xref: /rk3399_ARM-atf/docs/design/firmware-design.rst (revision 6fb6bee1dfd7fd896c44cc21b02b4ef3aad3bbd0)
1Firmware Design
2===============
3
4Trusted Firmware-A (TF-A) implements a subset of the Trusted Board Boot
5Requirements (TBBR) Platform Design Document (PDD) for Arm reference
6platforms.
7
8The TBB sequence starts when the platform is powered on and runs up
9to the stage where it hands-off control to firmware running in the normal
10world in DRAM. This is the cold boot path.
11
12TF-A also implements the `PSCI`_ as a runtime service. PSCI is the interface
13from normal world software to firmware implementing power management use-cases
14(for example, secondary CPU boot, hotplug and idle). Normal world software can
15access TF-A runtime services via the Arm SMC (Secure Monitor Call) instruction.
16The SMC instruction must be used as mandated by the SMC Calling Convention
17(`SMCCC`_).
18
19TF-A implements a framework for configuring and managing interrupts generated
20in either security state. The details of the interrupt management framework
21and its design can be found in :ref:`Interrupt Management Framework`.
22
23TF-A also implements a library for setting up and managing the translation
24tables. The details of this library can be found in
25:ref:`Translation (XLAT) Tables Library`.
26
27TF-A can be built to support either AArch64 or AArch32 execution state.
28
29.. note::
30    The descriptions in this chapter are for the Arm TrustZone architecture.
31    For changes to the firmware design for the `Arm Confidential Compute
32    Architecture (Arm CCA)`_ please refer to the chapter :ref:`Realm Management
33    Extension (RME)`.
34
35Cold boot
36---------
37
38The cold boot path starts when the platform is physically turned on. If
39``COLD_BOOT_SINGLE_CPU=0``, one of the CPUs released from reset is chosen as the
40primary CPU, and the remaining CPUs are considered secondary CPUs. The primary
41CPU is chosen through platform-specific means. The cold boot path is mainly
42executed by the primary CPU, other than essential CPU initialization executed by
43all CPUs. The secondary CPUs are kept in a safe platform-specific state until
44the primary CPU has performed enough initialization to boot them.
45
46Refer to the :ref:`CPU Reset` for more information on the effect of the
47``COLD_BOOT_SINGLE_CPU`` platform build option.
48
49The cold boot path in this implementation of TF-A depends on the execution
50state. For AArch64, it is divided into five steps (in order of execution):
51
52-  Boot Loader stage 1 (BL1) *AP Trusted ROM*
53-  Boot Loader stage 2 (BL2) *Trusted Boot Firmware*
54-  Boot Loader stage 3-1 (BL31) *EL3 Runtime Software*
55-  Boot Loader stage 3-2 (BL32) *Secure-EL1 Payload* (optional)
56-  Boot Loader stage 3-3 (BL33) *Non-trusted Firmware*
57
58For AArch32, it is divided into four steps (in order of execution):
59
60-  Boot Loader stage 1 (BL1) *AP Trusted ROM*
61-  Boot Loader stage 2 (BL2) *Trusted Boot Firmware*
62-  Boot Loader stage 3-2 (BL32) *EL3 Runtime Software*
63-  Boot Loader stage 3-3 (BL33) *Non-trusted Firmware*
64
65Arm development platforms (Fixed Virtual Platforms (FVPs) and Juno) implement a
66combination of the following types of memory regions. Each bootloader stage uses
67one or more of these memory regions.
68
69-  Regions accessible from both non-secure and secure states. For example,
70   non-trusted SRAM, ROM and DRAM.
71-  Regions accessible from only the secure state. For example, trusted SRAM and
72   ROM. The FVPs also implement the trusted DRAM which is statically
73   configured. Additionally, the Base FVPs and Juno development platform
74   configure the TrustZone Controller (TZC) to create a region in the DRAM
75   which is accessible only from the secure state.
76
77The sections below provide the following details:
78
79-  dynamic configuration of Boot Loader stages
80-  initialization and execution of the first three stages during cold boot
81-  specification of the EL3 Runtime Software (BL31 for AArch64 and BL32 for
82   AArch32) entrypoint requirements for use by alternative Trusted Boot
83   Firmware in place of the provided BL1 and BL2
84
85Dynamic Configuration during cold boot
86~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
87
88Each of the Boot Loader stages may be dynamically configured if required by the
89platform. The Boot Loader stage may optionally specify a firmware
90configuration file and/or hardware configuration file as listed below:
91
92-  FW_CONFIG - The firmware configuration file. Holds properties shared across
93   all BLx images.
94   An example is the "dtb-registry" node, which contains the information about
95   the other device tree configurations (load-address, size, image_id).
96-  HW_CONFIG - The hardware configuration file. Can be shared by all Boot Loader
97   stages and also by the Normal World Rich OS.
98-  TB_FW_CONFIG - Trusted Boot Firmware configuration file. Shared between BL1
99   and BL2.
100-  SOC_FW_CONFIG - SoC Firmware configuration file. Used by BL31.
101-  TOS_FW_CONFIG - Trusted OS Firmware configuration file. Used by Trusted OS
102   (BL32).
103-  NT_FW_CONFIG - Non Trusted Firmware configuration file. Used by Non-trusted
104   firmware (BL33).
105
106The Arm development platforms use the Flattened Device Tree format for the
107dynamic configuration files.
108
109Each Boot Loader stage can pass up to 4 arguments via registers to the next
110stage.  BL2 passes the list of the next images to execute to the *EL3 Runtime
111Software* (BL31 for AArch64 and BL32 for AArch32) via `arg0`. All the other
112arguments are platform defined. The Arm development platforms use the following
113convention:
114
115-  BL1 passes the address of a meminfo_t structure to BL2 via ``arg1``. This
116   structure contains the memory layout available to BL2.
117-  When dynamic configuration files are present, the firmware configuration for
118   the next Boot Loader stage is populated in the first available argument and
119   the generic hardware configuration is passed the next available argument.
120   For example,
121
122   -  FW_CONFIG is loaded by BL1, then its address is passed in ``arg0`` to BL2.
123   -  TB_FW_CONFIG address is retrieved by BL2 from FW_CONFIG device tree.
124   -  If HW_CONFIG is loaded by BL1, then its address is passed in ``arg2`` to
125      BL2. Note, ``arg1`` is already used for meminfo_t.
126   -  If SOC_FW_CONFIG is loaded by BL2, then its address is passed in ``arg1``
127      to BL31. Note, ``arg0`` is used to pass the list of executable images.
128   -  Similarly, if HW_CONFIG is loaded by BL1 or BL2, then its address is
129      passed in ``arg2`` to BL31.
130   -  For other BL3x images, if the firmware configuration file is loaded by
131      BL2, then its address is passed in ``arg0`` and if HW_CONFIG is loaded
132      then its address is passed in ``arg1``.
133   -  In case SPMC_AT_EL3 is enabled, populate the BL32 image base, size and max
134      limit in the entry point information, since there is no platform function
135      to retrieve these in generic code. We choose ``arg2``, ``arg3`` and
136      ``arg4`` since the generic code uses ``arg1`` for stashing the SP manifest
137      size. The SPMC setup uses these arguments to update SP manifest with
138      actual SP's base address and it size.
139   -  In case of the Arm FVP platform, FW_CONFIG address passed in ``arg1`` to
140      BL31/SP_MIN, and the SOC_FW_CONFIG and HW_CONFIG details are retrieved
141      from FW_CONFIG device tree.
142
143BL1
144~~~
145
146This stage begins execution from the platform's reset vector at EL3. The reset
147address is platform dependent but it is usually located in a Trusted ROM area.
148The BL1 data section is copied to trusted SRAM at runtime.
149
150On the Arm development platforms, BL1 code starts execution from the reset
151vector defined by the constant ``BL1_RO_BASE``. The BL1 data section is copied
152to the top of trusted SRAM as defined by the constant ``BL1_RW_BASE``.
153
154The functionality implemented by this stage is as follows.
155
156Determination of boot path
157^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
158
159Whenever a CPU is released from reset, BL1 needs to distinguish between a warm
160boot and a cold boot. This is done using platform-specific mechanisms (see the
161``plat_get_my_entrypoint()`` function in the :ref:`Porting Guide`). In the case
162of a warm boot, a CPU is expected to continue execution from a separate
163entrypoint. In the case of a cold boot, the secondary CPUs are placed in a safe
164platform-specific state (see the ``plat_secondary_cold_boot_setup()`` function in
165the :ref:`Porting Guide`) while the primary CPU executes the remaining cold boot
166path as described in the following sections.
167
168This step only applies when ``PROGRAMMABLE_RESET_ADDRESS=0``. Refer to the
169:ref:`CPU Reset` for more information on the effect of the
170``PROGRAMMABLE_RESET_ADDRESS`` platform build option.
171
172Architectural initialization
173^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
174
175BL1 performs minimal architectural initialization as follows.
176
177-  Exception vectors
178
179   BL1 sets up simple exception vectors for both synchronous and asynchronous
180   exceptions. The default behavior upon receiving an exception is to populate
181   a status code in the general purpose register ``X0/R0`` and call the
182   ``plat_report_exception()`` function (see the :ref:`Porting Guide`). The
183   status code is one of:
184
185   For AArch64:
186
187   ::
188
189       0x0 : Synchronous exception from Current EL with SP_EL0
190       0x1 : IRQ exception from Current EL with SP_EL0
191       0x2 : FIQ exception from Current EL with SP_EL0
192       0x3 : System Error exception from Current EL with SP_EL0
193       0x4 : Synchronous exception from Current EL with SP_ELx
194       0x5 : IRQ exception from Current EL with SP_ELx
195       0x6 : FIQ exception from Current EL with SP_ELx
196       0x7 : System Error exception from Current EL with SP_ELx
197       0x8 : Synchronous exception from Lower EL using aarch64
198       0x9 : IRQ exception from Lower EL using aarch64
199       0xa : FIQ exception from Lower EL using aarch64
200       0xb : System Error exception from Lower EL using aarch64
201       0xc : Synchronous exception from Lower EL using aarch32
202       0xd : IRQ exception from Lower EL using aarch32
203       0xe : FIQ exception from Lower EL using aarch32
204       0xf : System Error exception from Lower EL using aarch32
205
206   For AArch32:
207
208   ::
209
210       0x10 : User mode
211       0x11 : FIQ mode
212       0x12 : IRQ mode
213       0x13 : SVC mode
214       0x16 : Monitor mode
215       0x17 : Abort mode
216       0x1a : Hypervisor mode
217       0x1b : Undefined mode
218       0x1f : System mode
219
220   The ``plat_report_exception()`` implementation on the Arm FVP port programs
221   the Versatile Express System LED register in the following format to
222   indicate the occurrence of an unexpected exception:
223
224   ::
225
226       SYS_LED[0]   - Security state (Secure=0/Non-Secure=1)
227       SYS_LED[2:1] - Exception Level (EL3=0x3, EL2=0x2, EL1=0x1, EL0=0x0)
228                      For AArch32 it is always 0x0
229       SYS_LED[7:3] - Exception Class (Sync/Async & origin). This is the value
230                      of the status code
231
232   A write to the LED register reflects in the System LEDs (S6LED0..7) in the
233   CLCD window of the FVP.
234
235   BL1 does not expect to receive any exceptions other than the SMC exception.
236   For the latter, BL1 installs a simple stub. The stub expects to receive a
237   limited set of SMC types (determined by their function IDs in the general
238   purpose register ``X0/R0``):
239
240   -  ``BL1_SMC_RUN_IMAGE``: This SMC is raised by BL2 to make BL1 pass control
241      to EL3 Runtime Software.
242   -  All SMCs listed in section "BL1 SMC Interface" in the :ref:`Firmware Update (FWU)`
243      Design Guide are supported for AArch64 only. These SMCs are currently
244      not supported when BL1 is built for AArch32.
245
246   Any other SMC leads to an assertion failure.
247
248-  CPU initialization
249
250   BL1 calls the ``reset_handler`` macro/function which in turn calls the CPU
251   specific reset handler function (see the section: "CPU specific operations
252   framework").
253
254Platform initialization
255^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
256
257On Arm platforms, BL1 performs the following platform initializations:
258
259-  Enable the Trusted Watchdog.
260-  Initialize the console.
261-  Configure the Interconnect to enable hardware coherency.
262-  Enable the MMU and map the memory it needs to access.
263-  Configure any required platform storage to load the next bootloader image
264   (BL2).
265-  If the BL1 dynamic configuration file, ``TB_FW_CONFIG``, is available, then
266   load it to the platform defined address and make it available to BL2 via
267   ``arg0``.
268-  Configure the system timer and program the `CNTFRQ_EL0` for use by NS-BL1U
269   and NS-BL2U firmware update images.
270
271Firmware Update detection and execution
272^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
273
274After performing platform setup, BL1 common code calls
275``bl1_plat_get_next_image_id()`` to determine if :ref:`Firmware Update (FWU)` is
276required or to proceed with the normal boot process. If the platform code
277returns ``BL2_IMAGE_ID`` then the normal boot sequence is executed as described
278in the next section, else BL1 assumes that :ref:`Firmware Update (FWU)` is
279required and execution passes to the first image in the
280:ref:`Firmware Update (FWU)` process. In either case, BL1 retrieves a descriptor
281of the next image by calling ``bl1_plat_get_image_desc()``. The image descriptor
282contains an ``entry_point_info_t`` structure, which BL1 uses to initialize the
283execution state of the next image.
284
285BL2 image load and execution
286^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
287
288In the normal boot flow, BL1 execution continues as follows:
289
290#. BL1 prints the following string from the primary CPU to indicate successful
291   execution of the BL1 stage:
292
293   ::
294
295       "Booting Trusted Firmware"
296
297#. BL1 loads a BL2 raw binary image from platform storage, at a
298   platform-specific base address. Prior to the load, BL1 invokes
299   ``bl1_plat_handle_pre_image_load()`` which allows the platform to update or
300   use the image information. If the BL2 image file is not present or if
301   there is not enough free trusted SRAM the following error message is
302   printed:
303
304   ::
305
306       "Failed to load BL2 firmware."
307
308#. BL1 invokes ``bl1_plat_handle_post_image_load()`` which again is intended
309   for platforms to take further action after image load. This function must
310   populate the necessary arguments for BL2, which may also include the memory
311   layout. Further description of the memory layout can be found later
312   in this document.
313
314#. BL1 passes control to the BL2 image at Secure EL1 (for AArch64) or at
315   Secure SVC mode (for AArch32), starting from its load address.
316
317BL2
318~~~
319
320BL1 loads and passes control to BL2 at Secure-EL1 (for AArch64) or at Secure
321SVC mode (for AArch32) . BL2 is linked against and loaded at a platform-specific
322base address (more information can be found later in this document).
323The functionality implemented by BL2 is as follows.
324
325Architectural initialization
326^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
327
328For AArch64, BL2 performs the minimal architectural initialization required
329for subsequent stages of TF-A and normal world software. EL1 and EL0 are given
330access to Floating Point and Advanced SIMD registers by setting the
331``CPACR.FPEN`` bits.
332
333For AArch32, the minimal architectural initialization required for subsequent
334stages of TF-A and normal world software is taken care of in BL1 as both BL1
335and BL2 execute at PL1.
336
337Platform initialization
338^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
339
340On Arm platforms, BL2 performs the following platform initializations:
341
342-  Initialize the console.
343-  Configure any required platform storage to allow loading further bootloader
344   images.
345-  Enable the MMU and map the memory it needs to access.
346-  Perform platform security setup to allow access to controlled components.
347-  Reserve some memory for passing information to the next bootloader image
348   EL3 Runtime Software and populate it.
349-  Define the extents of memory available for loading each subsequent
350   bootloader image.
351-  If BL1 has passed TB_FW_CONFIG dynamic configuration file in ``arg0``,
352   then parse it.
353
354Image loading in BL2
355^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
356
357BL2 generic code loads the images based on the list of loadable images
358provided by the platform. BL2 passes the list of executable images
359provided by the platform to the next handover BL image.
360
361The list of loadable images provided by the platform may also contain
362dynamic configuration files. The files are loaded and can be parsed as
363needed in the ``bl2_plat_handle_post_image_load()`` function. These
364configuration files can be passed to next Boot Loader stages as arguments
365by updating the corresponding entrypoint information in this function.
366
367SCP_BL2 (System Control Processor Firmware) image load
368^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
369
370Some systems have a separate System Control Processor (SCP) for power, clock,
371reset and system control. BL2 loads the optional SCP_BL2 image from platform
372storage into a platform-specific region of secure memory. The subsequent
373handling of SCP_BL2 is platform specific. For example, on the Juno Arm
374development platform port the image is transferred into SCP's internal memory
375using the Boot Over MHU (BOM) protocol after being loaded in the trusted SRAM
376memory. The SCP executes SCP_BL2 and signals to the Application Processor (AP)
377for BL2 execution to continue.
378
379EL3 Runtime Software image load
380^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
381
382BL2 loads the EL3 Runtime Software image from platform storage into a platform-
383specific address in trusted SRAM. If there is not enough memory to load the
384image or image is missing it leads to an assertion failure.
385
386AArch64 BL32 (Secure-EL1 Payload) image load
387^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
388
389BL2 loads the optional BL32 image from platform storage into a platform-
390specific region of secure memory. The image executes in the secure world. BL2
391relies on BL31 to pass control to the BL32 image, if present. Hence, BL2
392populates a platform-specific area of memory with the entrypoint/load-address
393of the BL32 image. The value of the Saved Processor Status Register (``SPSR``)
394for entry into BL32 is not determined by BL2, it is initialized by the
395Secure-EL1 Payload Dispatcher (see later) within BL31, which is responsible for
396managing interaction with BL32. This information is passed to BL31.
397
398BL33 (Non-trusted Firmware) image load
399^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
400
401BL2 loads the BL33 image (e.g. UEFI or other test or boot software) from
402platform storage into non-secure memory as defined by the platform.
403
404BL2 relies on EL3 Runtime Software to pass control to BL33 once secure state
405initialization is complete. Hence, BL2 populates a platform-specific area of
406memory with the entrypoint and Saved Program Status Register (``SPSR``) of the
407normal world software image. The entrypoint is the load address of the BL33
408image. The ``SPSR`` is determined as specified in Section 5.13 of the
409`PSCI`_. This information is passed to the EL3 Runtime Software.
410
411AArch64 BL31 (EL3 Runtime Software) execution
412^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
413
414BL2 execution continues as follows:
415
416#. BL2 passes control back to BL1 by raising an SMC, providing BL1 with the
417   BL31 entrypoint. The exception is handled by the SMC exception handler
418   installed by BL1.
419
420#. BL1 turns off the MMU and flushes the caches. It clears the
421   ``SCTLR_EL3.M/I/C`` bits, flushes the data cache to the point of coherency
422   and invalidates the TLBs.
423
424#. BL1 passes control to BL31 at the specified entrypoint at EL3.
425
426Running BL2 at EL3 execution level
427~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
428
429Some platforms have a non-TF-A Boot ROM that expects the next boot stage
430to execute at EL3. On these platforms, TF-A BL1 is a waste of memory
431as its only purpose is to ensure TF-A BL2 is entered at S-EL1. To avoid
432this waste, a special mode enables BL2 to execute at EL3, which allows
433a non-TF-A Boot ROM to load and jump directly to BL2. This mode is selected
434when the build flag RESET_TO_BL2 is enabled.
435The main differences in this mode are:
436
437#. BL2 includes the reset code and the mailbox mechanism to differentiate
438   cold boot and warm boot. It runs at EL3 doing the arch
439   initialization required for EL3.
440
441#. BL2 does not receive the meminfo information from BL1 anymore. This
442   information can be passed by the Boot ROM or be internal to the
443   BL2 image.
444
445#. Since BL2 executes at EL3, BL2 jumps directly to the next image,
446   instead of invoking the RUN_IMAGE SMC call.
447
448
449We assume 3 different types of BootROM support on the platform:
450
451#. The Boot ROM always jumps to the same address, for both cold
452   and warm boot. In this case, we will need to keep a resident part
453   of BL2 whose memory cannot be reclaimed by any other image. The
454   linker script defines the symbols __TEXT_RESIDENT_START__ and
455   __TEXT_RESIDENT_END__ that allows the platform to configure
456   correctly the memory map.
457#. The platform has some mechanism to indicate the jump address to the
458   Boot ROM. Platform code can then program the jump address with
459   psci_warmboot_entrypoint during cold boot.
460#. The platform has some mechanism to program the reset address using
461   the PROGRAMMABLE_RESET_ADDRESS feature. Platform code can then
462   program the reset address with psci_warmboot_entrypoint during
463   cold boot, bypassing the boot ROM for warm boot.
464
465In the last 2 cases, no part of BL2 needs to remain resident at
466runtime. In the first 2 cases, we expect the Boot ROM to be able to
467differentiate between warm and cold boot, to avoid loading BL2 again
468during warm boot.
469
470This functionality can be tested with FVP loading the image directly
471in memory and changing the address where the system jumps at reset.
472For example:
473
474	-C cluster0.cpu0.RVBAR=0x4022000
475	--data cluster0.cpu0=bl2.bin@0x4022000
476
477With this configuration, FVP is like a platform of the first case,
478where the Boot ROM jumps always to the same address. For simplification,
479BL32 is loaded in DRAM in this case, to avoid other images reclaiming
480BL2 memory.
481
482
483AArch64 BL31
484~~~~~~~~~~~~
485
486The image for this stage is loaded by BL2 and BL1 passes control to BL31 at
487EL3. BL31 executes solely in trusted SRAM. BL31 is linked against and
488loaded at a platform-specific base address (more information can be found later
489in this document). The functionality implemented by BL31 is as follows.
490
491Architectural initialization
492^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
493
494Currently, BL31 performs a similar architectural initialization to BL1 as
495far as system register settings are concerned. Since BL1 code resides in ROM,
496architectural initialization in BL31 allows override of any previous
497initialization done by BL1.
498
499BL31 initializes the per-CPU data framework, which provides a cache of
500frequently accessed per-CPU data optimised for fast, concurrent manipulation
501on different CPUs. This buffer includes pointers to per-CPU contexts, crash
502buffer, CPU reset and power down operations, PSCI data, platform data and so on.
503
504It then replaces the exception vectors populated by BL1 with its own. BL31
505exception vectors implement more elaborate support for handling SMCs since this
506is the only mechanism to access the runtime services implemented by BL31 (PSCI
507for example). BL31 checks each SMC for validity as specified by the
508`SMC Calling Convention`_ before passing control to the required SMC
509handler routine.
510
511BL31 programs the ``CNTFRQ_EL0`` register with the clock frequency of the system
512counter, which is provided by the platform.
513
514Platform initialization
515^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
516
517BL31 performs detailed platform initialization, which enables normal world
518software to function correctly.
519
520On Arm platforms, this consists of the following:
521
522-  Initialize the console.
523-  Configure the Interconnect to enable hardware coherency.
524-  Enable the MMU and map the memory it needs to access.
525-  Initialize the generic interrupt controller.
526-  Initialize the power controller device.
527-  Detect the system topology.
528
529Runtime services initialization
530^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
531
532BL31 is responsible for initializing the runtime services. One of them is PSCI.
533
534As part of the PSCI initializations, BL31 detects the system topology. It also
535initializes the data structures that implement the state machine used to track
536the state of power domain nodes. The state can be one of ``OFF``, ``RUN`` or
537``RETENTION``. All secondary CPUs are initially in the ``OFF`` state. The cluster
538that the primary CPU belongs to is ``ON``; any other cluster is ``OFF``. It also
539initializes the locks that protect them. BL31 accesses the state of a CPU or
540cluster immediately after reset and before the data cache is enabled in the
541warm boot path. It is not currently possible to use 'exclusive' based spinlocks,
542therefore BL31 uses locks based on Lamport's Bakery algorithm instead.
543
544The runtime service framework and its initialization is described in more
545detail in the "EL3 runtime services framework" section below.
546
547Details about the status of the PSCI implementation are provided in the
548"Power State Coordination Interface" section below.
549
550AArch64 BL32 (Secure-EL1 Payload) image initialization
551^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
552
553If a BL32 image is present then there must be a matching Secure-EL1 Payload
554Dispatcher (SPD) service (see later for details). During initialization
555that service must register a function to carry out initialization of BL32
556once the runtime services are fully initialized. BL31 invokes such a
557registered function to initialize BL32 before running BL33. This initialization
558is not necessary for AArch32 SPs.
559
560Details on BL32 initialization and the SPD's role are described in the
561:ref:`firmware_design_sel1_spd` section below.
562
563BL33 (Non-trusted Firmware) execution
564^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
565
566EL3 Runtime Software initializes the EL2 or EL1 processor context for normal-
567world cold boot, ensuring that no secure state information finds its way into
568the non-secure execution state. EL3 Runtime Software uses the entrypoint
569information provided by BL2 to jump to the Non-trusted firmware image (BL33)
570at the highest available Exception Level (EL2 if available, otherwise EL1).
571
572Using alternative Trusted Boot Firmware in place of BL1 & BL2 (AArch64 only)
573~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
574
575Some platforms have existing implementations of Trusted Boot Firmware that
576would like to use TF-A BL31 for the EL3 Runtime Software. To enable this
577firmware architecture it is important to provide a fully documented and stable
578interface between the Trusted Boot Firmware and BL31.
579
580Future changes to the BL31 interface will be done in a backwards compatible
581way, and this enables these firmware components to be independently enhanced/
582updated to develop and exploit new functionality.
583
584Required CPU state when calling ``bl31_entrypoint()`` during cold boot
585^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
586
587This function must only be called by the primary CPU.
588
589On entry to this function the calling primary CPU must be executing in AArch64
590EL3, little-endian data access, and all interrupt sources masked:
591
592::
593
594    PSTATE.EL = 3
595    PSTATE.RW = 1
596    PSTATE.DAIF = 0xf
597    SCTLR_EL3.EE = 0
598
599X0 and X1 can be used to pass information from the Trusted Boot Firmware to the
600platform code in BL31:
601
602::
603
604    X0 : Reserved for common TF-A information
605    X1 : Platform specific information
606
607BL31 zero-init sections (e.g. ``.bss``) should not contain valid data on entry,
608these will be zero filled prior to invoking platform setup code.
609
610Use of the X0 and X1 parameters
611'''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''
612
613The parameters are platform specific and passed from ``bl31_entrypoint()`` to
614``bl31_early_platform_setup()``. The value of these parameters is never directly
615used by the common BL31 code.
616
617The convention is that ``X0`` conveys information regarding the BL31, BL32 and
618BL33 images from the Trusted Boot firmware and ``X1`` can be used for other
619platform specific purpose. This convention allows platforms which use TF-A's
620BL1 and BL2 images to transfer additional platform specific information from
621Secure Boot without conflicting with future evolution of TF-A using ``X0`` to
622pass a ``bl31_params`` structure.
623
624BL31 common and SPD initialization code depends on image and entrypoint
625information about BL33 and BL32, which is provided via BL31 platform APIs.
626This information is required until the start of execution of BL33. This
627information can be provided in a platform defined manner, e.g. compiled into
628the platform code in BL31, or provided in a platform defined memory location
629by the Trusted Boot firmware, or passed from the Trusted Boot Firmware via the
630Cold boot Initialization parameters. This data may need to be cleaned out of
631the CPU caches if it is provided by an earlier boot stage and then accessed by
632BL31 platform code before the caches are enabled.
633
634TF-A's BL2 implementation passes a ``bl31_params`` structure in
635``X0`` and the Arm development platforms interpret this in the BL31 platform
636code.
637
638MMU, Data caches & Coherency
639''''''''''''''''''''''''''''
640
641BL31 does not depend on the enabled state of the MMU, data caches or
642interconnect coherency on entry to ``bl31_entrypoint()``. If these are disabled
643on entry, these should be enabled during ``bl31_plat_arch_setup()``.
644
645Data structures used in the BL31 cold boot interface
646''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''
647
648In the cold boot flow, ``entry_point_info`` is used to represent the execution
649state of an image; that is, the state of general purpose registers, PC, and
650SPSR.
651
652There are two variants of this structure, for AArch64:
653
654.. code:: c
655
656   typedef struct entry_point_info {
657        param_header_t h;
658        uintptr_t pc;
659        uint32_t spsr;
660
661        aapcs64_params_t args;
662   }
663
664and, AArch32:
665
666.. code:: c
667
668   typedef struct entry_point_info {
669      param_header_t h;
670      uintptr_t pc;
671      uint32_t spsr;
672
673      uintptr_t lr_svc;
674      aapcs32_params_t args;
675   } entry_point_info_t;
676
677These structures are designed to support compatibility and independent
678evolution of the structures and the firmware images. For example, a version of
679BL31 that can interpret the BL3x image information from different versions of
680BL2, a platform that uses an extended entry_point_info structure to convey
681additional register information to BL31, or a ELF image loader that can convey
682more details about the firmware images.
683
684To support these scenarios the structures are versioned and sized, which enables
685BL31 to detect which information is present and respond appropriately. The
686``param_header`` is defined to capture this information:
687
688.. code:: c
689
690    typedef struct param_header {
691        uint8_t type;       /* type of the structure */
692        uint8_t version;    /* version of this structure */
693        uint16_t size;      /* size of this structure in bytes */
694        uint32_t attr;      /* attributes */
695    } param_header_t;
696
697In `entry_point_info`, Bits 0 and 5 of ``attr`` field are used to encode the
698security state; in other words, whether the image is to be executed in Secure,
699Non-Secure, or Realm mode.
700
701Other structures using this format are ``image_info`` and ``bl31_params``. The
702code that allocates and populates these structures must set the header fields
703appropriately, the ``SET_PARAM_HEAD()`` macro is defined to simplify this
704action.
705
706Required CPU state for BL31 Warm boot initialization
707^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
708
709When requesting a CPU power-on, or suspending a running CPU, TF-A provides
710the platform power management code with a Warm boot initialization
711entry-point, to be invoked by the CPU immediately after the reset handler.
712On entry to the Warm boot initialization function the calling CPU must be in
713AArch64 EL3, little-endian data access and all interrupt sources masked:
714
715::
716
717    PSTATE.EL = 3
718    PSTATE.RW = 1
719    PSTATE.DAIF = 0xf
720    SCTLR_EL3.EE = 0
721
722The PSCI implementation will initialize the processor state and ensure that the
723platform power management code is then invoked as required to initialize all
724necessary system, cluster and CPU resources.
725
726AArch32 EL3 Runtime Software entrypoint interface
727~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
728
729To enable this firmware architecture it is important to provide a fully
730documented and stable interface between the Trusted Boot Firmware and the
731AArch32 EL3 Runtime Software.
732
733Future changes to the entrypoint interface will be done in a backwards
734compatible way, and this enables these firmware components to be independently
735enhanced/updated to develop and exploit new functionality.
736
737Required CPU state when entering during cold boot
738^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
739
740This function must only be called by the primary CPU.
741
742On entry to this function the calling primary CPU must be executing in AArch32
743EL3, little-endian data access, and all interrupt sources masked:
744
745::
746
747    PSTATE.AIF = 0x7
748    SCTLR.EE = 0
749
750R0 and R1 are used to pass information from the Trusted Boot Firmware to the
751platform code in AArch32 EL3 Runtime Software:
752
753::
754
755    R0 : Reserved for common TF-A information
756    R1 : Platform specific information
757
758Use of the R0 and R1 parameters
759'''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''
760
761The parameters are platform specific and the convention is that ``R0`` conveys
762information regarding the BL3x images from the Trusted Boot firmware and ``R1``
763can be used for other platform specific purpose. This convention allows
764platforms which use TF-A's BL1 and BL2 images to transfer additional platform
765specific information from Secure Boot without conflicting with future
766evolution of TF-A using ``R0`` to pass a ``bl_params`` structure.
767
768The AArch32 EL3 Runtime Software is responsible for entry into BL33. This
769information can be obtained in a platform defined manner, e.g. compiled into
770the AArch32 EL3 Runtime Software, or provided in a platform defined memory
771location by the Trusted Boot firmware, or passed from the Trusted Boot Firmware
772via the Cold boot Initialization parameters. This data may need to be cleaned
773out of the CPU caches if it is provided by an earlier boot stage and then
774accessed by AArch32 EL3 Runtime Software before the caches are enabled.
775
776When using AArch32 EL3 Runtime Software, the Arm development platforms pass a
777``bl_params`` structure in ``R0`` from BL2 to be interpreted by AArch32 EL3 Runtime
778Software platform code.
779
780MMU, Data caches & Coherency
781''''''''''''''''''''''''''''
782
783AArch32 EL3 Runtime Software must not depend on the enabled state of the MMU,
784data caches or interconnect coherency in its entrypoint. They must be explicitly
785enabled if required.
786
787Data structures used in cold boot interface
788'''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''
789
790The AArch32 EL3 Runtime Software cold boot interface uses ``bl_params`` instead
791of ``bl31_params``. The ``bl_params`` structure is based on the convention
792described in AArch64 BL31 cold boot interface section.
793
794Required CPU state for warm boot initialization
795^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
796
797When requesting a CPU power-on, or suspending a running CPU, AArch32 EL3
798Runtime Software must ensure execution of a warm boot initialization entrypoint.
799If TF-A BL1 is used and the PROGRAMMABLE_RESET_ADDRESS build flag is false,
800then AArch32 EL3 Runtime Software must ensure that BL1 branches to the warm
801boot entrypoint by arranging for the BL1 platform function,
802plat_get_my_entrypoint(), to return a non-zero value.
803
804In this case, the warm boot entrypoint must be in AArch32 EL3, little-endian
805data access and all interrupt sources masked:
806
807::
808
809    PSTATE.AIF = 0x7
810    SCTLR.EE = 0
811
812The warm boot entrypoint may be implemented by using TF-A
813``psci_warmboot_entrypoint()`` function. In that case, the platform must fulfil
814the pre-requisites mentioned in the
815:ref:`PSCI Library Integration guide for Armv8-A AArch32 systems`.
816
817EL3 runtime services framework
818------------------------------
819
820Software executing in the non-secure state and in the secure state at exception
821levels lower than EL3 will request runtime services using the Secure Monitor
822Call (SMC) instruction. These requests will follow the convention described in
823the SMC Calling Convention PDD (`SMCCC`_). The `SMCCC`_ assigns function
824identifiers to each SMC request and describes how arguments are passed and
825returned.
826
827The EL3 runtime services framework enables the development of services by
828different providers that can be easily integrated into final product firmware.
829The following sections describe the framework which facilitates the
830registration, initialization and use of runtime services in EL3 Runtime
831Software (BL31).
832
833The design of the runtime services depends heavily on the concepts and
834definitions described in the `SMCCC`_, in particular SMC Function IDs, Owning
835Entity Numbers (OEN), Fast and Yielding calls, and the SMC32 and SMC64 calling
836conventions. Please refer to that document for more detailed explanation of
837these terms.
838
839The following runtime services are expected to be implemented first. They have
840not all been instantiated in the current implementation.
841
842#. Standard service calls
843
844   This service is for management of the entire system. The Power State
845   Coordination Interface (`PSCI`_) is the first set of standard service calls
846   defined by Arm (see PSCI section later).
847
848#. Secure-EL1 Payload Dispatcher service
849
850   If a system runs a Trusted OS or other Secure-EL1 Payload (SP) then
851   it also requires a *Secure Monitor* at EL3 to switch the EL1 processor
852   context between the normal world (EL1/EL2) and trusted world (Secure-EL1).
853   The Secure Monitor will make these world switches in response to SMCs. The
854   `SMCCC`_ provides for such SMCs with the Trusted OS Call and Trusted
855   Application Call OEN ranges.
856
857   The interface between the EL3 Runtime Software and the Secure-EL1 Payload is
858   not defined by the `SMCCC`_ or any other standard. As a result, each
859   Secure-EL1 Payload requires a specific Secure Monitor that runs as a runtime
860   service - within TF-A this service is referred to as the Secure-EL1 Payload
861   Dispatcher (SPD).
862
863   TF-A provides a Test Secure-EL1 Payload (TSP) and its associated Dispatcher
864   (TSPD). Details of SPD design and TSP/TSPD operation are described in the
865   :ref:`firmware_design_sel1_spd` section below.
866
867#. CPU implementation service
868
869   This service will provide an interface to CPU implementation specific
870   services for a given platform e.g. access to processor errata workarounds.
871   This service is currently unimplemented.
872
873Additional services for Arm Architecture, SiP and OEM calls can be implemented.
874Each implemented service handles a range of SMC function identifiers as
875described in the `SMCCC`_.
876
877Registration
878~~~~~~~~~~~~
879
880A runtime service is registered using the ``DECLARE_RT_SVC()`` macro, specifying
881the name of the service, the range of OENs covered, the type of service and
882initialization and call handler functions. This macro instantiates a ``const struct rt_svc_desc`` for the service with these details (see ``runtime_svc.h``).
883This structure is allocated in a special ELF section ``.rt_svc_descs``, enabling
884the framework to find all service descriptors included into BL31.
885
886The specific service for a SMC Function is selected based on the OEN and call
887type of the Function ID, and the framework uses that information in the service
888descriptor to identify the handler for the SMC Call.
889
890The service descriptors do not include information to identify the precise set
891of SMC function identifiers supported by this service implementation, the
892security state from which such calls are valid nor the capability to support
89364-bit and/or 32-bit callers (using SMC32 or SMC64). Responding appropriately
894to these aspects of a SMC call is the responsibility of the service
895implementation, the framework is focused on integration of services from
896different providers and minimizing the time taken by the framework before the
897service handler is invoked.
898
899Details of the parameters, requirements and behavior of the initialization and
900call handling functions are provided in the following sections.
901
902Initialization
903~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
904
905``runtime_svc_init()`` in ``runtime_svc.c`` initializes the runtime services
906framework running on the primary CPU during cold boot as part of the BL31
907initialization. This happens prior to initializing a Trusted OS and running
908Normal world boot firmware that might in turn use these services.
909Initialization involves validating each of the declared runtime service
910descriptors, calling the service initialization function and populating the
911index used for runtime lookup of the service.
912
913The BL31 linker script collects all of the declared service descriptors into a
914single array and defines symbols that allow the framework to locate and traverse
915the array, and determine its size.
916
917The framework does basic validation of each descriptor to halt firmware
918initialization if service declaration errors are detected. The framework does
919not check descriptors for the following error conditions, and may behave in an
920unpredictable manner under such scenarios:
921
922#. Overlapping OEN ranges
923#. Multiple descriptors for the same range of OENs and ``call_type``
924#. Incorrect range of owning entity numbers for a given ``call_type``
925
926Once validated, the service ``init()`` callback is invoked. This function carries
927out any essential EL3 initialization before servicing requests. The ``init()``
928function is only invoked on the primary CPU during cold boot. If the service
929uses per-CPU data this must either be initialized for all CPUs during this call,
930or be done lazily when a CPU first issues an SMC call to that service. If
931``init()`` returns anything other than ``0``, this is treated as an initialization
932error and the service is ignored: this does not cause the firmware to halt.
933
934The OEN and call type fields present in the SMC Function ID cover a total of
935128 distinct services, but in practice a single descriptor can cover a range of
936OENs, e.g. SMCs to call a Trusted OS function. To optimize the lookup of a
937service handler, the framework uses an array of 128 indices that map every
938distinct OEN/call-type combination either to one of the declared services or to
939indicate the service is not handled. This ``rt_svc_descs_indices[]`` array is
940populated for all of the OENs covered by a service after the service ``init()``
941function has reported success. So a service that fails to initialize will never
942have it's ``handle()`` function invoked.
943
944The following figure shows how the ``rt_svc_descs_indices[]`` index maps the SMC
945Function ID call type and OEN onto a specific service handler in the
946``rt_svc_descs[]`` array.
947
948|Image 1|
949
950.. _handling-an-smc:
951
952Handling an SMC
953~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
954
955When the EL3 runtime services framework receives a Secure Monitor Call, the SMC
956Function ID is passed in W0 from the lower exception level (as per the
957`SMCCC`_). If the calling register width is AArch32, it is invalid to invoke an
958SMC Function which indicates the SMC64 calling convention: such calls are
959ignored and return the Unknown SMC Function Identifier result code ``0xFFFFFFFF``
960in R0/X0.
961
962Bit[31] (fast/yielding call) and bits[29:24] (owning entity number) of the SMC
963Function ID are combined to index into the ``rt_svc_descs_indices[]`` array. The
964resulting value might indicate a service that has no handler, in this case the
965framework will also report an Unknown SMC Function ID. Otherwise, the value is
966used as a further index into the ``rt_svc_descs[]`` array to locate the required
967service and handler.
968
969The service's ``handle()`` callback is provided with five of the SMC parameters
970directly, the others are saved into memory for retrieval (if needed) by the
971handler. The handler is also provided with an opaque ``handle`` for use with the
972supporting library for parameter retrieval, setting return values and context
973manipulation. The ``flags`` parameter indicates the security state of the caller
974and the state of the SVE hint bit per the SMCCCv1.3. The framework finally sets
975up the execution stack for the handler, and invokes the services ``handle()``
976function.
977
978On return from the handler the result registers are populated in X0-X7 as needed
979before restoring the stack and CPU state and returning from the original SMC.
980
981Exception Handling Framework
982----------------------------
983
984Please refer to the :ref:`Exception Handling Framework` document.
985
986Power State Coordination Interface
987----------------------------------
988
989TODO: Provide design walkthrough of PSCI implementation.
990
991The PSCI v1.1 specification categorizes APIs as optional and mandatory. All the
992mandatory APIs in PSCI v1.1, PSCI v1.0 and in PSCI v0.2 draft specification
993`PSCI`_ are implemented. The table lists the PSCI v1.1 APIs and their support
994in generic code.
995
996An API implementation might have a dependency on platform code e.g. CPU_SUSPEND
997requires the platform to export a part of the implementation. Hence the level
998of support of the mandatory APIs depends upon the support exported by the
999platform port as well. The Juno and FVP (all variants) platforms export all the
1000required support.
1001
1002+-----------------------------+-------------+-------------------------------+
1003| PSCI v1.1 API               | Supported   | Comments                      |
1004+=============================+=============+===============================+
1005| ``PSCI_VERSION``            | Yes         | The version returned is 1.1   |
1006+-----------------------------+-------------+-------------------------------+
1007| ``CPU_SUSPEND``             | Yes\*       |                               |
1008+-----------------------------+-------------+-------------------------------+
1009| ``CPU_OFF``                 | Yes\*       |                               |
1010+-----------------------------+-------------+-------------------------------+
1011| ``CPU_ON``                  | Yes\*       |                               |
1012+-----------------------------+-------------+-------------------------------+
1013| ``AFFINITY_INFO``           | Yes         |                               |
1014+-----------------------------+-------------+-------------------------------+
1015| ``MIGRATE``                 | Yes\*\*     |                               |
1016+-----------------------------+-------------+-------------------------------+
1017| ``MIGRATE_INFO_TYPE``       | Yes\*\*     |                               |
1018+-----------------------------+-------------+-------------------------------+
1019| ``MIGRATE_INFO_CPU``        | Yes\*\*     |                               |
1020+-----------------------------+-------------+-------------------------------+
1021| ``SYSTEM_OFF``              | Yes\*       |                               |
1022+-----------------------------+-------------+-------------------------------+
1023| ``SYSTEM_RESET``            | Yes\*       |                               |
1024+-----------------------------+-------------+-------------------------------+
1025| ``PSCI_FEATURES``           | Yes         |                               |
1026+-----------------------------+-------------+-------------------------------+
1027| ``CPU_FREEZE``              | No          |                               |
1028+-----------------------------+-------------+-------------------------------+
1029| ``CPU_DEFAULT_SUSPEND``     | No          |                               |
1030+-----------------------------+-------------+-------------------------------+
1031| ``NODE_HW_STATE``           | Yes\*       |                               |
1032+-----------------------------+-------------+-------------------------------+
1033| ``SYSTEM_SUSPEND``          | Yes\*       |                               |
1034+-----------------------------+-------------+-------------------------------+
1035| ``PSCI_SET_SUSPEND_MODE``   | No          |                               |
1036+-----------------------------+-------------+-------------------------------+
1037| ``PSCI_STAT_RESIDENCY``     | Yes\*       |                               |
1038+-----------------------------+-------------+-------------------------------+
1039| ``PSCI_STAT_COUNT``         | Yes\*       |                               |
1040+-----------------------------+-------------+-------------------------------+
1041| ``SYSTEM_RESET2``           | Yes\*       |                               |
1042+-----------------------------+-------------+-------------------------------+
1043| ``MEM_PROTECT``             | Yes\*       |                               |
1044+-----------------------------+-------------+-------------------------------+
1045| ``MEM_PROTECT_CHECK_RANGE`` | Yes\*       |                               |
1046+-----------------------------+-------------+-------------------------------+
1047
1048\*Note : These PSCI APIs require platform power management hooks to be
1049registered with the generic PSCI code to be supported.
1050
1051\*\*Note : These PSCI APIs require appropriate Secure Payload Dispatcher
1052hooks to be registered with the generic PSCI code to be supported.
1053
1054The PSCI implementation in TF-A is a library which can be integrated with
1055AArch64 or AArch32 EL3 Runtime Software for Armv8-A systems. A guide to
1056integrating PSCI library with AArch32 EL3 Runtime Software can be found
1057at :ref:`PSCI Library Integration guide for Armv8-A AArch32 systems`.
1058
1059DSU driver
1060----------
1061
1062Platforms that include a DSU (DynamIQ Shared Unit) can define
1063the ``USE_DSU_DRIVER`` build flag to enable the DSU driver.
1064This driver is responsible for configuring DSU-related powerdown
1065and power feature settings, enabling access to PMU registers at EL1
1066using ``dsu_driver_init()`` and for preserving the context of DSU
1067PMU system registers.
1068
1069To support the DSU driver, platforms must define the ``plat_dsu_data``
1070structure.
1071
1072.. _firmware_design_sel1_spd:
1073
1074Secure-EL1 Payloads and Dispatchers
1075-----------------------------------
1076
1077On a production system that includes a Trusted OS running in Secure-EL1/EL0,
1078the Trusted OS is coupled with a companion runtime service in the BL31
1079firmware. This service is responsible for the initialisation of the Trusted
1080OS and all communications with it. The Trusted OS is the BL32 stage of the
1081boot flow in TF-A. The firmware will attempt to locate, load and execute a
1082BL32 image.
1083
1084TF-A uses a more general term for the BL32 software that runs at Secure-EL1 -
1085the *Secure-EL1 Payload* - as it is not always a Trusted OS.
1086
1087TF-A provides a Test Secure-EL1 Payload (TSP) and a Test Secure-EL1 Payload
1088Dispatcher (TSPD) service as an example of how a Trusted OS is supported on a
1089production system using the Runtime Services Framework. On such a system, the
1090Test BL32 image and service are replaced by the Trusted OS and its dispatcher
1091service. The TF-A build system expects that the dispatcher will define the
1092build flag ``NEED_BL32`` to enable it to include the BL32 in the build either
1093as a binary or to compile from source depending on whether the ``BL32`` build
1094option is specified or not.
1095
1096The TSP runs in Secure-EL1. It is designed to demonstrate synchronous
1097communication with the normal-world software running in EL1/EL2. Communication
1098is initiated by the normal-world software
1099
1100-  either directly through a Fast SMC (as defined in the `SMCCC`_)
1101
1102-  or indirectly through a `PSCI`_ SMC. The `PSCI`_ implementation in turn
1103   informs the TSPD about the requested power management operation. This allows
1104   the TSP to prepare for or respond to the power state change
1105
1106The TSPD service is responsible for.
1107
1108-  Initializing the TSP
1109
1110-  Routing requests and responses between the secure and the non-secure
1111   states during the two types of communications just described
1112
1113Initializing a BL32 Image
1114~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1115
1116The Secure-EL1 Payload Dispatcher (SPD) service is responsible for initializing
1117the BL32 image. It needs access to the information passed by BL2 to BL31 to do
1118so. This is provided by:
1119
1120.. code:: c
1121
1122    entry_point_info_t *bl31_plat_get_next_image_ep_info(uint32_t);
1123
1124which returns a reference to the ``entry_point_info`` structure corresponding to
1125the image which will be run in the specified security state. The SPD uses this
1126API to get entry point information for the SECURE image, BL32.
1127
1128In the absence of a BL32 image, BL31 passes control to the normal world
1129bootloader image (BL33). When the BL32 image is present, it is typical
1130that the SPD wants control to be passed to BL32 first and then later to BL33.
1131
1132To do this the SPD has to register a BL32 initialization function during
1133initialization of the SPD service. The BL32 initialization function has this
1134prototype:
1135
1136.. code:: c
1137
1138    int32_t init(void);
1139
1140and is registered using the ``bl31_register_bl32_init()`` function.
1141
1142TF-A supports two approaches for the SPD to pass control to BL32 before
1143returning through EL3 and running the non-trusted firmware (BL33):
1144
1145#. In the BL32 setup function, use ``bl31_set_next_image_type()`` to
1146   request that the exit from ``bl31_main()`` is to the BL32 entrypoint in
1147   Secure-EL1. BL31 will exit to BL32 using the asynchronous method by
1148   calling ``bl31_prepare_next_image_entry()`` and ``el3_exit()``.
1149
1150   When the BL32 has completed initialization at Secure-EL1, it returns to
1151   BL31 by issuing an SMC, using a Function ID allocated to the SPD. On
1152   receipt of this SMC, the SPD service handler should switch the CPU context
1153   from trusted to normal world and use the ``bl31_set_next_image_type()`` and
1154   ``bl31_prepare_next_image_entry()`` functions to set up the initial return to
1155   the normal world firmware BL33. On return from the handler the framework
1156   will exit to EL2 and run BL33.
1157
1158#. The BL32 setup function registers an initialization function using
1159   ``bl31_register_bl32_init()`` which provides a SPD-defined mechanism to
1160   invoke a 'world-switch synchronous call' to Secure-EL1 to run the BL32
1161   entrypoint.
1162
1163   .. note::
1164      The Test SPD service included with TF-A provides one implementation
1165      of such a mechanism.
1166
1167   On completion BL32 returns control to BL31 via a SMC, and on receipt the
1168   SPD service handler invokes the synchronous call return mechanism to return
1169   to the BL32 initialization function. On return from this function,
1170   ``bl31_main()`` will set up the return to the normal world firmware BL33 and
1171   continue the boot process in the normal world.
1172
1173Exception handling in BL31
1174--------------------------
1175
1176When exception occurs, PE must execute handler corresponding to exception. The
1177location in memory where the handler is stored is called the exception vector.
1178For ARM architecture, exception vectors are stored in a table, called the exception
1179vector table.
1180
1181Each EL (except EL0) has its own vector table, VBAR_ELn register stores the base
1182of vector table. Refer to `AArch64 exception vector table`_
1183
1184Current EL with SP_EL0
1185~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1186
1187-  Sync exception : Not expected except for BRK instruction, its debugging tool which
1188   a programmer may place at specific points in a program, to check the state of
1189   processor flags at these points in the code.
1190
1191-  IRQ/FIQ : Unexpected exception, panic
1192
1193-  SError : "plat_handle_el3_ea", defaults to panic
1194
1195Current EL with SP_ELx
1196~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1197
1198-  Sync exception : Unexpected exception, panic
1199
1200-  IRQ/FIQ : Unexpected exception, panic
1201
1202-  SError : "plat_handle_el3_ea" Except for special handling of lower EL's SError exception
1203   which gets triggered in EL3 when PSTATE.A is unmasked. Its only applicable when lower
1204   EL's EA is routed to EL3 (FFH_SUPPORT=1).
1205
1206Lower EL Exceptions
1207~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1208
1209Applies to all the exceptions in both AArch64/AArch32 mode of lower EL.
1210
1211Before handling any lower EL exception, we synchronize the errors at EL3 entry to ensure
1212that any errors pertaining to lower EL is isolated/identified. If we continue without
1213identifying these errors early on then these errors will trigger in EL3 (as SError from
1214current EL) any time after PSTATE.A is unmasked. This is wrong because the error originated
1215in lower EL but exception happened in EL3.
1216
1217To solve this problem, synchronize the errors at EL3 entry and check for any pending
1218errors (async EA). If there is no pending error then continue with original exception.
1219If there is a pending error then, handle them based on routing model of EA's. Refer to
1220:ref:`Reliability, Availability, and Serviceability (RAS) Extensions` for details about
1221routing models.
1222
1223-  KFH : Reflect it back to lower EL using **reflect_pending_async_ea_to_lower_el()**
1224
1225-  FFH : Handle the synchronized error first using **handle_pending_async_ea()** after
1226   that continue with original exception. It is the only scenario where EL3 is capable
1227   of doing nested exception handling.
1228
1229After synchronizing and handling lower EL SErrors, unmask EA (PSTATE.A) to ensure
1230that any further EA's caused by EL3 are caught.
1231
1232Crash Reporting in BL31
1233-----------------------
1234
1235BL31 implements a scheme for reporting the processor state when an unhandled
1236exception is encountered. The reporting mechanism attempts to preserve all the
1237register contents and report it via a dedicated UART (PL011 console). BL31
1238reports the general purpose, EL3, Secure EL1 and some EL2 state registers.
1239
1240A dedicated per-CPU crash stack is maintained by BL31 and this is retrieved via
1241the per-CPU pointer cache. The implementation attempts to minimise the memory
1242required for this feature. The file ``crash_reporting.S`` contains the
1243implementation for crash reporting.
1244
1245The sample crash output is shown below.
1246
1247::
1248
1249    x0             = 0x000000002a4a0000
1250    x1             = 0x0000000000000001
1251    x2             = 0x0000000000000002
1252    x3             = 0x0000000000000003
1253    x4             = 0x0000000000000004
1254    x5             = 0x0000000000000005
1255    x6             = 0x0000000000000006
1256    x7             = 0x0000000000000007
1257    x8             = 0x0000000000000008
1258    x9             = 0x0000000000000009
1259    x10            = 0x0000000000000010
1260    x11            = 0x0000000000000011
1261    x12            = 0x0000000000000012
1262    x13            = 0x0000000000000013
1263    x14            = 0x0000000000000014
1264    x15            = 0x0000000000000015
1265    x16            = 0x0000000000000016
1266    x17            = 0x0000000000000017
1267    x18            = 0x0000000000000018
1268    x19            = 0x0000000000000019
1269    x20            = 0x0000000000000020
1270    x21            = 0x0000000000000021
1271    x22            = 0x0000000000000022
1272    x23            = 0x0000000000000023
1273    x24            = 0x0000000000000024
1274    x25            = 0x0000000000000025
1275    x26            = 0x0000000000000026
1276    x27            = 0x0000000000000027
1277    x28            = 0x0000000000000028
1278    x29            = 0x0000000000000029
1279    x30            = 0x0000000088000b78
1280    scr_el3        = 0x000000000003073d
1281    sctlr_el3      = 0x00000000b0cd183f
1282    cptr_el3       = 0x0000000000000000
1283    tcr_el3        = 0x000000008080351c
1284    daif           = 0x00000000000002c0
1285    mair_el3       = 0x00000000004404ff
1286    spsr_el3       = 0x0000000060000349
1287    elr_el3        = 0x0000000088000114
1288    ttbr0_el3      = 0x0000000004018201
1289    esr_el3        = 0x00000000be000000
1290    far_el3        = 0x0000000000000000
1291    spsr_el1       = 0x0000000000000000
1292    elr_el1        = 0x0000000000000000
1293    spsr_abt       = 0x0000000000000000
1294    spsr_und       = 0x0000000000000000
1295    spsr_irq       = 0x0000000000000000
1296    spsr_fiq       = 0x0000000000000000
1297    sctlr_el1      = 0x0000000030d00800
1298    actlr_el1      = 0x0000000000000000
1299    cpacr_el1      = 0x0000000000000000
1300    csselr_el1     = 0x0000000000000000
1301    sp_el1         = 0x0000000000000000
1302    esr_el1        = 0x0000000000000000
1303    ttbr0_el1      = 0x0000000000000000
1304    ttbr1_el1      = 0x0000000000000000
1305    mair_el1       = 0x0000000000000000
1306    amair_el1      = 0x0000000000000000
1307    tcr_el1        = 0x0000000000000000
1308    tpidr_el1      = 0x0000000000000000
1309    tpidr_el0      = 0x0000000000000000
1310    tpidrro_el0    = 0x0000000000000000
1311    par_el1        = 0x0000000000000000
1312    mpidr_el1      = 0x0000000080000000
1313    afsr0_el1      = 0x0000000000000000
1314    afsr1_el1      = 0x0000000000000000
1315    contextidr_el1 = 0x0000000000000000
1316    vbar_el1       = 0x0000000000000000
1317    cntp_ctl_el0   = 0x0000000000000000
1318    cntp_cval_el0  = 0x0000000000000000
1319    cntv_ctl_el0   = 0x0000000000000000
1320    cntv_cval_el0  = 0x0000000000000000
1321    cntkctl_el1    = 0x0000000000000000
1322    sp_el0         = 0x0000000004014940
1323    isr_el1        = 0x0000000000000000
1324    dacr32_el2     = 0x0000000000000000
1325    ifsr32_el2     = 0x0000000000000000
1326    icc_hppir0_el1 = 0x00000000000003ff
1327    icc_hppir1_el1 = 0x00000000000003ff
1328    icc_ctlr_el3   = 0x0000000000080400
1329    gicd_ispendr regs (Offsets 0x200-0x278)
1330    Offset		    Value
1331    0x200:	     0x0000000000000000
1332    0x208:	     0x0000000000000000
1333    0x210:	     0x0000000000000000
1334    0x218:	     0x0000000000000000
1335    0x220:	     0x0000000000000000
1336    0x228:	     0x0000000000000000
1337    0x230:	     0x0000000000000000
1338    0x238:	     0x0000000000000000
1339    0x240:	     0x0000000000000000
1340    0x248:	     0x0000000000000000
1341    0x250:	     0x0000000000000000
1342    0x258:	     0x0000000000000000
1343    0x260:	     0x0000000000000000
1344    0x268:	     0x0000000000000000
1345    0x270:	     0x0000000000000000
1346    0x278:	     0x0000000000000000
1347
1348Guidelines for Reset Handlers
1349-----------------------------
1350
1351TF-A implements a framework that allows CPU and platform ports to perform
1352actions very early after a CPU is released from reset in both the cold and warm
1353boot paths. This is done by calling the ``reset_handler`` macro/function in both
1354the BL1 and BL31 images. It in turn calls the platform and CPU specific reset
1355handling functions.
1356
1357Details for implementing a CPU specific reset handler can be found in
1358:ref:`firmware_design_cpu_specific_reset_handling`. Details for implementing a
1359platform specific reset handler can be found in the :ref:`Porting Guide` (see
1360the``plat_reset_handler()`` function).
1361
1362When adding functionality to a reset handler, keep in mind that if a different
1363reset handling behavior is required between the first and the subsequent
1364invocations of the reset handling code, this should be detected at runtime.
1365In other words, the reset handler should be able to detect whether an action has
1366already been performed and act as appropriate. Possible courses of actions are,
1367e.g. skip the action the second time, or undo/redo it.
1368
1369.. _configuring-secure-interrupts:
1370
1371Configuring secure interrupts
1372-----------------------------
1373
1374The GIC driver is responsible for performing initial configuration of secure
1375interrupts on the platform. To this end, the platform is expected to provide the
1376GIC driver (either GICv2 or GICv3, as selected by the platform) with the
1377interrupt configuration during the driver initialisation.
1378
1379Secure interrupt configuration are specified in an array of secure interrupt
1380properties. In this scheme, in both GICv2 and GICv3 driver data structures, the
1381``interrupt_props`` member points to an array of interrupt properties. Each
1382element of the array specifies the interrupt number and its attributes
1383(priority, group, configuration). Each element of the array shall be populated
1384by the macro ``INTR_PROP_DESC()``. The macro takes the following arguments:
1385
1386- 13-bit interrupt number,
1387
1388- 8-bit interrupt priority,
1389
1390- Interrupt type (one of ``INTR_TYPE_EL3``, ``INTR_TYPE_S_EL1``,
1391  ``INTR_TYPE_NS``),
1392
1393- Interrupt configuration (either ``GIC_INTR_CFG_LEVEL`` or
1394  ``GIC_INTR_CFG_EDGE``).
1395
1396.. _firmware_design_cpu_ops_fwk:
1397
1398CPU specific operations framework
1399---------------------------------
1400
1401Certain aspects of the Armv8-A architecture are implementation defined,
1402that is, certain behaviours are not architecturally defined, but must be
1403defined and documented by individual processor implementations. TF-A
1404implements a framework which categorises the common implementation defined
1405behaviours and allows a processor to export its implementation of that
1406behaviour. The categories are:
1407
1408#. Processor specific reset sequence.
1409
1410#. Processor specific power down sequences.
1411
1412#. Processor specific register dumping as a part of crash reporting.
1413
1414#. Errata status reporting.
1415
1416Each of the above categories fulfils a different requirement.
1417
1418#. allows any processor specific initialization before the caches and MMU
1419   are turned on, like implementation of errata workarounds, entry into
1420   the intra-cluster coherency domain etc.
1421
1422#. allows each processor to implement the power down sequence mandated in
1423   its Technical Reference Manual (TRM).
1424
1425#. allows a processor to provide additional information to the developer
1426   in the event of a crash, for example Cortex-A53 has registers which
1427   can expose the data cache contents.
1428
1429#. allows a processor to define a function that inspects and reports the status
1430   of all errata workarounds on that processor.
1431
1432Please note that only 2. is mandated by the TRM.
1433
1434The CPU specific operations framework scales to accommodate a large number of
1435different CPUs during power down and reset handling. The platform can specify
1436any CPU optimization it wants to enable for each CPU. It can also specify
1437the CPU errata workarounds to be applied for each CPU type during reset
1438handling by defining CPU errata compile time macros. Details on these macros
1439can be found in the :ref:`Arm CPU Specific Build Macros` document.
1440
1441The CPU specific operations framework depends on the ``cpu_ops`` structure which
1442needs to be exported for each type of CPU in the platform. It is defined in
1443``include/lib/cpus/aarch64/cpu_macros.S`` and has the following fields : ``midr``,
1444``reset_func()``, ``cpu_pwr_down_ops`` (array of power down functions) and
1445``cpu_reg_dump()``.
1446
1447The CPU specific files in ``lib/cpus`` export a ``cpu_ops`` data structure with
1448suitable handlers for that CPU. For example, ``lib/cpus/aarch64/cortex_a53.S``
1449exports the ``cpu_ops`` for Cortex-A53 CPU. According to the platform
1450configuration, these CPU specific files must be included in the build by
1451the platform makefile. The generic CPU specific operations framework code exists
1452in ``lib/cpus/aarch64/cpu_helpers.S``.
1453
1454CPU PCS
1455~~~~~~~
1456
1457All assembly functions in CPU files are asked to follow a modified version of
1458the Procedure Call Standard (PCS) in their internals. This is done to ensure
1459calling these functions from outside the file doesn't unexpectedly corrupt
1460registers in the very early environment and to help the internals to be easier
1461to understand. Please see the :ref:`firmware_design_cpu_errata_implementation`
1462for any function specific restrictions.
1463
1464+--------------+---------------------------------+
1465|   register   | use                             |
1466+==============+=================================+
1467|   x0 - x15   | scratch                         |
1468+--------------+---------------------------------+
1469|   x16, x17   | do not use (used by the linker) |
1470+--------------+---------------------------------+
1471|     x18      | do not use (platform register)  |
1472+--------------+---------------------------------+
1473|   x19 - x28  | callee saved                    |
1474+--------------+---------------------------------+
1475|   x29, x30   | FP, LR                          |
1476+--------------+---------------------------------+
1477
1478.. _firmware_design_cpu_specific_reset_handling:
1479
1480CPU specific Reset Handling
1481~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1482
1483After a reset, the state of the CPU when it calls generic reset handler is:
1484MMU turned off, both instruction and data caches turned off, not part
1485of any coherency domain and no stack.
1486
1487The BL entrypoint code first invokes the ``plat_reset_handler()`` to allow
1488the platform to perform any system initialization required and any system
1489errata workarounds that needs to be applied. The ``get_cpu_ops_ptr()`` reads
1490the current CPU midr, finds the matching ``cpu_ops`` entry in the ``cpu_ops``
1491array and returns it. Note that only the part number and implementer fields
1492in midr are used to find the matching ``cpu_ops`` entry. The ``reset_func()`` in
1493the returned ``cpu_ops`` is then invoked which executes the required reset
1494handling for that CPU and also any errata workarounds enabled by the platform.
1495
1496It should be defined using the ``cpu_reset_func_{start,end}`` macros and its
1497body may only clobber x0 to x14 with x14 being the cpu_rev parameter. The cpu
1498file should also include a call to ``cpu_reset_prologue`` at the start of the
1499file for errata to work correctly.
1500
1501CPU specific power down sequence
1502~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1503
1504During the BL31 initialization sequence, the pointer to the matching ``cpu_ops``
1505entry is stored in per-CPU data by ``cpu_data_init_cpu_ops()`` so that it can be quickly
1506retrieved during power down sequences.
1507
1508Various CPU drivers register handlers to perform power down at certain power
1509levels for that specific CPU. The PSCI service, upon receiving a power down
1510request, determines the highest power level at which to execute power down
1511sequence for a particular CPU. It uses the ``prepare_cpu_pwr_dwn()`` function to
1512pick the right power down handler for the requested level. The function
1513retrieves ``cpu_ops`` pointer member of per-CPU data, and from that, further
1514retrieves ``cpu_pwr_down_ops`` array, and indexes into the required level. If the
1515requested power level is higher than what a CPU driver supports, the handler
1516registered for highest level is invoked.
1517
1518At runtime the platform hooks for power down are invoked by the PSCI service to
1519perform platform specific operations during a power down sequence, for example
1520turning off CCI coherency during a cluster power down.
1521
1522Newer CPUs include a feature called "powerdown abandon". The feature is based on
1523the observation that events like GIC wakeups have a high likelihood of happening
1524while the core is in the middle of its powerdown sequence (at ``wfi``). Older
1525cores will powerdown and immediately power back up when this happens. To save on
1526the work and latency involved, the newer cores will "give up" mid way through if
1527no context has been lost yet. This is possible as the powerdown operation is
1528lengthy and a large part of it does not lose context.
1529
1530To cater for this possibility, the powerdown hook will be called a second time
1531after a wakeup. The expectation is that the first call will operate as before,
1532while the second call will undo anything the first call did. This should be done
1533statelessly, for example by toggling the relevant bits.
1534
1535CPU specific register reporting during crash
1536~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1537
1538If the crash reporting is enabled in BL31, when a crash occurs, the crash
1539reporting framework calls ``do_cpu_reg_dump`` which retrieves the matching
1540``cpu_ops`` using ``get_cpu_ops_ptr()`` function. The ``cpu_reg_dump()`` in
1541``cpu_ops`` is invoked, which then returns the CPU specific register values to
1542be reported and a pointer to the ASCII list of register names in a format
1543expected by the crash reporting framework.
1544
1545.. _firmware_design_cpu_errata_implementation:
1546
1547CPU errata implementation
1548~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1549
1550Errata workarounds for CPUs supported in TF-A are applied during both cold and
1551warm boots, shortly after reset. Individual Errata workarounds are enabled as
1552build options. Some errata workarounds have potential run-time implications;
1553therefore some are enabled by default, others not. Platform ports shall
1554override build options to enable or disable errata as appropriate. The CPU
1555drivers take care of applying errata workarounds that are enabled and applicable
1556to a given CPU.
1557
1558Each erratum has a build flag in ``lib/cpus/cpu-ops.mk`` of the form:
1559``ERRATA_<cpu_num>_<erratum_id>``. It also has a short description in
1560:ref:`arm_cpu_macros_errata_workarounds` on when it should apply.
1561
1562Errata framework
1563^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1564
1565The errata framework is a convention and a small library to allow errata to be
1566automatically discovered. It enables compliant errata to be automatically
1567applied and reported at runtime (either by status reporting or the errata ABI).
1568
1569To write a compliant mitigation for erratum number ``erratum_id`` on a cpu that
1570declared itself (with ``declare_cpu_ops``) as ``cpu_name`` one needs 3 things:
1571
1572#. A CPU revision checker function: ``check_erratum_<cpu_name>_<erratum_id>``
1573
1574   It should check whether this erratum applies on this revision of this CPU.
1575   It will be called with the CPU revision as its first parameter (x0) and
1576   should return one of ``ERRATA_APPLIES`` or ``ERRATA_NOT_APPLIES``.
1577
1578   It may only clobber x0 to x4. The rest should be treated as callee-saved.
1579
1580#. A workaround function: ``erratum_<cpu_name>_<erratum_id>_wa``
1581
1582   It should obtain the cpu revision (with ``cpu_get_rev_var``), call its
1583   revision checker, and perform the mitigation, should the erratum apply.
1584
1585   It may only clobber x0 to x8. The rest should be treated as callee-saved.
1586
1587#. Register itself to the framework
1588
1589   Do this with
1590   ``add_erratum_entry <cpu_name>, ERRATUM(<erratum_id>), <errata_flag>``
1591   where the ``errata_flag`` is the enable flag in ``cpu-ops.mk`` described
1592   above.
1593
1594See the next section on how to do this easily.
1595
1596.. note::
1597
1598 CVEs have the format ``CVE_<year>_<number>``. To fit them in the framework, the
1599 ``erratum_id`` for the checker and the workaround functions become the
1600 ``number`` part of its name and the ``ERRATUM(<number>)`` part of the
1601 registration should instead be ``CVE(<year>, <number>)``. In the extremely
1602 unlikely scenario where a CVE and an erratum numbers clash, the CVE number
1603 should be prefixed with a zero.
1604
1605 Also, their build flag should be ``WORKAROUND_CVE_<year>_<number>``.
1606
1607.. note::
1608
1609 AArch32 uses the legacy convention. The checker function has the format
1610 ``check_errata_<erratum_id>`` and the workaround has the format
1611 ``errata_<cpu_number>_<erratum_id>_wa`` where ``cpu_number`` is the shortform
1612 letter and number name of the CPU.
1613
1614 For CVEs the ``erratum_id`` also becomes ``cve_<year>_<number>``.
1615
1616Errata framework helpers
1617^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1618
1619Writing these errata involves lots of boilerplate and repetitive code. On
1620AArch64 there are helpers to omit most of this. They are located in
1621``include/lib/cpus/aarch64/cpu_macros.S`` and the preferred way to implement
1622errata. Please see their comments on how to use them.
1623
1624The most common type of erratum workaround, one that just sets a "chicken" bit
1625in some arbitrary register, would have an implementation for the Cortex-A77,
1626erratum #1925769 like::
1627
1628    workaround_reset_start cortex_a77, ERRATUM(1925769), ERRATA_A77_1925769
1629        sysreg_bit_set CORTEX_A77_CPUECTLR_EL1, CORTEX_A77_CPUECTLR_EL1_BIT_8
1630    workaround_reset_end cortex_a77, ERRATUM(1925769)
1631
1632    check_erratum_ls cortex_a77, ERRATUM(1925769), CPU_REV(1, 1)
1633
1634Status reporting
1635^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1636
1637In a debug build of TF-A, on a CPU that comes out of reset, both BL1 and the
1638runtime firmware (BL31 in AArch64, and BL32 in AArch32) will invoke a generic
1639errata status reporting function. It will read the ``errata_entries`` list of
1640that cpu and will report whether each known erratum was applied and, if not,
1641whether it should have been.
1642
1643Reporting the status of errata workaround is for informational purpose only; it
1644has no functional significance.
1645
1646Memory layout of BL images
1647--------------------------
1648
1649Each bootloader image can be divided in 2 parts:
1650
1651-  the static contents of the image. These are data actually stored in the
1652   binary on the disk. In the ELF terminology, they are called ``PROGBITS``
1653   sections;
1654
1655-  the run-time contents of the image. These are data that don't occupy any
1656   space in the binary on the disk. The ELF binary just contains some
1657   metadata indicating where these data will be stored at run-time and the
1658   corresponding sections need to be allocated and initialized at run-time.
1659   In the ELF terminology, they are called ``NOBITS`` sections.
1660
1661All PROGBITS sections are grouped together at the beginning of the image,
1662followed by all NOBITS sections. This is true for all TF-A images and it is
1663governed by the linker scripts. This ensures that the raw binary images are
1664as small as possible. If a NOBITS section was inserted in between PROGBITS
1665sections then the resulting binary file would contain zero bytes in place of
1666this NOBITS section, making the image unnecessarily bigger. Smaller images
1667allow faster loading from the FIP to the main memory.
1668
1669For BL31, a platform can specify an alternate location for NOBITS sections
1670(other than immediately following PROGBITS sections) by setting
1671``SEPARATE_NOBITS_REGION`` to 1 and defining ``BL31_NOBITS_BASE`` and
1672``BL31_NOBITS_LIMIT``.
1673
1674Linker scripts and symbols
1675~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1676
1677Each bootloader stage image layout is described by its own linker script. The
1678linker scripts export some symbols into the program symbol table. Their values
1679correspond to particular addresses. TF-A code can refer to these symbols to
1680figure out the image memory layout.
1681
1682Linker symbols follow the following naming convention in TF-A.
1683
1684-  ``__<SECTION>_START__``
1685
1686   Start address of a given section named ``<SECTION>``.
1687
1688-  ``__<SECTION>_END__``
1689
1690   End address of a given section named ``<SECTION>``. If there is an alignment
1691   constraint on the section's end address then ``__<SECTION>_END__`` corresponds
1692   to the end address of the section's actual contents, rounded up to the right
1693   boundary. Refer to the value of ``__<SECTION>_UNALIGNED_END__`` to know the
1694   actual end address of the section's contents.
1695
1696-  ``__<SECTION>_UNALIGNED_END__``
1697
1698   End address of a given section named ``<SECTION>`` without any padding or
1699   rounding up due to some alignment constraint.
1700
1701-  ``__<SECTION>_SIZE__``
1702
1703   Size (in bytes) of a given section named ``<SECTION>``. If there is an
1704   alignment constraint on the section's end address then ``__<SECTION>_SIZE__``
1705   corresponds to the size of the section's actual contents, rounded up to the
1706   right boundary. In other words, ``__<SECTION>_SIZE__ = __<SECTION>_END__ - _<SECTION>_START__``. Refer to the value of ``__<SECTION>_UNALIGNED_SIZE__``
1707   to know the actual size of the section's contents.
1708
1709-  ``__<SECTION>_UNALIGNED_SIZE__``
1710
1711   Size (in bytes) of a given section named ``<SECTION>`` without any padding or
1712   rounding up due to some alignment constraint. In other words,
1713   ``__<SECTION>_UNALIGNED_SIZE__ = __<SECTION>_UNALIGNED_END__ - __<SECTION>_START__``.
1714
1715Some of the linker symbols are mandatory as TF-A code relies on them to be
1716defined. They are listed in the following subsections. Some of them must be
1717provided for each bootloader stage and some are specific to a given bootloader
1718stage.
1719
1720The linker scripts define some extra, optional symbols. They are not actually
1721used by any code but they help in understanding the bootloader images' memory
1722layout as they are easy to spot in the link map files.
1723
1724Common linker symbols
1725^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1726
1727All BL images share the following requirements:
1728
1729-  The BSS section must be zero-initialised before executing any C code.
1730-  The coherent memory section (if enabled) must be zero-initialised as well.
1731-  The MMU setup code needs to know the extents of the coherent and read-only
1732   memory regions to set the right memory attributes. When
1733   ``SEPARATE_CODE_AND_RODATA=1``, it needs to know more specifically how the
1734   read-only memory region is divided between code and data.
1735
1736The following linker symbols are defined for this purpose:
1737
1738-  ``__BSS_START__``
1739-  ``__BSS_SIZE__``
1740-  ``__COHERENT_RAM_START__`` Must be aligned on a page-size boundary.
1741-  ``__COHERENT_RAM_END__`` Must be aligned on a page-size boundary.
1742-  ``__COHERENT_RAM_UNALIGNED_SIZE__``
1743-  ``__RO_START__``
1744-  ``__RO_END__``
1745-  ``__TEXT_START__``
1746-  ``__TEXT_END_UNALIGNED__``
1747-  ``__TEXT_END__``
1748-  ``__RODATA_START__``
1749-  ``__RODATA_END_UNALIGNED__``
1750-  ``__RODATA_END__``
1751
1752BL1's linker symbols
1753^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1754
1755BL1 being the ROM image, it has additional requirements. BL1 resides in ROM and
1756it is entirely executed in place but it needs some read-write memory for its
1757mutable data. Its ``.data`` section (i.e. its allocated read-write data) must be
1758relocated from ROM to RAM before executing any C code.
1759
1760The following additional linker symbols are defined for BL1:
1761
1762-  ``__BL1_ROM_END__`` End address of BL1's ROM contents, covering its code
1763   and ``.data`` section in ROM.
1764-  ``__DATA_ROM_START__`` Start address of the ``.data`` section in ROM. Must be
1765   aligned on a 16-byte boundary.
1766-  ``__DATA_RAM_START__`` Address in RAM where the ``.data`` section should be
1767   copied over. Must be aligned on a 16-byte boundary.
1768-  ``__DATA_SIZE__`` Size of the ``.data`` section (in ROM or RAM).
1769-  ``__BL1_RAM_START__`` Start address of BL1 read-write data.
1770-  ``__BL1_RAM_END__`` End address of BL1 read-write data.
1771
1772How to choose the right base addresses for each bootloader stage image
1773~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1774
1775There is currently no support for dynamic image loading in TF-A. This means
1776that all bootloader images need to be linked against their ultimate runtime
1777locations and the base addresses of each image must be chosen carefully such
1778that images don't overlap each other in an undesired way. As the code grows,
1779the base addresses might need adjustments to cope with the new memory layout.
1780
1781The memory layout is completely specific to the platform and so there is no
1782general recipe for choosing the right base addresses for each bootloader image.
1783However, there are tools to aid in understanding the memory layout. These are
1784the link map files: ``build/<platform>/<build-type>/bl<x>/bl<x>.map``, with ``<x>``
1785being the stage bootloader. They provide a detailed view of the memory usage of
1786each image. Among other useful information, they provide the end address of
1787each image.
1788
1789-  ``bl1.map`` link map file provides ``__BL1_RAM_END__`` address.
1790-  ``bl2.map`` link map file provides ``__BL2_END__`` address.
1791-  ``bl31.map`` link map file provides ``__BL31_END__`` address.
1792-  ``bl32.map`` link map file provides ``__BL32_END__`` address.
1793
1794For each bootloader image, the platform code must provide its start address
1795as well as a limit address that it must not overstep. The latter is used in the
1796linker scripts to check that the image doesn't grow past that address. If that
1797happens, the linker will issue a message similar to the following:
1798
1799::
1800
1801    aarch64-none-elf-ld: BLx has exceeded its limit.
1802
1803Additionally, if the platform memory layout implies some image overlaying like
1804on FVP, BL31 and TSP need to know the limit address that their PROGBITS
1805sections must not overstep. The platform code must provide those.
1806
1807TF-A does not provide any mechanism to verify at boot time that the memory
1808to load a new image is free to prevent overwriting a previously loaded image.
1809The platform must specify the memory available in the system for all the
1810relevant BL images to be loaded.
1811
1812For example, in the case of BL1 loading BL2, ``bl1_plat_sec_mem_layout()`` will
1813return the region defined by the platform where BL1 intends to load BL2. The
1814``load_image()`` function performs bounds check for the image size based on the
1815base and maximum image size provided by the platforms. Platforms must take
1816this behaviour into account when defining the base/size for each of the images.
1817
1818Memory layout on Arm development platforms
1819^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1820
1821The following list describes the memory layout on the Arm development platforms:
1822
1823-  A 4KB page of shared memory is used for communication between Trusted
1824   Firmware and the platform's power controller. This is located at the base of
1825   Trusted SRAM. The amount of Trusted SRAM available to load the bootloader
1826   images is reduced by the size of the shared memory.
1827
1828   The shared memory is used to store the CPUs' entrypoint mailbox. On Juno,
1829   this is also used for the MHU payload when passing messages to and from the
1830   SCP.
1831
1832-  Another 4 KB page is reserved for passing memory layout between BL1 and BL2
1833   and also the dynamic firmware configurations.
1834
1835-  On FVP, BL1 is originally sitting in the Trusted ROM at address ``0x0``. On
1836   Juno, BL1 resides in flash memory at address ``0x0BEC0000``. BL1 read-write
1837   data are relocated to the top of Trusted SRAM at runtime.
1838
1839-  BL2 is loaded below BL1 RW
1840
1841-  EL3 Runtime Software, BL31 for AArch64 and BL32 for AArch32 (e.g. SP_MIN),
1842   is loaded at the top of the Trusted SRAM, such that its NOBITS sections will
1843   overwrite BL1 R/W data and BL2. This implies that BL1 global variables
1844   remain valid only until execution reaches the EL3 Runtime Software entry
1845   point during a cold boot.
1846
1847-  On Juno, SCP_BL2 is loaded temporarily into the EL3 Runtime Software memory
1848   region and transferred to the SCP before being overwritten by EL3 Runtime
1849   Software.
1850
1851-  BL32 (for AArch64) can be loaded in one of the following locations:
1852
1853   -  Trusted SRAM
1854   -  Trusted DRAM (FVP only)
1855   -  Secure region of DRAM (top 16MB of DRAM configured by the TrustZone
1856      controller)
1857
1858   When BL32 (for AArch64) is loaded into Trusted SRAM, it is loaded below
1859   BL31.
1860
1861The location of the BL32 image will result in different memory maps. This is
1862illustrated for both FVP and Juno in the following diagrams, using the TSP as
1863an example.
1864
1865.. note::
1866   Loading the BL32 image in TZC secured DRAM doesn't change the memory
1867   layout of the other images in Trusted SRAM.
1868
1869CONFIG section in memory layouts shown below contains:
1870
1871::
1872
1873    +--------------------+
1874    |bl2_mem_params_descs|
1875    |--------------------|
1876    |     fw_configs     |
1877    +--------------------+
1878
1879``bl2_mem_params_descs`` contains parameters passed from BL2 to next the
1880BL image during boot.
1881
1882``fw_configs`` includes soc_fw_config, tos_fw_config, tb_fw_config and fw_config.
1883
1884**FVP with TSP in Trusted SRAM with firmware configs :**
1885(These diagrams only cover the AArch64 case)
1886
1887::
1888
1889                   DRAM
1890    0xffffffff +----------+
1891               | EL3 TZC  |
1892    0xffe00000 |----------| (secure)
1893               | AP TZC   |
1894    0xff000000 +----------+
1895               :          :
1896    0x82100000 |----------|
1897               |HW_CONFIG |
1898    0x82000000 |----------|  (non-secure)
1899               |          |
1900    0x80000000 +----------+
1901
1902               Trusted DRAM
1903    0x08000000 +----------+
1904               |HW_CONFIG |
1905    0x07f00000 |----------|
1906               :          :
1907               |          |
1908    0x06000000 +----------+
1909
1910               Trusted SRAM
1911    0x04040000 +----------+  loaded by BL2  +----------------+
1912               | BL1 (rw) |  <<<<<<<<<<<<<  |                |
1913               |----------|  <<<<<<<<<<<<<  |  BL31 NOBITS   |
1914               |   BL2    |  <<<<<<<<<<<<<  |                |
1915               |----------|  <<<<<<<<<<<<<  |----------------|
1916               |          |  <<<<<<<<<<<<<  | BL31 PROGBITS  |
1917               |          |  <<<<<<<<<<<<<  |----------------|
1918               |          |  <<<<<<<<<<<<<  |     BL32       |
1919    0x04003000 +----------+                 +----------------+
1920               |  CONFIG  |
1921    0x04001000 +----------+
1922               |  Shared  |
1923    0x04000000 +----------+
1924
1925               Trusted ROM
1926    0x04000000 +----------+
1927               | BL1 (ro) |
1928    0x00000000 +----------+
1929
1930**FVP with TSP in Trusted DRAM with firmware configs (default option):**
1931
1932::
1933
1934                     DRAM
1935    0xffffffff +--------------+
1936               |   EL3 TZC    |
1937    0xffe00000 |--------------|  (secure)
1938               |   AP TZC     |
1939    0xff000000 +--------------+
1940               :              :
1941    0x82100000 |--------------|
1942               |  HW_CONFIG   |
1943    0x82000000 |--------------|  (non-secure)
1944               |              |
1945    0x80000000 +--------------+
1946
1947                 Trusted DRAM
1948    0x08000000 +--------------+
1949               |  HW_CONFIG   |
1950    0x07f00000 |--------------|
1951               :              :
1952               |    BL32      |
1953    0x06000000 +--------------+
1954
1955                 Trusted SRAM
1956    0x04040000 +--------------+  loaded by BL2  +----------------+
1957               |   BL1 (rw)   |  <<<<<<<<<<<<<  |                |
1958               |--------------|  <<<<<<<<<<<<<  |  BL31 NOBITS   |
1959               |     BL2      |  <<<<<<<<<<<<<  |                |
1960               |--------------|  <<<<<<<<<<<<<  |----------------|
1961               |              |  <<<<<<<<<<<<<  | BL31 PROGBITS  |
1962               |              |                 +----------------+
1963    0x04003000 +--------------+
1964               |    CONFIG    |
1965    0x04001000 +--------------+
1966               |    Shared    |
1967    0x04000000 +--------------+
1968
1969                 Trusted ROM
1970    0x04000000 +--------------+
1971               |   BL1 (ro)   |
1972    0x00000000 +--------------+
1973
1974**FVP with TSP in TZC-Secured DRAM with firmware configs :**
1975
1976::
1977
1978                   DRAM
1979    0xffffffff +----------+
1980               |  EL3 TZC |
1981    0xffe00000 |----------|  (secure)
1982               |  AP TZC  |
1983               |  (BL32)  |
1984    0xff000000 +----------+
1985               |          |
1986    0x82100000 |----------|
1987               |HW_CONFIG |
1988    0x82000000 |----------|  (non-secure)
1989               |          |
1990    0x80000000 +----------+
1991
1992               Trusted DRAM
1993    0x08000000 +----------+
1994               |HW_CONFIG |
1995    0x7f000000 |----------|
1996               :          :
1997               |          |
1998    0x06000000 +----------+
1999
2000               Trusted SRAM
2001    0x04040000 +----------+  loaded by BL2  +----------------+
2002               | BL1 (rw) |  <<<<<<<<<<<<<  |                |
2003               |----------|  <<<<<<<<<<<<<  |  BL31 NOBITS   |
2004               |   BL2    |  <<<<<<<<<<<<<  |                |
2005               |----------|  <<<<<<<<<<<<<  |----------------|
2006               |          |  <<<<<<<<<<<<<  | BL31 PROGBITS  |
2007               |          |                 +----------------+
2008    0x04003000 +----------+
2009               |  CONFIG  |
2010    0x04001000 +----------+
2011               |  Shared  |
2012    0x04000000 +----------+
2013
2014               Trusted ROM
2015    0x04000000 +----------+
2016               | BL1 (ro) |
2017    0x00000000 +----------+
2018
2019**Juno with BL32 in Trusted SRAM :**
2020
2021::
2022
2023                  DRAM
2024    0xFFFFFFFF +----------+
2025               |  SCP TZC |
2026    0xFFE00000 |----------|
2027               |  EL3 TZC |
2028    0xFFC00000 |----------|  (secure)
2029               |  AP TZC  |
2030    0xFF000000 +----------+
2031               |          |
2032               :          :  (non-secure)
2033               |          |
2034    0x80000000 +----------+
2035
2036
2037                  Flash0
2038    0x0C000000 +----------+
2039               :          :
2040    0x0BED0000 |----------|
2041               | BL1 (ro) |
2042    0x0BEC0000 |----------|
2043               :          :
2044    0x08000000 +----------+                  BL31 is loaded
2045                                             after SCP_BL2 has
2046               Trusted SRAM                  been sent to SCP
2047    0x04040000 +----------+  loaded by BL2  +----------------+
2048               | BL1 (rw) |  <<<<<<<<<<<<<  |                |
2049               |----------|  <<<<<<<<<<<<<  |  BL31 NOBITS   |
2050               |   BL2    |  <<<<<<<<<<<<<  |                |
2051               |----------|  <<<<<<<<<<<<<  |----------------|
2052               | SCP_BL2  |  <<<<<<<<<<<<<  | BL31 PROGBITS  |
2053               |          |  <<<<<<<<<<<<<  |----------------|
2054               |          |  <<<<<<<<<<<<<  |     BL32       |
2055               |          |                 +----------------+
2056               |          |
2057    0x04001000 +----------+
2058               |   MHU    |
2059    0x04000000 +----------+
2060
2061**Juno with BL32 in TZC-secured DRAM :**
2062
2063::
2064
2065                   DRAM
2066    0xFFFFFFFF +----------+
2067               |  SCP TZC |
2068    0xFFE00000 |----------|
2069               |  EL3 TZC |
2070    0xFFC00000 |----------|  (secure)
2071               |  AP TZC  |
2072               |  (BL32)  |
2073    0xFF000000 +----------+
2074               |          |
2075               :          :  (non-secure)
2076               |          |
2077    0x80000000 +----------+
2078
2079                  Flash0
2080    0x0C000000 +----------+
2081               :          :
2082    0x0BED0000 |----------|
2083               | BL1 (ro) |
2084    0x0BEC0000 |----------|
2085               :          :
2086    0x08000000 +----------+                  BL31 is loaded
2087                                             after SCP_BL2 has
2088               Trusted SRAM                  been sent to SCP
2089    0x04040000 +----------+  loaded by BL2  +----------------+
2090               | BL1 (rw) |  <<<<<<<<<<<<<  |                |
2091               |----------|  <<<<<<<<<<<<<  |  BL31 NOBITS   |
2092               |   BL2    |  <<<<<<<<<<<<<  |                |
2093               |----------|  <<<<<<<<<<<<<  |----------------|
2094               | SCP_BL2  |  <<<<<<<<<<<<<  | BL31 PROGBITS  |
2095               |          |                 +----------------+
2096    0x04001000 +----------+
2097               |   MHU    |
2098    0x04000000 +----------+
2099
2100.. _firmware_design_fip:
2101
2102Firmware Image Package (FIP)
2103----------------------------
2104
2105Using a Firmware Image Package (FIP) allows for packing bootloader images (and
2106potentially other payloads) into a single archive that can be loaded by TF-A
2107from non-volatile platform storage. A driver to load images from a FIP has
2108been added to the storage layer and allows a package to be read from supported
2109platform storage. A tool to create Firmware Image Packages is also provided
2110and described below.
2111
2112Firmware Image Package layout
2113~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2114
2115The FIP layout consists of a table of contents (ToC) followed by payload data.
2116The ToC itself has a header followed by one or more table entries. The ToC is
2117terminated by an end marker entry, and since the size of the ToC is 0 bytes,
2118the offset equals the total size of the FIP file. All ToC entries describe some
2119payload data that has been appended to the end of the binary package. With the
2120information provided in the ToC entry the corresponding payload data can be
2121retrieved.
2122
2123::
2124
2125    ------------------
2126    | ToC Header     |
2127    |----------------|
2128    | ToC Entry 0    |
2129    |----------------|
2130    | ToC Entry 1    |
2131    |----------------|
2132    | ToC End Marker |
2133    |----------------|
2134    |                |
2135    |     Data 0     |
2136    |                |
2137    |----------------|
2138    |                |
2139    |     Data 1     |
2140    |                |
2141    ------------------
2142
2143The ToC header and entry formats are described in the header file
2144``include/tools_share/firmware_image_package.h``. This file is used by both the
2145tool and TF-A.
2146
2147The ToC header has the following fields:
2148
2149::
2150
2151    `name`: The name of the ToC. This is currently used to validate the header.
2152    `serial_number`: A non-zero number provided by the creation tool
2153    `flags`: Flags associated with this data.
2154        Bits 0-31: Reserved
2155        Bits 32-47: Platform defined
2156        Bits 48-63: Reserved
2157
2158A ToC entry has the following fields:
2159
2160::
2161
2162    `uuid`: All files are referred to by a pre-defined Universally Unique
2163        IDentifier [UUID] . The UUIDs are defined in
2164        `include/tools_share/firmware_image_package.h`. The platform translates
2165        the requested image name into the corresponding UUID when accessing the
2166        package.
2167    `offset_address`: The offset address at which the corresponding payload data
2168        can be found. The offset is calculated from the ToC base address.
2169    `size`: The size of the corresponding payload data in bytes.
2170    `flags`: Flags associated with this entry. None are yet defined.
2171
2172Firmware Image Package creation tool
2173~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2174
2175The FIP creation tool can be used to pack specified images into a binary
2176package that can be loaded by TF-A from platform storage. The tool currently
2177only supports packing bootloader images. Additional image definitions can be
2178added to the tool as required.
2179
2180The tool can be found in ``tools/fiptool``.
2181
2182Loading from a Firmware Image Package (FIP)
2183~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2184
2185The Firmware Image Package (FIP) driver can load images from a binary package on
2186non-volatile platform storage. For the Arm development platforms, this is
2187currently NOR FLASH.
2188
2189Bootloader images are loaded according to the platform policy as specified by
2190the function ``plat_get_image_source()``. For the Arm development platforms, this
2191means the platform will attempt to load images from a Firmware Image Package
2192located at the start of NOR FLASH0.
2193
2194The Arm development platforms' policy is to only allow loading of a known set of
2195images. The platform policy can be modified to allow additional images.
2196
2197Use of coherent memory in TF-A
2198------------------------------
2199
2200There might be loss of coherency when physical memory with mismatched
2201shareability, cacheability and memory attributes is accessed by multiple CPUs
2202(refer to section B2.9 of `Arm ARM`_ for more details). This possibility occurs
2203in TF-A during power up/down sequences when coherency, MMU and caches are
2204turned on/off incrementally.
2205
2206TF-A defines coherent memory as a region of memory with Device nGnRE attributes
2207in the translation tables. The translation granule size in TF-A is 4KB. This
2208is the smallest possible size of the coherent memory region.
2209
2210By default, all data structures which are susceptible to accesses with
2211mismatched attributes from various CPUs are allocated in a coherent memory
2212region (refer to section 2.1 of :ref:`Porting Guide`). The coherent memory
2213region accesses are Outer Shareable, non-cacheable and they can be accessed with
2214the Device nGnRE attributes when the MMU is turned on. Hence, at the expense of
2215at least an extra page of memory, TF-A is able to work around coherency issues
2216due to mismatched memory attributes.
2217
2218The alternative to the above approach is to allocate the susceptible data
2219structures in Normal WriteBack WriteAllocate Inner shareable memory. This
2220approach requires the data structures to be designed so that it is possible to
2221work around the issue of mismatched memory attributes by performing software
2222cache maintenance on them.
2223
2224Disabling the use of coherent memory in TF-A
2225~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2226
2227It might be desirable to avoid the cost of allocating coherent memory on
2228platforms which are memory constrained. TF-A enables inclusion of coherent
2229memory in firmware images through the build flag ``USE_COHERENT_MEM``.
2230This flag is enabled by default. It can be disabled to choose the second
2231approach described above.
2232
2233The below sections analyze the data structures allocated in the coherent memory
2234region and the changes required to allocate them in normal memory.
2235
2236Coherent memory usage in PSCI implementation
2237~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2238
2239The ``psci_non_cpu_pd_nodes`` data structure stores the platform's power domain
2240tree information for state management of power domains. By default, this data
2241structure is allocated in the coherent memory region in TF-A because it can be
2242accessed by multiple CPUs, either with caches enabled or disabled.
2243
2244.. code:: c
2245
2246    typedef struct non_cpu_pwr_domain_node {
2247        /*
2248         * Index of the first CPU power domain node level 0 which has this node
2249         * as its parent.
2250         */
2251        unsigned int cpu_start_idx;
2252
2253        /*
2254         * Number of CPU power domains which are siblings of the domain indexed
2255         * by 'cpu_start_idx' i.e. all the domains in the range 'cpu_start_idx
2256         * -> cpu_start_idx + ncpus' have this node as their parent.
2257         */
2258        unsigned int ncpus;
2259
2260        /*
2261         * Index of the parent power domain node.
2262         */
2263        unsigned int parent_node;
2264
2265        plat_local_state_t local_state;
2266
2267        unsigned char level;
2268
2269        /* For indexing the psci_lock array*/
2270        unsigned char lock_index;
2271    } non_cpu_pd_node_t;
2272
2273In order to move this data structure to normal memory, the use of each of its
2274fields must be analyzed. Fields like ``cpu_start_idx``, ``ncpus``, ``parent_node``
2275``level`` and ``lock_index`` are only written once during cold boot. Hence removing
2276them from coherent memory involves only doing a clean and invalidate of the
2277cache lines after these fields are written.
2278
2279The field ``local_state`` can be concurrently accessed by multiple CPUs in
2280different cache states. A Lamport's Bakery lock ``psci_locks`` is used to ensure
2281mutual exclusion to this field and a clean and invalidate is needed after it
2282is written.
2283
2284Bakery lock data
2285~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2286
2287The bakery lock data structure ``bakery_lock_t`` is allocated in coherent memory
2288and is accessed by multiple CPUs with mismatched attributes. ``bakery_lock_t`` is
2289defined as follows:
2290
2291.. code:: c
2292
2293    typedef struct bakery_lock {
2294        /*
2295         * The lock_data is a bit-field of 2 members:
2296         * Bit[0]       : choosing. This field is set when the CPU is
2297         *                choosing its bakery number.
2298         * Bits[1 - 15] : number. This is the bakery number allocated.
2299         */
2300        volatile uint16_t lock_data[BAKERY_LOCK_MAX_CPUS];
2301    } bakery_lock_t;
2302
2303It is a characteristic of Lamport's Bakery algorithm that the volatile per-CPU
2304fields can be read by all CPUs but only written to by the owning CPU.
2305
2306Depending upon the data cache line size, the per-CPU fields of the
2307``bakery_lock_t`` structure for multiple CPUs may exist on a single cache line.
2308These per-CPU fields can be read and written during lock contention by multiple
2309CPUs with mismatched memory attributes. Since these fields are a part of the
2310lock implementation, they do not have access to any other locking primitive to
2311safeguard against the resulting coherency issues. As a result, simple software
2312cache maintenance is not enough to allocate them in coherent memory. Consider
2313the following example.
2314
2315CPU0 updates its per-CPU field with data cache enabled. This write updates a
2316local cache line which contains a copy of the fields for other CPUs as well. Now
2317CPU1 updates its per-CPU field of the ``bakery_lock_t`` structure with data cache
2318disabled. CPU1 then issues a DCIVAC operation to invalidate any stale copies of
2319its field in any other cache line in the system. This operation will invalidate
2320the update made by CPU0 as well.
2321
2322To use bakery locks when ``USE_COHERENT_MEM`` is disabled, the lock data structure
2323has been redesigned. The changes utilise the characteristic of Lamport's Bakery
2324algorithm mentioned earlier. The bakery_lock structure only allocates the memory
2325for a single CPU. The macro ``DEFINE_BAKERY_LOCK`` allocates all the bakery locks
2326needed for a CPU into a section ``.bakery_lock``. The linker allocates the memory
2327for other cores by using the total size allocated for the bakery_lock section
2328and multiplying it with (PLATFORM_CORE_COUNT - 1). This enables software to
2329perform software cache maintenance on the lock data structure without running
2330into coherency issues associated with mismatched attributes.
2331
2332The bakery lock data structure ``bakery_info_t`` is defined for use when
2333``USE_COHERENT_MEM`` is disabled as follows:
2334
2335.. code:: c
2336
2337    typedef struct bakery_info {
2338        /*
2339         * The lock_data is a bit-field of 2 members:
2340         * Bit[0]       : choosing. This field is set when the CPU is
2341         *                choosing its bakery number.
2342         * Bits[1 - 15] : number. This is the bakery number allocated.
2343         */
2344         volatile uint16_t lock_data;
2345    } bakery_info_t;
2346
2347The ``bakery_info_t`` represents a single per-CPU field of one lock and
2348the combination of corresponding ``bakery_info_t`` structures for all CPUs in the
2349system represents the complete bakery lock. The view in memory for a system
2350with n bakery locks are:
2351
2352::
2353
2354    .bakery_lock section start
2355    |----------------|
2356    | `bakery_info_t`| <-- Lock_0 per-CPU field
2357    |    Lock_0      |     for CPU0
2358    |----------------|
2359    | `bakery_info_t`| <-- Lock_1 per-CPU field
2360    |    Lock_1      |     for CPU0
2361    |----------------|
2362    | ....           |
2363    |----------------|
2364    | `bakery_info_t`| <-- Lock_N per-CPU field
2365    |    Lock_N      |     for CPU0
2366    ------------------
2367    |    XXXXX       |
2368    | Padding to     |
2369    | next Cache WB  | <--- Calculate PERCPU_BAKERY_LOCK_SIZE, allocate
2370    |  Granule       |       continuous memory for remaining CPUs.
2371    ------------------
2372    | `bakery_info_t`| <-- Lock_0 per-CPU field
2373    |    Lock_0      |     for CPU1
2374    |----------------|
2375    | `bakery_info_t`| <-- Lock_1 per-CPU field
2376    |    Lock_1      |     for CPU1
2377    |----------------|
2378    | ....           |
2379    |----------------|
2380    | `bakery_info_t`| <-- Lock_N per-CPU field
2381    |    Lock_N      |     for CPU1
2382    ------------------
2383    |    XXXXX       |
2384    | Padding to     |
2385    | next Cache WB  |
2386    |  Granule       |
2387    ------------------
2388
2389Consider a system of 2 CPUs with 'N' bakery locks as shown above. For an
2390operation on Lock_N, the corresponding ``bakery_info_t`` in both CPU0 and CPU1
2391``.bakery_lock`` section need to be fetched and appropriate cache operations need
2392to be performed for each access.
2393
2394On Arm Platforms, bakery locks are used in psci (``psci_locks``) and power controller
2395driver (``arm_lock``).
2396
2397Non Functional Impact of removing coherent memory
2398~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2399
2400Removal of the coherent memory region leads to the additional software overhead
2401of performing cache maintenance for the affected data structures. However, since
2402the memory where the data structures are allocated is cacheable, the overhead is
2403mostly mitigated by an increase in performance.
2404
2405There is however a performance impact for bakery locks, due to:
2406
2407-  Additional cache maintenance operations, and
2408-  Multiple cache line reads for each lock operation, since the bakery locks
2409   for each CPU are distributed across different cache lines.
2410
2411The implementation has been optimized to minimize this additional overhead.
2412Measurements indicate that when bakery locks are allocated in Normal memory, the
2413minimum latency of acquiring a lock is on an average 3-4 micro seconds whereas
2414in Device memory the same is 2 micro seconds. The measurements were done on the
2415Juno Arm development platform.
2416
2417As mentioned earlier, almost a page of memory can be saved by disabling
2418``USE_COHERENT_MEM``. Each platform needs to consider these trade-offs to decide
2419whether coherent memory should be used. If a platform disables
2420``USE_COHERENT_MEM`` and needs to use bakery locks in the porting layer, it can
2421optionally define macro ``PLAT_PERCPU_BAKERY_LOCK_SIZE`` (see the
2422:ref:`Porting Guide`). Refer to the reference platform code for examples.
2423
2424Isolating code and read-only data on separate memory pages
2425----------------------------------------------------------
2426
2427In the Armv8-A VMSA, translation table entries include fields that define the
2428properties of the target memory region, such as its access permissions. The
2429smallest unit of memory that can be addressed by a translation table entry is
2430a memory page. Therefore, if software needs to set different permissions on two
2431memory regions then it needs to map them using different memory pages.
2432
2433The default memory layout for each BL image is as follows:
2434
2435::
2436
2437       |        ...        |
2438       +-------------------+
2439       |  Read-write data  |
2440       +-------------------+ Page boundary
2441       |     <Padding>     |
2442       +-------------------+
2443       | Exception vectors |
2444       +-------------------+ 2 KB boundary
2445       |     <Padding>     |
2446       +-------------------+
2447       |  Read-only data   |
2448       +-------------------+
2449       |       Code        |
2450       +-------------------+ BLx_BASE
2451
2452.. note::
2453   The 2KB alignment for the exception vectors is an architectural
2454   requirement.
2455
2456The read-write data start on a new memory page so that they can be mapped with
2457read-write permissions, whereas the code and read-only data below are configured
2458as read-only.
2459
2460However, the read-only data are not aligned on a page boundary. They are
2461contiguous to the code. Therefore, the end of the code section and the beginning
2462of the read-only data one might share a memory page. This forces both to be
2463mapped with the same memory attributes. As the code needs to be executable, this
2464means that the read-only data stored on the same memory page as the code are
2465executable as well. This could potentially be exploited as part of a security
2466attack.
2467
2468TF provides the build flag ``SEPARATE_CODE_AND_RODATA`` to isolate the code and
2469read-only data on separate memory pages. This in turn allows independent control
2470of the access permissions for the code and read-only data. In this case,
2471platform code gets a finer-grained view of the image layout and can
2472appropriately map the code region as executable and the read-only data as
2473execute-never.
2474
2475This has an impact on memory footprint, as padding bytes need to be introduced
2476between the code and read-only data to ensure the segregation of the two. To
2477limit the memory cost, this flag also changes the memory layout such that the
2478code and exception vectors are now contiguous, like so:
2479
2480::
2481
2482       |        ...        |
2483       +-------------------+
2484       |  Read-write data  |
2485       +-------------------+ Page boundary
2486       |     <Padding>     |
2487       +-------------------+
2488       |  Read-only data   |
2489       +-------------------+ Page boundary
2490       |     <Padding>     |
2491       +-------------------+
2492       | Exception vectors |
2493       +-------------------+ 2 KB boundary
2494       |     <Padding>     |
2495       +-------------------+
2496       |       Code        |
2497       +-------------------+ BLx_BASE
2498
2499With this more condensed memory layout, the separation of read-only data will
2500add zero or one page to the memory footprint of each BL image. Each platform
2501should consider the trade-off between memory footprint and security.
2502
2503This build flag is disabled by default, minimising memory footprint. On Arm
2504platforms, it is enabled.
2505
2506Publish and Subscribe Framework
2507-------------------------------
2508
2509The Publish and Subscribe Framework allows EL3 components to define and publish
2510events, to which other EL3 components can subscribe.
2511
2512The following macros are provided by the framework:
2513
2514-  ``REGISTER_PUBSUB_EVENT(event)``: Defines an event, and takes one argument,
2515   the event name, which must be a valid C identifier. All calls to
2516   ``REGISTER_PUBSUB_EVENT`` macro must be placed in the file
2517   ``pubsub_events.h``.
2518
2519-  ``PUBLISH_EVENT_ARG(event, arg)``: Publishes a defined event, by iterating
2520   subscribed handlers and calling them in turn. The handlers will be passed the
2521   parameter ``arg``. The expected use-case is to broadcast an event.
2522
2523-  ``PUBLISH_EVENT(event)``: Like ``PUBLISH_EVENT_ARG``, except that the value
2524   ``NULL`` is passed to subscribed handlers.
2525
2526-  ``SUBSCRIBE_TO_EVENT(event, handler)``: Registers the ``handler`` to
2527   subscribe to ``event``. The handler will be executed whenever the ``event``
2528   is published.
2529
2530-  ``for_each_subscriber(event, subscriber)``: Iterates through all handlers
2531   subscribed for ``event``. ``subscriber`` must be a local variable of type
2532   ``pubsub_cb_t *``, and will point to each subscribed handler in turn during
2533   iteration. This macro can be used for those patterns that none of the
2534   ``PUBLISH_EVENT_*()`` macros cover.
2535
2536Publishing an event that wasn't defined using ``REGISTER_PUBSUB_EVENT`` will
2537result in build error. Subscribing to an undefined event however won't.
2538
2539Subscribed handlers must be of type ``pubsub_cb_t``, with following function
2540signature:
2541
2542.. code:: c
2543
2544   typedef void* (*pubsub_cb_t)(const void *arg);
2545
2546There may be arbitrary number of handlers registered to the same event. The
2547order in which subscribed handlers are notified when that event is published is
2548not defined. Subscribed handlers may be executed in any order; handlers should
2549not assume any relative ordering amongst them.
2550
2551Publishing an event on a PE will result in subscribed handlers executing on that
2552PE only; it won't cause handlers to execute on a different PE.
2553
2554Note that publishing an event on a PE blocks until all the subscribed handlers
2555finish executing on the PE.
2556
2557TF-A generic code publishes and subscribes to some events within. Platform
2558ports are discouraged from subscribing to them. These events may be withdrawn,
2559renamed, or have their semantics altered in the future. Platforms may however
2560register, publish, and subscribe to platform-specific events.
2561
2562Publish and Subscribe Example
2563~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2564
2565A publisher that wants to publish event ``foo`` would:
2566
2567-  Define the event ``foo`` in the ``pubsub_events.h``.
2568
2569   .. code:: c
2570
2571      REGISTER_PUBSUB_EVENT(foo);
2572
2573-  Depending on the nature of event, use one of ``PUBLISH_EVENT_*()`` macros to
2574   publish the event at the appropriate path and time of execution.
2575
2576A subscriber that wants to subscribe to event ``foo`` published above would
2577implement:
2578
2579.. code:: c
2580
2581    void *foo_handler(const void *arg)
2582    {
2583         void *result;
2584
2585         /* Do handling ... */
2586
2587         return result;
2588    }
2589
2590    SUBSCRIBE_TO_EVENT(foo, foo_handler);
2591
2592
2593Reclaiming the BL31 initialization code
2594~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2595
2596A significant amount of the code used for the initialization of BL31 is never
2597needed again after boot time. In order to reduce the runtime memory
2598footprint, the memory used for this code can be reclaimed after initialization
2599has finished and be used for runtime data.
2600
2601The build option ``RECLAIM_INIT_CODE`` can be set to mark this boot time code
2602with a ``.text.init.*`` attribute which can be filtered and placed suitably
2603within the BL image for later reclamation by the platform. The platform can
2604specify the filter and the memory region for this init section in BL31 via the
2605plat.ld.S linker script. For example, on the FVP, this section is placed
2606overlapping the secondary CPU stacks so that after the cold boot is done, this
2607memory can be reclaimed for the stacks. The init memory section is initially
2608mapped with ``RO``, ``EXECUTE`` attributes. After BL31 initialization has
2609completed, the FVP changes the attributes of this section to ``RW``,
2610``EXECUTE_NEVER`` allowing it to be used for runtime data. The memory attributes
2611are changed within the ``bl31_plat_runtime_setup`` platform hook. The init
2612section section can be reclaimed for any data which is accessed after cold
2613boot initialization and it is upto the platform to make the decision.
2614
2615Please note that this will disable inlining for any functions with the __init
2616attribute.
2617
2618.. _firmware_design_pmf:
2619
2620Performance Measurement Framework
2621---------------------------------
2622
2623The Performance Measurement Framework (PMF) facilitates collection of
2624timestamps by registered services and provides interfaces to retrieve them
2625from within TF-A. A platform can choose to expose appropriate SMCs to
2626retrieve these collected timestamps.
2627
2628By default, the global physical counter is used for the timestamp
2629value and is read via ``CNTPCT_EL0``. The framework allows to retrieve
2630timestamps captured by other CPUs.
2631
2632Timestamp identifier format
2633~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2634
2635A PMF timestamp is uniquely identified across the system via the
2636timestamp ID or ``tid``. The ``tid`` is composed as follows:
2637
2638::
2639
2640    Bits 0-7: The local timestamp identifier.
2641    Bits 8-9: Reserved.
2642    Bits 10-15: The service identifier.
2643    Bits 16-31: Reserved.
2644
2645#. The service identifier. Each PMF service is identified by a
2646   service name and a service identifier. Both the service name and
2647   identifier are unique within the system as a whole.
2648
2649#. The local timestamp identifier. This identifier is unique within a given
2650   service.
2651
2652Registering a PMF service
2653~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2654
2655To register a PMF service, the ``PMF_REGISTER_SERVICE()`` macro from ``pmf.h``
2656is used. The arguments required are the service name, the service ID,
2657the total number of local timestamps to be captured and a set of flags.
2658
2659The ``flags`` field can be specified as a bitwise-OR of the following values:
2660
2661::
2662
2663    PMF_STORE_ENABLE: The timestamp is stored in memory for later retrieval.
2664    PMF_DUMP_ENABLE: The timestamp is dumped on the serial console.
2665
2666The ``PMF_REGISTER_SERVICE()`` reserves memory to store captured
2667timestamps in a PMF specific linker section at build time.
2668Additionally, it defines necessary functions to capture and
2669retrieve a particular timestamp for the given service at runtime.
2670
2671The macro ``PMF_REGISTER_SERVICE()`` only enables capturing PMF timestamps
2672from within TF-A. In order to retrieve timestamps from outside of TF-A, the
2673``PMF_REGISTER_SERVICE_SMC()`` macro must be used instead. This macro
2674accepts the same set of arguments as the ``PMF_REGISTER_SERVICE()``
2675macro but additionally supports retrieving timestamps using SMCs.
2676
2677Capturing a timestamp
2678~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2679
2680PMF timestamps are stored in a per-service timestamp region. On a
2681system with multiple CPUs, each timestamp is captured and stored
2682in a per-CPU cache line aligned memory region.
2683
2684Having registered the service, the ``PMF_CAPTURE_TIMESTAMP()`` macro can be
2685used to capture a timestamp at the location where it is used. The macro
2686takes the service name, a local timestamp identifier and a flag as arguments.
2687
2688The ``flags`` field argument can be zero, or ``PMF_CACHE_MAINT`` which
2689instructs PMF to do cache maintenance following the capture. Cache
2690maintenance is required if any of the service's timestamps are captured
2691with data cache disabled.
2692
2693To capture a timestamp in assembly code, the caller should use
2694``pmf_calc_timestamp_addr`` macro (defined in ``pmf_asm_macros.S``) to
2695calculate the address of where the timestamp would be stored. The
2696caller should then read ``CNTPCT_EL0`` register to obtain the timestamp
2697and store it at the determined address for later retrieval.
2698
2699Retrieving a timestamp
2700~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2701
2702From within TF-A, timestamps for individual CPUs can be retrieved using either
2703``PMF_GET_TIMESTAMP_BY_MPIDR()`` or ``PMF_GET_TIMESTAMP_BY_INDEX()`` macros.
2704These macros accept the CPU's MPIDR value, or its ordinal position
2705respectively.
2706
2707From outside TF-A, timestamps for individual CPUs can be retrieved by calling
2708into ``pmf_smc_handler()``.
2709
2710::
2711
2712    Interface : pmf_smc_handler()
2713    Argument  : unsigned int smc_fid, u_register_t x1,
2714                u_register_t x2, u_register_t x3,
2715                u_register_t x4, void *cookie,
2716                void *handle, u_register_t flags
2717    Return    : uintptr_t
2718
2719    smc_fid: Holds the SMC identifier which is either `PMF_SMC_GET_TIMESTAMP_32`
2720        when the caller of the SMC is running in AArch32 mode
2721        or `PMF_SMC_GET_TIMESTAMP_64` when the caller is running in AArch64 mode.
2722    x1: Timestamp identifier.
2723    x2: The `mpidr` of the CPU for which the timestamp has to be retrieved.
2724        This can be the `mpidr` of a different core to the one initiating
2725        the SMC.  In that case, service specific cache maintenance may be
2726        required to ensure the updated copy of the timestamp is returned.
2727    x3: A flags value that is either 0 or `PMF_CACHE_MAINT`.  If
2728        `PMF_CACHE_MAINT` is passed, then the PMF code will perform a
2729        cache invalidate before reading the timestamp.  This ensures
2730        an updated copy is returned.
2731
2732The remaining arguments, ``x4``, ``cookie``, ``handle`` and ``flags`` are unused
2733in this implementation.
2734
2735PMF code structure
2736~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2737
2738#. ``pmf_main.c`` consists of core functions that implement service registration,
2739   initialization, storing, dumping and retrieving timestamps.
2740
2741#. ``pmf_smc.c`` contains the SMC handling for registered PMF services.
2742
2743#. ``pmf.h`` contains the public interface to Performance Measurement Framework.
2744
2745#. ``pmf_asm_macros.S`` consists of macros to facilitate capturing timestamps in
2746   assembly code.
2747
2748#. ``pmf_helpers.h`` is an internal header used by ``pmf.h``.
2749
2750Armv8-A Architecture Extensions
2751-------------------------------
2752
2753TF-A makes use of Armv8-A Architecture Extensions where applicable. This
2754section lists the usage of Architecture Extensions, and build flags
2755controlling them.
2756
2757Build options
2758~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2759
2760``ARM_ARCH_MAJOR`` and ``ARM_ARCH_MINOR``
2761
2762These build options serve dual purpose
2763
2764- Determine the architecture extension support in TF-A build: All the mandatory
2765  architectural features up to ``ARM_ARCH_MAJOR.ARM_ARCH_MINOR`` are included
2766  and unconditionally enabled by TF-A build system.
2767
2768- ``ARM_ARCH_MAJOR`` and ``ARM_ARCH_MINOR`` are passed to a march.mk build utility
2769  this will try to come up with an appropriate -march value to be passed to compiler
2770  by probing the compiler and checking what's supported by the compiler and what's best
2771  that can be used. But if platform provides a ``MARCH_DIRECTIVE`` then it will used
2772  directly and compiler probing will be skipped.
2773
2774The build system requires that the platform provides a valid numeric value based on
2775CPU architecture extension, otherwise it defaults to base Armv8.0-A architecture.
2776Subsequent Arm Architecture versions also support extensions which were introduced
2777in previous versions.
2778
2779.. seealso:: :ref:`Build Options`
2780
2781For details on the Architecture Extension and available features, please refer
2782to the respective Architecture Extension Supplement.
2783
2784Armv8.1-A
2785~~~~~~~~~
2786
2787This Architecture Extension is targeted when ``ARM_ARCH_MAJOR`` >= 8, or when
2788``ARM_ARCH_MAJOR`` == 8 and ``ARM_ARCH_MINOR`` >= 1.
2789
2790-  By default, a load-/store-exclusive instruction pair is used to implement
2791   spinlocks. The ``USE_SPINLOCK_CAS`` build option when set to 1 selects the
2792   spinlock implementation using the ARMv8.1-LSE Compare and Swap instruction.
2793   Notice this instruction is only available in AArch64 execution state, so
2794   the option is only available to AArch64 builds.
2795
2796Armv8.2-A
2797~~~~~~~~~
2798
2799-  The presence of ARMv8.2-TTCNP is detected at runtime. When it is present, the
2800   Common not Private (TTBRn_ELx.CnP) bit is enabled to indicate that multiple
2801   Processing Elements in the same Inner Shareable domain use the same
2802   translation table entries for a given stage of translation for a particular
2803   translation regime.
2804
2805Armv8.3-A
2806~~~~~~~~~
2807
2808-  Pointer authentication features of Armv8.3-A are unconditionally enabled in
2809   the Non-secure world so that lower ELs are allowed to use them without
2810   causing a trap to EL3.
2811
2812   In order to enable the Secure world to use it, ``CTX_INCLUDE_PAUTH_REGS``
2813   must be set to 1. This will add all pointer authentication system registers
2814   to the context that is saved when doing a world switch.
2815
2816   The TF-A itself has support for pointer authentication at runtime
2817   that can be enabled by setting ``BRANCH_PROTECTION`` option to non-zero and
2818   ``CTX_INCLUDE_PAUTH_REGS`` to 1. This enables pointer authentication in BL1,
2819   BL2, BL31, and the TSP if it is used.
2820
2821   Note that Pointer Authentication is enabled for Non-secure world irrespective
2822   of the value of these build flags if the CPU supports it.
2823
2824   If ``ARM_ARCH_MAJOR == 8`` and ``ARM_ARCH_MINOR >= 3`` the code footprint of
2825   enabling PAuth is lower because the compiler will use the optimized
2826   PAuth instructions rather than the backwards-compatible ones.
2827
2828Armv8.5-A
2829~~~~~~~~~
2830
2831-  Branch Target Identification feature is selected by ``BRANCH_PROTECTION``
2832   option set to 1. This option defaults to 0.
2833
2834-  Memory Tagging Extension feature has few variants but not all of them require
2835   enablement from EL3 to be used at lower EL. e.g. Memory tagging only at
2836   EL0(MTE) does not require EL3 configuration however memory tagging at
2837   EL2/EL1 (MTE2) does require EL3 enablement and we need to set this option
2838   ``ENABLE_FEAT_MTE2`` to 1. This option defaults to 0.
2839
2840Armv7-A
2841~~~~~~~
2842
2843This Architecture Extension is targeted when ``ARM_ARCH_MAJOR`` == 7.
2844
2845There are several Armv7-A extensions available. Obviously the TrustZone
2846extension is mandatory to support the TF-A bootloader and runtime services.
2847
2848Platform implementing an Armv7-A system can to define from its target
2849Cortex-A architecture through ``ARM_CORTEX_A<X> = yes`` in their
2850``platform.mk`` script. For example ``ARM_CORTEX_A15=yes`` for a
2851Cortex-A15 target.
2852
2853Platform can also set ``ARM_WITH_NEON=yes`` to enable neon support.
2854Note that using neon at runtime has constraints on non secure world context.
2855TF-A does not yet provide VFP context management.
2856
2857Directive ``ARM_CORTEX_A<x>`` and ``ARM_WITH_NEON`` are used to set
2858the toolchain  target architecture directive.
2859
2860Platform may choose to not define straight the toolchain target architecture
2861directive by defining ``MARCH_DIRECTIVE``.
2862I.e:
2863
2864.. code:: make
2865
2866   MARCH_DIRECTIVE := -march=armv7-a
2867
2868Code Structure
2869--------------
2870
2871TF-A code is logically divided between the three boot loader stages mentioned
2872in the previous sections. The code is also divided into the following
2873categories (present as directories in the source code):
2874
2875-  **Platform specific.** Choice of architecture specific code depends upon
2876   the platform.
2877-  **Common code.** This is platform and architecture agnostic code.
2878-  **Library code.** This code comprises of functionality commonly used by all
2879   other code. The PSCI implementation and other EL3 runtime frameworks reside
2880   as Library components.
2881-  **Stage specific.** Code specific to a boot stage.
2882-  **Drivers.**
2883-  **Services.** EL3 runtime services (eg: SPD). Specific SPD services
2884   reside in the ``services/spd`` directory (e.g. ``services/spd/tspd``).
2885
2886Each boot loader stage uses code from one or more of the above mentioned
2887categories. Based upon the above, the code layout looks like this:
2888
2889::
2890
2891    Directory    Used by BL1?    Used by BL2?    Used by BL31?
2892    bl1          Yes             No              No
2893    bl2          No              Yes             No
2894    bl31         No              No              Yes
2895    plat         Yes             Yes             Yes
2896    drivers      Yes             No              Yes
2897    common       Yes             Yes             Yes
2898    lib          Yes             Yes             Yes
2899    services     No              No              Yes
2900
2901The build system provides a non configurable build option IMAGE_BLx for each
2902boot loader stage (where x = BL stage). e.g. for BL1 , IMAGE_BL1 will be
2903defined by the build system. This enables TF-A to compile certain code only
2904for specific boot loader stages
2905
2906All assembler files have the ``.S`` extension. The linker source files for each
2907boot stage have the extension ``.ld.S``. These are processed by GCC to create the
2908linker scripts which have the extension ``.ld``.
2909
2910FDTs provide a description of the hardware platform and are used by the Linux
2911kernel at boot time. These can be found in the ``fdts`` directory.
2912
2913.. rubric:: References
2914
2915-  `Trusted Board Boot Requirements CLIENT (TBBR-CLIENT) Armv8-A (ARM DEN0006D)`_
2916
2917-  `PSCI`_
2918
2919-  `SMC Calling Convention`_
2920
2921-  :ref:`Interrupt Management Framework`
2922
2923--------------
2924
2925*Copyright (c) 2013-2025, Arm Limited and Contributors. All rights reserved.*
2926
2927.. _SMCCC: https://developer.arm.com/docs/den0028/latest
2928.. _PSCI: https://developer.arm.com/documentation/den0022/latest/
2929.. _Arm ARM: https://developer.arm.com/docs/ddi0487/latest
2930.. _SMC Calling Convention: https://developer.arm.com/docs/den0028/latest
2931.. _Trusted Board Boot Requirements CLIENT (TBBR-CLIENT) Armv8-A (ARM DEN0006D): https://developer.arm.com/docs/den0006/latest
2932.. _Arm Confidential Compute Architecture (Arm CCA): https://www.arm.com/why-arm/architecture/security-features/arm-confidential-compute-architecture
2933.. _AArch64 exception vector table: https://developer.arm.com/documentation/100933/0100/AArch64-exception-vector-table
2934
2935.. |Image 1| image:: ../resources/diagrams/rt-svc-descs-layout.png
2936