1Trusted Firmware-A Porting Guide 2================================ 3 4 5.. section-numbering:: 6 :suffix: . 7 8.. contents:: 9 10-------------- 11 12Introduction 13------------ 14 15Please note that this document has been updated for the new platform API 16as required by the PSCI v1.0 implementation. Please refer to the 17`Migration Guide`_ for the previous platform API. 18 19Porting Trusted Firmware-A (TF-A) to a new platform involves making some 20mandatory and optional modifications for both the cold and warm boot paths. 21Modifications consist of: 22 23- Implementing a platform-specific function or variable, 24- Setting up the execution context in a certain way, or 25- Defining certain constants (for example #defines). 26 27The platform-specific functions and variables are declared in 28`include/plat/common/platform.h`_. The firmware provides a default implementation 29of variables and functions to fulfill the optional requirements. These 30implementations are all weakly defined; they are provided to ease the porting 31effort. Each platform port can override them with its own implementation if the 32default implementation is inadequate. 33 34Platform ports that want to be aligned with standard Arm platforms (for example 35FVP and Juno) may also use `include/plat/arm/common/plat\_arm.h`_ and the 36corresponding source files in ``plat/arm/common/``. These provide standard 37implementations for some of the required platform porting functions. However, 38using these functions requires the platform port to implement additional 39Arm standard platform porting functions. These additional functions are not 40documented here. 41 42Some modifications are common to all Boot Loader (BL) stages. Section 2 43discusses these in detail. The subsequent sections discuss the remaining 44modifications for each BL stage in detail. 45 46This document should be read in conjunction with the TF-A `User Guide`_. 47 48Common modifications 49-------------------- 50 51This section covers the modifications that should be made by the platform for 52each BL stage to correctly port the firmware stack. They are categorized as 53either mandatory or optional. 54 55Common mandatory modifications 56------------------------------ 57 58A platform port must enable the Memory Management Unit (MMU) as well as the 59instruction and data caches for each BL stage. Setting up the translation 60tables is the responsibility of the platform port because memory maps differ 61across platforms. A memory translation library (see ``lib/xlat_tables/``) is 62provided to help in this setup. 63 64Note that although this library supports non-identity mappings, this is intended 65only for re-mapping peripheral physical addresses and allows platforms with high 66I/O addresses to reduce their virtual address space. All other addresses 67corresponding to code and data must currently use an identity mapping. 68 69Also, the only translation granule size supported in TF-A is 4KB, as various 70parts of the code assume that is the case. It is not possible to switch to 7116 KB or 64 KB granule sizes at the moment. 72 73In Arm standard platforms, each BL stage configures the MMU in the 74platform-specific architecture setup function, ``blX_plat_arch_setup()``, and uses 75an identity mapping for all addresses. 76 77If the build option ``USE_COHERENT_MEM`` is enabled, each platform can allocate a 78block of identity mapped secure memory with Device-nGnRE attributes aligned to 79page boundary (4K) for each BL stage. All sections which allocate coherent 80memory are grouped under ``coherent_ram``. For ex: Bakery locks are placed in a 81section identified by name ``bakery_lock`` inside ``coherent_ram`` so that its 82possible for the firmware to place variables in it using the following C code 83directive: 84 85:: 86 87 __section("bakery_lock") 88 89Or alternatively the following assembler code directive: 90 91:: 92 93 .section bakery_lock 94 95The ``coherent_ram`` section is a sum of all sections like ``bakery_lock`` which are 96used to allocate any data structures that are accessed both when a CPU is 97executing with its MMU and caches enabled, and when it's running with its MMU 98and caches disabled. Examples are given below. 99 100The following variables, functions and constants must be defined by the platform 101for the firmware to work correctly. 102 103File : platform\_def.h [mandatory] 104~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 105 106Each platform must ensure that a header file of this name is in the system 107include path with the following constants defined. This may require updating the 108list of ``PLAT_INCLUDES`` in the ``platform.mk`` file. In the Arm development 109platforms, this file is found in ``plat/arm/board/<plat_name>/include/``. 110 111Platform ports may optionally use the file `include/plat/common/common\_def.h`_, 112which provides typical values for some of the constants below. These values are 113likely to be suitable for all platform ports. 114 115Platform ports that want to be aligned with standard Arm platforms (for example 116FVP and Juno) may also use `include/plat/arm/common/arm\_def.h`_, which provides 117standard values for some of the constants below. However, this requires the 118platform port to define additional platform porting constants in 119``platform_def.h``. These additional constants are not documented here. 120 121- **#define : PLATFORM\_LINKER\_FORMAT** 122 123 Defines the linker format used by the platform, for example 124 ``elf64-littleaarch64``. 125 126- **#define : PLATFORM\_LINKER\_ARCH** 127 128 Defines the processor architecture for the linker by the platform, for 129 example ``aarch64``. 130 131- **#define : PLATFORM\_STACK\_SIZE** 132 133 Defines the normal stack memory available to each CPU. This constant is used 134 by `plat/common/aarch64/platform\_mp\_stack.S`_ and 135 `plat/common/aarch64/platform\_up\_stack.S`_. 136 137- **define : CACHE\_WRITEBACK\_GRANULE** 138 139 Defines the size in bits of the largest cache line across all the cache 140 levels in the platform. 141 142- **#define : FIRMWARE\_WELCOME\_STR** 143 144 Defines the character string printed by BL1 upon entry into the ``bl1_main()`` 145 function. 146 147- **#define : PLATFORM\_CORE\_COUNT** 148 149 Defines the total number of CPUs implemented by the platform across all 150 clusters in the system. 151 152- **#define : PLAT\_NUM\_PWR\_DOMAINS** 153 154 Defines the total number of nodes in the power domain topology 155 tree at all the power domain levels used by the platform. 156 This macro is used by the PSCI implementation to allocate 157 data structures to represent power domain topology. 158 159- **#define : PLAT\_MAX\_PWR\_LVL** 160 161 Defines the maximum power domain level that the power management operations 162 should apply to. More often, but not always, the power domain level 163 corresponds to affinity level. This macro allows the PSCI implementation 164 to know the highest power domain level that it should consider for power 165 management operations in the system that the platform implements. For 166 example, the Base AEM FVP implements two clusters with a configurable 167 number of CPUs and it reports the maximum power domain level as 1. 168 169- **#define : PLAT\_MAX\_OFF\_STATE** 170 171 Defines the local power state corresponding to the deepest power down 172 possible at every power domain level in the platform. The local power 173 states for each level may be sparsely allocated between 0 and this value 174 with 0 being reserved for the RUN state. The PSCI implementation uses this 175 value to initialize the local power states of the power domain nodes and 176 to specify the requested power state for a PSCI\_CPU\_OFF call. 177 178- **#define : PLAT\_MAX\_RET\_STATE** 179 180 Defines the local power state corresponding to the deepest retention state 181 possible at every power domain level in the platform. This macro should be 182 a value less than PLAT\_MAX\_OFF\_STATE and greater than 0. It is used by the 183 PSCI implementation to distinguish between retention and power down local 184 power states within PSCI\_CPU\_SUSPEND call. 185 186- **#define : PLAT\_MAX\_PWR\_LVL\_STATES** 187 188 Defines the maximum number of local power states per power domain level 189 that the platform supports. The default value of this macro is 2 since 190 most platforms just support a maximum of two local power states at each 191 power domain level (power-down and retention). If the platform needs to 192 account for more local power states, then it must redefine this macro. 193 194 Currently, this macro is used by the Generic PSCI implementation to size 195 the array used for PSCI\_STAT\_COUNT/RESIDENCY accounting. 196 197- **#define : BL1\_RO\_BASE** 198 199 Defines the base address in secure ROM where BL1 originally lives. Must be 200 aligned on a page-size boundary. 201 202- **#define : BL1\_RO\_LIMIT** 203 204 Defines the maximum address in secure ROM that BL1's actual content (i.e. 205 excluding any data section allocated at runtime) can occupy. 206 207- **#define : BL1\_RW\_BASE** 208 209 Defines the base address in secure RAM where BL1's read-write data will live 210 at runtime. Must be aligned on a page-size boundary. 211 212- **#define : BL1\_RW\_LIMIT** 213 214 Defines the maximum address in secure RAM that BL1's read-write data can 215 occupy at runtime. 216 217- **#define : BL2\_BASE** 218 219 Defines the base address in secure RAM where BL1 loads the BL2 binary image. 220 Must be aligned on a page-size boundary. This constant is not applicable 221 when BL2_IN_XIP_MEM is set to '1'. 222 223- **#define : BL2\_LIMIT** 224 225 Defines the maximum address in secure RAM that the BL2 image can occupy. 226 This constant is not applicable when BL2_IN_XIP_MEM is set to '1'. 227 228- **#define : BL2\_RO\_BASE** 229 230 Defines the base address in secure XIP memory where BL2 RO section originally 231 lives. Must be aligned on a page-size boundary. This constant is only needed 232 when BL2_IN_XIP_MEM is set to '1'. 233 234- **#define : BL2\_RO\_LIMIT** 235 236 Defines the maximum address in secure XIP memory that BL2's actual content 237 (i.e. excluding any data section allocated at runtime) can occupy. This 238 constant is only needed when BL2_IN_XIP_MEM is set to '1'. 239 240- **#define : BL2\_RW\_BASE** 241 242 Defines the base address in secure RAM where BL2's read-write data will live 243 at runtime. Must be aligned on a page-size boundary. This constant is only 244 needed when BL2_IN_XIP_MEM is set to '1'. 245 246- **#define : BL2\_RW\_LIMIT** 247 248 Defines the maximum address in secure RAM that BL2's read-write data can 249 occupy at runtime. This constant is only needed when BL2_IN_XIP_MEM is set 250 to '1'. 251 252- **#define : BL31\_BASE** 253 254 Defines the base address in secure RAM where BL2 loads the BL31 binary 255 image. Must be aligned on a page-size boundary. 256 257- **#define : BL31\_LIMIT** 258 259 Defines the maximum address in secure RAM that the BL31 image can occupy. 260 261For every image, the platform must define individual identifiers that will be 262used by BL1 or BL2 to load the corresponding image into memory from non-volatile 263storage. For the sake of performance, integer numbers will be used as 264identifiers. The platform will use those identifiers to return the relevant 265information about the image to be loaded (file handler, load address, 266authentication information, etc.). The following image identifiers are 267mandatory: 268 269- **#define : BL2\_IMAGE\_ID** 270 271 BL2 image identifier, used by BL1 to load BL2. 272 273- **#define : BL31\_IMAGE\_ID** 274 275 BL31 image identifier, used by BL2 to load BL31. 276 277- **#define : BL33\_IMAGE\_ID** 278 279 BL33 image identifier, used by BL2 to load BL33. 280 281If Trusted Board Boot is enabled, the following certificate identifiers must 282also be defined: 283 284- **#define : TRUSTED\_BOOT\_FW\_CERT\_ID** 285 286 BL2 content certificate identifier, used by BL1 to load the BL2 content 287 certificate. 288 289- **#define : TRUSTED\_KEY\_CERT\_ID** 290 291 Trusted key certificate identifier, used by BL2 to load the trusted key 292 certificate. 293 294- **#define : SOC\_FW\_KEY\_CERT\_ID** 295 296 BL31 key certificate identifier, used by BL2 to load the BL31 key 297 certificate. 298 299- **#define : SOC\_FW\_CONTENT\_CERT\_ID** 300 301 BL31 content certificate identifier, used by BL2 to load the BL31 content 302 certificate. 303 304- **#define : NON\_TRUSTED\_FW\_KEY\_CERT\_ID** 305 306 BL33 key certificate identifier, used by BL2 to load the BL33 key 307 certificate. 308 309- **#define : NON\_TRUSTED\_FW\_CONTENT\_CERT\_ID** 310 311 BL33 content certificate identifier, used by BL2 to load the BL33 content 312 certificate. 313 314- **#define : FWU\_CERT\_ID** 315 316 Firmware Update (FWU) certificate identifier, used by NS\_BL1U to load the 317 FWU content certificate. 318 319- **#define : PLAT\_CRYPTOCELL\_BASE** 320 321 This defines the base address of Arm® TrustZone® CryptoCell and must be 322 defined if CryptoCell crypto driver is used for Trusted Board Boot. For 323 capable Arm platforms, this driver is used if ``ARM_CRYPTOCELL_INTEG`` is 324 set. 325 326If the AP Firmware Updater Configuration image, BL2U is used, the following 327must also be defined: 328 329- **#define : BL2U\_BASE** 330 331 Defines the base address in secure memory where BL1 copies the BL2U binary 332 image. Must be aligned on a page-size boundary. 333 334- **#define : BL2U\_LIMIT** 335 336 Defines the maximum address in secure memory that the BL2U image can occupy. 337 338- **#define : BL2U\_IMAGE\_ID** 339 340 BL2U image identifier, used by BL1 to fetch an image descriptor 341 corresponding to BL2U. 342 343If the SCP Firmware Update Configuration Image, SCP\_BL2U is used, the following 344must also be defined: 345 346- **#define : SCP\_BL2U\_IMAGE\_ID** 347 348 SCP\_BL2U image identifier, used by BL1 to fetch an image descriptor 349 corresponding to SCP\_BL2U. 350 NOTE: TF-A does not provide source code for this image. 351 352If the Non-Secure Firmware Updater ROM, NS\_BL1U is used, the following must 353also be defined: 354 355- **#define : NS\_BL1U\_BASE** 356 357 Defines the base address in non-secure ROM where NS\_BL1U executes. 358 Must be aligned on a page-size boundary. 359 NOTE: TF-A does not provide source code for this image. 360 361- **#define : NS\_BL1U\_IMAGE\_ID** 362 363 NS\_BL1U image identifier, used by BL1 to fetch an image descriptor 364 corresponding to NS\_BL1U. 365 366If the Non-Secure Firmware Updater, NS\_BL2U is used, the following must also 367be defined: 368 369- **#define : NS\_BL2U\_BASE** 370 371 Defines the base address in non-secure memory where NS\_BL2U executes. 372 Must be aligned on a page-size boundary. 373 NOTE: TF-A does not provide source code for this image. 374 375- **#define : NS\_BL2U\_IMAGE\_ID** 376 377 NS\_BL2U image identifier, used by BL1 to fetch an image descriptor 378 corresponding to NS\_BL2U. 379 380For the the Firmware update capability of TRUSTED BOARD BOOT, the following 381macros may also be defined: 382 383- **#define : PLAT\_FWU\_MAX\_SIMULTANEOUS\_IMAGES** 384 385 Total number of images that can be loaded simultaneously. If the platform 386 doesn't specify any value, it defaults to 10. 387 388If a SCP\_BL2 image is supported by the platform, the following constants must 389also be defined: 390 391- **#define : SCP\_BL2\_IMAGE\_ID** 392 393 SCP\_BL2 image identifier, used by BL2 to load SCP\_BL2 into secure memory 394 from platform storage before being transfered to the SCP. 395 396- **#define : SCP\_FW\_KEY\_CERT\_ID** 397 398 SCP\_BL2 key certificate identifier, used by BL2 to load the SCP\_BL2 key 399 certificate (mandatory when Trusted Board Boot is enabled). 400 401- **#define : SCP\_FW\_CONTENT\_CERT\_ID** 402 403 SCP\_BL2 content certificate identifier, used by BL2 to load the SCP\_BL2 404 content certificate (mandatory when Trusted Board Boot is enabled). 405 406If a BL32 image is supported by the platform, the following constants must 407also be defined: 408 409- **#define : BL32\_IMAGE\_ID** 410 411 BL32 image identifier, used by BL2 to load BL32. 412 413- **#define : TRUSTED\_OS\_FW\_KEY\_CERT\_ID** 414 415 BL32 key certificate identifier, used by BL2 to load the BL32 key 416 certificate (mandatory when Trusted Board Boot is enabled). 417 418- **#define : TRUSTED\_OS\_FW\_CONTENT\_CERT\_ID** 419 420 BL32 content certificate identifier, used by BL2 to load the BL32 content 421 certificate (mandatory when Trusted Board Boot is enabled). 422 423- **#define : BL32\_BASE** 424 425 Defines the base address in secure memory where BL2 loads the BL32 binary 426 image. Must be aligned on a page-size boundary. 427 428- **#define : BL32\_LIMIT** 429 430 Defines the maximum address that the BL32 image can occupy. 431 432If the Test Secure-EL1 Payload (TSP) instantiation of BL32 is supported by the 433platform, the following constants must also be defined: 434 435- **#define : TSP\_SEC\_MEM\_BASE** 436 437 Defines the base address of the secure memory used by the TSP image on the 438 platform. This must be at the same address or below ``BL32_BASE``. 439 440- **#define : TSP\_SEC\_MEM\_SIZE** 441 442 Defines the size of the secure memory used by the BL32 image on the 443 platform. ``TSP_SEC_MEM_BASE`` and ``TSP_SEC_MEM_SIZE`` must fully accomodate 444 the memory required by the BL32 image, defined by ``BL32_BASE`` and 445 ``BL32_LIMIT``. 446 447- **#define : TSP\_IRQ\_SEC\_PHY\_TIMER** 448 449 Defines the ID of the secure physical generic timer interrupt used by the 450 TSP's interrupt handling code. 451 452If the platform port uses the translation table library code, the following 453constants must also be defined: 454 455- **#define : PLAT\_XLAT\_TABLES\_DYNAMIC** 456 457 Optional flag that can be set per-image to enable the dynamic allocation of 458 regions even when the MMU is enabled. If not defined, only static 459 functionality will be available, if defined and set to 1 it will also 460 include the dynamic functionality. 461 462- **#define : MAX\_XLAT\_TABLES** 463 464 Defines the maximum number of translation tables that are allocated by the 465 translation table library code. To minimize the amount of runtime memory 466 used, choose the smallest value needed to map the required virtual addresses 467 for each BL stage. If ``PLAT_XLAT_TABLES_DYNAMIC`` flag is enabled for a BL 468 image, ``MAX_XLAT_TABLES`` must be defined to accommodate the dynamic regions 469 as well. 470 471- **#define : MAX\_MMAP\_REGIONS** 472 473 Defines the maximum number of regions that are allocated by the translation 474 table library code. A region consists of physical base address, virtual base 475 address, size and attributes (Device/Memory, RO/RW, Secure/Non-Secure), as 476 defined in the ``mmap_region_t`` structure. The platform defines the regions 477 that should be mapped. Then, the translation table library will create the 478 corresponding tables and descriptors at runtime. To minimize the amount of 479 runtime memory used, choose the smallest value needed to register the 480 required regions for each BL stage. If ``PLAT_XLAT_TABLES_DYNAMIC`` flag is 481 enabled for a BL image, ``MAX_MMAP_REGIONS`` must be defined to accommodate 482 the dynamic regions as well. 483 484- **#define : ADDR\_SPACE\_SIZE** 485 486 Defines the total size of the address space in bytes. For example, for a 32 487 bit address space, this value should be ``(1ULL << 32)``. This definition is 488 now deprecated, platforms should use ``PLAT_PHY_ADDR_SPACE_SIZE`` and 489 ``PLAT_VIRT_ADDR_SPACE_SIZE`` instead. 490 491- **#define : PLAT\_VIRT\_ADDR\_SPACE\_SIZE** 492 493 Defines the total size of the virtual address space in bytes. For example, 494 for a 32 bit virtual address space, this value should be ``(1ULL << 32)``. 495 496- **#define : PLAT\_PHY\_ADDR\_SPACE\_SIZE** 497 498 Defines the total size of the physical address space in bytes. For example, 499 for a 32 bit physical address space, this value should be ``(1ULL << 32)``. 500 501If the platform port uses the IO storage framework, the following constants 502must also be defined: 503 504- **#define : MAX\_IO\_DEVICES** 505 506 Defines the maximum number of registered IO devices. Attempting to register 507 more devices than this value using ``io_register_device()`` will fail with 508 -ENOMEM. 509 510- **#define : MAX\_IO\_HANDLES** 511 512 Defines the maximum number of open IO handles. Attempting to open more IO 513 entities than this value using ``io_open()`` will fail with -ENOMEM. 514 515- **#define : MAX\_IO\_BLOCK\_DEVICES** 516 517 Defines the maximum number of registered IO block devices. Attempting to 518 register more devices this value using ``io_dev_open()`` will fail 519 with -ENOMEM. MAX\_IO\_BLOCK\_DEVICES should be less than MAX\_IO\_DEVICES. 520 With this macro, multiple block devices could be supported at the same 521 time. 522 523If the platform needs to allocate data within the per-cpu data framework in 524BL31, it should define the following macro. Currently this is only required if 525the platform decides not to use the coherent memory section by undefining the 526``USE_COHERENT_MEM`` build flag. In this case, the framework allocates the 527required memory within the the per-cpu data to minimize wastage. 528 529- **#define : PLAT\_PCPU\_DATA\_SIZE** 530 531 Defines the memory (in bytes) to be reserved within the per-cpu data 532 structure for use by the platform layer. 533 534The following constants are optional. They should be defined when the platform 535memory layout implies some image overlaying like in Arm standard platforms. 536 537- **#define : BL31\_PROGBITS\_LIMIT** 538 539 Defines the maximum address in secure RAM that the BL31's progbits sections 540 can occupy. 541 542- **#define : TSP\_PROGBITS\_LIMIT** 543 544 Defines the maximum address that the TSP's progbits sections can occupy. 545 546If the platform port uses the PL061 GPIO driver, the following constant may 547optionally be defined: 548 549- **PLAT\_PL061\_MAX\_GPIOS** 550 Maximum number of GPIOs required by the platform. This allows control how 551 much memory is allocated for PL061 GPIO controllers. The default value is 552 553 #. $(eval $(call add\_define,PLAT\_PL061\_MAX\_GPIOS)) 554 555If the platform port uses the partition driver, the following constant may 556optionally be defined: 557 558- **PLAT\_PARTITION\_MAX\_ENTRIES** 559 Maximum number of partition entries required by the platform. This allows 560 control how much memory is allocated for partition entries. The default 561 value is 128. 562 `For example, define the build flag in platform.mk`_: 563 PLAT\_PARTITION\_MAX\_ENTRIES := 12 564 $(eval $(call add\_define,PLAT\_PARTITION\_MAX\_ENTRIES)) 565 566The following constant is optional. It should be defined to override the default 567behaviour of the ``assert()`` function (for example, to save memory). 568 569- **PLAT\_LOG\_LEVEL\_ASSERT** 570 If ``PLAT_LOG_LEVEL_ASSERT`` is higher or equal than ``LOG_LEVEL_VERBOSE``, 571 ``assert()`` prints the name of the file, the line number and the asserted 572 expression. Else if it is higher than ``LOG_LEVEL_INFO``, it prints the file 573 name and the line number. Else if it is lower than ``LOG_LEVEL_INFO``, it 574 doesn't print anything to the console. If ``PLAT_LOG_LEVEL_ASSERT`` isn't 575 defined, it defaults to ``LOG_LEVEL``. 576 577If the platform port uses the Activity Monitor Unit, the following constants 578may be defined: 579 580- **PLAT\_AMU\_GROUP1\_COUNTERS\_MASK** 581 This mask reflects the set of group counters that should be enabled. The 582 maximum number of group 1 counters supported by AMUv1 is 16 so the mask 583 can be at most 0xffff. If the platform does not define this mask, no group 1 584 counters are enabled. If the platform defines this mask, the following 585 constant needs to also be defined. 586 587- **PLAT\_AMU\_GROUP1\_NR\_COUNTERS** 588 This value is used to allocate an array to save and restore the counters 589 specified by ``PLAT_AMU_GROUP1_COUNTERS_MASK`` on CPU suspend. 590 This value should be equal to the highest bit position set in the 591 mask, plus 1. The maximum number of group 1 counters in AMUv1 is 16. 592 593File : plat\_macros.S [mandatory] 594~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 595 596Each platform must ensure a file of this name is in the system include path with 597the following macro defined. In the Arm development platforms, this file is 598found in ``plat/arm/board/<plat_name>/include/plat_macros.S``. 599 600- **Macro : plat\_crash\_print\_regs** 601 602 This macro allows the crash reporting routine to print relevant platform 603 registers in case of an unhandled exception in BL31. This aids in debugging 604 and this macro can be defined to be empty in case register reporting is not 605 desired. 606 607 For instance, GIC or interconnect registers may be helpful for 608 troubleshooting. 609 610Handling Reset 611-------------- 612 613BL1 by default implements the reset vector where execution starts from a cold 614or warm boot. BL31 can be optionally set as a reset vector using the 615``RESET_TO_BL31`` make variable. 616 617For each CPU, the reset vector code is responsible for the following tasks: 618 619#. Distinguishing between a cold boot and a warm boot. 620 621#. In the case of a cold boot and the CPU being a secondary CPU, ensuring that 622 the CPU is placed in a platform-specific state until the primary CPU 623 performs the necessary steps to remove it from this state. 624 625#. In the case of a warm boot, ensuring that the CPU jumps to a platform- 626 specific address in the BL31 image in the same processor mode as it was 627 when released from reset. 628 629The following functions need to be implemented by the platform port to enable 630reset vector code to perform the above tasks. 631 632Function : plat\_get\_my\_entrypoint() [mandatory when PROGRAMMABLE\_RESET\_ADDRESS == 0] 633~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 634 635:: 636 637 Argument : void 638 Return : uintptr_t 639 640This function is called with the MMU and caches disabled 641(``SCTLR_EL3.M`` = 0 and ``SCTLR_EL3.C`` = 0). The function is responsible for 642distinguishing between a warm and cold reset for the current CPU using 643platform-specific means. If it's a warm reset, then it returns the warm 644reset entrypoint point provided to ``plat_setup_psci_ops()`` during 645BL31 initialization. If it's a cold reset then this function must return zero. 646 647This function does not follow the Procedure Call Standard used by the 648Application Binary Interface for the Arm 64-bit architecture. The caller should 649not assume that callee saved registers are preserved across a call to this 650function. 651 652This function fulfills requirement 1 and 3 listed above. 653 654Note that for platforms that support programming the reset address, it is 655expected that a CPU will start executing code directly at the right address, 656both on a cold and warm reset. In this case, there is no need to identify the 657type of reset nor to query the warm reset entrypoint. Therefore, implementing 658this function is not required on such platforms. 659 660Function : plat\_secondary\_cold\_boot\_setup() [mandatory when COLD\_BOOT\_SINGLE\_CPU == 0] 661~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 662 663:: 664 665 Argument : void 666 667This function is called with the MMU and data caches disabled. It is responsible 668for placing the executing secondary CPU in a platform-specific state until the 669primary CPU performs the necessary actions to bring it out of that state and 670allow entry into the OS. This function must not return. 671 672In the Arm FVP port, when using the normal boot flow, each secondary CPU powers 673itself off. The primary CPU is responsible for powering up the secondary CPUs 674when normal world software requires them. When booting an EL3 payload instead, 675they stay powered on and are put in a holding pen until their mailbox gets 676populated. 677 678This function fulfills requirement 2 above. 679 680Note that for platforms that can't release secondary CPUs out of reset, only the 681primary CPU will execute the cold boot code. Therefore, implementing this 682function is not required on such platforms. 683 684Function : plat\_is\_my\_cpu\_primary() [mandatory when COLD\_BOOT\_SINGLE\_CPU == 0] 685~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 686 687:: 688 689 Argument : void 690 Return : unsigned int 691 692This function identifies whether the current CPU is the primary CPU or a 693secondary CPU. A return value of zero indicates that the CPU is not the 694primary CPU, while a non-zero return value indicates that the CPU is the 695primary CPU. 696 697Note that for platforms that can't release secondary CPUs out of reset, only the 698primary CPU will execute the cold boot code. Therefore, there is no need to 699distinguish between primary and secondary CPUs and implementing this function is 700not required. 701 702Function : platform\_mem\_init() [mandatory] 703~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 704 705:: 706 707 Argument : void 708 Return : void 709 710This function is called before any access to data is made by the firmware, in 711order to carry out any essential memory initialization. 712 713Function: plat\_get\_rotpk\_info() 714~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 715 716:: 717 718 Argument : void *, void **, unsigned int *, unsigned int * 719 Return : int 720 721This function is mandatory when Trusted Board Boot is enabled. It returns a 722pointer to the ROTPK stored in the platform (or a hash of it) and its length. 723The ROTPK must be encoded in DER format according to the following ASN.1 724structure: 725 726:: 727 728 AlgorithmIdentifier ::= SEQUENCE { 729 algorithm OBJECT IDENTIFIER, 730 parameters ANY DEFINED BY algorithm OPTIONAL 731 } 732 733 SubjectPublicKeyInfo ::= SEQUENCE { 734 algorithm AlgorithmIdentifier, 735 subjectPublicKey BIT STRING 736 } 737 738In case the function returns a hash of the key: 739 740:: 741 742 DigestInfo ::= SEQUENCE { 743 digestAlgorithm AlgorithmIdentifier, 744 digest OCTET STRING 745 } 746 747The function returns 0 on success. Any other value is treated as error by the 748Trusted Board Boot. The function also reports extra information related 749to the ROTPK in the flags parameter: 750 751:: 752 753 ROTPK_IS_HASH : Indicates that the ROTPK returned by the platform is a 754 hash. 755 ROTPK_NOT_DEPLOYED : This allows the platform to skip certificate ROTPK 756 verification while the platform ROTPK is not deployed. 757 When this flag is set, the function does not need to 758 return a platform ROTPK, and the authentication 759 framework uses the ROTPK in the certificate without 760 verifying it against the platform value. This flag 761 must not be used in a deployed production environment. 762 763Function: plat\_get\_nv\_ctr() 764~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 765 766:: 767 768 Argument : void *, unsigned int * 769 Return : int 770 771This function is mandatory when Trusted Board Boot is enabled. It returns the 772non-volatile counter value stored in the platform in the second argument. The 773cookie in the first argument may be used to select the counter in case the 774platform provides more than one (for example, on platforms that use the default 775TBBR CoT, the cookie will correspond to the OID values defined in 776TRUSTED\_FW\_NVCOUNTER\_OID or NON\_TRUSTED\_FW\_NVCOUNTER\_OID). 777 778The function returns 0 on success. Any other value means the counter value could 779not be retrieved from the platform. 780 781Function: plat\_set\_nv\_ctr() 782~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 783 784:: 785 786 Argument : void *, unsigned int 787 Return : int 788 789This function is mandatory when Trusted Board Boot is enabled. It sets a new 790counter value in the platform. The cookie in the first argument may be used to 791select the counter (as explained in plat\_get\_nv\_ctr()). The second argument is 792the updated counter value to be written to the NV counter. 793 794The function returns 0 on success. Any other value means the counter value could 795not be updated. 796 797Function: plat\_set\_nv\_ctr2() 798~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 799 800:: 801 802 Argument : void *, const auth_img_desc_t *, unsigned int 803 Return : int 804 805This function is optional when Trusted Board Boot is enabled. If this 806interface is defined, then ``plat_set_nv_ctr()`` need not be defined. The 807first argument passed is a cookie and is typically used to 808differentiate between a Non Trusted NV Counter and a Trusted NV 809Counter. The second argument is a pointer to an authentication image 810descriptor and may be used to decide if the counter is allowed to be 811updated or not. The third argument is the updated counter value to 812be written to the NV counter. 813 814The function returns 0 on success. Any other value means the counter value 815either could not be updated or the authentication image descriptor indicates 816that it is not allowed to be updated. 817 818Common mandatory function modifications 819--------------------------------------- 820 821The following functions are mandatory functions which need to be implemented 822by the platform port. 823 824Function : plat\_my\_core\_pos() 825~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 826 827:: 828 829 Argument : void 830 Return : unsigned int 831 832This funtion returns the index of the calling CPU which is used as a 833CPU-specific linear index into blocks of memory (for example while allocating 834per-CPU stacks). This function will be invoked very early in the 835initialization sequence which mandates that this function should be 836implemented in assembly and should not rely on the avalability of a C 837runtime environment. This function can clobber x0 - x8 and must preserve 838x9 - x29. 839 840This function plays a crucial role in the power domain topology framework in 841PSCI and details of this can be found in `Power Domain Topology Design`_. 842 843Function : plat\_core\_pos\_by\_mpidr() 844~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 845 846:: 847 848 Argument : u_register_t 849 Return : int 850 851This function validates the ``MPIDR`` of a CPU and converts it to an index, 852which can be used as a CPU-specific linear index into blocks of memory. In 853case the ``MPIDR`` is invalid, this function returns -1. This function will only 854be invoked by BL31 after the power domain topology is initialized and can 855utilize the C runtime environment. For further details about how TF-A 856represents the power domain topology and how this relates to the linear CPU 857index, please refer `Power Domain Topology Design`_. 858 859Common optional modifications 860----------------------------- 861 862The following are helper functions implemented by the firmware that perform 863common platform-specific tasks. A platform may choose to override these 864definitions. 865 866Function : plat\_set\_my\_stack() 867~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 868 869:: 870 871 Argument : void 872 Return : void 873 874This function sets the current stack pointer to the normal memory stack that 875has been allocated for the current CPU. For BL images that only require a 876stack for the primary CPU, the UP version of the function is used. The size 877of the stack allocated to each CPU is specified by the platform defined 878constant ``PLATFORM_STACK_SIZE``. 879 880Common implementations of this function for the UP and MP BL images are 881provided in `plat/common/aarch64/platform\_up\_stack.S`_ and 882`plat/common/aarch64/platform\_mp\_stack.S`_ 883 884Function : plat\_get\_my\_stack() 885~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 886 887:: 888 889 Argument : void 890 Return : uintptr_t 891 892This function returns the base address of the normal memory stack that 893has been allocated for the current CPU. For BL images that only require a 894stack for the primary CPU, the UP version of the function is used. The size 895of the stack allocated to each CPU is specified by the platform defined 896constant ``PLATFORM_STACK_SIZE``. 897 898Common implementations of this function for the UP and MP BL images are 899provided in `plat/common/aarch64/platform\_up\_stack.S`_ and 900`plat/common/aarch64/platform\_mp\_stack.S`_ 901 902Function : plat\_report\_exception() 903~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 904 905:: 906 907 Argument : unsigned int 908 Return : void 909 910A platform may need to report various information about its status when an 911exception is taken, for example the current exception level, the CPU security 912state (secure/non-secure), the exception type, and so on. This function is 913called in the following circumstances: 914 915- In BL1, whenever an exception is taken. 916- In BL2, whenever an exception is taken. 917 918The default implementation doesn't do anything, to avoid making assumptions 919about the way the platform displays its status information. 920 921For AArch64, this function receives the exception type as its argument. 922Possible values for exceptions types are listed in the 923`include/common/bl\_common.h`_ header file. Note that these constants are not 924related to any architectural exception code; they are just a TF-A convention. 925 926For AArch32, this function receives the exception mode as its argument. 927Possible values for exception modes are listed in the 928`include/lib/aarch32/arch.h`_ header file. 929 930Function : plat\_reset\_handler() 931~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 932 933:: 934 935 Argument : void 936 Return : void 937 938A platform may need to do additional initialization after reset. This function 939allows the platform to do the platform specific intializations. Platform 940specific errata workarounds could also be implemented here. The api should 941preserve the values of callee saved registers x19 to x29. 942 943The default implementation doesn't do anything. If a platform needs to override 944the default implementation, refer to the `Firmware Design`_ for general 945guidelines. 946 947Function : plat\_disable\_acp() 948~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 949 950:: 951 952 Argument : void 953 Return : void 954 955This API allows a platform to disable the Accelerator Coherency Port (if 956present) during a cluster power down sequence. The default weak implementation 957doesn't do anything. Since this API is called during the power down sequence, 958it has restrictions for stack usage and it can use the registers x0 - x17 as 959scratch registers. It should preserve the value in x18 register as it is used 960by the caller to store the return address. 961 962Function : plat\_error\_handler() 963~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 964 965:: 966 967 Argument : int 968 Return : void 969 970This API is called when the generic code encounters an error situation from 971which it cannot continue. It allows the platform to perform error reporting or 972recovery actions (for example, reset the system). This function must not return. 973 974The parameter indicates the type of error using standard codes from ``errno.h``. 975Possible errors reported by the generic code are: 976 977- ``-EAUTH``: a certificate or image could not be authenticated (when Trusted 978 Board Boot is enabled) 979- ``-ENOENT``: the requested image or certificate could not be found or an IO 980 error was detected 981- ``-ENOMEM``: resources exhausted. TF-A does not use dynamic memory, so this 982 error is usually an indication of an incorrect array size 983 984The default implementation simply spins. 985 986Function : plat\_panic\_handler() 987~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 988 989:: 990 991 Argument : void 992 Return : void 993 994This API is called when the generic code encounters an unexpected error 995situation from which it cannot recover. This function must not return, 996and must be implemented in assembly because it may be called before the C 997environment is initialized. 998 999Note: The address from where it was called is stored in x30 (Link Register). 1000The default implementation simply spins. 1001 1002Function : plat\_get\_bl\_image\_load\_info() 1003~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1004 1005:: 1006 1007 Argument : void 1008 Return : bl_load_info_t * 1009 1010This function returns pointer to the list of images that the platform has 1011populated to load. This function is currently invoked in BL2 to load the 1012BL3xx images, when LOAD\_IMAGE\_V2 is enabled. 1013 1014Function : plat\_get\_next\_bl\_params() 1015~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1016 1017:: 1018 1019 Argument : void 1020 Return : bl_params_t * 1021 1022This function returns a pointer to the shared memory that the platform has 1023kept aside to pass TF-A related information that next BL image needs. This 1024function is currently invoked in BL2 to pass this information to the next BL 1025image, when LOAD\_IMAGE\_V2 is enabled. 1026 1027Function : plat\_get\_stack\_protector\_canary() 1028~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1029 1030:: 1031 1032 Argument : void 1033 Return : u_register_t 1034 1035This function returns a random value that is used to initialize the canary used 1036when the stack protector is enabled with ENABLE\_STACK\_PROTECTOR. A predictable 1037value will weaken the protection as the attacker could easily write the right 1038value as part of the attack most of the time. Therefore, it should return a 1039true random number. 1040 1041Note: For the protection to be effective, the global data need to be placed at 1042a lower address than the stack bases. Failure to do so would allow an attacker 1043to overwrite the canary as part of the stack buffer overflow attack. 1044 1045Function : plat\_flush\_next\_bl\_params() 1046~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1047 1048:: 1049 1050 Argument : void 1051 Return : void 1052 1053This function flushes to main memory all the image params that are passed to 1054next image. This function is currently invoked in BL2 to flush this information 1055to the next BL image, when LOAD\_IMAGE\_V2 is enabled. 1056 1057Function : plat\_log\_get\_prefix() 1058~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1059 1060:: 1061 1062 Argument : unsigned int 1063 Return : const char * 1064 1065This function defines the prefix string corresponding to the `log_level` to be 1066prepended to all the log output from TF-A. The `log_level` (argument) will 1067correspond to one of the standard log levels defined in debug.h. The platform 1068can override the common implementation to define a different prefix string for 1069the log output. The implementation should be robust to future changes that 1070increase the number of log levels. 1071 1072Modifications specific to a Boot Loader stage 1073--------------------------------------------- 1074 1075Boot Loader Stage 1 (BL1) 1076------------------------- 1077 1078BL1 implements the reset vector where execution starts from after a cold or 1079warm boot. For each CPU, BL1 is responsible for the following tasks: 1080 1081#. Handling the reset as described in section 2.2 1082 1083#. In the case of a cold boot and the CPU being the primary CPU, ensuring that 1084 only this CPU executes the remaining BL1 code, including loading and passing 1085 control to the BL2 stage. 1086 1087#. Identifying and starting the Firmware Update process (if required). 1088 1089#. Loading the BL2 image from non-volatile storage into secure memory at the 1090 address specified by the platform defined constant ``BL2_BASE``. 1091 1092#. Populating a ``meminfo`` structure with the following information in memory, 1093 accessible by BL2 immediately upon entry. 1094 1095 :: 1096 1097 meminfo.total_base = Base address of secure RAM visible to BL2 1098 meminfo.total_size = Size of secure RAM visible to BL2 1099 meminfo.free_base = Base address of secure RAM available for 1100 allocation to BL2 1101 meminfo.free_size = Size of secure RAM available for allocation to BL2 1102 1103 By default, BL1 places this ``meminfo`` structure at the beginning of the 1104 free memory available for its use. Since BL1 cannot allocate memory 1105 dynamically at the moment, its free memory will be available for BL2's use 1106 as-is. However, this means that BL2 must read the ``meminfo`` structure 1107 before it starts using its free memory (this is discussed in Section 3.2). 1108 1109 It is possible for the platform to decide where it wants to place the 1110 ``meminfo`` structure for BL2 or restrict the amount of memory visible to 1111 BL2 by overriding the weak default implementation of 1112 ``bl1_plat_handle_post_image_load`` API. 1113 1114The following functions need to be implemented by the platform port to enable 1115BL1 to perform the above tasks. 1116 1117Function : bl1\_early\_platform\_setup() [mandatory] 1118~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1119 1120:: 1121 1122 Argument : void 1123 Return : void 1124 1125This function executes with the MMU and data caches disabled. It is only called 1126by the primary CPU. 1127 1128On Arm standard platforms, this function: 1129 1130- Enables a secure instance of SP805 to act as the Trusted Watchdog. 1131 1132- Initializes a UART (PL011 console), which enables access to the ``printf`` 1133 family of functions in BL1. 1134 1135- Enables issuing of snoop and DVM (Distributed Virtual Memory) requests to 1136 the CCI slave interface corresponding to the cluster that includes the 1137 primary CPU. 1138 1139Function : bl1\_plat\_arch\_setup() [mandatory] 1140~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1141 1142:: 1143 1144 Argument : void 1145 Return : void 1146 1147This function performs any platform-specific and architectural setup that the 1148platform requires. Platform-specific setup might include configuration of 1149memory controllers and the interconnect. 1150 1151In Arm standard platforms, this function enables the MMU. 1152 1153This function helps fulfill requirement 2 above. 1154 1155Function : bl1\_platform\_setup() [mandatory] 1156~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1157 1158:: 1159 1160 Argument : void 1161 Return : void 1162 1163This function executes with the MMU and data caches enabled. It is responsible 1164for performing any remaining platform-specific setup that can occur after the 1165MMU and data cache have been enabled. 1166 1167if support for multiple boot sources is required, it initializes the boot 1168sequence used by plat\_try\_next\_boot\_source(). 1169 1170In Arm standard platforms, this function initializes the storage abstraction 1171layer used to load the next bootloader image. 1172 1173This function helps fulfill requirement 4 above. 1174 1175Function : bl1\_plat\_sec\_mem\_layout() [mandatory] 1176~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1177 1178:: 1179 1180 Argument : void 1181 Return : meminfo * 1182 1183This function should only be called on the cold boot path. It executes with the 1184MMU and data caches enabled. The pointer returned by this function must point to 1185a ``meminfo`` structure containing the extents and availability of secure RAM for 1186the BL1 stage. 1187 1188:: 1189 1190 meminfo.total_base = Base address of secure RAM visible to BL1 1191 meminfo.total_size = Size of secure RAM visible to BL1 1192 meminfo.free_base = Base address of secure RAM available for allocation 1193 to BL1 1194 meminfo.free_size = Size of secure RAM available for allocation to BL1 1195 1196This information is used by BL1 to load the BL2 image in secure RAM. BL1 also 1197populates a similar structure to tell BL2 the extents of memory available for 1198its own use. 1199 1200This function helps fulfill requirements 4 and 5 above. 1201 1202Function : bl1\_plat\_prepare\_exit() [optional] 1203~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1204 1205:: 1206 1207 Argument : entry_point_info_t * 1208 Return : void 1209 1210This function is called prior to exiting BL1 in response to the 1211``BL1_SMC_RUN_IMAGE`` SMC request raised by BL2. It should be used to perform 1212platform specific clean up or bookkeeping operations before transferring 1213control to the next image. It receives the address of the ``entry_point_info_t`` 1214structure passed from BL2. This function runs with MMU disabled. 1215 1216Function : bl1\_plat\_set\_ep\_info() [optional] 1217~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1218 1219:: 1220 1221 Argument : unsigned int image_id, entry_point_info_t *ep_info 1222 Return : void 1223 1224This function allows platforms to override ``ep_info`` for the given ``image_id``. 1225 1226The default implementation just returns. 1227 1228Function : bl1\_plat\_get\_next\_image\_id() [optional] 1229~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1230 1231:: 1232 1233 Argument : void 1234 Return : unsigned int 1235 1236This and the following function must be overridden to enable the FWU feature. 1237 1238BL1 calls this function after platform setup to identify the next image to be 1239loaded and executed. If the platform returns ``BL2_IMAGE_ID`` then BL1 proceeds 1240with the normal boot sequence, which loads and executes BL2. If the platform 1241returns a different image id, BL1 assumes that Firmware Update is required. 1242 1243The default implementation always returns ``BL2_IMAGE_ID``. The Arm development 1244platforms override this function to detect if firmware update is required, and 1245if so, return the first image in the firmware update process. 1246 1247Function : bl1\_plat\_get\_image\_desc() [optional] 1248~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1249 1250:: 1251 1252 Argument : unsigned int image_id 1253 Return : image_desc_t * 1254 1255BL1 calls this function to get the image descriptor information ``image_desc_t`` 1256for the provided ``image_id`` from the platform. 1257 1258The default implementation always returns a common BL2 image descriptor. Arm 1259standard platforms return an image descriptor corresponding to BL2 or one of 1260the firmware update images defined in the Trusted Board Boot Requirements 1261specification. 1262 1263Function : bl1\_plat\_handle\_pre\_image\_load() [optional] 1264~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1265 1266:: 1267 1268 Argument : unsigned int image_id 1269 Return : int 1270 1271This function can be used by the platforms to update/use image information 1272corresponding to ``image_id``. This function is invoked in BL1, both in cold 1273boot and FWU code path, before loading the image. 1274 1275Function : bl1\_plat\_handle\_post\_image\_load() [optional] 1276~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1277 1278:: 1279 1280 Argument : unsigned int image_id 1281 Return : int 1282 1283This function can be used by the platforms to update/use image information 1284corresponding to ``image_id``. This function is invoked in BL1, both in cold 1285boot and FWU code path, after loading and authenticating the image. 1286 1287The default weak implementation of this function calculates the amount of 1288Trusted SRAM that can be used by BL2 and allocates a ``meminfo_t`` 1289structure at the beginning of this free memory and populates it. The address 1290of ``meminfo_t`` structure is updated in ``arg1`` of the entrypoint 1291information to BL2. 1292 1293Function : bl1\_plat\_fwu\_done() [optional] 1294~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1295 1296:: 1297 1298 Argument : unsigned int image_id, uintptr_t image_src, 1299 unsigned int image_size 1300 Return : void 1301 1302BL1 calls this function when the FWU process is complete. It must not return. 1303The platform may override this function to take platform specific action, for 1304example to initiate the normal boot flow. 1305 1306The default implementation spins forever. 1307 1308Function : bl1\_plat\_mem\_check() [mandatory] 1309~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1310 1311:: 1312 1313 Argument : uintptr_t mem_base, unsigned int mem_size, 1314 unsigned int flags 1315 Return : int 1316 1317BL1 calls this function while handling FWU related SMCs, more specifically when 1318copying or authenticating an image. Its responsibility is to ensure that the 1319region of memory identified by ``mem_base`` and ``mem_size`` is mapped in BL1, and 1320that this memory corresponds to either a secure or non-secure memory region as 1321indicated by the security state of the ``flags`` argument. 1322 1323This function can safely assume that the value resulting from the addition of 1324``mem_base`` and ``mem_size`` fits into a ``uintptr_t`` type variable and does not 1325overflow. 1326 1327This function must return 0 on success, a non-null error code otherwise. 1328 1329The default implementation of this function asserts therefore platforms must 1330override it when using the FWU feature. 1331 1332Boot Loader Stage 2 (BL2) 1333------------------------- 1334 1335The BL2 stage is executed only by the primary CPU, which is determined in BL1 1336using the ``platform_is_primary_cpu()`` function. BL1 passed control to BL2 at 1337``BL2_BASE``. BL2 executes in Secure EL1 and is responsible for: 1338 1339#. (Optional) Loading the SCP\_BL2 binary image (if present) from platform 1340 provided non-volatile storage. To load the SCP\_BL2 image, BL2 makes use of 1341 the ``meminfo`` returned by the ``bl2_plat_get_scp_bl2_meminfo()`` function. 1342 The platform also defines the address in memory where SCP\_BL2 is loaded 1343 through the optional constant ``SCP_BL2_BASE``. BL2 uses this information 1344 to determine if there is enough memory to load the SCP\_BL2 image. 1345 Subsequent handling of the SCP\_BL2 image is platform-specific and is 1346 implemented in the ``bl2_plat_handle_scp_bl2()`` function. 1347 If ``SCP_BL2_BASE`` is not defined then this step is not performed. 1348 1349#. Loading the BL31 binary image into secure RAM from non-volatile storage. To 1350 load the BL31 image, BL2 makes use of the ``meminfo`` structure passed to it 1351 by BL1. This structure allows BL2 to calculate how much secure RAM is 1352 available for its use. The platform also defines the address in secure RAM 1353 where BL31 is loaded through the constant ``BL31_BASE``. BL2 uses this 1354 information to determine if there is enough memory to load the BL31 image. 1355 1356#. (Optional) Loading the BL32 binary image (if present) from platform 1357 provided non-volatile storage. To load the BL32 image, BL2 makes use of 1358 the ``meminfo`` returned by the ``bl2_plat_get_bl32_meminfo()`` function. 1359 The platform also defines the address in memory where BL32 is loaded 1360 through the optional constant ``BL32_BASE``. BL2 uses this information 1361 to determine if there is enough memory to load the BL32 image. 1362 If ``BL32_BASE`` is not defined then this and the next step is not performed. 1363 1364#. (Optional) Arranging to pass control to the BL32 image (if present) that 1365 has been pre-loaded at ``BL32_BASE``. BL2 populates an ``entry_point_info`` 1366 structure in memory provided by the platform with information about how 1367 BL31 should pass control to the BL32 image. 1368 1369#. (Optional) Loading the normal world BL33 binary image (if not loaded by 1370 other means) into non-secure DRAM from platform storage and arranging for 1371 BL31 to pass control to this image. This address is determined using the 1372 ``plat_get_ns_image_entrypoint()`` function described below. 1373 1374#. BL2 populates an ``entry_point_info`` structure in memory provided by the 1375 platform with information about how BL31 should pass control to the 1376 other BL images. 1377 1378The following functions must be implemented by the platform port to enable BL2 1379to perform the above tasks. 1380 1381Function : bl2\_early\_platform\_setup() [mandatory] 1382~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1383 1384:: 1385 1386 Argument : meminfo * 1387 Return : void 1388 1389This function executes with the MMU and data caches disabled. It is only called 1390by the primary CPU. The arguments to this function is the address of the 1391``meminfo`` structure populated by BL1. 1392 1393The platform may copy the contents of the ``meminfo`` structure into a private 1394variable as the original memory may be subsequently overwritten by BL2. The 1395copied structure is made available to all BL2 code through the 1396``bl2_plat_sec_mem_layout()`` function. 1397 1398On Arm standard platforms, this function also: 1399 1400- Initializes a UART (PL011 console), which enables access to the ``printf`` 1401 family of functions in BL2. 1402 1403- Initializes the storage abstraction layer used to load further bootloader 1404 images. It is necessary to do this early on platforms with a SCP\_BL2 image, 1405 since the later ``bl2_platform_setup`` must be done after SCP\_BL2 is loaded. 1406 1407Function : bl2\_plat\_arch\_setup() [mandatory] 1408~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1409 1410:: 1411 1412 Argument : void 1413 Return : void 1414 1415This function executes with the MMU and data caches disabled. It is only called 1416by the primary CPU. 1417 1418The purpose of this function is to perform any architectural initialization 1419that varies across platforms. 1420 1421On Arm standard platforms, this function enables the MMU. 1422 1423Function : bl2\_platform\_setup() [mandatory] 1424~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1425 1426:: 1427 1428 Argument : void 1429 Return : void 1430 1431This function may execute with the MMU and data caches enabled if the platform 1432port does the necessary initialization in ``bl2_plat_arch_setup()``. It is only 1433called by the primary CPU. 1434 1435The purpose of this function is to perform any platform initialization 1436specific to BL2. 1437 1438In Arm standard platforms, this function performs security setup, including 1439configuration of the TrustZone controller to allow non-secure masters access 1440to most of DRAM. Part of DRAM is reserved for secure world use. 1441 1442Function : bl2\_plat\_sec\_mem\_layout() [mandatory] 1443~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1444 1445:: 1446 1447 Argument : void 1448 Return : meminfo * 1449 1450This function should only be called on the cold boot path. It may execute with 1451the MMU and data caches enabled if the platform port does the necessary 1452initialization in ``bl2_plat_arch_setup()``. It is only called by the primary CPU. 1453 1454The purpose of this function is to return a pointer to a ``meminfo`` structure 1455populated with the extents of secure RAM available for BL2 to use. See 1456``bl2_early_platform_setup()`` above. 1457 1458Following functions are optionally used only when LOAD\_IMAGE\_V2 is enabled. 1459 1460Function : bl2\_plat\_handle\_pre\_image\_load() [optional] 1461~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1462 1463:: 1464 1465 Argument : unsigned int 1466 Return : int 1467 1468This function can be used by the platforms to update/use image information 1469for given ``image_id``. This function is currently invoked in BL2 before 1470loading each image, when LOAD\_IMAGE\_V2 is enabled. 1471 1472Function : bl2\_plat\_handle\_post\_image\_load() [optional] 1473~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1474 1475:: 1476 1477 Argument : unsigned int 1478 Return : int 1479 1480This function can be used by the platforms to update/use image information 1481for given ``image_id``. This function is currently invoked in BL2 after 1482loading each image, when LOAD\_IMAGE\_V2 is enabled. 1483 1484Following functions are required only when LOAD\_IMAGE\_V2 is disabled. 1485 1486Function : bl2\_plat\_get\_scp\_bl2\_meminfo() [mandatory] 1487~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1488 1489:: 1490 1491 Argument : meminfo * 1492 Return : void 1493 1494This function is used to get the memory limits where BL2 can load the 1495SCP\_BL2 image. The meminfo provided by this is used by load\_image() to 1496validate whether the SCP\_BL2 image can be loaded within the given 1497memory from the given base. 1498 1499Function : bl2\_plat\_handle\_scp\_bl2() [mandatory] 1500~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1501 1502:: 1503 1504 Argument : image_info * 1505 Return : int 1506 1507This function is called after loading SCP\_BL2 image and it is used to perform 1508any platform-specific actions required to handle the SCP firmware. Typically it 1509transfers the image into SCP memory using a platform-specific protocol and waits 1510until SCP executes it and signals to the Application Processor (AP) for BL2 1511execution to continue. 1512 1513This function returns 0 on success, a negative error code otherwise. 1514 1515Function : bl2\_plat\_get\_bl31\_params() [mandatory] 1516~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1517 1518:: 1519 1520 Argument : void 1521 Return : bl31_params * 1522 1523BL2 platform code needs to return a pointer to a ``bl31_params`` structure it 1524will use for passing information to BL31. The ``bl31_params`` structure carries 1525the following information. 1526- Header describing the version information for interpreting the bl31\_param 1527structure 1528- Information about executing the BL33 image in the ``bl33_ep_info`` field 1529- Information about executing the BL32 image in the ``bl32_ep_info`` field 1530- Information about the type and extents of BL31 image in the 1531``bl31_image_info`` field 1532- Information about the type and extents of BL32 image in the 1533``bl32_image_info`` field 1534- Information about the type and extents of BL33 image in the 1535``bl33_image_info`` field 1536 1537The memory pointed by this structure and its sub-structures should be 1538accessible from BL31 initialisation code. BL31 might choose to copy the 1539necessary content, or maintain the structures until BL33 is initialised. 1540 1541Funtion : bl2\_plat\_get\_bl31\_ep\_info() [mandatory] 1542~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1543 1544:: 1545 1546 Argument : void 1547 Return : entry_point_info * 1548 1549BL2 platform code returns a pointer which is used to populate the entry point 1550information for BL31 entry point. The location pointed by it should be 1551accessible from BL1 while processing the synchronous exception to run to BL31. 1552 1553In Arm standard platforms this is allocated inside a bl2\_to\_bl31\_params\_mem 1554structure in BL2 memory. 1555 1556Function : bl2\_plat\_set\_bl31\_ep\_info() [mandatory] 1557~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1558 1559:: 1560 1561 Argument : image_info *, entry_point_info * 1562 Return : void 1563 1564In the normal boot flow, this function is called after loading BL31 image and 1565it can be used to overwrite the entry point set by loader and also set the 1566security state and SPSR which represents the entry point system state for BL31. 1567 1568When booting an EL3 payload instead, this function is called after populating 1569its entry point address and can be used for the same purpose for the payload 1570image. It receives a null pointer as its first argument in this case. 1571 1572Function : bl2\_plat\_set\_bl32\_ep\_info() [mandatory] 1573~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1574 1575:: 1576 1577 Argument : image_info *, entry_point_info * 1578 Return : void 1579 1580This function is called after loading BL32 image and it can be used to 1581overwrite the entry point set by loader and also set the security state 1582and SPSR which represents the entry point system state for BL32. 1583 1584Function : bl2\_plat\_set\_bl33\_ep\_info() [mandatory] 1585~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1586 1587:: 1588 1589 Argument : image_info *, entry_point_info * 1590 Return : void 1591 1592This function is called after loading BL33 image and it can be used to 1593overwrite the entry point set by loader and also set the security state 1594and SPSR which represents the entry point system state for BL33. 1595 1596In the preloaded BL33 alternative boot flow, this function is called after 1597populating its entry point address. It is passed a null pointer as its first 1598argument in this case. 1599 1600Function : bl2\_plat\_get\_bl32\_meminfo() [mandatory] 1601~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1602 1603:: 1604 1605 Argument : meminfo * 1606 Return : void 1607 1608This function is used to get the memory limits where BL2 can load the 1609BL32 image. The meminfo provided by this is used by load\_image() to 1610validate whether the BL32 image can be loaded with in the given 1611memory from the given base. 1612 1613Function : bl2\_plat\_get\_bl33\_meminfo() [mandatory] 1614~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1615 1616:: 1617 1618 Argument : meminfo * 1619 Return : void 1620 1621This function is used to get the memory limits where BL2 can load the 1622BL33 image. The meminfo provided by this is used by load\_image() to 1623validate whether the BL33 image can be loaded with in the given 1624memory from the given base. 1625 1626This function isn't needed if either ``PRELOADED_BL33_BASE`` or ``EL3_PAYLOAD_BASE`` 1627build options are used. 1628 1629Function : bl2\_plat\_flush\_bl31\_params() [mandatory] 1630~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1631 1632:: 1633 1634 Argument : void 1635 Return : void 1636 1637Once BL2 has populated all the structures that needs to be read by BL1 1638and BL31 including the bl31\_params structures and its sub-structures, 1639the bl31\_ep\_info structure and any platform specific data. It flushes 1640all these data to the main memory so that it is available when we jump to 1641later Bootloader stages with MMU off 1642 1643Function : plat\_get\_ns\_image\_entrypoint() [mandatory] 1644~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1645 1646:: 1647 1648 Argument : void 1649 Return : uintptr_t 1650 1651As previously described, BL2 is responsible for arranging for control to be 1652passed to a normal world BL image through BL31. This function returns the 1653entrypoint of that image, which BL31 uses to jump to it. 1654 1655BL2 is responsible for loading the normal world BL33 image (e.g. UEFI). 1656 1657This function isn't needed if either ``PRELOADED_BL33_BASE`` or ``EL3_PAYLOAD_BASE`` 1658build options are used. 1659 1660Function : bl2\_plat\_preload\_setup [optional] 1661~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1662 1663:: 1664 1665 Argument : void 1666 Return : void 1667 1668This optional function performs any BL2 platform initialization 1669required before image loading, that is not done later in 1670bl2\_platform\_setup(). Specifically, if support for multiple 1671boot sources is required, it initializes the boot sequence used by 1672plat\_try\_next\_boot\_source(). 1673 1674Function : plat\_try\_next\_boot\_source() [optional] 1675~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1676 1677:: 1678 1679 Argument : void 1680 Return : int 1681 1682This optional function passes to the next boot source in the redundancy 1683sequence. 1684 1685This function moves the current boot redundancy source to the next 1686element in the boot sequence. If there are no more boot sources then it 1687must return 0, otherwise it must return 1. The default implementation 1688of this always returns 0. 1689 1690Boot Loader Stage 2 (BL2) at EL3 1691-------------------------------- 1692 1693When the platform has a non-TF-A Boot ROM it is desirable to jump 1694directly to BL2 instead of TF-A BL1. In this case BL2 is expected to 1695execute at EL3 instead of executing at EL1. Refer to the `Firmware 1696Design`_ for more information. 1697 1698All mandatory functions of BL2 must be implemented, except the functions 1699bl2\_early\_platform\_setup and bl2\_el3\_plat\_arch\_setup, because 1700their work is done now by bl2\_el3\_early\_platform\_setup and 1701bl2\_el3\_plat\_arch\_setup. These functions should generally implement 1702the bl1\_plat\_xxx() and bl2\_plat\_xxx() functionality combined. 1703 1704 1705Function : bl2\_el3\_early\_platform\_setup() [mandatory] 1706~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1707 1708:: 1709 1710 Argument : u_register_t, u_register_t, u_register_t, u_register_t 1711 Return : void 1712 1713This function executes with the MMU and data caches disabled. It is only called 1714by the primary CPU. This function receives four parameters which can be used 1715by the platform to pass any needed information from the Boot ROM to BL2. 1716 1717On Arm standard platforms, this function does the following: 1718 1719- Initializes a UART (PL011 console), which enables access to the ``printf`` 1720 family of functions in BL2. 1721 1722- Initializes the storage abstraction layer used to load further bootloader 1723 images. It is necessary to do this early on platforms with a SCP\_BL2 image, 1724 since the later ``bl2_platform_setup`` must be done after SCP\_BL2 is loaded. 1725 1726- Initializes the private variables that define the memory layout used. 1727 1728Function : bl2\_el3\_plat\_arch\_setup() [mandatory] 1729~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1730 1731:: 1732 1733 Argument : void 1734 Return : void 1735 1736This function executes with the MMU and data caches disabled. It is only called 1737by the primary CPU. 1738 1739The purpose of this function is to perform any architectural initialization 1740that varies across platforms. 1741 1742On Arm standard platforms, this function enables the MMU. 1743 1744Function : bl2\_el3\_plat\_prepare\_exit() [optional] 1745~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1746 1747:: 1748 1749 Argument : void 1750 Return : void 1751 1752This function is called prior to exiting BL2 and run the next image. 1753It should be used to perform platform specific clean up or bookkeeping 1754operations before transferring control to the next image. This function 1755runs with MMU disabled. 1756 1757FWU Boot Loader Stage 2 (BL2U) 1758------------------------------ 1759 1760The AP Firmware Updater Configuration, BL2U, is an optional part of the FWU 1761process and is executed only by the primary CPU. BL1 passes control to BL2U at 1762``BL2U_BASE``. BL2U executes in Secure-EL1 and is responsible for: 1763 1764#. (Optional) Transfering the optional SCP\_BL2U binary image from AP secure 1765 memory to SCP RAM. BL2U uses the SCP\_BL2U ``image_info`` passed by BL1. 1766 ``SCP_BL2U_BASE`` defines the address in AP secure memory where SCP\_BL2U 1767 should be copied from. Subsequent handling of the SCP\_BL2U image is 1768 implemented by the platform specific ``bl2u_plat_handle_scp_bl2u()`` function. 1769 If ``SCP_BL2U_BASE`` is not defined then this step is not performed. 1770 1771#. Any platform specific setup required to perform the FWU process. For 1772 example, Arm standard platforms initialize the TZC controller so that the 1773 normal world can access DDR memory. 1774 1775The following functions must be implemented by the platform port to enable 1776BL2U to perform the tasks mentioned above. 1777 1778Function : bl2u\_early\_platform\_setup() [mandatory] 1779~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1780 1781:: 1782 1783 Argument : meminfo *mem_info, void *plat_info 1784 Return : void 1785 1786This function executes with the MMU and data caches disabled. It is only 1787called by the primary CPU. The arguments to this function is the address 1788of the ``meminfo`` structure and platform specific info provided by BL1. 1789 1790The platform may copy the contents of the ``mem_info`` and ``plat_info`` into 1791private storage as the original memory may be subsequently overwritten by BL2U. 1792 1793On Arm CSS platforms ``plat_info`` is interpreted as an ``image_info_t`` structure, 1794to extract SCP\_BL2U image information, which is then copied into a private 1795variable. 1796 1797Function : bl2u\_plat\_arch\_setup() [mandatory] 1798~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1799 1800:: 1801 1802 Argument : void 1803 Return : void 1804 1805This function executes with the MMU and data caches disabled. It is only 1806called by the primary CPU. 1807 1808The purpose of this function is to perform any architectural initialization 1809that varies across platforms, for example enabling the MMU (since the memory 1810map differs across platforms). 1811 1812Function : bl2u\_platform\_setup() [mandatory] 1813~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1814 1815:: 1816 1817 Argument : void 1818 Return : void 1819 1820This function may execute with the MMU and data caches enabled if the platform 1821port does the necessary initialization in ``bl2u_plat_arch_setup()``. It is only 1822called by the primary CPU. 1823 1824The purpose of this function is to perform any platform initialization 1825specific to BL2U. 1826 1827In Arm standard platforms, this function performs security setup, including 1828configuration of the TrustZone controller to allow non-secure masters access 1829to most of DRAM. Part of DRAM is reserved for secure world use. 1830 1831Function : bl2u\_plat\_handle\_scp\_bl2u() [optional] 1832~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1833 1834:: 1835 1836 Argument : void 1837 Return : int 1838 1839This function is used to perform any platform-specific actions required to 1840handle the SCP firmware. Typically it transfers the image into SCP memory using 1841a platform-specific protocol and waits until SCP executes it and signals to the 1842Application Processor (AP) for BL2U execution to continue. 1843 1844This function returns 0 on success, a negative error code otherwise. 1845This function is included if SCP\_BL2U\_BASE is defined. 1846 1847Boot Loader Stage 3-1 (BL31) 1848---------------------------- 1849 1850During cold boot, the BL31 stage is executed only by the primary CPU. This is 1851determined in BL1 using the ``platform_is_primary_cpu()`` function. BL1 passes 1852control to BL31 at ``BL31_BASE``. During warm boot, BL31 is executed by all 1853CPUs. BL31 executes at EL3 and is responsible for: 1854 1855#. Re-initializing all architectural and platform state. Although BL1 performs 1856 some of this initialization, BL31 remains resident in EL3 and must ensure 1857 that EL3 architectural and platform state is completely initialized. It 1858 should make no assumptions about the system state when it receives control. 1859 1860#. Passing control to a normal world BL image, pre-loaded at a platform- 1861 specific address by BL2. BL31 uses the ``entry_point_info`` structure that BL2 1862 populated in memory to do this. 1863 1864#. Providing runtime firmware services. Currently, BL31 only implements a 1865 subset of the Power State Coordination Interface (PSCI) API as a runtime 1866 service. See Section 3.3 below for details of porting the PSCI 1867 implementation. 1868 1869#. Optionally passing control to the BL32 image, pre-loaded at a platform- 1870 specific address by BL2. BL31 exports a set of apis that allow runtime 1871 services to specify the security state in which the next image should be 1872 executed and run the corresponding image. BL31 uses the ``entry_point_info`` 1873 structure populated by BL2 to do this. 1874 1875If BL31 is a reset vector, It also needs to handle the reset as specified in 1876section 2.2 before the tasks described above. 1877 1878The following functions must be implemented by the platform port to enable BL31 1879to perform the above tasks. 1880 1881Function : bl31\_early\_platform\_setup() [mandatory] 1882~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1883 1884:: 1885 1886 Argument : bl31_params *, void * 1887 Return : void 1888 1889This function executes with the MMU and data caches disabled. It is only called 1890by the primary CPU. The arguments to this function are: 1891 1892- The address of the ``bl31_params`` structure populated by BL2. 1893- An opaque pointer that the platform may use as needed. 1894 1895The platform can copy the contents of the ``bl31_params`` structure and its 1896sub-structures into private variables if the original memory may be 1897subsequently overwritten by BL31 and similarly the ``void *`` pointing 1898to the platform data also needs to be saved. 1899 1900In Arm standard platforms, BL2 passes a pointer to a ``bl31_params`` structure 1901in BL2 memory. BL31 copies the information in this pointer to internal data 1902structures. It also performs the following: 1903 1904- Initialize a UART (PL011 console), which enables access to the ``printf`` 1905 family of functions in BL31. 1906 1907- Enable issuing of snoop and DVM (Distributed Virtual Memory) requests to the 1908 CCI slave interface corresponding to the cluster that includes the primary 1909 CPU. 1910 1911Function : bl31\_plat\_arch\_setup() [mandatory] 1912~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1913 1914:: 1915 1916 Argument : void 1917 Return : void 1918 1919This function executes with the MMU and data caches disabled. It is only called 1920by the primary CPU. 1921 1922The purpose of this function is to perform any architectural initialization 1923that varies across platforms. 1924 1925On Arm standard platforms, this function enables the MMU. 1926 1927Function : bl31\_platform\_setup() [mandatory] 1928~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1929 1930:: 1931 1932 Argument : void 1933 Return : void 1934 1935This function may execute with the MMU and data caches enabled if the platform 1936port does the necessary initialization in ``bl31_plat_arch_setup()``. It is only 1937called by the primary CPU. 1938 1939The purpose of this function is to complete platform initialization so that both 1940BL31 runtime services and normal world software can function correctly. 1941 1942On Arm standard platforms, this function does the following: 1943 1944- Initialize the generic interrupt controller. 1945 1946 Depending on the GIC driver selected by the platform, the appropriate GICv2 1947 or GICv3 initialization will be done, which mainly consists of: 1948 1949 - Enable secure interrupts in the GIC CPU interface. 1950 - Disable the legacy interrupt bypass mechanism. 1951 - Configure the priority mask register to allow interrupts of all priorities 1952 to be signaled to the CPU interface. 1953 - Mark SGIs 8-15 and the other secure interrupts on the platform as secure. 1954 - Target all secure SPIs to CPU0. 1955 - Enable these secure interrupts in the GIC distributor. 1956 - Configure all other interrupts as non-secure. 1957 - Enable signaling of secure interrupts in the GIC distributor. 1958 1959- Enable system-level implementation of the generic timer counter through the 1960 memory mapped interface. 1961 1962- Grant access to the system counter timer module 1963 1964- Initialize the power controller device. 1965 1966 In particular, initialise the locks that prevent concurrent accesses to the 1967 power controller device. 1968 1969Function : bl31\_plat\_runtime\_setup() [optional] 1970~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1971 1972:: 1973 1974 Argument : void 1975 Return : void 1976 1977The purpose of this function is allow the platform to perform any BL31 runtime 1978setup just prior to BL31 exit during cold boot. The default weak 1979implementation of this function will invoke ``console_switch_state()`` to switch 1980console output to consoles marked for use in the ``runtime`` state. 1981 1982Function : bl31\_plat\_get\_next\_image\_ep\_info() [mandatory] 1983~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1984 1985:: 1986 1987 Argument : uint32_t 1988 Return : entry_point_info * 1989 1990This function may execute with the MMU and data caches enabled if the platform 1991port does the necessary initializations in ``bl31_plat_arch_setup()``. 1992 1993This function is called by ``bl31_main()`` to retrieve information provided by 1994BL2 for the next image in the security state specified by the argument. BL31 1995uses this information to pass control to that image in the specified security 1996state. This function must return a pointer to the ``entry_point_info`` structure 1997(that was copied during ``bl31_early_platform_setup()``) if the image exists. It 1998should return NULL otherwise. 1999 2000Function : bl31_plat_enable_mmu [optional] 2001~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 2002 2003:: 2004 2005 Argument : uint32_t 2006 Return : void 2007 2008This function enables the MMU. The boot code calls this function with MMU and 2009caches disabled. This function should program necessary registers to enable 2010translation, and upon return, the MMU on the calling PE must be enabled. 2011 2012The function must honor flags passed in the first argument. These flags are 2013defined by the translation library, and can be found in the file 2014``include/lib/xlat_tables/xlat_mmu_helpers.h``. 2015 2016On DynamIQ systems, this function must not use stack while enabling MMU, which 2017is how the function in xlat table library version 2 is implementated. 2018 2019Function : plat\_get\_syscnt\_freq2() [mandatory] 2020~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 2021 2022:: 2023 2024 Argument : void 2025 Return : unsigned int 2026 2027This function is used by the architecture setup code to retrieve the counter 2028frequency for the CPU's generic timer. This value will be programmed into the 2029``CNTFRQ_EL0`` register. In Arm standard platforms, it returns the base frequency 2030of the system counter, which is retrieved from the first entry in the frequency 2031modes table. 2032 2033#define : PLAT\_PERCPU\_BAKERY\_LOCK\_SIZE [optional] 2034~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 2035 2036When ``USE_COHERENT_MEM = 0``, this constant defines the total memory (in 2037bytes) aligned to the cache line boundary that should be allocated per-cpu to 2038accommodate all the bakery locks. 2039 2040If this constant is not defined when ``USE_COHERENT_MEM = 0``, the linker 2041calculates the size of the ``bakery_lock`` input section, aligns it to the 2042nearest ``CACHE_WRITEBACK_GRANULE``, multiplies it with ``PLATFORM_CORE_COUNT`` 2043and stores the result in a linker symbol. This constant prevents a platform 2044from relying on the linker and provide a more efficient mechanism for 2045accessing per-cpu bakery lock information. 2046 2047If this constant is defined and its value is not equal to the value 2048calculated by the linker then a link time assertion is raised. A compile time 2049assertion is raised if the value of the constant is not aligned to the cache 2050line boundary. 2051 2052SDEI porting requirements 2053~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 2054 2055The SDEI dispatcher requires the platform to provide the following macros 2056and functions, of which some are optional, and some others mandatory. 2057 2058Macros 2059...... 2060 2061Macro: PLAT_SDEI_NORMAL_PRI [mandatory] 2062^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 2063 2064This macro must be defined to the EL3 exception priority level associated with 2065Normal SDEI events on the platform. This must have a higher value (therefore of 2066lower priority) than ``PLAT_SDEI_CRITICAL_PRI``. 2067 2068Macro: PLAT_SDEI_CRITICAL_PRI [mandatory] 2069^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 2070 2071This macro must be defined to the EL3 exception priority level associated with 2072Critical SDEI events on the platform. This must have a lower value (therefore of 2073higher priority) than ``PLAT_SDEI_NORMAL_PRI``. 2074 2075**Note**: SDEI exception priorities must be the lowest among Secure priorities. 2076Among the SDEI exceptions, Critical SDEI priority must be higher than Normal 2077SDEI priority. 2078 2079Functions 2080......... 2081 2082Function: int plat_sdei_validate_entry_point(uintptr_t ep) [optional] 2083^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 2084 2085:: 2086 2087 Argument: uintptr_t 2088 Return: int 2089 2090This function validates the address of client entry points provided for both 2091event registration and *Complete and Resume* SDEI calls. The function takes one 2092argument, which is the address of the handler the SDEI client requested to 2093register. The function must return ``0`` for successful validation, or ``-1`` 2094upon failure. 2095 2096The default implementation always returns ``0``. On Arm platforms, this function 2097is implemented to translate the entry point to physical address, and further to 2098ensure that the address is located in Non-secure DRAM. 2099 2100Function: void plat_sdei_handle_masked_trigger(uint64_t mpidr, unsigned int intr) [optional] 2101^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 2102 2103:: 2104 2105 Argument: uint64_t 2106 Argument: unsigned int 2107 Return: void 2108 2109SDEI specification requires that a PE comes out of reset with the events masked. 2110The client therefore is expected to call ``PE_UNMASK`` to unmask SDEI events on 2111the PE. No SDEI events can be dispatched until such time. 2112 2113Should a PE receive an interrupt that was bound to an SDEI event while the 2114events are masked on the PE, the dispatcher implementation invokes the function 2115``plat_sdei_handle_masked_trigger``. The MPIDR of the PE that received the 2116interrupt and the interrupt ID are passed as parameters. 2117 2118The default implementation only prints out a warning message. 2119 2120Power State Coordination Interface (in BL31) 2121-------------------------------------------- 2122 2123The TF-A implementation of the PSCI API is based around the concept of a 2124*power domain*. A *power domain* is a CPU or a logical group of CPUs which 2125share some state on which power management operations can be performed as 2126specified by `PSCI`_. Each CPU in the system is assigned a cpu index which is 2127a unique number between ``0`` and ``PLATFORM_CORE_COUNT - 1``. The 2128*power domains* are arranged in a hierarchical tree structure and each 2129*power domain* can be identified in a system by the cpu index of any CPU that 2130is part of that domain and a *power domain level*. A processing element (for 2131example, a CPU) is at level 0. If the *power domain* node above a CPU is a 2132logical grouping of CPUs that share some state, then level 1 is that group of 2133CPUs (for example, a cluster), and level 2 is a group of clusters (for 2134example, the system). More details on the power domain topology and its 2135organization can be found in `Power Domain Topology Design`_. 2136 2137BL31's platform initialization code exports a pointer to the platform-specific 2138power management operations required for the PSCI implementation to function 2139correctly. This information is populated in the ``plat_psci_ops`` structure. The 2140PSCI implementation calls members of the ``plat_psci_ops`` structure for performing 2141power management operations on the power domains. For example, the target 2142CPU is specified by its ``MPIDR`` in a PSCI ``CPU_ON`` call. The ``pwr_domain_on()`` 2143handler (if present) is called for the CPU power domain. 2144 2145The ``power-state`` parameter of a PSCI ``CPU_SUSPEND`` call can be used to 2146describe composite power states specific to a platform. The PSCI implementation 2147defines a generic representation of the power-state parameter viz which is an 2148array of local power states where each index corresponds to a power domain 2149level. Each entry contains the local power state the power domain at that power 2150level could enter. It depends on the ``validate_power_state()`` handler to 2151convert the power-state parameter (possibly encoding a composite power state) 2152passed in a PSCI ``CPU_SUSPEND`` call to this representation. 2153 2154The following functions form part of platform port of PSCI functionality. 2155 2156Function : plat\_psci\_stat\_accounting\_start() [optional] 2157~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 2158 2159:: 2160 2161 Argument : const psci_power_state_t * 2162 Return : void 2163 2164This is an optional hook that platforms can implement for residency statistics 2165accounting before entering a low power state. The ``pwr_domain_state`` field of 2166``state_info`` (first argument) can be inspected if stat accounting is done 2167differently at CPU level versus higher levels. As an example, if the element at 2168index 0 (CPU power level) in the ``pwr_domain_state`` array indicates a power down 2169state, special hardware logic may be programmed in order to keep track of the 2170residency statistics. For higher levels (array indices > 0), the residency 2171statistics could be tracked in software using PMF. If ``ENABLE_PMF`` is set, the 2172default implementation will use PMF to capture timestamps. 2173 2174Function : plat\_psci\_stat\_accounting\_stop() [optional] 2175~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 2176 2177:: 2178 2179 Argument : const psci_power_state_t * 2180 Return : void 2181 2182This is an optional hook that platforms can implement for residency statistics 2183accounting after exiting from a low power state. The ``pwr_domain_state`` field 2184of ``state_info`` (first argument) can be inspected if stat accounting is done 2185differently at CPU level versus higher levels. As an example, if the element at 2186index 0 (CPU power level) in the ``pwr_domain_state`` array indicates a power down 2187state, special hardware logic may be programmed in order to keep track of the 2188residency statistics. For higher levels (array indices > 0), the residency 2189statistics could be tracked in software using PMF. If ``ENABLE_PMF`` is set, the 2190default implementation will use PMF to capture timestamps. 2191 2192Function : plat\_psci\_stat\_get\_residency() [optional] 2193~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 2194 2195:: 2196 2197 Argument : unsigned int, const psci_power_state_t *, int 2198 Return : u_register_t 2199 2200This is an optional interface that is is invoked after resuming from a low power 2201state and provides the time spent resident in that low power state by the power 2202domain at a particular power domain level. When a CPU wakes up from suspend, 2203all its parent power domain levels are also woken up. The generic PSCI code 2204invokes this function for each parent power domain that is resumed and it 2205identified by the ``lvl`` (first argument) parameter. The ``state_info`` (second 2206argument) describes the low power state that the power domain has resumed from. 2207The current CPU is the first CPU in the power domain to resume from the low 2208power state and the ``last_cpu_idx`` (third parameter) is the index of the last 2209CPU in the power domain to suspend and may be needed to calculate the residency 2210for that power domain. 2211 2212Function : plat\_get\_target\_pwr\_state() [optional] 2213~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 2214 2215:: 2216 2217 Argument : unsigned int, const plat_local_state_t *, unsigned int 2218 Return : plat_local_state_t 2219 2220The PSCI generic code uses this function to let the platform participate in 2221state coordination during a power management operation. The function is passed 2222a pointer to an array of platform specific local power state ``states`` (second 2223argument) which contains the requested power state for each CPU at a particular 2224power domain level ``lvl`` (first argument) within the power domain. The function 2225is expected to traverse this array of upto ``ncpus`` (third argument) and return 2226a coordinated target power state by the comparing all the requested power 2227states. The target power state should not be deeper than any of the requested 2228power states. 2229 2230A weak definition of this API is provided by default wherein it assumes 2231that the platform assigns a local state value in order of increasing depth 2232of the power state i.e. for two power states X & Y, if X < Y 2233then X represents a shallower power state than Y. As a result, the 2234coordinated target local power state for a power domain will be the minimum 2235of the requested local power state values. 2236 2237Function : plat\_get\_power\_domain\_tree\_desc() [mandatory] 2238~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 2239 2240:: 2241 2242 Argument : void 2243 Return : const unsigned char * 2244 2245This function returns a pointer to the byte array containing the power domain 2246topology tree description. The format and method to construct this array are 2247described in `Power Domain Topology Design`_. The BL31 PSCI initilization code 2248requires this array to be described by the platform, either statically or 2249dynamically, to initialize the power domain topology tree. In case the array 2250is populated dynamically, then plat\_core\_pos\_by\_mpidr() and 2251plat\_my\_core\_pos() should also be implemented suitably so that the topology 2252tree description matches the CPU indices returned by these APIs. These APIs 2253together form the platform interface for the PSCI topology framework. 2254 2255Function : plat\_setup\_psci\_ops() [mandatory] 2256~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 2257 2258:: 2259 2260 Argument : uintptr_t, const plat_psci_ops ** 2261 Return : int 2262 2263This function may execute with the MMU and data caches enabled if the platform 2264port does the necessary initializations in ``bl31_plat_arch_setup()``. It is only 2265called by the primary CPU. 2266 2267This function is called by PSCI initialization code. Its purpose is to let 2268the platform layer know about the warm boot entrypoint through the 2269``sec_entrypoint`` (first argument) and to export handler routines for 2270platform-specific psci power management actions by populating the passed 2271pointer with a pointer to BL31's private ``plat_psci_ops`` structure. 2272 2273A description of each member of this structure is given below. Please refer to 2274the Arm FVP specific implementation of these handlers in 2275`plat/arm/board/fvp/fvp\_pm.c`_ as an example. For each PSCI function that the 2276platform wants to support, the associated operation or operations in this 2277structure must be provided and implemented (Refer section 4 of 2278`Firmware Design`_ for the PSCI API supported in TF-A). To disable a PSCI 2279function in a platform port, the operation should be removed from this 2280structure instead of providing an empty implementation. 2281 2282plat\_psci\_ops.cpu\_standby() 2283.............................. 2284 2285Perform the platform-specific actions to enter the standby state for a cpu 2286indicated by the passed argument. This provides a fast path for CPU standby 2287wherein overheads of PSCI state management and lock acquistion is avoided. 2288For this handler to be invoked by the PSCI ``CPU_SUSPEND`` API implementation, 2289the suspend state type specified in the ``power-state`` parameter should be 2290STANDBY and the target power domain level specified should be the CPU. The 2291handler should put the CPU into a low power retention state (usually by 2292issuing a wfi instruction) and ensure that it can be woken up from that 2293state by a normal interrupt. The generic code expects the handler to succeed. 2294 2295plat\_psci\_ops.pwr\_domain\_on() 2296................................. 2297 2298Perform the platform specific actions to power on a CPU, specified 2299by the ``MPIDR`` (first argument). The generic code expects the platform to 2300return PSCI\_E\_SUCCESS on success or PSCI\_E\_INTERN\_FAIL for any failure. 2301 2302plat\_psci\_ops.pwr\_domain\_off() 2303.................................. 2304 2305Perform the platform specific actions to prepare to power off the calling CPU 2306and its higher parent power domain levels as indicated by the ``target_state`` 2307(first argument). It is called by the PSCI ``CPU_OFF`` API implementation. 2308 2309The ``target_state`` encodes the platform coordinated target local power states 2310for the CPU power domain and its parent power domain levels. The handler 2311needs to perform power management operation corresponding to the local state 2312at each power level. 2313 2314For this handler, the local power state for the CPU power domain will be a 2315power down state where as it could be either power down, retention or run state 2316for the higher power domain levels depending on the result of state 2317coordination. The generic code expects the handler to succeed. 2318 2319plat\_psci\_ops.pwr\_domain\_suspend\_pwrdown\_early() [optional] 2320................................................................. 2321 2322This optional function may be used as a performance optimization to replace 2323or complement pwr_domain_suspend() on some platforms. Its calling semantics 2324are identical to pwr_domain_suspend(), except the PSCI implementation only 2325calls this function when suspending to a power down state, and it guarantees 2326that data caches are enabled. 2327 2328When HW_ASSISTED_COHERENCY = 0, the PSCI implementation disables data caches 2329before calling pwr_domain_suspend(). If the target_state corresponds to a 2330power down state and it is safe to perform some or all of the platform 2331specific actions in that function with data caches enabled, it may be more 2332efficient to move those actions to this function. When HW_ASSISTED_COHERENCY 2333= 1, data caches remain enabled throughout, and so there is no advantage to 2334moving platform specific actions to this function. 2335 2336plat\_psci\_ops.pwr\_domain\_suspend() 2337...................................... 2338 2339Perform the platform specific actions to prepare to suspend the calling 2340CPU and its higher parent power domain levels as indicated by the 2341``target_state`` (first argument). It is called by the PSCI ``CPU_SUSPEND`` 2342API implementation. 2343 2344The ``target_state`` has a similar meaning as described in 2345the ``pwr_domain_off()`` operation. It encodes the platform coordinated 2346target local power states for the CPU power domain and its parent 2347power domain levels. The handler needs to perform power management operation 2348corresponding to the local state at each power level. The generic code 2349expects the handler to succeed. 2350 2351The difference between turning a power domain off versus suspending it is that 2352in the former case, the power domain is expected to re-initialize its state 2353when it is next powered on (see ``pwr_domain_on_finish()``). In the latter 2354case, the power domain is expected to save enough state so that it can resume 2355execution by restoring this state when its powered on (see 2356``pwr_domain_suspend_finish()``). 2357 2358When suspending a core, the platform can also choose to power off the GICv3 2359Redistributor and ITS through an implementation-defined sequence. To achieve 2360this safely, the ITS context must be saved first. The architectural part is 2361implemented by the ``gicv3_its_save_disable()`` helper, but most of the needed 2362sequence is implementation defined and it is therefore the responsibility of 2363the platform code to implement the necessary sequence. Then the GIC 2364Redistributor context can be saved using the ``gicv3_rdistif_save()`` helper. 2365Powering off the Redistributor requires the implementation to support it and it 2366is the responsibility of the platform code to execute the right implementation 2367defined sequence. 2368 2369When a system suspend is requested, the platform can also make use of the 2370``gicv3_distif_save()`` helper to save the context of the GIC Distributor after 2371it has saved the context of the Redistributors and ITS of all the cores in the 2372system. The context of the Distributor can be large and may require it to be 2373allocated in a special area if it cannot fit in the platform's global static 2374data, for example in DRAM. The Distributor can then be powered down using an 2375implementation-defined sequence. 2376 2377plat\_psci\_ops.pwr\_domain\_pwr\_down\_wfi() 2378............................................. 2379 2380This is an optional function and, if implemented, is expected to perform 2381platform specific actions including the ``wfi`` invocation which allows the 2382CPU to powerdown. Since this function is invoked outside the PSCI locks, 2383the actions performed in this hook must be local to the CPU or the platform 2384must ensure that races between multiple CPUs cannot occur. 2385 2386The ``target_state`` has a similar meaning as described in the ``pwr_domain_off()`` 2387operation and it encodes the platform coordinated target local power states for 2388the CPU power domain and its parent power domain levels. This function must 2389not return back to the caller. 2390 2391If this function is not implemented by the platform, PSCI generic 2392implementation invokes ``psci_power_down_wfi()`` for power down. 2393 2394plat\_psci\_ops.pwr\_domain\_on\_finish() 2395......................................... 2396 2397This function is called by the PSCI implementation after the calling CPU is 2398powered on and released from reset in response to an earlier PSCI ``CPU_ON`` call. 2399It performs the platform-specific setup required to initialize enough state for 2400this CPU to enter the normal world and also provide secure runtime firmware 2401services. 2402 2403The ``target_state`` (first argument) is the prior state of the power domains 2404immediately before the CPU was turned on. It indicates which power domains 2405above the CPU might require initialization due to having previously been in 2406low power states. The generic code expects the handler to succeed. 2407 2408plat\_psci\_ops.pwr\_domain\_suspend\_finish() 2409.............................................. 2410 2411This function is called by the PSCI implementation after the calling CPU is 2412powered on and released from reset in response to an asynchronous wakeup 2413event, for example a timer interrupt that was programmed by the CPU during the 2414``CPU_SUSPEND`` call or ``SYSTEM_SUSPEND`` call. It performs the platform-specific 2415setup required to restore the saved state for this CPU to resume execution 2416in the normal world and also provide secure runtime firmware services. 2417 2418The ``target_state`` (first argument) has a similar meaning as described in 2419the ``pwr_domain_on_finish()`` operation. The generic code expects the platform 2420to succeed. 2421 2422If the Distributor, Redistributors or ITS have been powered off as part of a 2423suspend, their context must be restored in this function in the reverse order 2424to how they were saved during suspend sequence. 2425 2426plat\_psci\_ops.system\_off() 2427............................. 2428 2429This function is called by PSCI implementation in response to a ``SYSTEM_OFF`` 2430call. It performs the platform-specific system poweroff sequence after 2431notifying the Secure Payload Dispatcher. 2432 2433plat\_psci\_ops.system\_reset() 2434............................... 2435 2436This function is called by PSCI implementation in response to a ``SYSTEM_RESET`` 2437call. It performs the platform-specific system reset sequence after 2438notifying the Secure Payload Dispatcher. 2439 2440plat\_psci\_ops.validate\_power\_state() 2441........................................ 2442 2443This function is called by the PSCI implementation during the ``CPU_SUSPEND`` 2444call to validate the ``power_state`` parameter of the PSCI API and if valid, 2445populate it in ``req_state`` (second argument) array as power domain level 2446specific local states. If the ``power_state`` is invalid, the platform must 2447return PSCI\_E\_INVALID\_PARAMS as error, which is propagated back to the 2448normal world PSCI client. 2449 2450plat\_psci\_ops.validate\_ns\_entrypoint() 2451.......................................... 2452 2453This function is called by the PSCI implementation during the ``CPU_SUSPEND``, 2454``SYSTEM_SUSPEND`` and ``CPU_ON`` calls to validate the non-secure ``entry_point`` 2455parameter passed by the normal world. If the ``entry_point`` is invalid, 2456the platform must return PSCI\_E\_INVALID\_ADDRESS as error, which is 2457propagated back to the normal world PSCI client. 2458 2459plat\_psci\_ops.get\_sys\_suspend\_power\_state() 2460................................................. 2461 2462This function is called by the PSCI implementation during the ``SYSTEM_SUSPEND`` 2463call to get the ``req_state`` parameter from platform which encodes the power 2464domain level specific local states to suspend to system affinity level. The 2465``req_state`` will be utilized to do the PSCI state coordination and 2466``pwr_domain_suspend()`` will be invoked with the coordinated target state to 2467enter system suspend. 2468 2469plat\_psci\_ops.get\_pwr\_lvl\_state\_idx() 2470........................................... 2471 2472This is an optional function and, if implemented, is invoked by the PSCI 2473implementation to convert the ``local_state`` (first argument) at a specified 2474``pwr_lvl`` (second argument) to an index between 0 and 2475``PLAT_MAX_PWR_LVL_STATES`` - 1. This function is only needed if the platform 2476supports more than two local power states at each power domain level, that is 2477``PLAT_MAX_PWR_LVL_STATES`` is greater than 2, and needs to account for these 2478local power states. 2479 2480plat\_psci\_ops.translate\_power\_state\_by\_mpidr() 2481.................................................... 2482 2483This is an optional function and, if implemented, verifies the ``power_state`` 2484(second argument) parameter of the PSCI API corresponding to a target power 2485domain. The target power domain is identified by using both ``MPIDR`` (first 2486argument) and the power domain level encoded in ``power_state``. The power domain 2487level specific local states are to be extracted from ``power_state`` and be 2488populated in the ``output_state`` (third argument) array. The functionality 2489is similar to the ``validate_power_state`` function described above and is 2490envisaged to be used in case the validity of ``power_state`` depend on the 2491targeted power domain. If the ``power_state`` is invalid for the targeted power 2492domain, the platform must return PSCI\_E\_INVALID\_PARAMS as error. If this 2493function is not implemented, then the generic implementation relies on 2494``validate_power_state`` function to translate the ``power_state``. 2495 2496This function can also be used in case the platform wants to support local 2497power state encoding for ``power_state`` parameter of PSCI\_STAT\_COUNT/RESIDENCY 2498APIs as described in Section 5.18 of `PSCI`_. 2499 2500plat\_psci\_ops.get\_node\_hw\_state() 2501...................................... 2502 2503This is an optional function. If implemented this function is intended to return 2504the power state of a node (identified by the first parameter, the ``MPIDR``) in 2505the power domain topology (identified by the second parameter, ``power_level``), 2506as retrieved from a power controller or equivalent component on the platform. 2507Upon successful completion, the implementation must map and return the final 2508status among ``HW_ON``, ``HW_OFF`` or ``HW_STANDBY``. Upon encountering failures, it 2509must return either ``PSCI_E_INVALID_PARAMS`` or ``PSCI_E_NOT_SUPPORTED`` as 2510appropriate. 2511 2512Implementations are not expected to handle ``power_levels`` greater than 2513``PLAT_MAX_PWR_LVL``. 2514 2515plat\_psci\_ops.system\_reset2() 2516................................ 2517 2518This is an optional function. If implemented this function is 2519called during the ``SYSTEM_RESET2`` call to perform a reset 2520based on the first parameter ``reset_type`` as specified in 2521`PSCI`_. The parameter ``cookie`` can be used to pass additional 2522reset information. If the ``reset_type`` is not supported, the 2523function must return ``PSCI_E_NOT_SUPPORTED``. For architectural 2524resets, all failures must return ``PSCI_E_INVALID_PARAMETERS`` 2525and vendor reset can return other PSCI error codes as defined 2526in `PSCI`_. On success this function will not return. 2527 2528plat\_psci\_ops.write\_mem\_protect() 2529.................................... 2530 2531This is an optional function. If implemented it enables or disables the 2532``MEM_PROTECT`` functionality based on the value of ``val``. 2533A non-zero value enables ``MEM_PROTECT`` and a value of zero 2534disables it. Upon encountering failures it must return a negative value 2535and on success it must return 0. 2536 2537plat\_psci\_ops.read\_mem\_protect() 2538..................................... 2539 2540This is an optional function. If implemented it returns the current 2541state of ``MEM_PROTECT`` via the ``val`` parameter. Upon encountering 2542failures it must return a negative value and on success it must 2543return 0. 2544 2545plat\_psci\_ops.mem\_protect\_chk() 2546................................... 2547 2548This is an optional function. If implemented it checks if a memory 2549region defined by a base address ``base`` and with a size of ``length`` 2550bytes is protected by ``MEM_PROTECT``. If the region is protected 2551then it must return 0, otherwise it must return a negative number. 2552 2553Interrupt Management framework (in BL31) 2554---------------------------------------- 2555 2556BL31 implements an Interrupt Management Framework (IMF) to manage interrupts 2557generated in either security state and targeted to EL1 or EL2 in the non-secure 2558state or EL3/S-EL1 in the secure state. The design of this framework is 2559described in the `IMF Design Guide`_ 2560 2561A platform should export the following APIs to support the IMF. The following 2562text briefly describes each api and its implementation in Arm standard 2563platforms. The API implementation depends upon the type of interrupt controller 2564present in the platform. Arm standard platform layer supports both 2565`Arm Generic Interrupt Controller version 2.0 (GICv2)`_ 2566and `3.0 (GICv3)`_. Juno builds the Arm platform layer to use GICv2 and the 2567FVP can be configured to use either GICv2 or GICv3 depending on the build flag 2568``FVP_USE_GIC_DRIVER`` (See FVP platform specific build options in 2569`User Guide`_ for more details). 2570 2571See also: `Interrupt Controller Abstraction APIs`__. 2572 2573.. __: platform-interrupt-controller-API.rst 2574 2575Function : plat\_interrupt\_type\_to\_line() [mandatory] 2576~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 2577 2578:: 2579 2580 Argument : uint32_t, uint32_t 2581 Return : uint32_t 2582 2583The Arm processor signals an interrupt exception either through the IRQ or FIQ 2584interrupt line. The specific line that is signaled depends on how the interrupt 2585controller (IC) reports different interrupt types from an execution context in 2586either security state. The IMF uses this API to determine which interrupt line 2587the platform IC uses to signal each type of interrupt supported by the framework 2588from a given security state. This API must be invoked at EL3. 2589 2590The first parameter will be one of the ``INTR_TYPE_*`` values (see 2591`IMF Design Guide`_) indicating the target type of the interrupt, the second parameter is the 2592security state of the originating execution context. The return result is the 2593bit position in the ``SCR_EL3`` register of the respective interrupt trap: IRQ=1, 2594FIQ=2. 2595 2596In the case of Arm standard platforms using GICv2, S-EL1 interrupts are 2597configured as FIQs and Non-secure interrupts as IRQs from either security 2598state. 2599 2600In the case of Arm standard platforms using GICv3, the interrupt line to be 2601configured depends on the security state of the execution context when the 2602interrupt is signalled and are as follows: 2603 2604- The S-EL1 interrupts are signaled as IRQ in S-EL0/1 context and as FIQ in 2605 NS-EL0/1/2 context. 2606- The Non secure interrupts are signaled as FIQ in S-EL0/1 context and as IRQ 2607 in the NS-EL0/1/2 context. 2608- The EL3 interrupts are signaled as FIQ in both S-EL0/1 and NS-EL0/1/2 2609 context. 2610 2611Function : plat\_ic\_get\_pending\_interrupt\_type() [mandatory] 2612~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 2613 2614:: 2615 2616 Argument : void 2617 Return : uint32_t 2618 2619This API returns the type of the highest priority pending interrupt at the 2620platform IC. The IMF uses the interrupt type to retrieve the corresponding 2621handler function. ``INTR_TYPE_INVAL`` is returned when there is no interrupt 2622pending. The valid interrupt types that can be returned are ``INTR_TYPE_EL3``, 2623``INTR_TYPE_S_EL1`` and ``INTR_TYPE_NS``. This API must be invoked at EL3. 2624 2625In the case of Arm standard platforms using GICv2, the *Highest Priority 2626Pending Interrupt Register* (``GICC_HPPIR``) is read to determine the id of 2627the pending interrupt. The type of interrupt depends upon the id value as 2628follows. 2629 2630#. id < 1022 is reported as a S-EL1 interrupt 2631#. id = 1022 is reported as a Non-secure interrupt. 2632#. id = 1023 is reported as an invalid interrupt type. 2633 2634In the case of Arm standard platforms using GICv3, the system register 2635``ICC_HPPIR0_EL1``, *Highest Priority Pending group 0 Interrupt Register*, 2636is read to determine the id of the pending interrupt. The type of interrupt 2637depends upon the id value as follows. 2638 2639#. id = ``PENDING_G1S_INTID`` (1020) is reported as a S-EL1 interrupt 2640#. id = ``PENDING_G1NS_INTID`` (1021) is reported as a Non-secure interrupt. 2641#. id = ``GIC_SPURIOUS_INTERRUPT`` (1023) is reported as an invalid interrupt type. 2642#. All other interrupt id's are reported as EL3 interrupt. 2643 2644Function : plat\_ic\_get\_pending\_interrupt\_id() [mandatory] 2645~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 2646 2647:: 2648 2649 Argument : void 2650 Return : uint32_t 2651 2652This API returns the id of the highest priority pending interrupt at the 2653platform IC. ``INTR_ID_UNAVAILABLE`` is returned when there is no interrupt 2654pending. 2655 2656In the case of Arm standard platforms using GICv2, the *Highest Priority 2657Pending Interrupt Register* (``GICC_HPPIR``) is read to determine the id of the 2658pending interrupt. The id that is returned by API depends upon the value of 2659the id read from the interrupt controller as follows. 2660 2661#. id < 1022. id is returned as is. 2662#. id = 1022. The *Aliased Highest Priority Pending Interrupt Register* 2663 (``GICC_AHPPIR``) is read to determine the id of the non-secure interrupt. 2664 This id is returned by the API. 2665#. id = 1023. ``INTR_ID_UNAVAILABLE`` is returned. 2666 2667In the case of Arm standard platforms using GICv3, if the API is invoked from 2668EL3, the system register ``ICC_HPPIR0_EL1``, *Highest Priority Pending Interrupt 2669group 0 Register*, is read to determine the id of the pending interrupt. The id 2670that is returned by API depends upon the value of the id read from the 2671interrupt controller as follows. 2672 2673#. id < ``PENDING_G1S_INTID`` (1020). id is returned as is. 2674#. id = ``PENDING_G1S_INTID`` (1020) or ``PENDING_G1NS_INTID`` (1021). The system 2675 register ``ICC_HPPIR1_EL1``, *Highest Priority Pending Interrupt group 1 2676 Register* is read to determine the id of the group 1 interrupt. This id 2677 is returned by the API as long as it is a valid interrupt id 2678#. If the id is any of the special interrupt identifiers, 2679 ``INTR_ID_UNAVAILABLE`` is returned. 2680 2681When the API invoked from S-EL1 for GICv3 systems, the id read from system 2682register ``ICC_HPPIR1_EL1``, *Highest Priority Pending group 1 Interrupt 2683Register*, is returned if is not equal to GIC\_SPURIOUS\_INTERRUPT (1023) else 2684``INTR_ID_UNAVAILABLE`` is returned. 2685 2686Function : plat\_ic\_acknowledge\_interrupt() [mandatory] 2687~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 2688 2689:: 2690 2691 Argument : void 2692 Return : uint32_t 2693 2694This API is used by the CPU to indicate to the platform IC that processing of 2695the highest pending interrupt has begun. It should return the raw, unmodified 2696value obtained from the interrupt controller when acknowledging an interrupt. 2697The actual interrupt number shall be extracted from this raw value using the API 2698`plat_ic_get_interrupt_id()`__. 2699 2700.. __: platform-interrupt-controller-API.rst#function-unsigned-int-plat-ic-get-interrupt-id-unsigned-int-raw-optional 2701 2702This function in Arm standard platforms using GICv2, reads the *Interrupt 2703Acknowledge Register* (``GICC_IAR``). This changes the state of the highest 2704priority pending interrupt from pending to active in the interrupt controller. 2705It returns the value read from the ``GICC_IAR``, unmodified. 2706 2707In the case of Arm standard platforms using GICv3, if the API is invoked 2708from EL3, the function reads the system register ``ICC_IAR0_EL1``, *Interrupt 2709Acknowledge Register group 0*. If the API is invoked from S-EL1, the function 2710reads the system register ``ICC_IAR1_EL1``, *Interrupt Acknowledge Register 2711group 1*. The read changes the state of the highest pending interrupt from 2712pending to active in the interrupt controller. The value read is returned 2713unmodified. 2714 2715The TSP uses this API to start processing of the secure physical timer 2716interrupt. 2717 2718Function : plat\_ic\_end\_of\_interrupt() [mandatory] 2719~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 2720 2721:: 2722 2723 Argument : uint32_t 2724 Return : void 2725 2726This API is used by the CPU to indicate to the platform IC that processing of 2727the interrupt corresponding to the id (passed as the parameter) has 2728finished. The id should be the same as the id returned by the 2729``plat_ic_acknowledge_interrupt()`` API. 2730 2731Arm standard platforms write the id to the *End of Interrupt Register* 2732(``GICC_EOIR``) in case of GICv2, and to ``ICC_EOIR0_EL1`` or ``ICC_EOIR1_EL1`` 2733system register in case of GICv3 depending on where the API is invoked from, 2734EL3 or S-EL1. This deactivates the corresponding interrupt in the interrupt 2735controller. 2736 2737The TSP uses this API to finish processing of the secure physical timer 2738interrupt. 2739 2740Function : plat\_ic\_get\_interrupt\_type() [mandatory] 2741~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 2742 2743:: 2744 2745 Argument : uint32_t 2746 Return : uint32_t 2747 2748This API returns the type of the interrupt id passed as the parameter. 2749``INTR_TYPE_INVAL`` is returned if the id is invalid. If the id is valid, a valid 2750interrupt type (one of ``INTR_TYPE_EL3``, ``INTR_TYPE_S_EL1`` and ``INTR_TYPE_NS``) is 2751returned depending upon how the interrupt has been configured by the platform 2752IC. This API must be invoked at EL3. 2753 2754Arm standard platforms using GICv2 configures S-EL1 interrupts as Group0 interrupts 2755and Non-secure interrupts as Group1 interrupts. It reads the group value 2756corresponding to the interrupt id from the relevant *Interrupt Group Register* 2757(``GICD_IGROUPRn``). It uses the group value to determine the type of interrupt. 2758 2759In the case of Arm standard platforms using GICv3, both the *Interrupt Group 2760Register* (``GICD_IGROUPRn``) and *Interrupt Group Modifier Register* 2761(``GICD_IGRPMODRn``) is read to figure out whether the interrupt is configured 2762as Group 0 secure interrupt, Group 1 secure interrupt or Group 1 NS interrupt. 2763 2764Crash Reporting mechanism (in BL31) 2765----------------------------------- 2766 2767NOTE: This section assumes that your platform is enabling the MULTI_CONSOLE_API 2768flag in its platform.mk. Not using this flag is deprecated for new platforms. 2769 2770BL31 implements a crash reporting mechanism which prints the various registers 2771of the CPU to enable quick crash analysis and debugging. By default, the 2772definitions in ``plat/common/aarch64/platform\_helpers.S`` will cause the crash 2773output to be routed over the normal console infrastructure and get printed on 2774consoles configured to output in crash state. ``console_set_scope()`` can be 2775used to control whether a console is used for crash output. 2776 2777In some cases (such as debugging very early crashes that happen before the 2778normal boot console can be set up), platforms may want to control crash output 2779more explicitly. For these, the following functions can be overridden by 2780platform code. They are executed outside of a C environment and without a stack. 2781 2782Function : plat\_crash\_console\_init 2783~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 2784 2785:: 2786 2787 Argument : void 2788 Return : int 2789 2790This API is used by the crash reporting mechanism to initialize the crash 2791console. It must only use the general purpose registers x0 through x7 to do the 2792initialization and returns 1 on success. 2793 2794If you are trying to debug crashes before the console driver would normally get 2795registered, you can use this to register a driver from assembly with hardcoded 2796parameters. For example, you could register the 16550 driver like this: 2797 2798:: 2799 2800 .section .data.crash_console /* Reserve space for console structure */ 2801 crash_console: 2802 .zero 6 * 8 /* console_16550_t has 6 8-byte words */ 2803 func plat_crash_console_init 2804 ldr x0, =YOUR_16550_BASE_ADDR 2805 ldr x1, =YOUR_16550_SRCCLK_IN_HZ 2806 ldr x2, =YOUR_16550_TARGET_BAUD_RATE 2807 adrp x3, crash_console 2808 add x3, x3, :lo12:crash_console 2809 b console_16550_register /* tail call, returns 1 on success */ 2810 endfunc plat_crash_console_init 2811 2812If you're trying to debug crashes in BL1, you can call the console_xxx_core_init 2813function exported by some console drivers from here. 2814 2815Function : plat\_crash\_console\_putc 2816~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 2817 2818:: 2819 2820 Argument : int 2821 Return : int 2822 2823This API is used by the crash reporting mechanism to print a character on the 2824designated crash console. It must only use general purpose registers x1 and 2825x2 to do its work. The parameter and the return value are in general purpose 2826register x0. 2827 2828If you have registered a normal console driver in ``plat_crash_console_init``, 2829you can keep the default implementation here (which calls ``console_putc()``). 2830 2831If you're trying to debug crashes in BL1, you can call the console_xxx_core_putc 2832function exported by some console drivers from here. 2833 2834Function : plat\_crash\_console\_flush 2835~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 2836 2837:: 2838 2839 Argument : void 2840 Return : int 2841 2842This API is used by the crash reporting mechanism to force write of all buffered 2843data on the designated crash console. It should only use general purpose 2844registers x0 through x5 to do its work. The return value is 0 on successful 2845completion; otherwise the return value is -1. 2846 2847If you have registered a normal console driver in ``plat_crash_console_init``, 2848you can keep the default implementation here (which calls ``console_flush()``). 2849 2850If you're trying to debug crashes in BL1, you can call the console_xx_core_flush 2851function exported by some console drivers from here. 2852 2853Extternal Abort handling and RAS Support 2854---------------------------------------- 2855 2856Function : plat_ea_handler 2857~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 2858 2859:: 2860 2861 Argument : int 2862 Argument : uint64_t 2863 Argument : void * 2864 Argument : void * 2865 Argument : uint64_t 2866 Return : void 2867 2868This function is invoked by the RAS framework for the platform to handle an 2869External Abort received at EL3. The intention of the function is to attempt to 2870resolve the cause of External Abort and return; if that's not possible, to 2871initiate orderly shutdown of the system. 2872 2873The first parameter (``int ea_reason``) indicates the reason for External Abort. 2874Its value is one of ``ERROR_EA_*`` constants defined in ``ea_handle.h``. 2875 2876The second parameter (``uint64_t syndrome``) is the respective syndrome 2877presented to EL3 after having received the External Abort. Depending on the 2878nature of the abort (as can be inferred from the ``ea_reason`` parameter), this 2879can be the content of either ``ESR_EL3`` or ``DISR_EL1``. 2880 2881The third parameter (``void *cookie``) is unused for now. The fourth parameter 2882(``void *handle``) is a pointer to the preempted context. The fifth parameter 2883(``uint64_t flags``) indicates the preempted security state. These parameters 2884are received from the top-level exception handler. 2885 2886If ``RAS_EXTENSION`` is set to ``1``, the default implementation of this 2887function iterates through RAS handlers registered by the platform. If any of the 2888RAS handlers resolve the External Abort, no further action is taken. 2889 2890If ``RAS_EXTENSION`` is set to ``0``, or if none of the platform RAS handlers 2891could resolve the External Abort, the default implementation prints an error 2892message, and panics. 2893 2894Function : plat_handle_uncontainable_ea 2895~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 2896 2897:: 2898 2899 Argument : int 2900 Argument : uint64_t 2901 Return : void 2902 2903This function is invoked by the RAS framework when an External Abort of 2904Uncontainable type is received at EL3. Due to the critical nature of 2905Uncontainable errors, the intention of this function is to initiate orderly 2906shutdown of the system, and is not expected to return. 2907 2908This function must be implemented in assembly. 2909 2910The first and second parameters are the same as that of ``plat_ea_handler``. 2911 2912The default implementation of this function calls 2913``report_unhandled_exception``. 2914 2915Function : plat_handle_double_fault 2916~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 2917 2918:: 2919 2920 Argument : int 2921 Argument : uint64_t 2922 Return : void 2923 2924This function is invoked by the RAS framework when another External Abort is 2925received at EL3 while one is already being handled. I.e., a call to 2926``plat_ea_handler`` is outstanding. Due to its critical nature, the intention of 2927this function is to initiate orderly shutdown of the system, and is not expected 2928recover or return. 2929 2930This function must be implemented in assembly. 2931 2932The first and second parameters are the same as that of ``plat_ea_handler``. 2933 2934The default implementation of this function calls 2935``report_unhandled_exception``. 2936 2937Function : plat_handle_el3_ea 2938~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 2939 2940:: 2941 2942 Return : void 2943 2944This function is invoked when an External Abort is received while executing in 2945EL3. Due to its critical nature, the intention of this function is to initiate 2946orderly shutdown of the system, and is not expected recover or return. 2947 2948This function must be implemented in assembly. 2949 2950The default implementation of this function calls 2951``report_unhandled_exception``. 2952 2953Build flags 2954----------- 2955 2956- **ENABLE\_PLAT\_COMPAT** 2957 All the platforms ports conforming to this API specification should define 2958 the build flag ``ENABLE_PLAT_COMPAT`` to 0 as the compatibility layer should 2959 be disabled. For more details on compatibility layer, refer 2960 `Migration Guide`_. 2961 2962There are some build flags which can be defined by the platform to control 2963inclusion or exclusion of certain BL stages from the FIP image. These flags 2964need to be defined in the platform makefile which will get included by the 2965build system. 2966 2967- **NEED\_BL33** 2968 By default, this flag is defined ``yes`` by the build system and ``BL33`` 2969 build option should be supplied as a build option. The platform has the 2970 option of excluding the BL33 image in the ``fip`` image by defining this flag 2971 to ``no``. If any of the options ``EL3_PAYLOAD_BASE`` or ``PRELOADED_BL33_BASE`` 2972 are used, this flag will be set to ``no`` automatically. 2973 2974C Library 2975--------- 2976 2977To avoid subtle toolchain behavioral dependencies, the header files provided 2978by the compiler are not used. The software is built with the ``-nostdinc`` flag 2979to ensure no headers are included from the toolchain inadvertently. Instead the 2980required headers are included in the TF-A source tree. The library only 2981contains those C library definitions required by the local implementation. If 2982more functionality is required, the needed library functions will need to be 2983added to the local implementation. 2984 2985Versions of `FreeBSD`_ headers can be found in ``include/lib/stdlib``. Some of 2986these headers have been cut down in order to simplify the implementation. In 2987order to minimize changes to the header files, the `FreeBSD`_ layout has been 2988maintained. The generic C library definitions can be found in 2989``include/lib/stdlib`` with more system and machine specific declarations in 2990``include/lib/stdlib/sys`` and ``include/lib/stdlib/machine``. 2991 2992The local C library implementations can be found in ``lib/stdlib``. In order to 2993extend the C library these files may need to be modified. It is recommended to 2994use a release version of `FreeBSD`_ as a starting point. 2995 2996The C library header files in the `FreeBSD`_ source tree are located in the 2997``include`` and ``sys/sys`` directories. `FreeBSD`_ machine specific definitions 2998can be found in the ``sys/<machine-type>`` directories. These files define things 2999like 'the size of a pointer' and 'the range of an integer'. Since an AArch64 3000port for `FreeBSD`_ does not yet exist, the machine specific definitions are 3001based on existing machine types with similar properties (for example SPARC64). 3002 3003Where possible, C library function implementations were taken from `FreeBSD`_ 3004as found in the ``lib/libc`` directory. 3005 3006A copy of the `FreeBSD`_ sources can be downloaded with ``git``. 3007 3008:: 3009 3010 git clone git://github.com/freebsd/freebsd.git -b origin/release/9.2.0 3011 3012Storage abstraction layer 3013------------------------- 3014 3015In order to improve platform independence and portability an storage abstraction 3016layer is used to load data from non-volatile platform storage. 3017 3018Each platform should register devices and their drivers via the Storage layer. 3019These drivers then need to be initialized by bootloader phases as 3020required in their respective ``blx_platform_setup()`` functions. Currently 3021storage access is only required by BL1 and BL2 phases. The ``load_image()`` 3022function uses the storage layer to access non-volatile platform storage. 3023 3024It is mandatory to implement at least one storage driver. For the Arm 3025development platforms the Firmware Image Package (FIP) driver is provided as 3026the default means to load data from storage (see the "Firmware Image Package" 3027section in the `User Guide`_). The storage layer is described in the header file 3028``include/drivers/io/io_storage.h``. The implementation of the common library 3029is in ``drivers/io/io_storage.c`` and the driver files are located in 3030``drivers/io/``. 3031 3032Each IO driver must provide ``io_dev_*`` structures, as described in 3033``drivers/io/io_driver.h``. These are returned via a mandatory registration 3034function that is called on platform initialization. The semi-hosting driver 3035implementation in ``io_semihosting.c`` can be used as an example. 3036 3037The Storage layer provides mechanisms to initialize storage devices before 3038IO operations are called. The basic operations supported by the layer 3039include ``open()``, ``close()``, ``read()``, ``write()``, ``size()`` and ``seek()``. 3040Drivers do not have to implement all operations, but each platform must 3041provide at least one driver for a device capable of supporting generic 3042operations such as loading a bootloader image. 3043 3044The current implementation only allows for known images to be loaded by the 3045firmware. These images are specified by using their identifiers, as defined in 3046[include/plat/common/platform\_def.h] (or a separate header file included from 3047there). The platform layer (``plat_get_image_source()``) then returns a reference 3048to a device and a driver-specific ``spec`` which will be understood by the driver 3049to allow access to the image data. 3050 3051The layer is designed in such a way that is it possible to chain drivers with 3052other drivers. For example, file-system drivers may be implemented on top of 3053physical block devices, both represented by IO devices with corresponding 3054drivers. In such a case, the file-system "binding" with the block device may 3055be deferred until the file-system device is initialised. 3056 3057The abstraction currently depends on structures being statically allocated 3058by the drivers and callers, as the system does not yet provide a means of 3059dynamically allocating memory. This may also have the affect of limiting the 3060amount of open resources per driver. 3061 3062-------------- 3063 3064*Copyright (c) 2013-2018, Arm Limited and Contributors. All rights reserved.* 3065 3066.. _Migration Guide: platform-migration-guide.rst 3067.. _include/plat/common/platform.h: ../include/plat/common/platform.h 3068.. _include/plat/arm/common/plat\_arm.h: ../include/plat/arm/common/plat_arm.h%5D 3069.. _User Guide: user-guide.rst 3070.. _include/plat/common/common\_def.h: ../include/plat/common/common_def.h 3071.. _include/plat/arm/common/arm\_def.h: ../include/plat/arm/common/arm_def.h 3072.. _plat/common/aarch64/platform\_mp\_stack.S: ../plat/common/aarch64/platform_mp_stack.S 3073.. _plat/common/aarch64/platform\_up\_stack.S: ../plat/common/aarch64/platform_up_stack.S 3074.. _For example, define the build flag in platform.mk: PLAT_PL061_MAX_GPIOS%20:=%20160 3075.. _Power Domain Topology Design: psci-pd-tree.rst 3076.. _include/common/bl\_common.h: ../include/common/bl_common.h 3077.. _include/lib/aarch32/arch.h: ../include/lib/aarch32/arch.h 3078.. _Firmware Design: firmware-design.rst 3079.. _PSCI: http://infocenter.arm.com/help/topic/com.arm.doc.den0022c/DEN0022C_Power_State_Coordination_Interface.pdf 3080.. _plat/arm/board/fvp/fvp\_pm.c: ../plat/arm/board/fvp/fvp_pm.c 3081.. _IMF Design Guide: interrupt-framework-design.rst 3082.. _Arm Generic Interrupt Controller version 2.0 (GICv2): http://infocenter.arm.com/help/topic/com.arm.doc.ihi0048b/index.html 3083.. _3.0 (GICv3): http://infocenter.arm.com/help/topic/com.arm.doc.ihi0069b/index.html 3084.. _FreeBSD: http://www.freebsd.org 3085