSPaul Beesleyservice and handler. 96640d553cfSPaul Beesley 96740d553cfSPaul BeesleyThe service's ``handle()`` callback is provided with five of the SMC parameters 96840d553cfSPaul Beesleydirectly, the others are saved into memory for retrieval (if needed) by the 96940d553cfSPaul Beesleyhandler. The handler is also provided with an opaque ``handle`` for use with the 97040d553cfSPaul Beesleysupporting library for parameter retrieval, setting return values and context 97140d553cfSPaul Beesleymanipulation; and with ``flags`` indicating the security state of the caller. The 97240d553cfSPaul Beesleyframework finally sets up the execution stack for the handler, and invokes the 97340d553cfSPaul Beesleyservices ``handle()`` function. 97440d553cfSPaul Beesley 97540d553cfSPaul BeesleyOn return from the handler the result registers are populated in X0-X3 before 97640d553cfSPaul Beesleyrestoring the stack and CPU state and returning from the original SMC. 97740d553cfSPaul Beesley 97840d553cfSPaul BeesleyException Handling Framework 97940d553cfSPaul Beesley---------------------------- 98040d553cfSPaul Beesley 98140d553cfSPaul BeesleyPlease refer to the `Exception Handling Framework`_ document. 98240d553cfSPaul Beesley 98340d553cfSPaul BeesleyPower State Coordination Interface 98440d553cfSPaul Beesley---------------------------------- 98540d553cfSPaul Beesley 98640d553cfSPaul BeesleyTODO: Provide design walkthrough of PSCI implementation. 98740d553cfSPaul Beesley 98840d553cfSPaul BeesleyThe PSCI v1.1 specification categorizes APIs as optional and mandatory. All the 98940d553cfSPaul Beesleymandatory APIs in PSCI v1.1, PSCI v1.0 and in PSCI v0.2 draft specification 99040d553cfSPaul Beesley`Power State Coordination Interface PDD`_ are implemented. The table lists 99140d553cfSPaul Beesleythe PSCI v1.1 APIs and their support in generic code. 99240d553cfSPaul Beesley 99340d553cfSPaul BeesleyAn API implementation might have a dependency on platform code e.g. CPU_SUSPEND 99440d553cfSPaul Beesleyrequires the platform to export a part of the implementation. Hence the level 99540d553cfSPaul Beesleyof support of the mandatory APIs depends upon the support exported by the 99640d553cfSPaul Beesleyplatform port as well. The Juno and FVP (all variants) platforms export all the 99740d553cfSPaul Beesleyrequired support. 99840d553cfSPaul Beesley 99940d553cfSPaul Beesley+-----------------------------+-------------+-------------------------------+ 100040d553cfSPaul Beesley| PSCI v1.1 API | Supported | Comments | 100140d553cfSPaul Beesley+=============================+=============+===============================+ 100240d553cfSPaul Beesley| ``PSCI_VERSION`` | Yes | The version returned is 1.1 | 100340d553cfSPaul Beesley+-----------------------------+-------------+-------------------------------+ 100440d553cfSPaul Beesley| ``CPU_SUSPEND`` | Yes\* | | 100540d553cfSPaul Beesley+-----------------------------+-------------+-------------------------------+ 100640d553cfSPaul Beesley| ``CPU_OFF`` | Yes\* | | 100740d553cfSPaul Beesley+-----------------------------+-------------+-------------------------------+ 100840d553cfSPaul Beesley| ``CPU_ON`` | Yes\* | | 100940d553cfSPaul Beesley+-----------------------------+-------------+-------------------------------+ 101040d553cfSPaul Beesley| ``AFFINITY_INFO`` | Yes | | 101140d553cfSPaul Beesley+-----------------------------+-------------+-------------------------------+ 101240d553cfSPaul Beesley| ``MIGRATE`` | Yes\*\* | | 101340d553cfSPaul Beesley+-----------------------------+-------------+-------------------------------+ 101440d553cfSPaul Beesley| ``MIGRATE_INFO_TYPE`` | Yes\*\* | | 101540d553cfSPaul Beesley+-----------------------------+-------------+-------------------------------+ 101640d553cfSPaul Beesley| ``MIGRATE_INFO_CPU`` | Yes\*\* | | 101740d553cfSPaul Beesley+-----------------------------+-------------+-------------------------------+ 101840d553cfSPaul Beesley| ``SYSTEM_OFF`` | Yes\* | | 101940d553cfSPaul Beesley+-----------------------------+-------------+-------------------------------+ 102040d553cfSPaul Beesley| ``SYSTEM_RESET`` | Yes\* | | 102140d553cfSPaul Beesley+-----------------------------+-------------+-------------------------------+ 102240d553cfSPaul Beesley| ``PSCI_FEATURES`` | Yes | | 102340d553cfSPaul Beesley+-----------------------------+-------------+-------------------------------+ 102440d553cfSPaul Beesley| ``CPU_FREEZE`` | No | | 102540d553cfSPaul Beesley+-----------------------------+-------------+-------------------------------+ 102640d553cfSPaul Beesley| ``CPU_DEFAULT_SUSPEND`` | No | | 102740d553cfSPaul Beesley+-----------------------------+-------------+-------------------------------+ 102840d553cfSPaul Beesley| ``NODE_HW_STATE`` | Yes\* | | 102940d553cfSPaul Beesley+-----------------------------+-------------+-------------------------------+ 103040d553cfSPaul Beesley| ``SYSTEM_SUSPEND`` | Yes\* | | 103140d553cfSPaul Beesley+-----------------------------+-------------+-------------------------------+ 103240d553cfSPaul Beesley| ``PSCI_SET_SUSPEND_MODE`` | No | | 103340d553cfSPaul Beesley+-----------------------------+-------------+-------------------------------+ 103440d553cfSPaul Beesley| ``PSCI_STAT_RESIDENCY`` | Yes\* | | 103540d553cfSPaul Beesley+-----------------------------+-------------+-------------------------------+ 103640d553cfSPaul Beesley| ``PSCI_STAT_COUNT`` | Yes\* | | 103740d553cfSPaul Beesley+-----------------------------+-------------+-------------------------------+ 103840d553cfSPaul Beesley| ``SYSTEM_RESET2`` | Yes\* | | 103940d553cfSPaul Beesley+-----------------------------+-------------+-------------------------------+ 104040d553cfSPaul Beesley| ``MEM_PROTECT`` | Yes\* | | 104140d553cfSPaul Beesley+-----------------------------+-------------+-------------------------------+ 104240d553cfSPaul Beesley| ``MEM_PROTECT_CHECK_RANGE`` | Yes\* | | 104340d553cfSPaul Beesley+-----------------------------+-------------+-------------------------------+ 104440d553cfSPaul Beesley 104540d553cfSPaul Beesley\*Note : These PSCI APIs require platform power management hooks to be 104640d553cfSPaul Beesleyregistered with the generic PSCI code to be supported. 104740d553cfSPaul Beesley 104840d553cfSPaul Beesley\*\*Note : These PSCI APIs require appropriate Secure Payload Dispatcher 104940d553cfSPaul Beesleyhooks to be registered with the generic PSCI code to be supported. 105040d553cfSPaul Beesley 105140d553cfSPaul BeesleyThe PSCI implementation in TF-A is a library which can be integrated with 105240d553cfSPaul BeesleyAArch64 or AArch32 EL3 Runtime Software for Armv8-A systems. A guide to 105340d553cfSPaul Beesleyintegrating PSCI library with AArch32 EL3 Runtime Software can be found 105440d553cfSPaul Beesley`here`_. 105540d553cfSPaul Beesley 105640d553cfSPaul BeesleySecure-EL1 Payloads and Dispatchers 105740d553cfSPaul Beesley----------------------------------- 105840d553cfSPaul Beesley 105940d553cfSPaul BeesleyOn a production system that includes a Trusted OS running in Secure-EL1/EL0, 106040d553cfSPaul Beesleythe Trusted OS is coupled with a companion runtime service in the BL31 106140d553cfSPaul Beesleyfirmware. This service is responsible for the initialisation of the Trusted 106240d553cfSPaul BeesleyOS and all communications with it. The Trusted OS is the BL32 stage of the 106340d553cfSPaul Beesleyboot flow in TF-A. The firmware will attempt to locate, load and execute a 106440d553cfSPaul BeesleyBL32 image. 106540d553cfSPaul Beesley 106640d553cfSPaul BeesleyTF-A uses a more general term for the BL32 software that runs at Secure-EL1 - 106740d553cfSPaul Beesleythe *Secure-EL1 Payload* - as it is not always a Trusted OS. 106840d553cfSPaul Beesley 106940d553cfSPaul BeesleyTF-A provides a Test Secure-EL1 Payload (TSP) and a Test Secure-EL1 Payload 107040d553cfSPaul BeesleyDispatcher (TSPD) service as an example of how a Trusted OS is supported on a 107140d553cfSPaul Beesleyproduction system using the Runtime Services Framework. On such a system, the 107240d553cfSPaul BeesleyTest BL32 image and service are replaced by the Trusted OS and its dispatcher 107340d553cfSPaul Beesleyservice. The TF-A build system expects that the dispatcher will define the 107440d553cfSPaul Beesleybuild flag ``NEED_BL32`` to enable it to include the BL32 in the build either 107540d553cfSPaul Beesleyas a binary or to compile from source depending on whether the ``BL32`` build 107640d553cfSPaul Beesleyoption is specified or not. 107740d553cfSPaul Beesley 107840d553cfSPaul BeesleyThe TSP runs in Secure-EL1. It is designed to demonstrate synchronous 107940d553cfSPaul Beesleycommunication with the normal-world software running in EL1/EL2. Communication 108040d553cfSPaul Beesleyis initiated by the normal-world software 108140d553cfSPaul Beesley 108240d553cfSPaul Beesley- either directly through a Fast SMC (as defined in the `SMCCC`_) 108340d553cfSPaul Beesley 108440d553cfSPaul Beesley- or indirectly through a `PSCI`_ SMC. The `PSCI`_ implementation in turn 108540d553cfSPaul Beesley informs the TSPD about the requested power management operation. This allows 108640d553cfSPaul Beesley the TSP to prepare for or respond to the power state change 108740d553cfSPaul Beesley 108840d553cfSPaul BeesleyThe TSPD service is responsible for. 108940d553cfSPaul Beesley 109040d553cfSPaul Beesley- Initializing the TSP 109140d553cfSPaul Beesley 109240d553cfSPaul Beesley- Routing requests and responses between the secure and the non-secure 109340d553cfSPaul Beesley states during the two types of communications just described 109440d553cfSPaul Beesley 109540d553cfSPaul BeesleyInitializing a BL32 Image 109640d553cfSPaul Beesley~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 109740d553cfSPaul Beesley 109840d553cfSPaul BeesleyThe Secure-EL1 Payload Dispatcher (SPD) service is responsible for initializing 109940d553cfSPaul Beesleythe BL32 image. It needs access to the information passed by BL2 to BL31 to do 110040d553cfSPaul Beesleyso. This is provided by: 110140d553cfSPaul Beesley 110240d553cfSPaul Beesley.. code:: c 110340d553cfSPaul Beesley 110440d553cfSPaul Beesley entry_point_info_t *bl31_plat_get_next_image_ep_info(uint32_t); 110540d553cfSPaul Beesley 110640d553cfSPaul Beesleywhich returns a reference to the ``entry_point_info`` structure corresponding to 110740d553cfSPaul Beesleythe image which will be run in the specified security state. The SPD uses this 110840d553cfSPaul BeesleyAPI to get entry point information for the SECURE image, BL32. 110940d553cfSPaul Beesley 111040d553cfSPaul BeesleyIn the absence of a BL32 image, BL31 passes control to the normal world 111140d553cfSPaul Beesleybootloader image (BL33). When the BL32 image is present, it is typical 111240d553cfSPaul Beesleythat the SPD wants control to be passed to BL32 first and then later to BL33. 111340d553cfSPaul Beesley 111440d553cfSPaul BeesleyTo do this the SPD has to register a BL32 initialization function during 111540d553cfSPaul Beesleyinitialization of the SPD service. The BL32 initialization function has this 111640d553cfSPaul Beesleyprototype: 111740d553cfSPaul Beesley 111840d553cfSPaul Beesley.. code:: c 111940d553cfSPaul Beesley 112040d553cfSPaul Beesley int32_t init(void); 112140d553cfSPaul Beesley 112240d553cfSPaul Beesleyand is registered using the ``bl31_register_bl32_init()`` function. 112340d553cfSPaul Beesley 112440d553cfSPaul BeesleyTF-A supports two approaches for the SPD to pass control to BL32 before 112540d553cfSPaul Beesleyreturning through EL3 and running the non-trusted firmware (BL33): 112640d553cfSPaul Beesley 112740d553cfSPaul Beesley#. In the BL32 setup function, use ``bl31_set_next_image_type()`` to 112840d553cfSPaul Beesley request that the exit from ``bl31_main()`` is to the BL32 entrypoint in 112940d553cfSPaul Beesley Secure-EL1. BL31 will exit to BL32 using the asynchronous method by 113040d553cfSPaul Beesley calling ``bl31_prepare_next_image_entry()`` and ``el3_exit()``. 113140d553cfSPaul Beesley 113240d553cfSPaul Beesley When the BL32 has completed initialization at Secure-EL1, it returns to 113340d553cfSPaul Beesley BL31 by issuing an SMC, using a Function ID allocated to the SPD. On 113440d553cfSPaul Beesley receipt of this SMC, the SPD service handler should switch the CPU context 113540d553cfSPaul Beesley from trusted to normal world and use the ``bl31_set_next_image_type()`` and 113640d553cfSPaul Beesley ``bl31_prepare_next_image_entry()`` functions to set up the initial return to 113740d553cfSPaul Beesley the normal world firmware BL33. On return from the handler the framework 113840d553cfSPaul Beesley will exit to EL2 and run BL33. 113940d553cfSPaul Beesley 114040d553cfSPaul Beesley#. The BL32 setup function registers an initialization function using 114140d553cfSPaul Beesley ``bl31_register_bl32_init()`` which provides a SPD-defined mechanism to 114240d553cfSPaul Beesley invoke a 'world-switch synchronous call' to Secure-EL1 to run the BL32 114340d553cfSPaul Beesley entrypoint. 1144e1c5026aSPaul Beesley 1145e1c5026aSPaul Beesley .. note:: 1146e1c5026aSPaul Beesley The Test SPD service included with TF-A provides one implementation 114740d553cfSPaul Beesley of such a mechanism. 114840d553cfSPaul Beesley 114940d553cfSPaul Beesley On completion BL32 returns control to BL31 via a SMC, and on receipt the 115040d553cfSPaul Beesley SPD service handler invokes the synchronous call return mechanism to return 115140d553cfSPaul Beesley to the BL32 initialization function. On return from this function, 115240d553cfSPaul Beesley ``bl31_main()`` will set up the return to the normal world firmware BL33 and 115340d553cfSPaul Beesley continue the boot process in the normal world. 115440d553cfSPaul Beesley 115540d553cfSPaul BeesleyCrash Reporting in BL31 115640d553cfSPaul Beesley----------------------- 115740d553cfSPaul Beesley 115840d553cfSPaul BeesleyBL31 implements a scheme for reporting the processor state when an unhandled 115940d553cfSPaul Beesleyexception is encountered. The reporting mechanism attempts to preserve all the 116040d553cfSPaul Beesleyregister contents and report it via a dedicated UART (PL011 console). BL31 116140d553cfSPaul Beesleyreports the general purpose, EL3, Secure EL1 and some EL2 state registers. 116240d553cfSPaul Beesley 116340d553cfSPaul BeesleyA dedicated per-CPU crash stack is maintained by BL31 and this is retrieved via 116440d553cfSPaul Beesleythe per-CPU pointer cache. The implementation attempts to minimise the memory 116540d553cfSPaul Beesleyrequired for this feature. The file ``crash_reporting.S`` contains the 116640d553cfSPaul Beesleyimplementation for crash reporting. 116740d553cfSPaul Beesley 116840d553cfSPaul BeesleyThe sample crash output is shown below. 116940d553cfSPaul Beesley 117040d553cfSPaul Beesley:: 117140d553cfSPaul Beesley 117240d553cfSPaul Beesley x0 :0x000000004F00007C 117340d553cfSPaul Beesley x1 :0x0000000007FFFFFF 117440d553cfSPaul Beesley x2 :0x0000000004014D50 117540d553cfSPaul Beesley x3 :0x0000000000000000 117640d553cfSPaul Beesley x4 :0x0000000088007998 117740d553cfSPaul Beesley x5 :0x00000000001343AC 117840d553cfSPaul Beesley x6 :0x0000000000000016 117940d553cfSPaul Beesley x7 :0x00000000000B8A38 118040d553cfSPaul Beesley x8 :0x00000000001343AC 118140d553cfSPaul Beesley x9 :0x00000000000101A8 118240d553cfSPaul Beesley x10 :0x0000000000000002 118340d553cfSPaul Beesley x11 :0x000000000000011C 118440d553cfSPaul Beesley x12 :0x00000000FEFDC644 118540d553cfSPaul Beesley x13 :0x00000000FED93FFC 118640d553cfSPaul Beesley x14 :0x0000000000247950 118740d553cfSPaul Beesley x15 :0x00000000000007A2 118840d553cfSPaul Beesley x16 :0x00000000000007A4 118940d553cfSPaul Beesley x17 :0x0000000000247950 119040d553cfSPaul Beesley x18 :0x0000000000000000 119140d553cfSPaul Beesley x19 :0x00000000FFFFFFFF 119240d553cfSPaul Beesley x20 :0x0000000004014D50 119340d553cfSPaul Beesley x21 :0x000000000400A38C 119440d553cfSPaul Beesley x22 :0x0000000000247950 119540d553cfSPaul Beesley x23 :0x0000000000000010 119640d553cfSPaul Beesley x24 :0x0000000000000024 119740d553cfSPaul Beesley x25 :0x00000000FEFDC868 119840d553cfSPaul Beesley x26 :0x00000000FEFDC86A 119940d553cfSPaul Beesley x27 :0x00000000019EDEDC 120040d553cfSPaul Beesley x28 :0x000000000A7CFDAA 120140d553cfSPaul Beesley x29 :0x0000000004010780 120240d553cfSPaul Beesley x30 :0x000000000400F004 120340d553cfSPaul Beesley scr_el3 :0x0000000000000D3D 120440d553cfSPaul Beesley sctlr_el3 :0x0000000000C8181F 120540d553cfSPaul Beesley cptr_el3 :0x0000000000000000 120640d553cfSPaul Beesley tcr_el3 :0x0000000080803520 120740d553cfSPaul Beesley daif :0x00000000000003C0 120840d553cfSPaul Beesley mair_el3 :0x00000000000004FF 120940d553cfSPaul Beesley spsr_el3 :0x00000000800003CC 121040d553cfSPaul Beesley elr_el3 :0x000000000400C0CC 121140d553cfSPaul Beesley ttbr0_el3 :0x00000000040172A0 121240d553cfSPaul Beesley esr_el3 :0x0000000096000210 121340d553cfSPaul Beesley sp_el3 :0x0000000004014D50 121440d553cfSPaul Beesley far_el3 :0x000000004F00007C 121540d553cfSPaul Beesley spsr_el1 :0x0000000000000000 121640d553cfSPaul Beesley elr_el1 :0x0000000000000000 121740d553cfSPaul Beesley spsr_abt :0x0000000000000000 121840d553cfSPaul Beesley spsr_und :0x0000000000000000 121940d553cfSPaul Beesley spsr_irq :0x0000000000000000 122040d553cfSPaul Beesley spsr_fiq :0x0000000000000000 122140d553cfSPaul Beesley sctlr_el1 :0x0000000030C81807 122240d553cfSPaul Beesley actlr_el1 :0x0000000000000000 122340d553cfSPaul Beesley cpacr_el1 :0x0000000000300000 122440d553cfSPaul Beesley csselr_el1 :0x0000000000000002 122540d553cfSPaul Beesley sp_el1 :0x0000000004028800 122640d553cfSPaul Beesley esr_el1 :0x0000000000000000 122740d553cfSPaul Beesley ttbr0_el1 :0x000000000402C200 122840d553cfSPaul Beesley ttbr1_el1 :0x0000000000000000 122940d553cfSPaul Beesley mair_el1 :0x00000000000004FF 123040d553cfSPaul Beesley amair_el1 :0x0000000000000000 123140d553cfSPaul Beesley tcr_el1 :0x0000000000003520 123240d553cfSPaul Beesley tpidr_el1 :0x0000000000000000 123340d553cfSPaul Beesley tpidr_el0 :0x0000000000000000 123440d553cfSPaul Beesley tpidrro_el0 :0x0000000000000000 123540d553cfSPaul Beesley dacr32_el2 :0x0000000000000000 123640d553cfSPaul Beesley ifsr32_el2 :0x0000000000000000 123740d553cfSPaul Beesley par_el1 :0x0000000000000000 123840d553cfSPaul Beesley far_el1 :0x0000000000000000 123940d553cfSPaul Beesley afsr0_el1 :0x0000000000000000 124040d553cfSPaul Beesley afsr1_el1 :0x0000000000000000 124140d553cfSPaul Beesley contextidr_el1 :0x0000000000000000 124240d553cfSPaul Beesley vbar_el1 :0x0000000004027000 124340d553cfSPaul Beesley cntp_ctl_el0 :0x0000000000000000 124440d553cfSPaul Beesley cntp_cval_el0 :0x0000000000000000 124540d553cfSPaul Beesley cntv_ctl_el0 :0x0000000000000000 124640d553cfSPaul Beesley cntv_cval_el0 :0x0000000000000000 124740d553cfSPaul Beesley cntkctl_el1 :0x0000000000000000 124840d553cfSPaul Beesley sp_el0 :0x0000000004010780 124940d553cfSPaul Beesley 125040d553cfSPaul BeesleyGuidelines for Reset Handlers 125140d553cfSPaul Beesley----------------------------- 125240d553cfSPaul Beesley 125340d553cfSPaul BeesleyTF-A implements a framework that allows CPU and platform ports to perform 125440d553cfSPaul Beesleyactions very early after a CPU is released from reset in both the cold and warm 125540d553cfSPaul Beesleyboot paths. This is done by calling the ``reset_handler()`` function in both 125640d553cfSPaul Beesleythe BL1 and BL31 images. It in turn calls the platform and CPU specific reset 125740d553cfSPaul Beesleyhandling functions. 125840d553cfSPaul Beesley 125940d553cfSPaul BeesleyDetails for implementing a CPU specific reset handler can be found in 126040d553cfSPaul BeesleySection 8. Details for implementing a platform specific reset handler can be 126140d553cfSPaul Beesleyfound in the `Porting Guide`_ (see the ``plat_reset_handler()`` function). 126240d553cfSPaul Beesley 126340d553cfSPaul BeesleyWhen adding functionality to a reset handler, keep in mind that if a different 126440d553cfSPaul Beesleyreset handling behavior is required between the first and the subsequent 126540d553cfSPaul Beesleyinvocations of the reset handling code, this should be detected at runtime. 126640d553cfSPaul BeesleyIn other words, the reset handler should be able to detect whether an action has 126740d553cfSPaul Beesleyalready been performed and act as appropriate. Possible courses of actions are, 126840d553cfSPaul Beesleye.g. skip the action the second time, or undo/redo it. 126940d553cfSPaul Beesley 127040d553cfSPaul BeesleyConfiguring secure interrupts 127140d553cfSPaul Beesley----------------------------- 127240d553cfSPaul Beesley 127340d553cfSPaul BeesleyThe GIC driver is responsible for performing initial configuration of secure 127440d553cfSPaul Beesleyinterrupts on the platform. To this end, the platform is expected to provide the 127540d553cfSPaul BeesleyGIC driver (either GICv2 or GICv3, as selected by the platform) with the 127640d553cfSPaul Beesleyinterrupt configuration during the driver initialisation. 127740d553cfSPaul Beesley 127840d553cfSPaul BeesleySecure interrupt configuration are specified in an array of secure interrupt 127940d553cfSPaul Beesleyproperties. In this scheme, in both GICv2 and GICv3 driver data structures, the 128040d553cfSPaul Beesley``interrupt_props`` member points to an array of interrupt properties. Each 128140d553cfSPaul Beesleyelement of the array specifies the interrupt number and its attributes 128240d553cfSPaul Beesley(priority, group, configuration). Each element of the array shall be populated 128340d553cfSPaul Beesleyby the macro ``INTR_PROP_DESC()``. The macro takes the following arguments: 128440d553cfSPaul Beesley 128540d553cfSPaul Beesley- 10-bit interrupt number, 128640d553cfSPaul Beesley 128740d553cfSPaul Beesley- 8-bit interrupt priority, 128840d553cfSPaul Beesley 128940d553cfSPaul Beesley- Interrupt type (one of ``INTR_TYPE_EL3``, ``INTR_TYPE_S_EL1``, 129040d553cfSPaul Beesley ``INTR_TYPE_NS``), 129140d553cfSPaul Beesley 129240d553cfSPaul Beesley- Interrupt configuration (either ``GIC_INTR_CFG_LEVEL`` or 129340d553cfSPaul Beesley ``GIC_INTR_CFG_EDGE``). 129440d553cfSPaul Beesley 129540d553cfSPaul BeesleyCPU specific operations framework 129640d553cfSPaul Beesley--------------------------------- 129740d553cfSPaul Beesley 129840d553cfSPaul BeesleyCertain aspects of the Armv8-A architecture are implementation defined, 129940d553cfSPaul Beesleythat is, certain behaviours are not architecturally defined, but must be 130040d553cfSPaul Beesleydefined and documented by individual processor implementations. TF-A 130140d553cfSPaul Beesleyimplements a framework which categorises the common implementation defined 130240d553cfSPaul Beesleybehaviours and allows a processor to export its implementation of that 130340d553cfSPaul Beesleybehaviour. The categories are: 130440d553cfSPaul Beesley 130540d553cfSPaul Beesley#. Processor specific reset sequence. 130640d553cfSPaul Beesley 130740d553cfSPaul Beesley#. Processor specific power down sequences. 130840d553cfSPaul Beesley 130940d553cfSPaul Beesley#. Processor specific register dumping as a part of crash reporting. 131040d553cfSPaul Beesley 131140d553cfSPaul Beesley#. Errata status reporting. 131240d553cfSPaul Beesley 131340d553cfSPaul BeesleyEach of the above categories fulfils a different requirement. 131440d553cfSPaul Beesley 131540d553cfSPaul Beesley#. allows any processor specific initialization before the caches and MMU 131640d553cfSPaul Beesley are turned on, like implementation of errata workarounds, entry into 131740d553cfSPaul Beesley the intra-cluster coherency domain etc. 131840d553cfSPaul Beesley 131940d553cfSPaul Beesley#. allows each processor to implement the power down sequence mandated in 132040d553cfSPaul Beesley its Technical Reference Manual (TRM). 132140d553cfSPaul Beesley 132240d553cfSPaul Beesley#. allows a processor to provide additional information to the developer 132340d553cfSPaul Beesley in the event of a crash, for example Cortex-A53 has registers which 132440d553cfSPaul Beesley can expose the data cache contents. 132540d553cfSPaul Beesley 132640d553cfSPaul Beesley#. allows a processor to define a function that inspects and reports the status 132740d553cfSPaul Beesley of all errata workarounds on that processor. 132840d553cfSPaul Beesley 132940d553cfSPaul BeesleyPlease note that only 2. is mandated by the TRM. 133040d553cfSPaul Beesley 133140d553cfSPaul BeesleyThe CPU specific operations framework scales to accommodate a large number of 133240d553cfSPaul Beesleydifferent CPUs during power down and reset handling. The platform can specify 133340d553cfSPaul Beesleyany CPU optimization it wants to enable for each CPU. It can also specify 133440d553cfSPaul Beesleythe CPU errata workarounds to be applied for each CPU type during reset 133540d553cfSPaul Beesleyhandling by defining CPU errata compile time macros. Details on these macros 1336f6ad51c8SJohn Tsichritziscan be found in `CPU specific build macros`_. 133740d553cfSPaul Beesley 133840d553cfSPaul BeesleyThe CPU specific operations framework depends on the ``cpu_ops`` structure which 133940d553cfSPaul Beesleyneeds to be exported for each type of CPU in the platform. It is defined in 134040d553cfSPaul Beesley``include/lib/cpus/aarch64/cpu_macros.S`` and has the following fields : ``midr``, 134140d553cfSPaul Beesley``reset_func()``, ``cpu_pwr_down_ops`` (array of power down functions) and 134240d553cfSPaul Beesley``cpu_reg_dump()``. 134340d553cfSPaul Beesley 134440d553cfSPaul BeesleyThe CPU specific files in ``lib/cpus`` export a ``cpu_ops`` data structure with 134540d553cfSPaul Beesleysuitable handlers for that CPU. For example, ``lib/cpus/aarch64/cortex_a53.S`` 134640d553cfSPaul Beesleyexports the ``cpu_ops`` for Cortex-A53 CPU. According to the platform 134740d553cfSPaul Beesleyconfiguration, these CPU specific files must be included in the build by 134840d553cfSPaul Beesleythe platform makefile. The generic CPU specific operations framework code exists 134940d553cfSPaul Beesleyin ``lib/cpus/aarch64/cpu_helpers.S``. 135040d553cfSPaul Beesley 135140d553cfSPaul BeesleyCPU specific Reset Handling 135240d553cfSPaul Beesley~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 135340d553cfSPaul Beesley 135440d553cfSPaul BeesleyAfter a reset, the state of the CPU when it calls generic reset handler is: 135540d553cfSPaul BeesleyMMU turned off, both instruction and data caches turned off and not part 135640d553cfSPaul Beesleyof any coherency domain. 135740d553cfSPaul Beesley 135840d553cfSPaul BeesleyThe BL entrypoint code first invokes the ``plat_reset_handler()`` to allow 135940d553cfSPaul Beesleythe platform to perform any system initialization required and any system 136040d553cfSPaul Beesleyerrata workarounds that needs to be applied. The ``get_cpu_ops_ptr()`` reads 136140d553cfSPaul Beesleythe current CPU midr, finds the matching ``cpu_ops`` entry in the ``cpu_ops`` 136240d553cfSPaul Beesleyarray and returns it. Note that only the part number and implementer fields 136340d553cfSPaul Beesleyin midr are used to find the matching ``cpu_ops`` entry. The ``reset_func()`` in 136440d553cfSPaul Beesleythe returned ``cpu_ops`` is then invoked which executes the required reset 136540d553cfSPaul Beesleyhandling for that CPU and also any errata workarounds enabled by the platform. 136640d553cfSPaul BeesleyThis function must preserve the values of general purpose registers x20 to x29. 136740d553cfSPaul Beesley 136840d553cfSPaul BeesleyRefer to Section "Guidelines for Reset Handlers" for general guidelines 136940d553cfSPaul Beesleyregarding placement of code in a reset handler. 137040d553cfSPaul Beesley 137140d553cfSPaul BeesleyCPU specific power down sequence 137240d553cfSPaul Beesley~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 137340d553cfSPaul Beesley 137440d553cfSPaul BeesleyDuring the BL31 initialization sequence, the pointer to the matching ``cpu_ops`` 137540d553cfSPaul Beesleyentry is stored in per-CPU data by ``init_cpu_ops()`` so that it can be quickly 137640d553cfSPaul Beesleyretrieved during power down sequences. 137740d553cfSPaul Beesley 137840d553cfSPaul BeesleyVarious CPU drivers register handlers to perform power down at certain power 137940d553cfSPaul Beesleylevels for that specific CPU. The PSCI service, upon receiving a power down 138040d553cfSPaul Beesleyrequest, determines the highest power level at which to execute power down 138140d553cfSPaul Beesleysequence for a particular CPU. It uses the ``prepare_cpu_pwr_dwn()`` function to 138240d553cfSPaul Beesleypick the right power down handler for the requested level. The function 138340d553cfSPaul Beesleyretrieves ``cpu_ops`` pointer member of per-CPU data, and from that, further 138440d553cfSPaul Beesleyretrieves ``cpu_pwr_down_ops`` array, and indexes into the required level. If the 138540d553cfSPaul Beesleyrequested power level is higher than what a CPU driver supports, the handler 138640d553cfSPaul Beesleyregistered for highest level is invoked. 138740d553cfSPaul Beesley 138840d553cfSPaul BeesleyAt runtime the platform hooks for power down are invoked by the PSCI service to 138940d553cfSPaul Beesleyperform platform specific operations during a power down sequence, for example 139040d553cfSPaul Beesleyturning off CCI coherency during a cluster power down. 139140d553cfSPaul Beesley 139240d553cfSPaul BeesleyCPU specific register reporting during crash 139340d553cfSPaul Beesley~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 139440d553cfSPaul Beesley 139540d553cfSPaul BeesleyIf the crash reporting is enabled in BL31, when a crash occurs, the crash 139640d553cfSPaul Beesleyreporting framework calls ``do_cpu_reg_dump`` which retrieves the matching 139740d553cfSPaul Beesley``cpu_ops`` using ``get_cpu_ops_ptr()`` function. The ``cpu_reg_dump()`` in 139840d553cfSPaul Beesley``cpu_ops`` is invoked, which then returns the CPU specific register values to 139940d553cfSPaul Beesleybe reported and a pointer to the ASCII list of register names in a format 140040d553cfSPaul Beesleyexpected by the crash reporting framework. 140140d553cfSPaul Beesley 140240d553cfSPaul BeesleyCPU errata status reporting 140340d553cfSPaul Beesley~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 140440d553cfSPaul Beesley 140540d553cfSPaul BeesleyErrata workarounds for CPUs supported in TF-A are applied during both cold and 140640d553cfSPaul Beesleywarm boots, shortly after reset. Individual Errata workarounds are enabled as 140740d553cfSPaul Beesleybuild options. Some errata workarounds have potential run-time implications; 140840d553cfSPaul Beesleytherefore some are enabled by default, others not. Platform ports shall 140940d553cfSPaul Beesleyoverride build options to enable or disable errata as appropriate. The CPU 141040d553cfSPaul Beesleydrivers take care of applying errata workarounds that are enabled and applicable 141140d553cfSPaul Beesleyto a given CPU. Refer to the section titled *CPU Errata Workarounds* in `CPUBM`_ 141240d553cfSPaul Beesleyfor more information. 141340d553cfSPaul Beesley 141440d553cfSPaul BeesleyFunctions in CPU drivers that apply errata workaround must follow the 141540d553cfSPaul Beesleyconventions listed below. 141640d553cfSPaul Beesley 141740d553cfSPaul BeesleyThe errata workaround must be authored as two separate functions: 141840d553cfSPaul Beesley 141940d553cfSPaul Beesley- One that checks for errata. This function must determine whether that errata 142040d553cfSPaul Beesley applies to the current CPU. Typically this involves matching the current 142140d553cfSPaul Beesley CPUs revision and variant against a value that's known to be affected by the 142240d553cfSPaul Beesley errata. If the function determines that the errata applies to this CPU, it 142340d553cfSPaul Beesley must return ``ERRATA_APPLIES``; otherwise, it must return 142440d553cfSPaul Beesley ``ERRATA_NOT_APPLIES``. The utility functions ``cpu_get_rev_var`` and 142540d553cfSPaul Beesley ``cpu_rev_var_ls`` functions may come in handy for this purpose. 142640d553cfSPaul Beesley 142740d553cfSPaul BeesleyFor an errata identified as ``E``, the check function must be named 142840d553cfSPaul Beesley``check_errata_E``. 142940d553cfSPaul Beesley 143040d553cfSPaul BeesleyThis function will be invoked at different times, both from assembly and from 143140d553cfSPaul BeesleyC run time. Therefore it must follow AAPCS, and must not use stack. 143240d553cfSPaul Beesley 143340d553cfSPaul Beesley- Another one that applies the errata workaround. This function would call the 143440d553cfSPaul Beesley check function described above, and applies errata workaround if required. 143540d553cfSPaul Beesley 143640d553cfSPaul BeesleyCPU drivers that apply errata workaround can optionally implement an assembly 143740d553cfSPaul Beesleyfunction that report the status of errata workarounds pertaining to that CPU. 143840d553cfSPaul BeesleyFor a driver that registers the CPU, for example, ``cpux`` via ``declare_cpu_ops`` 143940d553cfSPaul Beesleymacro, the errata reporting function, if it exists, must be named 144040d553cfSPaul Beesley``cpux_errata_report``. This function will always be called with MMU enabled; it 144140d553cfSPaul Beesleymust follow AAPCS and may use stack. 144240d553cfSPaul Beesley 144340d553cfSPaul BeesleyIn a debug build of TF-A, on a CPU that comes out of reset, both BL1 and the 144440d553cfSPaul Beesleyruntime firmware (BL31 in AArch64, and BL32 in AArch32) will invoke errata 144540d553cfSPaul Beesleystatus reporting function, if one exists, for that type of CPU. 144640d553cfSPaul Beesley 144740d553cfSPaul BeesleyTo report the status of each errata workaround, the function shall use the 144840d553cfSPaul Beesleyassembler macro ``report_errata``, passing it: 144940d553cfSPaul Beesley 145040d553cfSPaul Beesley- The build option that enables the errata; 145140d553cfSPaul Beesley 145240d553cfSPaul Beesley- The name of the CPU: this must be the same identifier that CPU driver 145340d553cfSPaul Beesley registered itself with, using ``declare_cpu_ops``; 145440d553cfSPaul Beesley 145540d553cfSPaul Beesley- And the errata identifier: the identifier must match what's used in the 145640d553cfSPaul Beesley errata's check function described above. 145740d553cfSPaul Beesley 145840d553cfSPaul BeesleyThe errata status reporting function will be called once per CPU type/errata 145940d553cfSPaul Beesleycombination during the software's active life time. 146040d553cfSPaul Beesley 146140d553cfSPaul BeesleyIt's expected that whenever an errata workaround is submitted to TF-A, the 146240d553cfSPaul Beesleyerrata reporting function is appropriately extended to report its status as 146340d553cfSPaul Beesleywell. 146440d553cfSPaul Beesley 146540d553cfSPaul BeesleyReporting the status of errata workaround is for informational purpose only; it 146640d553cfSPaul Beesleyhas no functional significance. 146740d553cfSPaul Beesley 146840d553cfSPaul BeesleyMemory layout of BL images 146940d553cfSPaul Beesley-------------------------- 147040d553cfSPaul Beesley 147140d553cfSPaul BeesleyEach bootloader image can be divided in 2 parts: 147240d553cfSPaul Beesley 147340d553cfSPaul Beesley- the static contents of the image. These are data actually stored in the 147440d553cfSPaul Beesley binary on the disk. In the ELF terminology, they are called ``PROGBITS`` 147540d553cfSPaul Beesley sections; 147640d553cfSPaul Beesley 147740d553cfSPaul Beesley- the run-time contents of the image. These are data that don't occupy any 147840d553cfSPaul Beesley space in the binary on the disk. The ELF binary just contains some 147940d553cfSPaul Beesley metadata indicating where these data will be stored at run-time and the 148040d553cfSPaul Beesley corresponding sections need to be allocated and initialized at run-time. 148140d553cfSPaul Beesley In the ELF terminology, they are called ``NOBITS`` sections. 148240d553cfSPaul Beesley 148340d553cfSPaul BeesleyAll PROGBITS sections are grouped together at the beginning of the image, 148440d553cfSPaul Beesleyfollowed by all NOBITS sections. This is true for all TF-A images and it is 148540d553cfSPaul Beesleygoverned by the linker scripts. This ensures that the raw binary images are 148640d553cfSPaul Beesleyas small as possible. If a NOBITS section was inserted in between PROGBITS 148740d553cfSPaul Beesleysections then the resulting binary file would contain zero bytes in place of 148840d553cfSPaul Beesleythis NOBITS section, making the image unnecessarily bigger. Smaller images 148940d553cfSPaul Beesleyallow faster loading from the FIP to the main memory. 149040d553cfSPaul Beesley 149140d553cfSPaul BeesleyLinker scripts and symbols 149240d553cfSPaul Beesley~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 149340d553cfSPaul Beesley 149440d553cfSPaul BeesleyEach bootloader stage image layout is described by its own linker script. The 149540d553cfSPaul Beesleylinker scripts export some symbols into the program symbol table. Their values 149640d553cfSPaul Beesleycorrespond to particular addresses. TF-A code can refer to these symbols to 149740d553cfSPaul Beesleyfigure out the image memory layout. 149840d553cfSPaul Beesley 149940d553cfSPaul BeesleyLinker symbols follow the following naming convention in TF-A. 150040d553cfSPaul Beesley 150140d553cfSPaul Beesley- ``__<SECTION>_START__`` 150240d553cfSPaul Beesley 150340d553cfSPaul Beesley Start address of a given section named ``<SECTION>``. 150440d553cfSPaul Beesley 150540d553cfSPaul Beesley- ``__<SECTION>_END__`` 150640d553cfSPaul Beesley 150740d553cfSPaul Beesley End address of a given section named ``<SECTION>``. If there is an alignment 150840d553cfSPaul Beesley constraint on the section's end address then ``__<SECTION>_END__`` corresponds 150940d553cfSPaul Beesley to the end address of the section's actual contents, rounded up to the right 151040d553cfSPaul Beesley boundary. Refer to the value of ``__<SECTION>_UNALIGNED_END__`` to know the 151140d553cfSPaul Beesley actual end address of the section's contents. 151240d553cfSPaul Beesley 151340d553cfSPaul Beesley- ``__<SECTION>_UNALIGNED_END__`` 151440d553cfSPaul Beesley 151540d553cfSPaul Beesley End address of a given section named ``<SECTION>`` without any padding or 151640d553cfSPaul Beesley rounding up due to some alignment constraint. 151740d553cfSPaul Beesley 151840d553cfSPaul Beesley- ``__<SECTION>_SIZE__`` 151940d553cfSPaul Beesley 152040d553cfSPaul Beesley Size (in bytes) of a given section named ``<SECTION>``. If there is an 152140d553cfSPaul Beesley alignment constraint on the section's end address then ``__<SECTION>_SIZE__`` 152240d553cfSPaul Beesley corresponds to the size of the section's actual contents, rounded up to the 152340d553cfSPaul Beesley right boundary. In other words, ``__<SECTION>_SIZE__ = __<SECTION>_END__ - _<SECTION>_START__``. Refer to the value of ``__<SECTION>_UNALIGNED_SIZE__`` 152440d553cfSPaul Beesley to know the actual size of the section's contents. 152540d553cfSPaul Beesley 152640d553cfSPaul Beesley- ``__<SECTION>_UNALIGNED_SIZE__`` 152740d553cfSPaul Beesley 152840d553cfSPaul Beesley Size (in bytes) of a given section named ``<SECTION>`` without any padding or 152940d553cfSPaul Beesley rounding up due to some alignment constraint. In other words, 153040d553cfSPaul Beesley ``__<SECTION>_UNALIGNED_SIZE__ = __<SECTION>_UNALIGNED_END__ - __<SECTION>_START__``. 153140d553cfSPaul Beesley 153240d553cfSPaul BeesleySome of the linker symbols are mandatory as TF-A code relies on them to be 153340d553cfSPaul Beesleydefined. They are listed in the following subsections. Some of them must be 153440d553cfSPaul Beesleyprovided for each bootloader stage and some are specific to a given bootloader 153540d553cfSPaul Beesleystage. 153640d553cfSPaul Beesley 153740d553cfSPaul BeesleyThe linker scripts define some extra, optional symbols. They are not actually 153840d553cfSPaul Beesleyused by any code but they help in understanding the bootloader images' memory 153940d553cfSPaul Beesleylayout as they are easy to spot in the link map files. 154040d553cfSPaul Beesley 154140d553cfSPaul BeesleyCommon linker symbols 154240d553cfSPaul Beesley^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 154340d553cfSPaul Beesley 154440d553cfSPaul BeesleyAll BL images share the following requirements: 154540d553cfSPaul Beesley 154640d553cfSPaul Beesley- The BSS section must be zero-initialised before executing any C code. 154740d553cfSPaul Beesley- The coherent memory section (if enabled) must be zero-initialised as well. 154840d553cfSPaul Beesley- The MMU setup code needs to know the extents of the coherent and read-only 154940d553cfSPaul Beesley memory regions to set the right memory attributes. When 155040d553cfSPaul Beesley ``SEPARATE_CODE_AND_RODATA=1``, it needs to know more specifically how the 155140d553cfSPaul Beesley read-only memory region is divided between code and data. 155240d553cfSPaul Beesley 155340d553cfSPaul BeesleyThe following linker symbols are defined for this purpose: 155440d553cfSPaul Beesley 155540d553cfSPaul Beesley- ``__BSS_START__`` 155640d553cfSPaul Beesley- ``__BSS_SIZE__`` 155740d553cfSPaul Beesley- ``__COHERENT_RAM_START__`` Must be aligned on a page-size boundary. 155840d553cfSPaul Beesley- ``__COHERENT_RAM_END__`` Must be aligned on a page-size boundary. 155940d553cfSPaul Beesley- ``__COHERENT_RAM_UNALIGNED_SIZE__`` 156040d553cfSPaul Beesley- ``__RO_START__`` 156140d553cfSPaul Beesley- ``__RO_END__`` 156240d553cfSPaul Beesley- ``__TEXT_START__`` 156340d553cfSPaul Beesley- ``__TEXT_END__`` 156440d553cfSPaul Beesley- ``__RODATA_START__`` 156540d553cfSPaul Beesley- ``__RODATA_END__`` 156640d553cfSPaul Beesley 156740d553cfSPaul BeesleyBL1's linker symbols 156840d553cfSPaul Beesley^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 156940d553cfSPaul Beesley 157040d553cfSPaul BeesleyBL1 being the ROM image, it has additional requirements. BL1 resides in ROM and 157140d553cfSPaul Beesleyit is entirely executed in place but it needs some read-write memory for its 157240d553cfSPaul Beesleymutable data. Its ``.data`` section (i.e. its allocated read-write data) must be 157340d553cfSPaul Beesleyrelocated from ROM to RAM before executing any C code. 157440d553cfSPaul Beesley 157540d553cfSPaul BeesleyThe following additional linker symbols are defined for BL1: 157640d553cfSPaul Beesley 157740d553cfSPaul Beesley- ``__BL1_ROM_END__`` End address of BL1's ROM contents, covering its code 157840d553cfSPaul Beesley and ``.data`` section in ROM. 157940d553cfSPaul Beesley- ``__DATA_ROM_START__`` Start address of the ``.data`` section in ROM. Must be 158040d553cfSPaul Beesley aligned on a 16-byte boundary. 158140d553cfSPaul Beesley- ``__DATA_RAM_START__`` Address in RAM where the ``.data`` section should be 158240d553cfSPaul Beesley copied over. Must be aligned on a 16-byte boundary. 158340d553cfSPaul Beesley- ``__DATA_SIZE__`` Size of the ``.data`` section (in ROM or RAM). 158440d553cfSPaul Beesley- ``__BL1_RAM_START__`` Start address of BL1 read-write data. 158540d553cfSPaul Beesley- ``__BL1_RAM_END__`` End address of BL1 read-write data. 158640d553cfSPaul Beesley 158740d553cfSPaul BeesleyHow to choose the right base addresses for each bootloader stage image 158840d553cfSPaul Beesley~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 158940d553cfSPaul Beesley 159040d553cfSPaul BeesleyThere is currently no support for dynamic image loading in TF-A. This means 159140d553cfSPaul Beesleythat all bootloader images need to be linked against their ultimate runtime 159240d553cfSPaul Beesleylocations and the base addresses of each image must be chosen carefully such 159340d553cfSPaul Beesleythat images don't overlap each other in an undesired way. As the code grows, 159440d553cfSPaul Beesleythe base addresses might need adjustments to cope with the new memory layout. 159540d553cfSPaul Beesley 159640d553cfSPaul BeesleyThe memory layout is completely specific to the platform and so there is no 159740d553cfSPaul Beesleygeneral recipe for choosing the right base addresses for each bootloader image. 159840d553cfSPaul BeesleyHowever, there are tools to aid in understanding the memory layout. These are 159940d553cfSPaul Beesleythe link map files: ``build/<platform>/<build-type>/bl<x>/bl<x>.map``, with ``<x>`` 160040d553cfSPaul Beesleybeing the stage bootloader. They provide a detailed view of the memory usage of 160140d553cfSPaul Beesleyeach image. Among other useful information, they provide the end address of 160240d553cfSPaul Beesleyeach image. 160340d553cfSPaul Beesley 160440d553cfSPaul Beesley- ``bl1.map`` link map file provides ``__BL1_RAM_END__`` address. 160540d553cfSPaul Beesley- ``bl2.map`` link map file provides ``__BL2_END__`` address. 160640d553cfSPaul Beesley- ``bl31.map`` link map file provides ``__BL31_END__`` address. 160740d553cfSPaul Beesley- ``bl32.map`` link map file provides ``__BL32_END__`` address. 160840d553cfSPaul Beesley 160940d553cfSPaul BeesleyFor each bootloader image, the platform code must provide its start address 161040d553cfSPaul Beesleyas well as a limit address that it must not overstep. The latter is used in the 161140d553cfSPaul Beesleylinker scripts to check that the image doesn't grow past that address. If that 161240d553cfSPaul Beesleyhappens, the linker will issue a message similar to the following: 161340d553cfSPaul Beesley 161440d553cfSPaul Beesley:: 161540d553cfSPaul Beesley 161640d553cfSPaul Beesley aarch64-none-elf-ld: BLx has exceeded its limit. 161740d553cfSPaul Beesley 161840d553cfSPaul BeesleyAdditionally, if the platform memory layout implies some image overlaying like 161940d553cfSPaul Beesleyon FVP, BL31 and TSP need to know the limit address that their PROGBITS 162040d553cfSPaul Beesleysections must not overstep. The platform code must provide those. 162140d553cfSPaul Beesley 162240d553cfSPaul BeesleyTF-A does not provide any mechanism to verify at boot time that the memory 162340d553cfSPaul Beesleyto load a new image is free to prevent overwriting a previously loaded image. 162440d553cfSPaul BeesleyThe platform must specify the memory available in the system for all the 162540d553cfSPaul Beesleyrelevant BL images to be loaded. 162640d553cfSPaul Beesley 162740d553cfSPaul BeesleyFor example, in the case of BL1 loading BL2, ``bl1_plat_sec_mem_layout()`` will 162840d553cfSPaul Beesleyreturn the region defined by the platform where BL1 intends to load BL2. The 162940d553cfSPaul Beesley``load_image()`` function performs bounds check for the image size based on the 163040d553cfSPaul Beesleybase and maximum image size provided by the platforms. Platforms must take 163140d553cfSPaul Beesleythis behaviour into account when defining the base/size for each of the images. 163240d553cfSPaul Beesley 163340d553cfSPaul BeesleyMemory layout on Arm development platforms 163440d553cfSPaul Beesley^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 163540d553cfSPaul Beesley 163640d553cfSPaul BeesleyThe following list describes the memory layout on the Arm development platforms: 163740d553cfSPaul Beesley 163840d553cfSPaul Beesley- A 4KB page of shared memory is used for communication between Trusted 163940d553cfSPaul Beesley Firmware and the platform's power controller. This is located at the base of 164040d553cfSPaul Beesley Trusted SRAM. The amount of Trusted SRAM available to load the bootloader 164140d553cfSPaul Beesley images is reduced by the size of the shared memory. 164240d553cfSPaul Beesley 164340d553cfSPaul Beesley The shared memory is used to store the CPUs' entrypoint mailbox. On Juno, 164440d553cfSPaul Beesley this is also used for the MHU payload when passing messages to and from the 164540d553cfSPaul Beesley SCP. 164640d553cfSPaul Beesley 164740d553cfSPaul Beesley- Another 4 KB page is reserved for passing memory layout between BL1 and BL2 164840d553cfSPaul Beesley and also the dynamic firmware configurations. 164940d553cfSPaul Beesley 165040d553cfSPaul Beesley- On FVP, BL1 is originally sitting in the Trusted ROM at address ``0x0``. On 165140d553cfSPaul Beesley Juno, BL1 resides in flash memory at address ``0x0BEC0000``. BL1 read-write 165240d553cfSPaul Beesley data are relocated to the top of Trusted SRAM at runtime. 165340d553cfSPaul Beesley 165440d553cfSPaul Beesley- BL2 is loaded below BL1 RW 165540d553cfSPaul Beesley 165640d553cfSPaul Beesley- EL3 Runtime Software, BL31 for AArch64 and BL32 for AArch32 (e.g. SP_MIN), 165740d553cfSPaul Beesley is loaded at the top of the Trusted SRAM, such that its NOBITS sections will 165840d553cfSPaul Beesley overwrite BL1 R/W data and BL2. This implies that BL1 global variables 165940d553cfSPaul Beesley remain valid only until execution reaches the EL3 Runtime Software entry 166040d553cfSPaul Beesley point during a cold boot. 166140d553cfSPaul Beesley 166240d553cfSPaul Beesley- On Juno, SCP_BL2 is loaded temporarily into the EL3 Runtime Software memory 166340d553cfSPaul Beesley region and transfered to the SCP before being overwritten by EL3 Runtime 166440d553cfSPaul Beesley Software. 166540d553cfSPaul Beesley 166640d553cfSPaul Beesley- BL32 (for AArch64) can be loaded in one of the following locations: 166740d553cfSPaul Beesley 166840d553cfSPaul Beesley - Trusted SRAM 166940d553cfSPaul Beesley - Trusted DRAM (FVP only) 167040d553cfSPaul Beesley - Secure region of DRAM (top 16MB of DRAM configured by the TrustZone 167140d553cfSPaul Beesley controller) 167240d553cfSPaul Beesley 167340d553cfSPaul Beesley When BL32 (for AArch64) is loaded into Trusted SRAM, it is loaded below 167440d553cfSPaul Beesley BL31. 167540d553cfSPaul Beesley 167640d553cfSPaul BeesleyThe location of the BL32 image will result in different memory maps. This is 167740d553cfSPaul Beesleyillustrated for both FVP and Juno in the following diagrams, using the TSP as 167840d553cfSPaul Beesleyan example. 167940d553cfSPaul Beesley 1680e1c5026aSPaul Beesley.. note:: 1681e1c5026aSPaul Beesley Loading the BL32 image in TZC secured DRAM doesn't change the memory 168240d553cfSPaul Beesley layout of the other images in Trusted SRAM. 168340d553cfSPaul Beesley 168440d553cfSPaul BeesleyCONFIG section in memory layouts shown below contains: 168540d553cfSPaul Beesley 168640d553cfSPaul Beesley:: 168740d553cfSPaul Beesley 168840d553cfSPaul Beesley +--------------------+ 168940d553cfSPaul Beesley |bl2_mem_params_descs| 169040d553cfSPaul Beesley |--------------------| 169140d553cfSPaul Beesley | fw_configs | 169240d553cfSPaul Beesley +--------------------+ 169340d553cfSPaul Beesley 169440d553cfSPaul Beesley``bl2_mem_params_descs`` contains parameters passed from BL2 to next the 169540d553cfSPaul BeesleyBL image during boot. 169640d553cfSPaul Beesley 169740d553cfSPaul Beesley``fw_configs`` includes soc_fw_config, tos_fw_config and tb_fw_config. 169840d553cfSPaul Beesley 169940d553cfSPaul Beesley**FVP with TSP in Trusted SRAM with firmware configs :** 170040d553cfSPaul Beesley(These diagrams only cover the AArch64 case) 170140d553cfSPaul Beesley 170240d553cfSPaul Beesley:: 170340d553cfSPaul Beesley 170440d553cfSPaul Beesley DRAM 170540d553cfSPaul Beesley 0xffffffff +----------+ 170640d553cfSPaul Beesley : : 170740d553cfSPaul Beesley |----------| 170840d553cfSPaul Beesley |HW_CONFIG | 170940d553cfSPaul Beesley 0x83000000 |----------| (non-secure) 171040d553cfSPaul Beesley | | 171140d553cfSPaul Beesley 0x80000000 +----------+ 171240d553cfSPaul Beesley 171340d553cfSPaul Beesley Trusted SRAM 171440d553cfSPaul Beesley 0x04040000 +----------+ loaded by BL2 +----------------+ 171540d553cfSPaul Beesley | BL1 (rw) | <<<<<<<<<<<<< | | 171640d553cfSPaul Beesley |----------| <<<<<<<<<<<<< | BL31 NOBITS | 171740d553cfSPaul Beesley | BL2 | <<<<<<<<<<<<< | | 171840d553cfSPaul Beesley |----------| <<<<<<<<<<<<< |----------------| 171940d553cfSPaul Beesley | | <<<<<<<<<<<<< | BL31 PROGBITS | 172040d553cfSPaul Beesley | | <<<<<<<<<<<<< |----------------| 172140d553cfSPaul Beesley | | <<<<<<<<<<<<< | BL32 | 172240d553cfSPaul Beesley 0x04002000 +----------+ +----------------+ 172340d553cfSPaul Beesley | CONFIG | 172440d553cfSPaul Beesley 0x04001000 +----------+ 172540d553cfSPaul Beesley | Shared | 172640d553cfSPaul Beesley 0x04000000 +----------+ 172740d553cfSPaul Beesley 172840d553cfSPaul Beesley Trusted ROM 172940d553cfSPaul Beesley 0x04000000 +----------+ 173040d553cfSPaul Beesley | BL1 (ro) | 173140d553cfSPaul Beesley 0x00000000 +----------+ 173240d553cfSPaul Beesley 173340d553cfSPaul Beesley**FVP with TSP in Trusted DRAM with firmware configs (default option):** 173440d553cfSPaul Beesley 173540d553cfSPaul Beesley:: 173640d553cfSPaul Beesley 173740d553cfSPaul Beesley DRAM 173840d553cfSPaul Beesley 0xffffffff +--------------+ 173940d553cfSPaul Beesley : : 174040d553cfSPaul Beesley |--------------| 174140d553cfSPaul Beesley | HW_CONFIG | 174240d553cfSPaul Beesley 0x83000000 |--------------| (non-secure) 174340d553cfSPaul Beesley | | 174440d553cfSPaul Beesley 0x80000000 +--------------+ 174540d553cfSPaul Beesley 174640d553cfSPaul Beesley Trusted DRAM 174740d553cfSPaul Beesley 0x08000000 +--------------+ 174840d553cfSPaul Beesley | BL32 | 174940d553cfSPaul Beesley 0x06000000 +--------------+ 175040d553cfSPaul Beesley 175140d553cfSPaul Beesley Trusted SRAM 175240d553cfSPaul Beesley 0x04040000 +--------------+ loaded by BL2 +----------------+ 175340d553cfSPaul Beesley | BL1 (rw) | <<<<<<<<<<<<< | | 175440d553cfSPaul Beesley |--------------| <<<<<<<<<<<<< | BL31 NOBITS | 175540d553cfSPaul Beesley | BL2 | <<<<<<<<<<<<< | | 175640d553cfSPaul Beesley |--------------| <<<<<<<<<<<<< |----------------| 175740d553cfSPaul Beesley | | <<<<<<<<<<<<< | BL31 PROGBITS | 175840d553cfSPaul Beesley | | +----------------+ 175940d553cfSPaul Beesley +--------------+ 176040d553cfSPaul Beesley | CONFIG | 176140d553cfSPaul Beesley 0x04001000 +--------------+ 176240d553cfSPaul Beesley | Shared | 176340d553cfSPaul Beesley 0x04000000 +--------------+ 176440d553cfSPaul Beesley 176540d553cfSPaul Beesley Trusted ROM 176640d553cfSPaul Beesley 0x04000000 +--------------+ 176740d553cfSPaul Beesley | BL1 (ro) | 176840d553cfSPaul Beesley 0x00000000 +--------------+ 176940d553cfSPaul Beesley 177040d553cfSPaul Beesley**FVP with TSP in TZC-Secured DRAM with firmware configs :** 177140d553cfSPaul Beesley 177240d553cfSPaul Beesley:: 177340d553cfSPaul Beesley 177440d553cfSPaul Beesley DRAM 177540d553cfSPaul Beesley 0xffffffff +----------+ 177640d553cfSPaul Beesley | BL32 | (secure) 177740d553cfSPaul Beesley 0xff000000 +----------+ 177840d553cfSPaul Beesley | | 177940d553cfSPaul Beesley |----------| 178040d553cfSPaul Beesley |HW_CONFIG | 178140d553cfSPaul Beesley 0x83000000 |----------| (non-secure) 178240d553cfSPaul Beesley | | 178340d553cfSPaul Beesley 0x80000000 +----------+ 178440d553cfSPaul Beesley 178540d553cfSPaul Beesley Trusted SRAM 178640d553cfSPaul Beesley 0x04040000 +----------+ loaded by BL2 +----------------+ 178740d553cfSPaul Beesley | BL1 (rw) | <<<<<<<<<<<<< | | 178840d553cfSPaul Beesley |----------| <<<<<<<<<<<<< | BL31 NOBITS | 178940d553cfSPaul Beesley | BL2 | <<<<<<<<<<<<< | | 179040d553cfSPaul Beesley |----------| <<<<<<<<<<<<< |----------------| 179140d553cfSPaul Beesley | | <<<<<<<<<<<<< | BL31 PROGBITS | 179240d553cfSPaul Beesley | | +----------------+ 179340d553cfSPaul Beesley 0x04002000 +----------+ 179440d553cfSPaul Beesley | CONFIG | 179540d553cfSPaul Beesley 0x04001000 +----------+ 179640d553cfSPaul Beesley | Shared | 179740d553cfSPaul Beesley 0x04000000 +----------+ 179840d553cfSPaul Beesley 179940d553cfSPaul Beesley Trusted ROM 180040d553cfSPaul Beesley 0x04000000 +----------+ 180140d553cfSPaul Beesley | BL1 (ro) | 180240d553cfSPaul Beesley 0x00000000 +----------+ 180340d553cfSPaul Beesley 180440d553cfSPaul Beesley**Juno with BL32 in Trusted SRAM :** 180540d553cfSPaul Beesley 180640d553cfSPaul Beesley:: 180740d553cfSPaul Beesley 180840d553cfSPaul Beesley Flash0 180940d553cfSPaul Beesley 0x0C000000 +----------+ 181040d553cfSPaul Beesley : : 181140d553cfSPaul Beesley 0x0BED0000 |----------| 181240d553cfSPaul Beesley | BL1 (ro) | 181340d553cfSPaul Beesley 0x0BEC0000 |----------| 181440d553cfSPaul Beesley : : 181540d553cfSPaul Beesley 0x08000000 +----------+ BL31 is loaded 181640d553cfSPaul Beesley after SCP_BL2 has 181740d553cfSPaul Beesley Trusted SRAM been sent to SCP 181840d553cfSPaul Beesley 0x04040000 +----------+ loaded by BL2 +----------------+ 181940d553cfSPaul Beesley | BL1 (rw) | <<<<<<<<<<<<< | | 182040d553cfSPaul Beesley |----------| <<<<<<<<<<<<< | BL31 NOBITS | 182140d553cfSPaul Beesley | BL2 | <<<<<<<<<<<<< | | 182240d553cfSPaul Beesley |----------| <<<<<<<<<<<<< |----------------| 182340d553cfSPaul Beesley | SCP_BL2 | <<<<<<<<<<<<< | BL31 PROGBITS | 182440d553cfSPaul Beesley |----------| <<<<<<<<<<<<< |----------------| 182540d553cfSPaul Beesley | | <<<<<<<<<<<<< | BL32 | 182640d553cfSPaul Beesley | | +----------------+ 182740d553cfSPaul Beesley | | 182840d553cfSPaul Beesley 0x04001000 +----------+ 182940d553cfSPaul Beesley | MHU | 183040d553cfSPaul Beesley 0x04000000 +----------+ 183140d553cfSPaul Beesley 183240d553cfSPaul Beesley**Juno with BL32 in TZC-secured DRAM :** 183340d553cfSPaul Beesley 183440d553cfSPaul Beesley:: 183540d553cfSPaul Beesley 183640d553cfSPaul Beesley DRAM 183740d553cfSPaul Beesley 0xFFE00000 +----------+ 183840d553cfSPaul Beesley | BL32 | (secure) 183940d553cfSPaul Beesley 0xFF000000 |----------| 184040d553cfSPaul Beesley | | 184140d553cfSPaul Beesley : : (non-secure) 184240d553cfSPaul Beesley | | 184340d553cfSPaul Beesley 0x80000000 +----------+ 184440d553cfSPaul Beesley 184540d553cfSPaul Beesley Flash0 184640d553cfSPaul Beesley 0x0C000000 +----------+ 184740d553cfSPaul Beesley : : 184840d553cfSPaul Beesley 0x0BED0000 |----------| 184940d553cfSPaul Beesley | BL1 (ro) | 185040d553cfSPaul Beesley 0x0BEC0000 |----------| 185140d553cfSPaul Beesley : : 185240d553cfSPaul Beesley 0x08000000 +----------+ BL31 is loaded 185340d553cfSPaul Beesley after SCP_BL2 has 185440d553cfSPaul Beesley Trusted SRAM been sent to SCP 185540d553cfSPaul Beesley 0x04040000 +----------+ loaded by BL2 +----------------+ 185640d553cfSPaul Beesley | BL1 (rw) | <<<<<<<<<<<<< | | 185740d553cfSPaul Beesley |----------| <<<<<<<<<<<<< | BL31 NOBITS | 185840d553cfSPaul Beesley | BL2 | <<<<<<<<<<<<< | | 185940d553cfSPaul Beesley |----------| <<<<<<<<<<<<< |----------------| 186040d553cfSPaul Beesley | SCP_BL2 | <<<<<<<<<<<<< | BL31 PROGBITS | 186140d553cfSPaul Beesley |----------| +----------------+ 186240d553cfSPaul Beesley 0x04001000 +----------+ 186340d553cfSPaul Beesley | MHU | 186440d553cfSPaul Beesley 0x04000000 +----------+ 186540d553cfSPaul Beesley 186640d553cfSPaul BeesleyLibrary at ROM 186740d553cfSPaul Beesley--------------- 186840d553cfSPaul Beesley 186940d553cfSPaul BeesleyPlease refer to the `ROMLIB Design`_ document. 187040d553cfSPaul Beesley 187140d553cfSPaul BeesleyFirmware Image Package (FIP) 187240d553cfSPaul Beesley---------------------------- 187340d553cfSPaul Beesley 187440d553cfSPaul BeesleyUsing a Firmware Image Package (FIP) allows for packing bootloader images (and 187540d553cfSPaul Beesleypotentially other payloads) into a single archive that can be loaded by TF-A 187640d553cfSPaul Beesleyfrom non-volatile platform storage. A driver to load images from a FIP has 187740d553cfSPaul Beesleybeen added to the storage layer and allows a package to be read from supported 187840d553cfSPaul Beesleyplatform storage. A tool to create Firmware Image Packages is also provided 187940d553cfSPaul Beesleyand described below. 188040d553cfSPaul Beesley 188140d553cfSPaul BeesleyFirmware Image Package layout 188240d553cfSPaul Beesley~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 188340d553cfSPaul Beesley 188440d553cfSPaul BeesleyThe FIP layout consists of a table of contents (ToC) followed by payload data. 188540d553cfSPaul BeesleyThe ToC itself has a header followed by one or more table entries. The ToC is 188640d553cfSPaul Beesleyterminated by an end marker entry, and since the size of the ToC is 0 bytes, 188740d553cfSPaul Beesleythe offset equals the total size of the FIP file. All ToC entries describe some 188840d553cfSPaul Beesleypayload data that has been appended to the end of the binary package. With the 188940d553cfSPaul Beesleyinformation provided in the ToC entry the corresponding payload data can be 189040d553cfSPaul Beesleyretrieved. 189140d553cfSPaul Beesley 189240d553cfSPaul Beesley:: 189340d553cfSPaul Beesley 189440d553cfSPaul Beesley ------------------ 189540d553cfSPaul Beesley | ToC Header | 189640d553cfSPaul Beesley |----------------| 189740d553cfSPaul Beesley | ToC Entry 0 | 189840d553cfSPaul Beesley |----------------| 189940d553cfSPaul Beesley | ToC Entry 1 | 190040d553cfSPaul Beesley |----------------| 190140d553cfSPaul Beesley | ToC End Marker | 190240d553cfSPaul Beesley |----------------| 190340d553cfSPaul Beesley | | 190440d553cfSPaul Beesley | Data 0 | 190540d553cfSPaul Beesley | | 190640d553cfSPaul Beesley |----------------| 190740d553cfSPaul Beesley | | 190840d553cfSPaul Beesley | Data 1 | 190940d553cfSPaul Beesley | | 191040d553cfSPaul Beesley ------------------ 191140d553cfSPaul Beesley 191240d553cfSPaul BeesleyThe ToC header and entry formats are described in the header file 191340d553cfSPaul Beesley``include/tools_share/firmware_image_package.h``. This file is used by both the 191440d553cfSPaul Beesleytool and TF-A. 191540d553cfSPaul Beesley 191640d553cfSPaul BeesleyThe ToC header has the following fields: 191740d553cfSPaul Beesley 191840d553cfSPaul Beesley:: 191940d553cfSPaul Beesley 192040d553cfSPaul Beesley `name`: The name of the ToC. This is currently used to validate the header. 192140d553cfSPaul Beesley `serial_number`: A non-zero number provided by the creation tool 192240d553cfSPaul Beesley `flags`: Flags associated with this data. 192340d553cfSPaul Beesley Bits 0-31: Reserved 192440d553cfSPaul Beesley Bits 32-47: Platform defined 192540d553cfSPaul Beesley Bits 48-63: Reserved 192640d553cfSPaul Beesley 192740d553cfSPaul BeesleyA ToC entry has the following fields: 192840d553cfSPaul Beesley 192940d553cfSPaul Beesley:: 193040d553cfSPaul Beesley 193140d553cfSPaul Beesley `uuid`: All files are referred to by a pre-defined Universally Unique 193240d553cfSPaul Beesley IDentifier [UUID] . The UUIDs are defined in 193340d553cfSPaul Beesley `include/tools_share/firmware_image_package.h`. The platform translates 193440d553cfSPaul Beesley the requested image name into the corresponding UUID when accessing the 193540d553cfSPaul Beesley package. 193640d553cfSPaul Beesley `offset_address`: The offset address at which the corresponding payload data 193740d553cfSPaul Beesley can be found. The offset is calculated from the ToC base address. 193840d553cfSPaul Beesley `size`: The size of the corresponding payload data in bytes. 193940d553cfSPaul Beesley `flags`: Flags associated with this entry. None are yet defined. 194040d553cfSPaul Beesley 194140d553cfSPaul BeesleyFirmware Image Package creation tool 194240d553cfSPaul Beesley~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 194340d553cfSPaul Beesley 194440d553cfSPaul BeesleyThe FIP creation tool can be used to pack specified images into a binary 194540d553cfSPaul Beesleypackage that can be loaded by TF-A from platform storage. The tool currently 194640d553cfSPaul Beesleyonly supports packing bootloader images. Additional image definitions can be 194740d553cfSPaul Beesleyadded to the tool as required. 194840d553cfSPaul Beesley 194940d553cfSPaul BeesleyThe tool can be found in ``tools/fiptool``. 195040d553cfSPaul Beesley 195140d553cfSPaul BeesleyLoading from a Firmware Image Package (FIP) 195240d553cfSPaul Beesley~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 195340d553cfSPaul Beesley 195440d553cfSPaul BeesleyThe Firmware Image Package (FIP) driver can load images from a binary package on 195540d553cfSPaul Beesleynon-volatile platform storage. For the Arm development platforms, this is 195640d553cfSPaul Beesleycurrently NOR FLASH. 195740d553cfSPaul Beesley 195840d553cfSPaul BeesleyBootloader images are loaded according to the platform policy as specified by 195940d553cfSPaul Beesleythe function ``plat_get_image_source()``. For the Arm development platforms, this 196040d553cfSPaul Beesleymeans the platform will attempt to load images from a Firmware Image Package 196140d553cfSPaul Beesleylocated at the start of NOR FLASH0. 196240d553cfSPaul Beesley 196340d553cfSPaul BeesleyThe Arm development platforms' policy is to only allow loading of a known set of 196440d553cfSPaul Beesleyimages. The platform policy can be modified to allow additional images. 196540d553cfSPaul Beesley 196640d553cfSPaul BeesleyUse of coherent memory in TF-A 196740d553cfSPaul Beesley------------------------------ 196840d553cfSPaul Beesley 196940d553cfSPaul BeesleyThere might be loss of coherency when physical memory with mismatched 197040d553cfSPaul Beesleyshareability, cacheability and memory attributes is accessed by multiple CPUs 197140d553cfSPaul Beesley(refer to section B2.9 of `Arm ARM`_ for more details). This possibility occurs 197240d553cfSPaul Beesleyin TF-A during power up/down sequences when coherency, MMU and caches are 197340d553cfSPaul Beesleyturned on/off incrementally. 197440d553cfSPaul Beesley 197540d553cfSPaul BeesleyTF-A defines coherent memory as a region of memory with Device nGnRE attributes 197640d553cfSPaul Beesleyin the translation tables. The translation granule size in TF-A is 4KB. This 197740d553cfSPaul Beesleyis the smallest possible size of the coherent memory region. 197840d553cfSPaul Beesley 197940d553cfSPaul BeesleyBy default, all data structures which are susceptible to accesses with 198040d553cfSPaul Beesleymismatched attributes from various CPUs are allocated in a coherent memory 198140d553cfSPaul Beesleyregion (refer to section 2.1 of `Porting Guide`_). The coherent memory region 198240d553cfSPaul Beesleyaccesses are Outer Shareable, non-cacheable and they can be accessed 198340d553cfSPaul Beesleywith the Device nGnRE attributes when the MMU is turned on. Hence, at the 198440d553cfSPaul Beesleyexpense of at least an extra page of memory, TF-A is able to work around 198540d553cfSPaul Beesleycoherency issues due to mismatched memory attributes. 198640d553cfSPaul Beesley 198740d553cfSPaul BeesleyThe alternative to the above approach is to allocate the susceptible data 198840d553cfSPaul Beesleystructures in Normal WriteBack WriteAllocate Inner shareable memory. This 198940d553cfSPaul Beesleyapproach requires the data structures to be designed so that it is possible to 199040d553cfSPaul Beesleywork around the issue of mismatched memory attributes by performing software 199140d553cfSPaul Beesleycache maintenance on them. 199240d553cfSPaul Beesley 199340d553cfSPaul BeesleyDisabling the use of coherent memory in TF-A 199440d553cfSPaul Beesley~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 199540d553cfSPaul Beesley 199640d553cfSPaul BeesleyIt might be desirable to avoid the cost of allocating coherent memory on 199740d553cfSPaul Beesleyplatforms which are memory constrained. TF-A enables inclusion of coherent 199840d553cfSPaul Beesleymemory in firmware images through the build flag ``USE_COHERENT_MEM``. 199940d553cfSPaul BeesleyThis flag is enabled by default. It can be disabled to choose the second 200040d553cfSPaul Beesleyapproach described above. 200140d553cfSPaul Beesley 200240d553cfSPaul BeesleyThe below sections analyze the data structures allocated in the coherent memory 200340d553cfSPaul Beesleyregion and the changes required to allocate them in normal memory. 200440d553cfSPaul Beesley 200540d553cfSPaul BeesleyCoherent memory usage in PSCI implementation 200640d553cfSPaul Beesley~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 200740d553cfSPaul Beesley 200840d553cfSPaul BeesleyThe ``psci_non_cpu_pd_nodes`` data structure stores the platform's power domain 200940d553cfSPaul Beesleytree information for state management of power domains. By default, this data 201040d553cfSPaul Beesleystructure is allocated in the coherent memory region in TF-A because it can be 201140d553cfSPaul Beesleyaccessed by multiple CPUs, either with caches enabled or disabled. 201240d553cfSPaul Beesley 201340d553cfSPaul Beesley.. code:: c 201440d553cfSPaul Beesley 201540d553cfSPaul Beesley typedef struct non_cpu_pwr_domain_node { 201640d553cfSPaul Beesley /* 201740d553cfSPaul Beesley * Index of the first CPU power domain node level 0 which has this node 201840d553cfSPaul Beesley * as its parent. 201940d553cfSPaul Beesley */ 202040d553cfSPaul Beesley unsigned int cpu_start_idx; 202140d553cfSPaul Beesley 202240d553cfSPaul Beesley /* 202340d553cfSPaul Beesley * Number of CPU power domains which are siblings of the domain indexed 202440d553cfSPaul Beesley * by 'cpu_start_idx' i.e. all the domains in the range 'cpu_start_idx 202540d553cfSPaul Beesley * -> cpu_start_idx + ncpus' have this node as their parent. 202640d553cfSPaul Beesley */ 202740d553cfSPaul Beesley unsigned int ncpus; 202840d553cfSPaul Beesley 202940d553cfSPaul Beesley /* 203040d553cfSPaul Beesley * Index of the parent power domain node. 203140d553cfSPaul Beesley */ 203240d553cfSPaul Beesley unsigned int parent_node; 203340d553cfSPaul Beesley 203440d553cfSPaul Beesley plat_local_state_t local_state; 203540d553cfSPaul Beesley 203640d553cfSPaul Beesley unsigned char level; 203740d553cfSPaul Beesley 203840d553cfSPaul Beesley /* For indexing the psci_lock array*/ 203940d553cfSPaul Beesley unsigned char lock_index; 204040d553cfSPaul Beesley } non_cpu_pd_node_t; 204140d553cfSPaul Beesley 204240d553cfSPaul BeesleyIn order to move this data structure to normal memory, the use of each of its 204340d553cfSPaul Beesleyfields must be analyzed. Fields like ``cpu_start_idx``, ``ncpus``, ``parent_node`` 204440d553cfSPaul Beesley``level`` and ``lock_index`` are only written once during cold boot. Hence removing 204540d553cfSPaul Beesleythem from coherent memory involves only doing a clean and invalidate of the 204640d553cfSPaul Beesleycache lines after these fields are written. 204740d553cfSPaul Beesley 204840d553cfSPaul BeesleyThe field ``local_state`` can be concurrently accessed by multiple CPUs in 204940d553cfSPaul Beesleydifferent cache states. A Lamport's Bakery lock ``psci_locks`` is used to ensure 205040d553cfSPaul Beesleymutual exclusion to this field and a clean and invalidate is needed after it 205140d553cfSPaul Beesleyis written. 205240d553cfSPaul Beesley 205340d553cfSPaul BeesleyBakery lock data 205440d553cfSPaul Beesley~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 205540d553cfSPaul Beesley 205640d553cfSPaul BeesleyThe bakery lock data structure ``bakery_lock_t`` is allocated in coherent memory 205740d553cfSPaul Beesleyand is accessed by multiple CPUs with mismatched attributes. ``bakery_lock_t`` is 205840d553cfSPaul Beesleydefined as follows: 205940d553cfSPaul Beesley 206040d553cfSPaul Beesley.. code:: c 206140d553cfSPaul Beesley 206240d553cfSPaul Beesley typedef struct bakery_lock { 206340d553cfSPaul Beesley /* 206440d553cfSPaul Beesley * The lock_data is a bit-field of 2 members: 206540d553cfSPaul Beesley * Bit[0] : choosing. This field is set when the CPU is 206640d553cfSPaul Beesley * choosing its bakery number. 206740d553cfSPaul Beesley * Bits[1 - 15] : number. This is the bakery number allocated. 206840d553cfSPaul Beesley */ 206940d553cfSPaul Beesley volatile uint16_t lock_data[BAKERY_LOCK_MAX_CPUS]; 207040d553cfSPaul Beesley } bakery_lock_t; 207140d553cfSPaul Beesley 207240d553cfSPaul BeesleyIt is a characteristic of Lamport's Bakery algorithm that the volatile per-CPU 207340d553cfSPaul Beesleyfields can be read by all CPUs but only written to by the owning CPU. 207440d553cfSPaul Beesley 207540d553cfSPaul BeesleyDepending upon the data cache line size, the per-CPU fields of the 207640d553cfSPaul Beesley``bakery_lock_t`` structure for multiple CPUs may exist on a single cache line. 207740d553cfSPaul BeesleyThese per-CPU fields can be read and written during lock contention by multiple 207840d553cfSPaul BeesleyCPUs with mismatched memory attributes. Since these fields are a part of the 207940d553cfSPaul Beesleylock implementation, they do not have access to any other locking primitive to 208040d553cfSPaul Beesleysafeguard against the resulting coherency issues. As a result, simple software 208140d553cfSPaul Beesleycache maintenance is not enough to allocate them in coherent memory. Consider 208240d553cfSPaul Beesleythe following example. 208340d553cfSPaul Beesley 208440d553cfSPaul BeesleyCPU0 updates its per-CPU field with data cache enabled. This write updates a 208540d553cfSPaul Beesleylocal cache line which contains a copy of the fields for other CPUs as well. Now 208640d553cfSPaul BeesleyCPU1 updates its per-CPU field of the ``bakery_lock_t`` structure with data cache 208740d553cfSPaul Beesleydisabled. CPU1 then issues a DCIVAC operation to invalidate any stale copies of 208840d553cfSPaul Beesleyits field in any other cache line in the system. This operation will invalidate 208940d553cfSPaul Beesleythe update made by CPU0 as well. 209040d553cfSPaul Beesley 209140d553cfSPaul BeesleyTo use bakery locks when ``USE_COHERENT_MEM`` is disabled, the lock data structure 209240d553cfSPaul Beesleyhas been redesigned. The changes utilise the characteristic of Lamport's Bakery 209340d553cfSPaul Beesleyalgorithm mentioned earlier. The bakery_lock structure only allocates the memory 209440d553cfSPaul Beesleyfor a single CPU. The macro ``DEFINE_BAKERY_LOCK`` allocates all the bakery locks 209540d553cfSPaul Beesleyneeded for a CPU into a section ``bakery_lock``. The linker allocates the memory 209640d553cfSPaul Beesleyfor other cores by using the total size allocated for the bakery_lock section 209740d553cfSPaul Beesleyand multiplying it with (PLATFORM_CORE_COUNT - 1). This enables software to 209840d553cfSPaul Beesleyperform software cache maintenance on the lock data structure without running 209940d553cfSPaul Beesleyinto coherency issues associated with mismatched attributes. 210040d553cfSPaul Beesley 210140d553cfSPaul BeesleyThe bakery lock data structure ``bakery_info_t`` is defined for use when 210240d553cfSPaul Beesley``USE_COHERENT_MEM`` is disabled as follows: 210340d553cfSPaul Beesley 210440d553cfSPaul Beesley.. code:: c 210540d553cfSPaul Beesley 210640d553cfSPaul Beesley typedef struct bakery_info { 210740d553cfSPaul Beesley /* 210840d553cfSPaul Beesley * The lock_data is a bit-field of 2 members: 210940d553cfSPaul Beesley * Bit[0] : choosing. This field is set when the CPU is 211040d553cfSPaul Beesley * choosing its bakery number. 211140d553cfSPaul Beesley * Bits[1 - 15] : number. This is the bakery number allocated. 211240d553cfSPaul Beesley */ 211340d553cfSPaul Beesley volatile uint16_t lock_data; 211440d553cfSPaul Beesley } bakery_info_t; 211540d553cfSPaul Beesley 211640d553cfSPaul BeesleyThe ``bakery_info_t`` represents a single per-CPU field of one lock and 211740d553cfSPaul Beesleythe combination of corresponding ``bakery_info_t`` structures for all CPUs in the 211840d553cfSPaul Beesleysystem represents the complete bakery lock. The view in memory for a system 211940d553cfSPaul Beesleywith n bakery locks are: 212040d553cfSPaul Beesley 212140d553cfSPaul Beesley:: 212240d553cfSPaul Beesley 212340d553cfSPaul Beesley bakery_lock section start 212440d553cfSPaul Beesley |----------------| 212540d553cfSPaul Beesley | `bakery_info_t`| <-- Lock_0 per-CPU field 212640d553cfSPaul Beesley | Lock_0 | for CPU0 212740d553cfSPaul Beesley |----------------| 212840d553cfSPaul Beesley | `bakery_info_t`| <-- Lock_1 per-CPU field 212940d553cfSPaul Beesley | Lock_1 | for CPU0 213040d553cfSPaul Beesley |----------------| 213140d553cfSPaul Beesley | .... | 213240d553cfSPaul Beesley |----------------| 213340d553cfSPaul Beesley | `bakery_info_t`| <-- Lock_N per-CPU field 213440d553cfSPaul Beesley | Lock_N | for CPU0 213540d553cfSPaul Beesley ------------------ 213640d553cfSPaul Beesley | XXXXX | 213740d553cfSPaul Beesley | Padding to | 213840d553cfSPaul Beesley | next Cache WB | <--- Calculate PERCPU_BAKERY_LOCK_SIZE, allocate 213940d553cfSPaul Beesley | Granule | continuous memory for remaining CPUs. 214040d553cfSPaul Beesley ------------------ 214140d553cfSPaul Beesley | `bakery_info_t`| <-- Lock_0 per-CPU field 214240d553cfSPaul Beesley | Lock_0 | for CPU1 214340d553cfSPaul Beesley |----------------| 214440d553cfSPaul Beesley | `bakery_info_t`| <-- Lock_1 per-CPU field 214540d553cfSPaul Beesley | Lock_1 | for CPU1 214640d553cfSPaul Beesley |----------------| 214740d553cfSPaul Beesley | .... | 214840d553cfSPaul Beesley |----------------| 214940d553cfSPaul Beesley | `bakery_info_t`| <-- Lock_N per-CPU field 215040d553cfSPaul Beesley | Lock_N | for CPU1 215140d553cfSPaul Beesley ------------------ 215240d553cfSPaul Beesley | XXXXX | 215340d553cfSPaul Beesley | Padding to | 215440d553cfSPaul Beesley | next Cache WB | 215540d553cfSPaul Beesley | Granule | 215640d553cfSPaul Beesley ------------------ 215740d553cfSPaul Beesley 215840d553cfSPaul BeesleyConsider a system of 2 CPUs with 'N' bakery locks as shown above. For an 215940d553cfSPaul Beesleyoperation on Lock_N, the corresponding ``bakery_info_t`` in both CPU0 and CPU1 216040d553cfSPaul Beesley``bakery_lock`` section need to be fetched and appropriate cache operations need 216140d553cfSPaul Beesleyto be performed for each access. 216240d553cfSPaul Beesley 216340d553cfSPaul BeesleyOn Arm Platforms, bakery locks are used in psci (``psci_locks``) and power controller 216440d553cfSPaul Beesleydriver (``arm_lock``). 216540d553cfSPaul Beesley 216640d553cfSPaul BeesleyNon Functional Impact of removing coherent memory 216740d553cfSPaul Beesley~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 216840d553cfSPaul Beesley 216940d553cfSPaul BeesleyRemoval of the coherent memory region leads to the additional software overhead 217040d553cfSPaul Beesleyof performing cache maintenance for the affected data structures. However, since 217140d553cfSPaul Beesleythe memory where the data structures are allocated is cacheable, the overhead is 217240d553cfSPaul Beesleymostly mitigated by an increase in performance. 217340d553cfSPaul Beesley 217440d553cfSPaul BeesleyThere is however a performance impact for bakery locks, due to: 217540d553cfSPaul Beesley 217640d553cfSPaul Beesley- Additional cache maintenance operations, and 217740d553cfSPaul Beesley- Multiple cache line reads for each lock operation, since the bakery locks 217840d553cfSPaul Beesley for each CPU are distributed across different cache lines. 217940d553cfSPaul Beesley 218040d553cfSPaul BeesleyThe implementation has been optimized to minimize this additional overhead. 218140d553cfSPaul BeesleyMeasurements indicate that when bakery locks are allocated in Normal memory, the 218240d553cfSPaul Beesleyminimum latency of acquiring a lock is on an average 3-4 micro seconds whereas 218340d553cfSPaul Beesleyin Device memory the same is 2 micro seconds. The measurements were done on the 218440d553cfSPaul BeesleyJuno Arm development platform. 218540d553cfSPaul Beesley 218640d553cfSPaul BeesleyAs mentioned earlier, almost a page of memory can be saved by disabling 218740d553cfSPaul Beesley``USE_COHERENT_MEM``. Each platform needs to consider these trade-offs to decide 218840d553cfSPaul Beesleywhether coherent memory should be used. If a platform disables 218940d553cfSPaul Beesley``USE_COHERENT_MEM`` and needs to use bakery locks in the porting layer, it can 219040d553cfSPaul Beesleyoptionally define macro ``PLAT_PERCPU_BAKERY_LOCK_SIZE`` (see the 219140d553cfSPaul Beesley`Porting Guide`_). Refer to the reference platform code for examples. 219240d553cfSPaul Beesley 219340d553cfSPaul BeesleyIsolating code and read-only data on separate memory pages 219440d553cfSPaul Beesley---------------------------------------------------------- 219540d553cfSPaul Beesley 219640d553cfSPaul BeesleyIn the Armv8-A VMSA, translation table entries include fields that define the 219740d553cfSPaul Beesleyproperties of the target memory region, such as its access permissions. The 219840d553cfSPaul Beesleysmallest unit of memory that can be addressed by a translation table entry is 219940d553cfSPaul Beesleya memory page. Therefore, if software needs to set different permissions on two 220040d553cfSPaul Beesleymemory regions then it needs to map them using different memory pages. 220140d553cfSPaul Beesley 220240d553cfSPaul BeesleyThe default memory layout for each BL image is as follows: 220340d553cfSPaul Beesley 220440d553cfSPaul Beesley:: 220540d553cfSPaul Beesley 220640d553cfSPaul Beesley | ... | 220740d553cfSPaul Beesley +-------------------+ 220840d553cfSPaul Beesley | Read-write data | 220940d553cfSPaul Beesley +-------------------+ Page boundary 221040d553cfSPaul Beesley | <Padding> | 221140d553cfSPaul Beesley +-------------------+ 221240d553cfSPaul Beesley | Exception vectors | 221340d553cfSPaul Beesley +-------------------+ 2 KB boundary 221440d553cfSPaul Beesley | <Padding> | 221540d553cfSPaul Beesley +-------------------+ 221640d553cfSPaul Beesley | Read-only data | 221740d553cfSPaul Beesley +-------------------+ 221840d553cfSPaul Beesley | Code | 221940d553cfSPaul Beesley +-------------------+ BLx_BASE 222040d553cfSPaul Beesley 2221e1c5026aSPaul Beesley.. note:: 2222e1c5026aSPaul Beesley The 2KB alignment for the exception vectors is an architectural 222340d553cfSPaul Beesley requirement. 222440d553cfSPaul Beesley 222540d553cfSPaul BeesleyThe read-write data start on a new memory page so that they can be mapped with 222640d553cfSPaul Beesleyread-write permissions, whereas the code and read-only data below are configured 222740d553cfSPaul Beesleyas read-only. 222840d553cfSPaul Beesley 222940d553cfSPaul BeesleyHowever, the read-only data are not aligned on a page boundary. They are 223040d553cfSPaul Beesleycontiguous to the code. Therefore, the end of the code section and the beginning 223140d553cfSPaul Beesleyof the read-only data one might share a memory page. This forces both to be 223240d553cfSPaul Beesleymapped with the same memory attributes. As the code needs to be executable, this 223340d553cfSPaul Beesleymeans that the read-only data stored on the same memory page as the code are 223440d553cfSPaul Beesleyexecutable as well. This could potentially be exploited as part of a security 223540d553cfSPaul Beesleyattack. 223640d553cfSPaul Beesley 223740d553cfSPaul BeesleyTF provides the build flag ``SEPARATE_CODE_AND_RODATA`` to isolate the code and 223840d553cfSPaul Beesleyread-only data on separate memory pages. This in turn allows independent control 223940d553cfSPaul Beesleyof the access permissions for the code and read-only data. In this case, 224040d553cfSPaul Beesleyplatform code gets a finer-grained view of the image layout and can 224140d553cfSPaul Beesleyappropriately map the code region as executable and the read-only data as 224240d553cfSPaul Beesleyexecute-never. 224340d553cfSPaul Beesley 224440d553cfSPaul BeesleyThis has an impact on memory footprint, as padding bytes need to be introduced 224540d553cfSPaul Beesleybetween the code and read-only data to ensure the segregation of the two. To 224640d553cfSPaul Beesleylimit the memory cost, this flag also changes the memory layout such that the 224740d553cfSPaul Beesleycode and exception vectors are now contiguous, like so: 224840d553cfSPaul Beesley 224940d553cfSPaul Beesley:: 225040d553cfSPaul Beesley 225140d553cfSPaul Beesley | ... | 225240d553cfSPaul Beesley +-------------------+ 225340d553cfSPaul Beesley | Read-write data | 225440d553cfSPaul Beesley +-------------------+ Page boundary 225540d553cfSPaul Beesley | <Padding> | 225640d553cfSPaul Beesley +-------------------+ 225740d553cfSPaul Beesley | Read-only data | 225840d553cfSPaul Beesley +-------------------+ Page boundary 225940d553cfSPaul Beesley | <Padding> | 226040d553cfSPaul Beesley +-------------------+ 226140d553cfSPaul Beesley | Exception vectors | 226240d553cfSPaul Beesley +-------------------+ 2 KB boundary 226340d553cfSPaul Beesley | <Padding> | 226440d553cfSPaul Beesley +-------------------+ 226540d553cfSPaul Beesley | Code | 226640d553cfSPaul Beesley +-------------------+ BLx_BASE 226740d553cfSPaul Beesley 226840d553cfSPaul BeesleyWith this more condensed memory layout, the separation of read-only data will 226940d553cfSPaul Beesleyadd zero or one page to the memory footprint of each BL image. Each platform 227040d553cfSPaul Beesleyshould consider the trade-off between memory footprint and security. 227140d553cfSPaul Beesley 227240d553cfSPaul BeesleyThis build flag is disabled by default, minimising memory footprint. On Arm 227340d553cfSPaul Beesleyplatforms, it is enabled. 227440d553cfSPaul Beesley 227540d553cfSPaul BeesleyPublish and Subscribe Framework 227640d553cfSPaul Beesley------------------------------- 227740d553cfSPaul Beesley 227840d553cfSPaul BeesleyThe Publish and Subscribe Framework allows EL3 components to define and publish 227940d553cfSPaul Beesleyevents, to which other EL3 components can subscribe. 228040d553cfSPaul Beesley 228140d553cfSPaul BeesleyThe following macros are provided by the framework: 228240d553cfSPaul Beesley 228340d553cfSPaul Beesley- ``REGISTER_PUBSUB_EVENT(event)``: Defines an event, and takes one argument, 228440d553cfSPaul Beesley the event name, which must be a valid C identifier. All calls to 228540d553cfSPaul Beesley ``REGISTER_PUBSUB_EVENT`` macro must be placed in the file 228640d553cfSPaul Beesley ``pubsub_events.h``. 228740d553cfSPaul Beesley 228840d553cfSPaul Beesley- ``PUBLISH_EVENT_ARG(event, arg)``: Publishes a defined event, by iterating 228940d553cfSPaul Beesley subscribed handlers and calling them in turn. The handlers will be passed the 229040d553cfSPaul Beesley parameter ``arg``. The expected use-case is to broadcast an event. 229140d553cfSPaul Beesley 229240d553cfSPaul Beesley- ``PUBLISH_EVENT(event)``: Like ``PUBLISH_EVENT_ARG``, except that the value 229340d553cfSPaul Beesley ``NULL`` is passed to subscribed handlers. 229440d553cfSPaul Beesley 229540d553cfSPaul Beesley- ``SUBSCRIBE_TO_EVENT(event, handler)``: Registers the ``handler`` to 229640d553cfSPaul Beesley subscribe to ``event``. The handler will be executed whenever the ``event`` 229740d553cfSPaul Beesley is published. 229840d553cfSPaul Beesley 229940d553cfSPaul Beesley- ``for_each_subscriber(event, subscriber)``: Iterates through all handlers 230040d553cfSPaul Beesley subscribed for ``event``. ``subscriber`` must be a local variable of type 230140d553cfSPaul Beesley ``pubsub_cb_t *``, and will point to each subscribed handler in turn during 230240d553cfSPaul Beesley iteration. This macro can be used for those patterns that none of the 230340d553cfSPaul Beesley ``PUBLISH_EVENT_*()`` macros cover. 230440d553cfSPaul Beesley 230540d553cfSPaul BeesleyPublishing an event that wasn't defined using ``REGISTER_PUBSUB_EVENT`` will 230640d553cfSPaul Beesleyresult in build error. Subscribing to an undefined event however won't. 230740d553cfSPaul Beesley 230840d553cfSPaul BeesleySubscribed handlers must be of type ``pubsub_cb_t``, with following function 230940d553cfSPaul Beesleysignature: 231040d553cfSPaul Beesley 231129c02529SPaul Beesley.. code:: c 231240d553cfSPaul Beesley 231340d553cfSPaul Beesley typedef void* (*pubsub_cb_t)(const void *arg); 231440d553cfSPaul Beesley 231540d553cfSPaul BeesleyThere may be arbitrary number of handlers registered to the same event. The 231640d553cfSPaul Beesleyorder in which subscribed handlers are notified when that event is published is 231740d553cfSPaul Beesleynot defined. Subscribed handlers may be executed in any order; handlers should 231840d553cfSPaul Beesleynot assume any relative ordering amongst them. 231940d553cfSPaul Beesley 232040d553cfSPaul BeesleyPublishing an event on a PE will result in subscribed handlers executing on that 232140d553cfSPaul BeesleyPE only; it won't cause handlers to execute on a different PE. 232240d553cfSPaul Beesley 232340d553cfSPaul BeesleyNote that publishing an event on a PE blocks until all the subscribed handlers 232440d553cfSPaul Beesleyfinish executing on the PE. 232540d553cfSPaul Beesley 232640d553cfSPaul BeesleyTF-A generic code publishes and subscribes to some events within. Platform 232740d553cfSPaul Beesleyports are discouraged from subscribing to them. These events may be withdrawn, 232840d553cfSPaul Beesleyrenamed, or have their semantics altered in the future. Platforms may however 232940d553cfSPaul Beesleyregister, publish, and subscribe to platform-specific events. 233040d553cfSPaul Beesley 233140d553cfSPaul BeesleyPublish and Subscribe Example 233240d553cfSPaul Beesley~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 233340d553cfSPaul Beesley 233440d553cfSPaul BeesleyA publisher that wants to publish event ``foo`` would: 233540d553cfSPaul Beesley 233640d553cfSPaul Beesley- Define the event ``foo`` in the ``pubsub_events.h``. 233740d553cfSPaul Beesley 233829c02529SPaul Beesley .. code:: c 233940d553cfSPaul Beesley 234040d553cfSPaul Beesley REGISTER_PUBSUB_EVENT(foo); 234140d553cfSPaul Beesley 234240d553cfSPaul Beesley- Depending on the nature of event, use one of ``PUBLISH_EVENT_*()`` macros to 234340d553cfSPaul Beesley publish the event at the appropriate path and time of execution. 234440d553cfSPaul Beesley 234540d553cfSPaul BeesleyA subscriber that wants to subscribe to event ``foo`` published above would 234640d553cfSPaul Beesleyimplement: 234740d553cfSPaul Beesley 234840d553cfSPaul Beesley.. code:: c 234940d553cfSPaul Beesley 235040d553cfSPaul Beesley void *foo_handler(const void *arg) 235140d553cfSPaul Beesley { 235240d553cfSPaul Beesley void *result; 235340d553cfSPaul Beesley 235440d553cfSPaul Beesley /* Do handling ... */ 235540d553cfSPaul Beesley 235640d553cfSPaul Beesley return result; 235740d553cfSPaul Beesley } 235840d553cfSPaul Beesley 235940d553cfSPaul Beesley SUBSCRIBE_TO_EVENT(foo, foo_handler); 236040d553cfSPaul Beesley 236140d553cfSPaul Beesley 236240d553cfSPaul BeesleyReclaiming the BL31 initialization code 236340d553cfSPaul Beesley~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 236440d553cfSPaul Beesley 236540d553cfSPaul BeesleyA significant amount of the code used for the initialization of BL31 is never 236640d553cfSPaul Beesleyneeded again after boot time. In order to reduce the runtime memory 236740d553cfSPaul Beesleyfootprint, the memory used for this code can be reclaimed after initialization 236840d553cfSPaul Beesleyhas finished and be used for runtime data. 236940d553cfSPaul Beesley 237040d553cfSPaul BeesleyThe build option ``RECLAIM_INIT_CODE`` can be set to mark this boot time code 237140d553cfSPaul Beesleywith a ``.text.init.*`` attribute which can be filtered and placed suitably 237240d553cfSPaul Beesleywithin the BL image for later reclamation by the platform. The platform can 237340d553cfSPaul Beesleyspecify the filter and the memory region for this init section in BL31 via the 237440d553cfSPaul Beesleyplat.ld.S linker script. For example, on the FVP, this section is placed 237540d553cfSPaul Beesleyoverlapping the secondary CPU stacks so that after the cold boot is done, this 237640d553cfSPaul Beesleymemory can be reclaimed for the stacks. The init memory section is initially 237740d553cfSPaul Beesleymapped with ``RO``, ``EXECUTE`` attributes. After BL31 initialization has 237840d553cfSPaul Beesleycompleted, the FVP changes the attributes of this section to ``RW``, 237940d553cfSPaul Beesley``EXECUTE_NEVER`` allowing it to be used for runtime data. The memory attributes 238040d553cfSPaul Beesleyare changed within the ``bl31_plat_runtime_setup`` platform hook. The init 238140d553cfSPaul Beesleysection section can be reclaimed for any data which is accessed after cold 238240d553cfSPaul Beesleyboot initialization and it is upto the platform to make the decision. 238340d553cfSPaul Beesley 238440d553cfSPaul BeesleyPerformance Measurement Framework 238540d553cfSPaul Beesley--------------------------------- 238640d553cfSPaul Beesley 238740d553cfSPaul BeesleyThe Performance Measurement Framework (PMF) facilitates collection of 238840d553cfSPaul Beesleytimestamps by registered services and provides interfaces to retrieve them 238940d553cfSPaul Beesleyfrom within TF-A. A platform can choose to expose appropriate SMCs to 239040d553cfSPaul Beesleyretrieve these collected timestamps. 239140d553cfSPaul Beesley 239240d553cfSPaul BeesleyBy default, the global physical counter is used for the timestamp 239340d553cfSPaul Beesleyvalue and is read via ``CNTPCT_EL0``. The framework allows to retrieve 239440d553cfSPaul Beesleytimestamps captured by other CPUs. 239540d553cfSPaul Beesley 239640d553cfSPaul BeesleyTimestamp identifier format 239740d553cfSPaul Beesley~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 239840d553cfSPaul Beesley 239940d553cfSPaul BeesleyA PMF timestamp is uniquely identified across the system via the 240040d553cfSPaul Beesleytimestamp ID or ``tid``. The ``tid`` is composed as follows: 240140d553cfSPaul Beesley 240240d553cfSPaul Beesley:: 240340d553cfSPaul Beesley 240440d553cfSPaul Beesley Bits 0-7: The local timestamp identifier. 240540d553cfSPaul Beesley Bits 8-9: Reserved. 240640d553cfSPaul Beesley Bits 10-15: The service identifier. 240740d553cfSPaul Beesley Bits 16-31: Reserved. 240840d553cfSPaul Beesley 240940d553cfSPaul Beesley#. The service identifier. Each PMF service is identified by a 241040d553cfSPaul Beesley service name and a service identifier. Both the service name and 241140d553cfSPaul Beesley identifier are unique within the system as a whole. 241240d553cfSPaul Beesley 241340d553cfSPaul Beesley#. The local timestamp identifier. This identifier is unique within a given 241440d553cfSPaul Beesley service. 241540d553cfSPaul Beesley 241640d553cfSPaul BeesleyRegistering a PMF service 241740d553cfSPaul Beesley~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 241840d553cfSPaul Beesley 241940d553cfSPaul BeesleyTo register a PMF service, the ``PMF_REGISTER_SERVICE()`` macro from ``pmf.h`` 242040d553cfSPaul Beesleyis used. The arguments required are the service name, the service ID, 242140d553cfSPaul Beesleythe total number of local timestamps to be captured and a set of flags. 242240d553cfSPaul Beesley 242340d553cfSPaul BeesleyThe ``flags`` field can be specified as a bitwise-OR of the following values: 242440d553cfSPaul Beesley 242540d553cfSPaul Beesley:: 242640d553cfSPaul Beesley 242740d553cfSPaul Beesley PMF_STORE_ENABLE: The timestamp is stored in memory for later retrieval. 242840d553cfSPaul Beesley PMF_DUMP_ENABLE: The timestamp is dumped on the serial console. 242940d553cfSPaul Beesley 243040d553cfSPaul BeesleyThe ``PMF_REGISTER_SERVICE()`` reserves memory to store captured 243140d553cfSPaul Beesleytimestamps in a PMF specific linker section at build time. 243240d553cfSPaul BeesleyAdditionally, it defines necessary functions to capture and 243340d553cfSPaul Beesleyretrieve a particular timestamp for the given service at runtime. 243440d553cfSPaul Beesley 243540d553cfSPaul BeesleyThe macro ``PMF_REGISTER_SERVICE()`` only enables capturing PMF timestamps 243640d553cfSPaul Beesleyfrom within TF-A. In order to retrieve timestamps from outside of TF-A, the 243740d553cfSPaul Beesley``PMF_REGISTER_SERVICE_SMC()`` macro must be used instead. This macro 243840d553cfSPaul Beesleyaccepts the same set of arguments as the ``PMF_REGISTER_SERVICE()`` 243940d553cfSPaul Beesleymacro but additionally supports retrieving timestamps using SMCs. 244040d553cfSPaul Beesley 244140d553cfSPaul BeesleyCapturing a timestamp 244240d553cfSPaul Beesley~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 244340d553cfSPaul Beesley 244440d553cfSPaul BeesleyPMF timestamps are stored in a per-service timestamp region. On a 244540d553cfSPaul Beesleysystem with multiple CPUs, each timestamp is captured and stored 244640d553cfSPaul Beesleyin a per-CPU cache line aligned memory region. 244740d553cfSPaul Beesley 244840d553cfSPaul BeesleyHaving registered the service, the ``PMF_CAPTURE_TIMESTAMP()`` macro can be 244940d553cfSPaul Beesleyused to capture a timestamp at the location where it is used. The macro 245040d553cfSPaul Beesleytakes the service name, a local timestamp identifier and a flag as arguments. 245140d553cfSPaul Beesley 245240d553cfSPaul BeesleyThe ``flags`` field argument can be zero, or ``PMF_CACHE_MAINT`` which 245340d553cfSPaul Beesleyinstructs PMF to do cache maintenance following the capture. Cache 245440d553cfSPaul Beesleymaintenance is required if any of the service's timestamps are captured 245540d553cfSPaul Beesleywith data cache disabled. 245640d553cfSPaul Beesley 245740d553cfSPaul BeesleyTo capture a timestamp in assembly code, the caller should use 245840d553cfSPaul Beesley``pmf_calc_timestamp_addr`` macro (defined in ``pmf_asm_macros.S``) to 245940d553cfSPaul Beesleycalculate the address of where the timestamp would be stored. The 246040d553cfSPaul Beesleycaller should then read ``CNTPCT_EL0`` register to obtain the timestamp 246140d553cfSPaul Beesleyand store it at the determined address for later retrieval. 246240d553cfSPaul Beesley 246340d553cfSPaul BeesleyRetrieving a timestamp 246440d553cfSPaul Beesley~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 246540d553cfSPaul Beesley 246640d553cfSPaul BeesleyFrom within TF-A, timestamps for individual CPUs can be retrieved using either 246740d553cfSPaul Beesley``PMF_GET_TIMESTAMP_BY_MPIDR()`` or ``PMF_GET_TIMESTAMP_BY_INDEX()`` macros. 246840d553cfSPaul BeesleyThese macros accept the CPU's MPIDR value, or its ordinal position 246940d553cfSPaul Beesleyrespectively. 247040d553cfSPaul Beesley 247140d553cfSPaul BeesleyFrom outside TF-A, timestamps for individual CPUs can be retrieved by calling 247240d553cfSPaul Beesleyinto ``pmf_smc_handler()``. 247340d553cfSPaul Beesley 247429c02529SPaul Beesley:: 247540d553cfSPaul Beesley 247640d553cfSPaul Beesley Interface : pmf_smc_handler() 247740d553cfSPaul Beesley Argument : unsigned int smc_fid, u_register_t x1, 247840d553cfSPaul Beesley u_register_t x2, u_register_t x3, 247940d553cfSPaul Beesley u_register_t x4, void *cookie, 248040d553cfSPaul Beesley void *handle, u_register_t flags 248140d553cfSPaul Beesley Return : uintptr_t 248240d553cfSPaul Beesley 248340d553cfSPaul Beesley smc_fid: Holds the SMC identifier which is either `PMF_SMC_GET_TIMESTAMP_32` 248440d553cfSPaul Beesley when the caller of the SMC is running in AArch32 mode 248540d553cfSPaul Beesley or `PMF_SMC_GET_TIMESTAMP_64` when the caller is running in AArch64 mode. 248640d553cfSPaul Beesley x1: Timestamp identifier. 248740d553cfSPaul Beesley x2: The `mpidr` of the CPU for which the timestamp has to be retrieved. 248840d553cfSPaul Beesley This can be the `mpidr` of a different core to the one initiating 248940d553cfSPaul Beesley the SMC. In that case, service specific cache maintenance may be 249040d553cfSPaul Beesley required to ensure the updated copy of the timestamp is returned. 249140d553cfSPaul Beesley x3: A flags value that is either 0 or `PMF_CACHE_MAINT`. If 249240d553cfSPaul Beesley `PMF_CACHE_MAINT` is passed, then the PMF code will perform a 249340d553cfSPaul Beesley cache invalidate before reading the timestamp. This ensures 249440d553cfSPaul Beesley an updated copy is returned. 249540d553cfSPaul Beesley 249640d553cfSPaul BeesleyThe remaining arguments, ``x4``, ``cookie``, ``handle`` and ``flags`` are unused 249740d553cfSPaul Beesleyin this implementation. 249840d553cfSPaul Beesley 249940d553cfSPaul BeesleyPMF code structure 250040d553cfSPaul Beesley~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 250140d553cfSPaul Beesley 250240d553cfSPaul Beesley#. ``pmf_main.c`` consists of core functions that implement service registration, 250340d553cfSPaul Beesley initialization, storing, dumping and retrieving timestamps. 250440d553cfSPaul Beesley 250540d553cfSPaul Beesley#. ``pmf_smc.c`` contains the SMC handling for registered PMF services. 250640d553cfSPaul Beesley 250740d553cfSPaul Beesley#. ``pmf.h`` contains the public interface to Performance Measurement Framework. 250840d553cfSPaul Beesley 250940d553cfSPaul Beesley#. ``pmf_asm_macros.S`` consists of macros to facilitate capturing timestamps in 251040d553cfSPaul Beesley assembly code. 251140d553cfSPaul Beesley 251240d553cfSPaul Beesley#. ``pmf_helpers.h`` is an internal header used by ``pmf.h``. 251340d553cfSPaul Beesley 251440d553cfSPaul BeesleyArmv8-A Architecture Extensions 251540d553cfSPaul Beesley------------------------------- 251640d553cfSPaul Beesley 251740d553cfSPaul BeesleyTF-A makes use of Armv8-A Architecture Extensions where applicable. This 251840d553cfSPaul Beesleysection lists the usage of Architecture Extensions, and build flags 251940d553cfSPaul Beesleycontrolling them. 252040d553cfSPaul Beesley 252140d553cfSPaul BeesleyIn general, and unless individually mentioned, the build options 252240d553cfSPaul Beesley``ARM_ARCH_MAJOR`` and ``ARM_ARCH_MINOR`` select the Architecture Extension to 252340d553cfSPaul Beesleytarget when building TF-A. Subsequent Arm Architecture Extensions are backward 252440d553cfSPaul Beesleycompatible with previous versions. 252540d553cfSPaul Beesley 252640d553cfSPaul BeesleyThe build system only requires that ``ARM_ARCH_MAJOR`` and ``ARM_ARCH_MINOR`` have a 252740d553cfSPaul Beesleyvalid numeric value. These build options only control whether or not 252840d553cfSPaul BeesleyArchitecture Extension-specific code is included in the build. Otherwise, TF-A 252940d553cfSPaul Beesleytargets the base Armv8.0-A architecture; i.e. as if ``ARM_ARCH_MAJOR`` == 8 253040d553cfSPaul Beesleyand ``ARM_ARCH_MINOR`` == 0, which are also their respective default values. 253140d553cfSPaul Beesley 253240d553cfSPaul BeesleySee also the *Summary of build options* in `User Guide`_. 253340d553cfSPaul Beesley 253440d553cfSPaul BeesleyFor details on the Architecture Extension and available features, please refer 253540d553cfSPaul Beesleyto the respective Architecture Extension Supplement. 253640d553cfSPaul Beesley 253740d553cfSPaul BeesleyArmv8.1-A 253840d553cfSPaul Beesley~~~~~~~~~ 253940d553cfSPaul Beesley 254040d553cfSPaul BeesleyThis Architecture Extension is targeted when ``ARM_ARCH_MAJOR`` >= 8, or when 254140d553cfSPaul Beesley``ARM_ARCH_MAJOR`` == 8 and ``ARM_ARCH_MINOR`` >= 1. 254240d553cfSPaul Beesley 2543*c97cba4eSSoby Mathew- By default, a load-/store-exclusive instruction pair is used to implement 2544*c97cba4eSSoby Mathew spinlocks. The ``USE_SPINLOCK_CAS`` build option when set to 1 selects the 2545*c97cba4eSSoby Mathew spinlock implementation using the ARMv8.1-LSE Compare and Swap instruction. 2546*c97cba4eSSoby Mathew Notice this instruction is only available in AArch64 execution state, so 2547*c97cba4eSSoby Mathew the option is only available to AArch64 builds. 254840d553cfSPaul Beesley 254940d553cfSPaul BeesleyArmv8.2-A 255040d553cfSPaul Beesley~~~~~~~~~ 255140d553cfSPaul Beesley 255240d553cfSPaul Beesley- The presence of ARMv8.2-TTCNP is detected at runtime. When it is present, the 255340d553cfSPaul Beesley Common not Private (TTBRn_ELx.CnP) bit is enabled to indicate that multiple 255440d553cfSPaul Beesley Processing Elements in the same Inner Shareable domain use the same 255540d553cfSPaul Beesley translation table entries for a given stage of translation for a particular 255640d553cfSPaul Beesley translation regime. 255740d553cfSPaul Beesley 255840d553cfSPaul BeesleyArmv8.3-A 255940d553cfSPaul Beesley~~~~~~~~~ 256040d553cfSPaul Beesley 256140d553cfSPaul Beesley- Pointer authentication features of Armv8.3-A are unconditionally enabled in 256240d553cfSPaul Beesley the Non-secure world so that lower ELs are allowed to use them without 256340d553cfSPaul Beesley causing a trap to EL3. 256440d553cfSPaul Beesley 256540d553cfSPaul Beesley In order to enable the Secure world to use it, ``CTX_INCLUDE_PAUTH_REGS`` 256640d553cfSPaul Beesley must be set to 1. This will add all pointer authentication system registers 256740d553cfSPaul Beesley to the context that is saved when doing a world switch. 256840d553cfSPaul Beesley 256940d553cfSPaul Beesley The TF-A itself has support for pointer authentication at runtime 25709fc59639SAlexei Fedorov that can be enabled by setting ``BRANCH_PROTECTION`` option to non-zero and 257140d553cfSPaul Beesley ``CTX_INCLUDE_PAUTH_REGS`` to 1. This enables pointer authentication in BL1, 257240d553cfSPaul Beesley BL2, BL31, and the TSP if it is used. 257340d553cfSPaul Beesley 257440d553cfSPaul Beesley These options are experimental features. 257540d553cfSPaul Beesley 257640d553cfSPaul Beesley Note that Pointer Authentication is enabled for Non-secure world irrespective 257740d553cfSPaul Beesley of the value of these build flags if the CPU supports it. 257840d553cfSPaul Beesley 257940d553cfSPaul Beesley If ``ARM_ARCH_MAJOR == 8`` and ``ARM_ARCH_MINOR >= 3`` the code footprint of 258040d553cfSPaul Beesley enabling PAuth is lower because the compiler will use the optimized 258140d553cfSPaul Beesley PAuth instructions rather than the backwards-compatible ones. 258240d553cfSPaul Beesley 25839fc59639SAlexei FedorovArmv8.5-A 25849fc59639SAlexei Fedorov~~~~~~~~~ 25859fc59639SAlexei Fedorov 25869fc59639SAlexei Fedorov- Branch Target Identification feature is selected by ``BRANCH_PROTECTION`` 258788d493fbSJustin Chadwell option set to 1. This option defaults to 0 and this is an experimental 258888d493fbSJustin Chadwell feature. 258988d493fbSJustin Chadwell 259088d493fbSJustin Chadwell- Memory Tagging Extension feature is unconditionally enabled for both worlds 259188d493fbSJustin Chadwell (at EL0 and S-EL0) if it is only supported at EL0. If instead it is 259288d493fbSJustin Chadwell implemented at all ELs, it is unconditionally enabled for only the normal 259388d493fbSJustin Chadwell world. To enable it for the secure world as well, the build option 259488d493fbSJustin Chadwell ``CTX_INCLUDE_MTE_REGS`` is required. If the hardware does not implement 259588d493fbSJustin Chadwell MTE support at all, it is always disabled, no matter what build options 259688d493fbSJustin Chadwell are used. 25979fc59639SAlexei Fedorov 259840d553cfSPaul BeesleyArmv7-A 259940d553cfSPaul Beesley~~~~~~~ 260040d553cfSPaul Beesley 260140d553cfSPaul BeesleyThis Architecture Extension is targeted when ``ARM_ARCH_MAJOR`` == 7. 260240d553cfSPaul Beesley 260340d553cfSPaul BeesleyThere are several Armv7-A extensions available. Obviously the TrustZone 260440d553cfSPaul Beesleyextension is mandatory to support the TF-A bootloader and runtime services. 260540d553cfSPaul Beesley 260640d553cfSPaul BeesleyPlatform implementing an Armv7-A system can to define from its target 260740d553cfSPaul BeesleyCortex-A architecture through ``ARM_CORTEX_A<X> = yes`` in their 260840d553cfSPaul Beesley``platform.mk`` script. For example ``ARM_CORTEX_A15=yes`` for a 260940d553cfSPaul BeesleyCortex-A15 target. 261040d553cfSPaul Beesley 261140d553cfSPaul BeesleyPlatform can also set ``ARM_WITH_NEON=yes`` to enable neon support. 261240d553cfSPaul BeesleyNote that using neon at runtime has constraints on non secure wolrd context. 261340d553cfSPaul BeesleyTF-A does not yet provide VFP context management. 261440d553cfSPaul Beesley 261540d553cfSPaul BeesleyDirective ``ARM_CORTEX_A<x>`` and ``ARM_WITH_NEON`` are used to set 261640d553cfSPaul Beesleythe toolchain target architecture directive. 261740d553cfSPaul Beesley 261840d553cfSPaul BeesleyPlatform may choose to not define straight the toolchain target architecture 261940d553cfSPaul Beesleydirective by defining ``MARCH32_DIRECTIVE``. 262040d553cfSPaul BeesleyI.e: 262140d553cfSPaul Beesley 262229c02529SPaul Beesley.. code:: make 262340d553cfSPaul Beesley 262440d553cfSPaul Beesley MARCH32_DIRECTIVE := -mach=armv7-a 262540d553cfSPaul Beesley 262640d553cfSPaul BeesleyCode Structure 262740d553cfSPaul Beesley-------------- 262840d553cfSPaul Beesley 262940d553cfSPaul BeesleyTF-A code is logically divided between the three boot loader stages mentioned 263040d553cfSPaul Beesleyin the previous sections. The code is also divided into the following 263140d553cfSPaul Beesleycategories (present as directories in the source code): 263240d553cfSPaul Beesley 263340d553cfSPaul Beesley- **Platform specific.** Choice of architecture specific code depends upon 263440d553cfSPaul Beesley the platform. 263540d553cfSPaul Beesley- **Common code.** This is platform and architecture agnostic code. 263640d553cfSPaul Beesley- **Library code.** This code comprises of functionality commonly used by all 263740d553cfSPaul Beesley other code. The PSCI implementation and other EL3 runtime frameworks reside 263840d553cfSPaul Beesley as Library components. 263940d553cfSPaul Beesley- **Stage specific.** Code specific to a boot stage. 264040d553cfSPaul Beesley- **Drivers.** 264140d553cfSPaul Beesley- **Services.** EL3 runtime services (eg: SPD). Specific SPD services 264240d553cfSPaul Beesley reside in the ``services/spd`` directory (e.g. ``services/spd/tspd``). 264340d553cfSPaul Beesley 264440d553cfSPaul BeesleyEach boot loader stage uses code from one or more of the above mentioned 264540d553cfSPaul Beesleycategories. Based upon the above, the code layout looks like this: 264640d553cfSPaul Beesley 264740d553cfSPaul Beesley:: 264840d553cfSPaul Beesley 264940d553cfSPaul Beesley Directory Used by BL1? Used by BL2? Used by BL31? 265040d553cfSPaul Beesley bl1 Yes No No 265140d553cfSPaul Beesley bl2 No Yes No 265240d553cfSPaul Beesley bl31 No No Yes 265340d553cfSPaul Beesley plat Yes Yes Yes 265440d553cfSPaul Beesley drivers Yes No Yes 265540d553cfSPaul Beesley common Yes Yes Yes 265640d553cfSPaul Beesley lib Yes Yes Yes 265740d553cfSPaul Beesley services No No Yes 265840d553cfSPaul Beesley 265940d553cfSPaul BeesleyThe build system provides a non configurable build option IMAGE_BLx for each 266040d553cfSPaul Beesleyboot loader stage (where x = BL stage). e.g. for BL1 , IMAGE_BL1 will be 266140d553cfSPaul Beesleydefined by the build system. This enables TF-A to compile certain code only 266240d553cfSPaul Beesleyfor specific boot loader stages 266340d553cfSPaul Beesley 266440d553cfSPaul BeesleyAll assembler files have the ``.S`` extension. The linker source files for each 266540d553cfSPaul Beesleyboot stage have the extension ``.ld.S``. These are processed by GCC to create the 266640d553cfSPaul Beesleylinker scripts which have the extension ``.ld``. 266740d553cfSPaul Beesley 266840d553cfSPaul BeesleyFDTs provide a description of the hardware platform and are used by the Linux 266940d553cfSPaul Beesleykernel at boot time. These can be found in the ``fdts`` directory. 267040d553cfSPaul Beesley 267140d553cfSPaul BeesleyReferences 267240d553cfSPaul Beesley---------- 267340d553cfSPaul Beesley 267440d553cfSPaul Beesley.. [#] `Trusted Board Boot Requirements CLIENT (TBBR-CLIENT) Armv8-A (ARM DEN0006D)`_ 267540d553cfSPaul Beesley.. [#] `Power State Coordination Interface PDD`_ 267640d553cfSPaul Beesley.. [#] `SMC Calling Convention PDD`_ 267740d553cfSPaul Beesley.. [#] `TF-A Interrupt Management Design guide`_. 267840d553cfSPaul Beesley 267940d553cfSPaul Beesley-------------- 268040d553cfSPaul Beesley 268140d553cfSPaul Beesley*Copyright (c) 2013-2019, Arm Limited and Contributors. All rights reserved.* 268240d553cfSPaul Beesley 268340d553cfSPaul Beesley.. _Reset Design: ./reset-design.rst 268440d553cfSPaul Beesley.. _Porting Guide: ../getting_started/porting-guide.rst 2685f6ad51c8SJohn Tsichritzis.. _Firmware Update: ../components/firmware-update.rst 268640d553cfSPaul Beesley.. _PSCI PDD: http://infocenter.arm.com/help/topic/com.arm.doc.den0022d/Power_State_Coordination_Interface_PDD_v1_1_DEN0022D.pdf 268740d553cfSPaul Beesley.. _SMC calling convention PDD: http://infocenter.arm.com/help/topic/com.arm.doc.den0028b/ARM_DEN0028B_SMC_Calling_Convention.pdf 268840d553cfSPaul Beesley.. _PSCI Library integration guide: ../getting_started/psci-lib-integration-guide.rst 268940d553cfSPaul Beesley.. _SMCCC: http://infocenter.arm.com/help/topic/com.arm.doc.den0028b/ARM_DEN0028B_SMC_Calling_Convention.pdf 269040d553cfSPaul Beesley.. _PSCI: http://infocenter.arm.com/help/topic/com.arm.doc.den0022d/Power_State_Coordination_Interface_PDD_v1_1_DEN0022D.pdf 269140d553cfSPaul Beesley.. _Power State Coordination Interface PDD: http://infocenter.arm.com/help/topic/com.arm.doc.den0022d/Power_State_Coordination_Interface_PDD_v1_1_DEN0022D.pdf 269240d553cfSPaul Beesley.. _here: ../getting_started/psci-lib-integration-guide.rst 2693f6ad51c8SJohn Tsichritzis.. _CPU specific build macros: ./cpu-specific-build-macros.rst 269440d553cfSPaul Beesley.. _CPUBM: ./cpu-specific-build-macros.rst 269540d553cfSPaul Beesley.. _Arm ARM: http://infocenter.arm.com/help/index.jsp?topic=/com.arm.doc.ddi0487a.e/index.html 269640d553cfSPaul Beesley.. _User Guide: ../getting_started/user-guide.rst 269740d553cfSPaul Beesley.. _SMC Calling Convention PDD: http://infocenter.arm.com/help/topic/com.arm.doc.den0028b/ARM_DEN0028B_SMC_Calling_Convention.pdf 269840d553cfSPaul Beesley.. _TF-A Interrupt Management Design guide: ./interrupt-framework-design.rst 2699f6ad51c8SJohn Tsichritzis.. _Translation tables design: ../components/xlat-tables-lib-v2-design.rst 2700f6ad51c8SJohn Tsichritzis.. _Exception Handling Framework: ../components/exception-handling.rst 2701f6ad51c8SJohn Tsichritzis.. _ROMLIB Design: ../components/romlib-design.rst 270240d553cfSPaul Beesley.. _Trusted Board Boot Requirements CLIENT (TBBR-CLIENT) Armv8-A (ARM DEN0006D): https://developer.arm.com/docs/den0006/latest/trusted-board-boot-requirements-client-tbbr-client-armv8-a 270340d553cfSPaul Beesley 2704a2c320a8SPaul Beesley.. |Image 1| image:: ../resources/diagrams/rt-svc-descs-layout.png 2705