| Porting Guide |
| ============= |
| |
| Introduction |
| ------------ |
| |
| Porting Trusted Firmware-A (TF-A) to a new platform involves making some |
| mandatory and optional modifications for both the cold and warm boot paths. |
| Modifications consist of: |
| |
| - Implementing a platform-specific function or variable, |
| - Setting up the execution context in a certain way, or |
| - Defining certain constants (for example #defines). |
| |
| The platform-specific functions and variables are declared in |
| ``include/plat/common/platform.h``. The firmware provides a default |
| implementation of variables and functions to fulfill the optional requirements |
| in order to ease the porting effort. Each platform port can use them as is or |
| provide their own implementation if the default implementation is inadequate. |
| |
| .. note:: |
| |
| TF-A historically provided default implementations of platform interfaces |
| as *weak* functions. This practice is now discouraged and new platform |
| interfaces as they get introduced in the code base should be *strongly* |
| defined. We intend to convert existing weak functions over time. Until |
| then, you will find references to *weak* functions in this document. |
| |
| Please review the :ref:`Threat Model` documents as part of the porting |
| effort. Some platform interfaces play a key role in mitigating against some of |
| the threats. Failing to fulfill these expectations could undermine the security |
| guarantees offered by TF-A. These platform responsibilities are highlighted in |
| the threat assessment section, under the "`Mitigations implemented?`" box for |
| each threat. |
| |
| Some modifications are common to all Boot Loader (BL) stages. Section 2 |
| discusses these in detail. The subsequent sections discuss the remaining |
| modifications for each BL stage in detail. |
| |
| Please refer to the :ref:`Platform Ports Policy` for the policy regarding |
| compatibility and deprecation of these porting interfaces. |
| |
| Only Arm development platforms (such as FVP and Juno) may use the |
| functions/definitions in ``include/plat/arm/common/`` and the corresponding |
| source files in ``plat/arm/common/``. This is done so that there are no |
| dependencies between platforms maintained by different people/companies. If you |
| want to use any of the functionality present in ``plat/arm`` files, please |
| propose a patch that moves the code to ``plat/common`` so that it can be |
| discussed. |
| |
| Common modifications |
| -------------------- |
| |
| This section covers the modifications that should be made by the platform for |
| each BL stage to correctly port the firmware stack. They are categorized as |
| either mandatory or optional. |
| |
| Common mandatory modifications |
| ------------------------------ |
| |
| A platform port must enable the Memory Management Unit (MMU) as well as the |
| instruction and data caches for each BL stage. Setting up the translation |
| tables is the responsibility of the platform port because memory maps differ |
| across platforms. A memory translation library (see ``lib/xlat_tables_v2/``) is |
| provided to help in this setup. |
| |
| Note that although this library supports non-identity mappings, this is intended |
| only for re-mapping peripheral physical addresses and allows platforms with high |
| I/O addresses to reduce their virtual address space. All other addresses |
| corresponding to code and data must currently use an identity mapping. |
| |
| Also, the only translation granule size supported in TF-A is 4KB, as various |
| parts of the code assume that is the case. It is not possible to switch to |
| 16 KB or 64 KB granule sizes at the moment. |
| |
| In Arm standard platforms, each BL stage configures the MMU in the |
| platform-specific architecture setup function, ``blX_plat_arch_setup()``, and uses |
| an identity mapping for all addresses. |
| |
| If the build option ``USE_COHERENT_MEM`` is enabled, each platform can allocate a |
| block of identity mapped secure memory with Device-nGnRE attributes aligned to |
| page boundary (4K) for each BL stage. All sections which allocate coherent |
| memory are grouped under ``.coherent_ram``. For ex: Bakery locks are placed in a |
| section identified by name ``.bakery_lock`` inside ``.coherent_ram`` so that its |
| possible for the firmware to place variables in it using the following C code |
| directive: |
| |
| :: |
| |
| __section(".bakery_lock") |
| |
| Or alternatively the following assembler code directive: |
| |
| :: |
| |
| .section .bakery_lock |
| |
| The ``.coherent_ram`` section is a sum of all sections like ``.bakery_lock`` which are |
| used to allocate any data structures that are accessed both when a CPU is |
| executing with its MMU and caches enabled, and when it's running with its MMU |
| and caches disabled. Examples are given below. |
| |
| The following variables, functions and constants must be defined by the platform |
| for the firmware to work correctly. |
| |
| .. _platform_def_mandatory: |
| |
| File : platform_def.h [mandatory] |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| Each platform must ensure that a header file of this name is in the system |
| include path with the following constants defined. This will require updating |
| the list of ``PLAT_INCLUDES`` in the ``platform.mk`` file. |
| |
| Platform ports may optionally use the file ``include/plat/common/common_def.h``, |
| which provides typical values for some of the constants below. These values are |
| likely to be suitable for all platform ports. |
| |
| - **#define : PLATFORM_LINKER_FORMAT** |
| |
| Defines the linker format used by the platform, for example |
| ``elf64-littleaarch64``. |
| |
| - **#define : PLATFORM_LINKER_ARCH** |
| |
| Defines the processor architecture for the linker by the platform, for |
| example ``aarch64``. |
| |
| - **#define : PLATFORM_STACK_SIZE** |
| |
| Defines the normal stack memory available to each CPU. This constant is used |
| by ``plat/common/aarch64/platform_mp_stack.S`` and |
| ``plat/common/aarch64/platform_up_stack.S``. |
| |
| - **#define : CACHE_WRITEBACK_GRANULE** |
| |
| Defines the size in bytes of the largest cache line across all the cache |
| levels in the platform. |
| |
| - **#define : FIRMWARE_WELCOME_STR** |
| |
| Defines the character string printed by BL1 upon entry into the ``bl1_main()`` |
| function. |
| |
| - **#define : PLATFORM_CORE_COUNT** |
| |
| Defines the total number of CPUs implemented by the platform across all |
| clusters in the system. |
| |
| - **#define : PLAT_NUM_PWR_DOMAINS** |
| |
| Defines the total number of nodes in the power domain topology |
| tree at all the power domain levels used by the platform. |
| This macro is used by the PSCI implementation to allocate |
| data structures to represent power domain topology. |
| |
| - **#define : PLAT_MAX_PWR_LVL** |
| |
| Defines the maximum power domain level that the power management operations |
| should apply to. More often, but not always, the power domain level |
| corresponds to affinity level. This macro allows the PSCI implementation |
| to know the highest power domain level that it should consider for power |
| management operations in the system that the platform implements. For |
| example, the Base AEM FVP implements two clusters with a configurable |
| number of CPUs and it reports the maximum power domain level as 1. |
| |
| - **#define : PLAT_MAX_OFF_STATE** |
| |
| Defines the local power state corresponding to the deepest power down |
| possible at every power domain level in the platform. The local power |
| states for each level may be sparsely allocated between 0 and this value |
| with 0 being reserved for the RUN state. The PSCI implementation uses this |
| value to initialize the local power states of the power domain nodes and |
| to specify the requested power state for a PSCI_CPU_OFF call. |
| |
| - **#define : PLAT_MAX_RET_STATE** |
| |
| Defines the local power state corresponding to the deepest retention state |
| possible at every power domain level in the platform. This macro should be |
| a value less than PLAT_MAX_OFF_STATE and greater than 0. It is used by the |
| PSCI implementation to distinguish between retention and power down local |
| power states within PSCI_CPU_SUSPEND call. |
| |
| - **#define : PLAT_MAX_PWR_LVL_STATES** |
| |
| Defines the maximum number of local power states per power domain level |
| that the platform supports. The default value of this macro is 2 since |
| most platforms just support a maximum of two local power states at each |
| power domain level (power-down and retention). If the platform needs to |
| account for more local power states, then it must redefine this macro. |
| |
| Currently, this macro is used by the Generic PSCI implementation to size |
| the array used for PSCI_STAT_COUNT/RESIDENCY accounting. |
| |
| - **#define : BL1_RO_BASE** |
| |
| Defines the base address in secure ROM where BL1 originally lives. Must be |
| aligned on a page-size boundary. |
| |
| - **#define : BL1_RO_LIMIT** |
| |
| Defines the maximum address in secure ROM that BL1's actual content (i.e. |
| excluding any data section allocated at runtime) can occupy. |
| |
| - **#define : BL1_RW_BASE** |
| |
| Defines the base address in secure RAM where BL1's read-write data will live |
| at runtime. Must be aligned on a page-size boundary. |
| |
| - **#define : BL1_RW_LIMIT** |
| |
| Defines the maximum address in secure RAM that BL1's read-write data can |
| occupy at runtime. |
| |
| - **#define : BL2_BASE** |
| |
| Defines the base address in secure RAM where BL1 loads the BL2 binary image. |
| Must be aligned on a page-size boundary. This constant is not applicable |
| when BL2_IN_XIP_MEM is set to '1'. |
| |
| - **#define : BL2_LIMIT** |
| |
| Defines the maximum address in secure RAM that the BL2 image can occupy. |
| This constant is not applicable when BL2_IN_XIP_MEM is set to '1'. |
| |
| - **#define : BL2_RO_BASE** |
| |
| Defines the base address in secure XIP memory where BL2 RO section originally |
| lives. Must be aligned on a page-size boundary. This constant is only needed |
| when BL2_IN_XIP_MEM is set to '1'. |
| |
| - **#define : BL2_RO_LIMIT** |
| |
| Defines the maximum address in secure XIP memory that BL2's actual content |
| (i.e. excluding any data section allocated at runtime) can occupy. This |
| constant is only needed when BL2_IN_XIP_MEM is set to '1'. |
| |
| - **#define : BL2_RW_BASE** |
| |
| Defines the base address in secure RAM where BL2's read-write data will live |
| at runtime. Must be aligned on a page-size boundary. This constant is only |
| needed when BL2_IN_XIP_MEM is set to '1'. |
| |
| - **#define : BL2_RW_LIMIT** |
| |
| Defines the maximum address in secure RAM that BL2's read-write data can |
| occupy at runtime. This constant is only needed when BL2_IN_XIP_MEM is set |
| to '1'. |
| |
| - **#define : BL31_BASE** |
| |
| Defines the base address in secure RAM where BL2 loads the BL31 binary |
| image. Must be aligned on a page-size boundary. |
| |
| - **#define : BL31_LIMIT** |
| |
| Defines the maximum address in secure RAM that the BL31 image can occupy. |
| |
| - **#define : PLAT_RSE_COMMS_PAYLOAD_MAX_SIZE** |
| |
| Defines the maximum message size between AP and RSE. Need to define if |
| platform supports RSE. |
| |
| For every image, the platform must define individual identifiers that will be |
| used by BL1 or BL2 to load the corresponding image into memory from non-volatile |
| storage. For the sake of performance, integer numbers will be used as |
| identifiers. The platform will use those identifiers to return the relevant |
| information about the image to be loaded (file handler, load address, |
| authentication information, etc.). The following image identifiers are |
| mandatory: |
| |
| - **#define : BL2_IMAGE_ID** |
| |
| BL2 image identifier, used by BL1 to load BL2. |
| |
| - **#define : BL31_IMAGE_ID** |
| |
| BL31 image identifier, used by BL2 to load BL31. |
| |
| - **#define : BL33_IMAGE_ID** |
| |
| BL33 image identifier, used by BL2 to load BL33. |
| |
| If Trusted Board Boot is enabled, the following certificate identifiers must |
| also be defined: |
| |
| - **#define : TRUSTED_BOOT_FW_CERT_ID** |
| |
| BL2 content certificate identifier, used by BL1 to load the BL2 content |
| certificate. |
| |
| - **#define : TRUSTED_KEY_CERT_ID** |
| |
| Trusted key certificate identifier, used by BL2 to load the trusted key |
| certificate. |
| |
| - **#define : SOC_FW_KEY_CERT_ID** |
| |
| BL31 key certificate identifier, used by BL2 to load the BL31 key |
| certificate. |
| |
| - **#define : SOC_FW_CONTENT_CERT_ID** |
| |
| BL31 content certificate identifier, used by BL2 to load the BL31 content |
| certificate. |
| |
| - **#define : NON_TRUSTED_FW_KEY_CERT_ID** |
| |
| BL33 key certificate identifier, used by BL2 to load the BL33 key |
| certificate. |
| |
| - **#define : NON_TRUSTED_FW_CONTENT_CERT_ID** |
| |
| BL33 content certificate identifier, used by BL2 to load the BL33 content |
| certificate. |
| |
| - **#define : FWU_CERT_ID** |
| |
| Firmware Update (FWU) certificate identifier, used by NS_BL1U to load the |
| FWU content certificate. |
| |
| If the AP Firmware Updater Configuration image, BL2U is used, the following |
| must also be defined: |
| |
| - **#define : BL2U_BASE** |
| |
| Defines the base address in secure memory where BL1 copies the BL2U binary |
| image. Must be aligned on a page-size boundary. |
| |
| - **#define : BL2U_LIMIT** |
| |
| Defines the maximum address in secure memory that the BL2U image can occupy. |
| |
| - **#define : BL2U_IMAGE_ID** |
| |
| BL2U image identifier, used by BL1 to fetch an image descriptor |
| corresponding to BL2U. |
| |
| If the SCP Firmware Update Configuration Image, SCP_BL2U is used, the following |
| must also be defined: |
| |
| - **#define : SCP_BL2U_IMAGE_ID** |
| |
| SCP_BL2U image identifier, used by BL1 to fetch an image descriptor |
| corresponding to SCP_BL2U. |
| |
| .. note:: |
| TF-A does not provide source code for this image. |
| |
| If the Non-Secure Firmware Updater ROM, NS_BL1U is used, the following must |
| also be defined: |
| |
| - **#define : NS_BL1U_BASE** |
| |
| Defines the base address in non-secure ROM where NS_BL1U executes. |
| Must be aligned on a page-size boundary. |
| |
| .. note:: |
| TF-A does not provide source code for this image. |
| |
| - **#define : NS_BL1U_IMAGE_ID** |
| |
| NS_BL1U image identifier, used by BL1 to fetch an image descriptor |
| corresponding to NS_BL1U. |
| |
| If the Non-Secure Firmware Updater, NS_BL2U is used, the following must also |
| be defined: |
| |
| - **#define : NS_BL2U_BASE** |
| |
| Defines the base address in non-secure memory where NS_BL2U executes. |
| Must be aligned on a page-size boundary. |
| |
| .. note:: |
| TF-A does not provide source code for this image. |
| |
| - **#define : NS_BL2U_IMAGE_ID** |
| |
| NS_BL2U image identifier, used by BL1 to fetch an image descriptor |
| corresponding to NS_BL2U. |
| |
| For the the Firmware update capability of TRUSTED BOARD BOOT, the following |
| macros may also be defined: |
| |
| - **#define : PLAT_FWU_MAX_SIMULTANEOUS_IMAGES** |
| |
| Total number of images that can be loaded simultaneously. If the platform |
| doesn't specify any value, it defaults to 10. |
| |
| If a SCP_BL2 image is supported by the platform, the following constants must |
| also be defined: |
| |
| - **#define : SCP_BL2_IMAGE_ID** |
| |
| SCP_BL2 image identifier, used by BL2 to load SCP_BL2 into secure memory |
| from platform storage before being transferred to the SCP. |
| |
| - **#define : SCP_FW_KEY_CERT_ID** |
| |
| SCP_BL2 key certificate identifier, used by BL2 to load the SCP_BL2 key |
| certificate (mandatory when Trusted Board Boot is enabled). |
| |
| - **#define : SCP_FW_CONTENT_CERT_ID** |
| |
| SCP_BL2 content certificate identifier, used by BL2 to load the SCP_BL2 |
| content certificate (mandatory when Trusted Board Boot is enabled). |
| |
| If a BL32 image is supported by the platform, the following constants must |
| also be defined: |
| |
| - **#define : BL32_IMAGE_ID** |
| |
| BL32 image identifier, used by BL2 to load BL32. |
| |
| - **#define : TRUSTED_OS_FW_KEY_CERT_ID** |
| |
| BL32 key certificate identifier, used by BL2 to load the BL32 key |
| certificate (mandatory when Trusted Board Boot is enabled). |
| |
| - **#define : TRUSTED_OS_FW_CONTENT_CERT_ID** |
| |
| BL32 content certificate identifier, used by BL2 to load the BL32 content |
| certificate (mandatory when Trusted Board Boot is enabled). |
| |
| - **#define : BL32_BASE** |
| |
| Defines the base address in secure memory where BL2 loads the BL32 binary |
| image. Must be aligned on a page-size boundary. |
| |
| - **#define : BL32_LIMIT** |
| |
| Defines the maximum address that the BL32 image can occupy. |
| |
| If the Test Secure-EL1 Payload (TSP) instantiation of BL32 is supported by the |
| platform, the following constants must also be defined: |
| |
| - **#define : TSP_SEC_MEM_BASE** |
| |
| Defines the base address of the secure memory used by the TSP image on the |
| platform. This must be at the same address or below ``BL32_BASE``. |
| |
| - **#define : TSP_SEC_MEM_SIZE** |
| |
| Defines the size of the secure memory used by the BL32 image on the |
| platform. ``TSP_SEC_MEM_BASE`` and ``TSP_SEC_MEM_SIZE`` must fully |
| accommodate the memory required by the BL32 image, defined by ``BL32_BASE`` |
| and ``BL32_LIMIT``. |
| |
| - **#define : TSP_IRQ_SEC_PHY_TIMER** |
| |
| Defines the ID of the secure physical generic timer interrupt used by the |
| TSP's interrupt handling code. |
| |
| If the platform port uses the translation table library code, the following |
| constants must also be defined: |
| |
| - **#define : PLAT_XLAT_TABLES_DYNAMIC** |
| |
| Optional flag that can be set per-image to enable the dynamic allocation of |
| regions even when the MMU is enabled. If not defined, only static |
| functionality will be available, if defined and set to 1 it will also |
| include the dynamic functionality. |
| |
| - **#define : MAX_XLAT_TABLES** |
| |
| Defines the maximum number of translation tables that are allocated by the |
| translation table library code. To minimize the amount of runtime memory |
| used, choose the smallest value needed to map the required virtual addresses |
| for each BL stage. If ``PLAT_XLAT_TABLES_DYNAMIC`` flag is enabled for a BL |
| image, ``MAX_XLAT_TABLES`` must be defined to accommodate the dynamic regions |
| as well. |
| |
| - **#define : MAX_MMAP_REGIONS** |
| |
| Defines the maximum number of regions that are allocated by the translation |
| table library code. A region consists of physical base address, virtual base |
| address, size and attributes (Device/Memory, RO/RW, Secure/Non-Secure), as |
| defined in the ``mmap_region_t`` structure. The platform defines the regions |
| that should be mapped. Then, the translation table library will create the |
| corresponding tables and descriptors at runtime. To minimize the amount of |
| runtime memory used, choose the smallest value needed to register the |
| required regions for each BL stage. If ``PLAT_XLAT_TABLES_DYNAMIC`` flag is |
| enabled for a BL image, ``MAX_MMAP_REGIONS`` must be defined to accommodate |
| the dynamic regions as well. |
| |
| - **#define : PLAT_VIRT_ADDR_SPACE_SIZE** |
| |
| Defines the total size of the virtual address space in bytes. For example, |
| for a 32 bit virtual address space, this value should be ``(1ULL << 32)``. |
| |
| - **#define : PLAT_PHY_ADDR_SPACE_SIZE** |
| |
| Defines the total size of the physical address space in bytes. For example, |
| for a 32 bit physical address space, this value should be ``(1ULL << 32)``. |
| |
| If the platform port uses the IO storage framework, the following constants |
| must also be defined: |
| |
| - **#define : MAX_IO_DEVICES** |
| |
| Defines the maximum number of registered IO devices. Attempting to register |
| more devices than this value using ``io_register_device()`` will fail with |
| -ENOMEM. |
| |
| - **#define : MAX_IO_HANDLES** |
| |
| Defines the maximum number of open IO handles. Attempting to open more IO |
| entities than this value using ``io_open()`` will fail with -ENOMEM. |
| |
| - **#define : MAX_IO_BLOCK_DEVICES** |
| |
| Defines the maximum number of registered IO block devices. Attempting to |
| register more devices this value using ``io_dev_open()`` will fail |
| with -ENOMEM. MAX_IO_BLOCK_DEVICES should be less than MAX_IO_DEVICES. |
| With this macro, multiple block devices could be supported at the same |
| time. |
| |
| If the platform needs to allocate data within the per-cpu data framework in |
| BL31, it should define the following macro. Currently this is only required if |
| the platform decides not to use the coherent memory section by undefining the |
| ``USE_COHERENT_MEM`` build flag. In this case, the framework allocates the |
| required memory within the the per-cpu data to minimize wastage. |
| |
| - **#define : PLAT_PCPU_DATA_SIZE** |
| |
| Defines the memory (in bytes) to be reserved within the per-cpu data |
| structure for use by the platform layer. |
| |
| The following constants are optional. They should be defined when the platform |
| memory layout implies some image overlaying like in Arm standard platforms. |
| |
| - **#define : BL31_PROGBITS_LIMIT** |
| |
| Defines the maximum address in secure RAM that the BL31's progbits sections |
| can occupy. |
| |
| - **#define : TSP_PROGBITS_LIMIT** |
| |
| Defines the maximum address that the TSP's progbits sections can occupy. |
| |
| If the platform supports OS-initiated mode, i.e. the build option |
| ``PSCI_OS_INIT_MODE`` is enabled, and if the platform's maximum power domain |
| level for PSCI_CPU_SUSPEND differs from ``PLAT_MAX_PWR_LVL``, the following |
| constant must be defined. |
| |
| - **#define : PLAT_MAX_CPU_SUSPEND_PWR_LVL** |
| |
| Defines the maximum power domain level that PSCI_CPU_SUSPEND should apply to. |
| |
| If the platform port uses the PL061 GPIO driver, the following constant may |
| optionally be defined: |
| |
| - **PLAT_PL061_MAX_GPIOS** |
| Maximum number of GPIOs required by the platform. This allows control how |
| much memory is allocated for PL061 GPIO controllers. The default value is |
| |
| #. $(eval $(call add_define,PLAT_PL061_MAX_GPIOS)) |
| |
| If the platform port uses the partition driver, the following constant may |
| optionally be defined: |
| |
| - **PLAT_PARTITION_MAX_ENTRIES** |
| Maximum number of partition entries required by the platform. This allows |
| control how much memory is allocated for partition entries. The default |
| value is 128. |
| For example, define the build flag in ``platform.mk``: |
| PLAT_PARTITION_MAX_ENTRIES := 12 |
| $(eval $(call add_define,PLAT_PARTITION_MAX_ENTRIES)) |
| |
| - **PLAT_PARTITION_BLOCK_SIZE** |
| The size of partition block. It could be either 512 bytes or 4096 bytes. |
| The default value is 512. |
| For example, define the build flag in ``platform.mk``: |
| PLAT_PARTITION_BLOCK_SIZE := 4096 |
| $(eval $(call add_define,PLAT_PARTITION_BLOCK_SIZE)) |
| |
| If the platform port uses the Arm® Ethos™-N NPU driver, the following |
| configuration must be performed: |
| |
| - The NPU SiP service handler must be hooked up. This consists of both the |
| initial setup (``ethosn_smc_setup``) and the handler itself |
| (``ethosn_smc_handler``) |
| |
| If the platform port uses the Arm® Ethos™-N NPU driver with TZMP1 support |
| enabled, the following constants and configuration must also be defined: |
| |
| - **ETHOSN_NPU_PROT_FW_NSAID** |
| |
| Defines the Non-secure Access IDentity (NSAID) that the NPU shall use to |
| access the protected memory that contains the NPU's firmware. |
| |
| - **ETHOSN_NPU_PROT_DATA_RW_NSAID** |
| |
| Defines the Non-secure Access IDentity (NSAID) that the NPU shall use for |
| read/write access to the protected memory that contains inference data. |
| |
| - **ETHOSN_NPU_PROT_DATA_RO_NSAID** |
| |
| Defines the Non-secure Access IDentity (NSAID) that the NPU shall use for |
| read-only access to the protected memory that contains inference data. |
| |
| - **ETHOSN_NPU_NS_RW_DATA_NSAID** |
| |
| Defines the Non-secure Access IDentity (NSAID) that the NPU shall use for |
| read/write access to the non-protected memory. |
| |
| - **ETHOSN_NPU_NS_RO_DATA_NSAID** |
| |
| Defines the Non-secure Access IDentity (NSAID) that the NPU shall use for |
| read-only access to the non-protected memory. |
| |
| - **ETHOSN_NPU_FW_IMAGE_BASE** and **ETHOSN_NPU_FW_IMAGE_LIMIT** |
| |
| Defines the physical address range that the NPU's firmware will be loaded |
| into and executed from. |
| |
| - Configure the platforms TrustZone Controller (TZC) with appropriate regions |
| of protected memory. At minimum this must include a region for the NPU's |
| firmware code and a region for protected inference data, and these must be |
| accessible using the NSAIDs defined above. |
| |
| - Include the NPU firmware and certificates in the FIP. |
| |
| - Provide FCONF entries to configure the image source for the NPU firmware |
| and certificates. |
| |
| - Add MMU mappings such that: |
| |
| - BL2 can write the NPU firmware into the region defined by |
| ``ETHOSN_NPU_FW_IMAGE_BASE`` and ``ETHOSN_NPU_FW_IMAGE_LIMIT`` |
| - BL31 (SiP service) can read the NPU firmware from the same region |
| |
| - Add the firmware image ID ``ETHOSN_NPU_FW_IMAGE_ID`` to the list of images |
| loaded by BL2. |
| |
| Please see the reference implementation code for the Juno platform as an example. |
| |
| |
| The following constant is optional. It should be defined to override the default |
| behaviour of the ``assert()`` function (for example, to save memory). |
| |
| - **PLAT_LOG_LEVEL_ASSERT** |
| If ``PLAT_LOG_LEVEL_ASSERT`` is higher or equal than ``LOG_LEVEL_VERBOSE``, |
| ``assert()`` prints the name of the file, the line number and the asserted |
| expression. Else if it is higher than ``LOG_LEVEL_INFO``, it prints the file |
| name and the line number. Else if it is lower than ``LOG_LEVEL_INFO``, it |
| doesn't print anything to the console. If ``PLAT_LOG_LEVEL_ASSERT`` isn't |
| defined, it defaults to ``LOG_LEVEL``. |
| |
| If the platform port uses the DRTM feature, the following constants must be |
| defined: |
| |
| - **#define : PLAT_DRTM_EVENT_LOG_MAX_SIZE** |
| |
| Maximum Event Log size used by the platform. Platform can decide the maximum |
| size of the Event Log buffer, depending upon the highest hash algorithm |
| chosen and the number of components selected to measure during the DRTM |
| execution flow. |
| |
| - **#define : PLAT_DRTM_MMAP_ENTRIES** |
| |
| Number of the MMAP entries used by the DRTM implementation to calculate the |
| size of address map region of the platform. |
| |
| File : plat_macros.S [mandatory] |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| Each platform must ensure a file of this name is in the system include path with |
| the following macro defined. In the Arm development platforms, this file is |
| found in ``plat/arm/board/<plat_name>/include/plat_macros.S``. |
| |
| - **Macro : plat_crash_print_regs** |
| |
| This macro allows the crash reporting routine to print relevant platform |
| registers in case of an unhandled exception in BL31. This aids in debugging |
| and this macro can be defined to be empty in case register reporting is not |
| desired. |
| |
| For instance, GIC or interconnect registers may be helpful for |
| troubleshooting. |
| |
| Handling Reset |
| -------------- |
| |
| BL1 by default implements the reset vector where execution starts from a cold |
| or warm boot. BL31 can be optionally set as a reset vector using the |
| ``RESET_TO_BL31`` make variable. |
| |
| For each CPU, the reset vector code is responsible for the following tasks: |
| |
| #. Distinguishing between a cold boot and a warm boot. |
| |
| #. In the case of a cold boot and the CPU being a secondary CPU, ensuring that |
| the CPU is placed in a platform-specific state until the primary CPU |
| performs the necessary steps to remove it from this state. |
| |
| #. In the case of a warm boot, ensuring that the CPU jumps to a platform- |
| specific address in the BL31 image in the same processor mode as it was |
| when released from reset. |
| |
| The following functions need to be implemented by the platform port to enable |
| reset vector code to perform the above tasks. |
| |
| Function : plat_get_my_entrypoint() [mandatory when PROGRAMMABLE_RESET_ADDRESS == 0] |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : void |
| Return : uintptr_t |
| |
| This function is called with the MMU and caches disabled |
| (``SCTLR_EL3.M`` = 0 and ``SCTLR_EL3.C`` = 0). The function is responsible for |
| distinguishing between a warm and cold reset for the current CPU using |
| platform-specific means. If it's a warm reset, then it returns the warm |
| reset entrypoint point provided to ``plat_setup_psci_ops()`` during |
| BL31 initialization. If it's a cold reset then this function must return zero. |
| |
| This function does not follow the Procedure Call Standard used by the |
| Application Binary Interface for the Arm 64-bit architecture. The caller should |
| not assume that callee saved registers are preserved across a call to this |
| function. |
| |
| This function fulfills requirement 1 and 3 listed above. |
| |
| Note that for platforms that support programming the reset address, it is |
| expected that a CPU will start executing code directly at the right address, |
| both on a cold and warm reset. In this case, there is no need to identify the |
| type of reset nor to query the warm reset entrypoint. Therefore, implementing |
| this function is not required on such platforms. |
| |
| Function : plat_secondary_cold_boot_setup() [mandatory when COLD_BOOT_SINGLE_CPU == 0] |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : void |
| |
| This function is called with the MMU and data caches disabled. It is responsible |
| for placing the executing secondary CPU in a platform-specific state until the |
| primary CPU performs the necessary actions to bring it out of that state and |
| allow entry into the OS. This function must not return. |
| |
| In the Arm FVP port, when using the normal boot flow, each secondary CPU powers |
| itself off. The primary CPU is responsible for powering up the secondary CPUs |
| when normal world software requires them. When booting an EL3 payload instead, |
| they stay powered on and are put in a holding pen until their mailbox gets |
| populated. |
| |
| This function fulfills requirement 2 above. |
| |
| Note that for platforms that can't release secondary CPUs out of reset, only the |
| primary CPU will execute the cold boot code. Therefore, implementing this |
| function is not required on such platforms. |
| |
| Function : plat_is_my_cpu_primary() [mandatory when COLD_BOOT_SINGLE_CPU == 0] |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : void |
| Return : unsigned int |
| |
| This function identifies whether the current CPU is the primary CPU or a |
| secondary CPU. A return value of zero indicates that the CPU is not the |
| primary CPU, while a non-zero return value indicates that the CPU is the |
| primary CPU. |
| |
| Note that for platforms that can't release secondary CPUs out of reset, only the |
| primary CPU will execute the cold boot code. Therefore, there is no need to |
| distinguish between primary and secondary CPUs and implementing this function is |
| not required. |
| |
| Function : platform_mem_init() [mandatory] |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : void |
| Return : void |
| |
| This function is called before any access to data is made by the firmware, in |
| order to carry out any essential memory initialization. |
| |
| Function: plat_get_rotpk_info() |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : void *, void **, unsigned int *, unsigned int * |
| Return : int |
| |
| This function is mandatory when Trusted Board Boot is enabled. It returns a |
| pointer to the ROTPK stored in the platform (or a hash of it) and its length. |
| The ROTPK must be encoded in DER format according to the following ASN.1 |
| structure: |
| |
| :: |
| |
| AlgorithmIdentifier ::= SEQUENCE { |
| algorithm OBJECT IDENTIFIER, |
| parameters ANY DEFINED BY algorithm OPTIONAL |
| } |
| |
| SubjectPublicKeyInfo ::= SEQUENCE { |
| algorithm AlgorithmIdentifier, |
| subjectPublicKey BIT STRING |
| } |
| |
| In case the function returns a hash of the key: |
| |
| :: |
| |
| DigestInfo ::= SEQUENCE { |
| digestAlgorithm AlgorithmIdentifier, |
| digest OCTET STRING |
| } |
| |
| The function returns 0 on success. Any other value is treated as error by the |
| Trusted Board Boot. The function also reports extra information related |
| to the ROTPK in the flags parameter: |
| |
| :: |
| |
| ROTPK_IS_HASH : Indicates that the ROTPK returned by the platform is a |
| hash. |
| ROTPK_NOT_DEPLOYED : This allows the platform to skip certificate ROTPK |
| verification while the platform ROTPK is not deployed. |
| When this flag is set, the function does not need to |
| return a platform ROTPK, and the authentication |
| framework uses the ROTPK in the certificate without |
| verifying it against the platform value. This flag |
| must not be used in a deployed production environment. |
| |
| Function: plat_get_nv_ctr() |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : void *, unsigned int * |
| Return : int |
| |
| This function is mandatory when Trusted Board Boot is enabled. It returns the |
| non-volatile counter value stored in the platform in the second argument. The |
| cookie in the first argument may be used to select the counter in case the |
| platform provides more than one (for example, on platforms that use the default |
| TBBR CoT, the cookie will correspond to the OID values defined in |
| TRUSTED_FW_NVCOUNTER_OID or NON_TRUSTED_FW_NVCOUNTER_OID). |
| |
| The function returns 0 on success. Any other value means the counter value could |
| not be retrieved from the platform. |
| |
| Function: plat_set_nv_ctr() |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : void *, unsigned int |
| Return : int |
| |
| This function is mandatory when Trusted Board Boot is enabled. It sets a new |
| counter value in the platform. The cookie in the first argument may be used to |
| select the counter (as explained in plat_get_nv_ctr()). The second argument is |
| the updated counter value to be written to the NV counter. |
| |
| The function returns 0 on success. Any other value means the counter value could |
| not be updated. |
| |
| Function: plat_set_nv_ctr2() |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : void *, const auth_img_desc_t *, unsigned int |
| Return : int |
| |
| This function is optional when Trusted Board Boot is enabled. If this |
| interface is defined, then ``plat_set_nv_ctr()`` need not be defined. The |
| first argument passed is a cookie and is typically used to |
| differentiate between a Non Trusted NV Counter and a Trusted NV |
| Counter. The second argument is a pointer to an authentication image |
| descriptor and may be used to decide if the counter is allowed to be |
| updated or not. The third argument is the updated counter value to |
| be written to the NV counter. |
| |
| The function returns 0 on success. Any other value means the counter value |
| either could not be updated or the authentication image descriptor indicates |
| that it is not allowed to be updated. |
| |
| Dynamic Root of Trust for Measurement support (in BL31) |
| ------------------------------------------------------- |
| |
| The functions mentioned in this section are mandatory, when platform enables |
| DRTM_SUPPORT build flag. |
| |
| Function : plat_get_addr_mmap() |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : void |
| Return : const mmap_region_t * |
| |
| This function is used to return the address of the platform *address-map* table, |
| which describes the regions of normal memory, memory mapped I/O |
| and non-volatile memory. |
| |
| Function : plat_has_non_host_platforms() |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : void |
| Return : bool |
| |
| This function returns *true* if the platform has any trusted devices capable of |
| DMA, otherwise returns *false*. |
| |
| Function : plat_has_unmanaged_dma_peripherals() |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : void |
| Return : bool |
| |
| This function returns *true* if platform uses peripherals whose DMA is not |
| managed by an SMMU, otherwise returns *false*. |
| |
| Note - |
| If the platform has peripherals that are not managed by the SMMU, then the |
| platform should investigate such peripherals to determine whether they can |
| be trusted, and such peripherals should be moved under "Non-host platforms" |
| if they can be trusted. |
| |
| Function : plat_get_total_num_smmus() |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : void |
| Return : unsigned int |
| |
| This function returns the total number of SMMUs in the platform. |
| |
| Function : plat_enumerate_smmus() |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| :: |
| |
| |
| Argument : void |
| Return : const uintptr_t *, size_t |
| |
| This function returns an array of SMMU addresses and the actual number of SMMUs |
| reported by the platform. |
| |
| Function : plat_drtm_get_dma_prot_features() |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : void |
| Return : const plat_drtm_dma_prot_features_t* |
| |
| This function returns the address of plat_drtm_dma_prot_features_t structure |
| containing the maximum number of protected regions and bitmap with the types |
| of DMA protection supported by the platform. |
| For more details see section 3.3 Table 6 of `DRTM`_ specification. |
| |
| Function : plat_drtm_dma_prot_get_max_table_bytes() |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : void |
| Return : uint64_t |
| |
| This function returns the maximum size of DMA protected regions table in |
| bytes. |
| |
| Function : plat_drtm_get_tpm_features() |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : void |
| Return : const plat_drtm_tpm_features_t* |
| |
| This function returns the address of *plat_drtm_tpm_features_t* structure |
| containing PCR usage schema, TPM-based hash, and firmware hash algorithm |
| supported by the platform. |
| |
| Function : plat_drtm_get_min_size_normal_world_dce() |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : void |
| Return : uint64_t |
| |
| This function returns the size normal-world DCE of the platform. |
| |
| Function : plat_drtm_get_imp_def_dlme_region_size() |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : void |
| Return : uint64_t |
| |
| This function returns the size of implementation defined DLME region |
| of the platform. |
| |
| Function : plat_drtm_get_tcb_hash_table_size() |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : void |
| Return : uint64_t |
| |
| This function returns the size of TCB hash table of the platform. |
| |
| Function : plat_drtm_get_tcb_hash_features() |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : void |
| Return : uint64_t |
| |
| This function returns the Maximum number of TCB hashes recorded by the |
| platform. |
| For more details see section 3.3 Table 6 of `DRTM`_ specification. |
| |
| Function : plat_drtm_validate_ns_region() |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : uintptr_t, uintptr_t |
| Return : int |
| |
| This function validates that given region is within the Non-Secure region |
| of DRAM. This function takes a region start address and size an input |
| arguments, and returns 0 on success and -1 on failure. |
| |
| Function : plat_set_drtm_error() |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : uint64_t |
| Return : int |
| |
| This function writes a 64 bit error code received as input into |
| non-volatile storage and returns 0 on success and -1 on failure. |
| |
| Function : plat_get_drtm_error() |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : uint64_t* |
| Return : int |
| |
| This function reads a 64 bit error code from the non-volatile storage |
| into the received address, and returns 0 on success and -1 on failure. |
| |
| Common mandatory function modifications |
| --------------------------------------- |
| |
| The following functions are mandatory functions which need to be implemented |
| by the platform port. |
| |
| Function : plat_my_core_pos() |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : void |
| Return : unsigned int |
| |
| This function returns the index of the calling CPU which is used as a |
| CPU-specific linear index into blocks of memory (for example while allocating |
| per-CPU stacks). This function will be invoked very early in the |
| initialization sequence which mandates that this function should be |
| implemented in assembly and should not rely on the availability of a C |
| runtime environment. This function can clobber x0 - x8 and must preserve |
| x9 - x29. |
| |
| This function plays a crucial role in the power domain topology framework in |
| PSCI and details of this can be found in |
| :ref:`PSCI Power Domain Tree Structure`. |
| |
| Function : plat_core_pos_by_mpidr() |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : u_register_t |
| Return : int |
| |
| This function validates the ``MPIDR`` of a CPU and converts it to an index, |
| which can be used as a CPU-specific linear index into blocks of memory. In |
| case the ``MPIDR`` is invalid, this function returns -1. This function will only |
| be invoked by BL31 after the power domain topology is initialized and can |
| utilize the C runtime environment. For further details about how TF-A |
| represents the power domain topology and how this relates to the linear CPU |
| index, please refer :ref:`PSCI Power Domain Tree Structure`. |
| |
| Function : plat_get_mbedtls_heap() [when TRUSTED_BOARD_BOOT == 1] |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Arguments : void **heap_addr, size_t *heap_size |
| Return : int |
| |
| This function is invoked during Mbed TLS library initialisation to get a heap, |
| by means of a starting address and a size. This heap will then be used |
| internally by the Mbed TLS library. Hence, each BL stage that utilises Mbed TLS |
| must be able to provide a heap to it. |
| |
| A helper function can be found in `drivers/auth/mbedtls/mbedtls_common.c` in |
| which a heap is statically reserved during compile time inside every image |
| (i.e. every BL stage) that utilises Mbed TLS. In this default implementation, |
| the function simply returns the address and size of this "pre-allocated" heap. |
| For a platform to use this default implementation, only a call to the helper |
| from inside plat_get_mbedtls_heap() body is enough and nothing else is needed. |
| |
| However, by writting their own implementation, platforms have the potential to |
| optimise memory usage. For example, on some Arm platforms, the Mbed TLS heap is |
| shared between BL1 and BL2 stages and, thus, the necessary space is not reserved |
| twice. |
| |
| On success the function should return 0 and a negative error code otherwise. |
| |
| Function : plat_get_enc_key_info() [when FW_ENC_STATUS == 0 or 1] |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Arguments : enum fw_enc_status_t fw_enc_status, uint8_t *key, |
| size_t *key_len, unsigned int *flags, const uint8_t *img_id, |
| size_t img_id_len |
| Return : int |
| |
| This function provides a symmetric key (either SSK or BSSK depending on |
| fw_enc_status) which is invoked during runtime decryption of encrypted |
| firmware images. `plat/common/plat_bl_common.c` provides a dummy weak |
| implementation for testing purposes which must be overridden by the platform |
| trying to implement a real world firmware encryption use-case. |
| |
| It also allows the platform to pass symmetric key identifier rather than |
| actual symmetric key which is useful in cases where the crypto backend provides |
| secure storage for the symmetric key. So in this case ``ENC_KEY_IS_IDENTIFIER`` |
| flag must be set in ``flags``. |
| |
| In addition to above a platform may also choose to provide an image specific |
| symmetric key/identifier using img_id. |
| |
| On success the function should return 0 and a negative error code otherwise. |
| |
| Note that this API depends on ``DECRYPTION_SUPPORT`` build flag. |
| |
| Function : plat_fwu_set_images_source() [when PSA_FWU_SUPPORT == 1] |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : const struct fwu_metadata *metadata |
| Return : void |
| |
| This function is mandatory when PSA_FWU_SUPPORT is enabled. |
| It provides a means to retrieve image specification (offset in |
| non-volatile storage and length) of active/updated images using the passed |
| FWU metadata, and update I/O policies of active/updated images using retrieved |
| image specification information. |
| Further I/O layer operations such as I/O open, I/O read, etc. on these |
| images rely on this function call. |
| |
| In Arm platforms, this function is used to set an I/O policy of the FIP image, |
| container of all active/updated secure and non-secure images. |
| |
| Function : plat_fwu_set_metadata_image_source() [when PSA_FWU_SUPPORT == 1] |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : unsigned int image_id, uintptr_t *dev_handle, |
| uintptr_t *image_spec |
| Return : int |
| |
| This function is mandatory when PSA_FWU_SUPPORT is enabled. It is |
| responsible for setting up the platform I/O policy of the requested metadata |
| image (either FWU_METADATA_IMAGE_ID or BKUP_FWU_METADATA_IMAGE_ID) that will |
| be used to load this image from the platform's non-volatile storage. |
| |
| FWU metadata can not be always stored as a raw image in non-volatile storage |
| to define its image specification (offset in non-volatile storage and length) |
| statically in I/O policy. |
| For example, the FWU metadata image is stored as a partition inside the GUID |
| partition table image. Its specification is defined in the partition table |
| that needs to be parsed dynamically. |
| This function provides a means to retrieve such dynamic information to set |
| the I/O policy of the FWU metadata image. |
| Further I/O layer operations such as I/O open, I/O read, etc. on FWU metadata |
| image relies on this function call. |
| |
| It returns '0' on success, otherwise a negative error value on error. |
| Alongside, returns device handle and image specification from the I/O policy |
| of the requested FWU metadata image. |
| |
| Function : plat_fwu_get_boot_idx() [when PSA_FWU_SUPPORT == 1] |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : void |
| Return : uint32_t |
| |
| This function is mandatory when PSA_FWU_SUPPORT is enabled. It provides the |
| means to retrieve the boot index value from the platform. The boot index is the |
| bank from which the platform has booted the firmware images. |
| |
| By default, the platform will read the metadata structure and try to boot from |
| the active bank. If the platform fails to boot from the active bank due to |
| reasons like an Authentication failure, or on crossing a set number of watchdog |
| resets while booting from the active bank, the platform can then switch to boot |
| from a different bank. This function then returns the bank that the platform |
| should boot its images from. |
| |
| Common optional modifications |
| ----------------------------- |
| |
| The following are helper functions implemented by the firmware that perform |
| common platform-specific tasks. A platform may choose to override these |
| definitions. |
| |
| Function : plat_set_my_stack() |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : void |
| Return : void |
| |
| This function sets the current stack pointer to the normal memory stack that |
| has been allocated for the current CPU. For BL images that only require a |
| stack for the primary CPU, the UP version of the function is used. The size |
| of the stack allocated to each CPU is specified by the platform defined |
| constant ``PLATFORM_STACK_SIZE``. |
| |
| Common implementations of this function for the UP and MP BL images are |
| provided in ``plat/common/aarch64/platform_up_stack.S`` and |
| ``plat/common/aarch64/platform_mp_stack.S`` |
| |
| Function : plat_get_my_stack() |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : void |
| Return : uintptr_t |
| |
| This function returns the base address of the normal memory stack that |
| has been allocated for the current CPU. For BL images that only require a |
| stack for the primary CPU, the UP version of the function is used. The size |
| of the stack allocated to each CPU is specified by the platform defined |
| constant ``PLATFORM_STACK_SIZE``. |
| |
| Common implementations of this function for the UP and MP BL images are |
| provided in ``plat/common/aarch64/platform_up_stack.S`` and |
| ``plat/common/aarch64/platform_mp_stack.S`` |
| |
| Function : plat_report_exception() |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : unsigned int |
| Return : void |
| |
| A platform may need to report various information about its status when an |
| exception is taken, for example the current exception level, the CPU security |
| state (secure/non-secure), the exception type, and so on. This function is |
| called in the following circumstances: |
| |
| - In BL1, whenever an exception is taken. |
| - In BL2, whenever an exception is taken. |
| |
| The default implementation doesn't do anything, to avoid making assumptions |
| about the way the platform displays its status information. |
| |
| For AArch64, this function receives the exception type as its argument. |
| Possible values for exceptions types are listed in the |
| ``include/common/bl_common.h`` header file. Note that these constants are not |
| related to any architectural exception code; they are just a TF-A convention. |
| |
| For AArch32, this function receives the exception mode as its argument. |
| Possible values for exception modes are listed in the |
| ``include/lib/aarch32/arch.h`` header file. |
| |
| Function : plat_reset_handler() |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : void |
| Return : void |
| |
| A platform may need to do additional initialization after reset. This function |
| allows the platform to do the platform specific initializations. Platform |
| specific errata workarounds could also be implemented here. The API should |
| preserve the values of callee saved registers x19 to x29. |
| |
| The default implementation doesn't do anything. If a platform needs to override |
| the default implementation, refer to the :ref:`Firmware Design` for general |
| guidelines. |
| |
| Function : plat_disable_acp() |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : void |
| Return : void |
| |
| This API allows a platform to disable the Accelerator Coherency Port (if |
| present) during a cluster power down sequence. The default weak implementation |
| doesn't do anything. Since this API is called during the power down sequence, |
| it has restrictions for stack usage and it can use the registers x0 - x17 as |
| scratch registers. It should preserve the value in x18 register as it is used |
| by the caller to store the return address. |
| |
| Function : plat_error_handler() |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : int |
| Return : void |
| |
| This API is called when the generic code encounters an error situation from |
| which it cannot continue. It allows the platform to perform error reporting or |
| recovery actions (for example, reset the system). This function must not return. |
| |
| The parameter indicates the type of error using standard codes from ``errno.h``. |
| Possible errors reported by the generic code are: |
| |
| - ``-EAUTH``: a certificate or image could not be authenticated (when Trusted |
| Board Boot is enabled) |
| - ``-ENOENT``: the requested image or certificate could not be found or an IO |
| error was detected |
| - ``-ENOMEM``: resources exhausted. TF-A does not use dynamic memory, so this |
| error is usually an indication of an incorrect array size |
| |
| The default implementation simply spins. |
| |
| Function : plat_panic_handler() |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : void |
| Return : void |
| |
| This API is called when the generic code encounters an unexpected error |
| situation from which it cannot recover. This function must not return, |
| and must be implemented in assembly because it may be called before the C |
| environment is initialized. |
| |
| .. note:: |
| The address from where it was called is stored in x30 (Link Register). |
| The default implementation simply spins. |
| |
| Function : plat_system_reset() |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : void |
| Return : void |
| |
| This function is used by the platform to resets the system. It can be used |
| in any specific use-case where system needs to be resetted. For example, |
| in case of DRTM implementation this function reset the system after |
| writing the DRTM error code in the non-volatile storage. This function |
| never returns. Failure in reset results in panic. |
| |
| Function : plat_get_bl_image_load_info() |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : void |
| Return : bl_load_info_t * |
| |
| This function returns pointer to the list of images that the platform has |
| populated to load. This function is invoked in BL2 to load the |
| BL3xx images. |
| |
| Function : plat_get_next_bl_params() |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : void |
| Return : bl_params_t * |
| |
| This function returns a pointer to the shared memory that the platform has |
| kept aside to pass TF-A related information that next BL image needs. This |
| function is invoked in BL2 to pass this information to the next BL |
| image. |
| |
| Function : plat_get_stack_protector_canary() |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : void |
| Return : u_register_t |
| |
| This function returns a random value that is used to initialize the canary used |
| when the stack protector is enabled with ENABLE_STACK_PROTECTOR. A predictable |
| value will weaken the protection as the attacker could easily write the right |
| value as part of the attack most of the time. Therefore, it should return a |
| true random number. |
| |
| .. warning:: |
| For the protection to be effective, the global data need to be placed at |
| a lower address than the stack bases. Failure to do so would allow an |
| attacker to overwrite the canary as part of the stack buffer overflow attack. |
| |
| Function : plat_flush_next_bl_params() |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : void |
| Return : void |
| |
| This function flushes to main memory all the image params that are passed to |
| next image. This function is invoked in BL2 to flush this information |
| to the next BL image. |
| |
| Function : plat_log_get_prefix() |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : unsigned int |
| Return : const char * |
| |
| This function defines the prefix string corresponding to the `log_level` to be |
| prepended to all the log output from TF-A. The `log_level` (argument) will |
| correspond to one of the standard log levels defined in debug.h. The platform |
| can override the common implementation to define a different prefix string for |
| the log output. The implementation should be robust to future changes that |
| increase the number of log levels. |
| |
| Function : plat_get_soc_version() |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : void |
| Return : int32_t |
| |
| This function returns soc version which mainly consist of below fields |
| |
| :: |
| |
| soc_version[30:24] = JEP-106 continuation code for the SiP |
| soc_version[23:16] = JEP-106 identification code with parity bit for the SiP |
| soc_version[15:0] = Implementation defined SoC ID |
| |
| Function : plat_get_soc_revision() |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : void |
| Return : int32_t |
| |
| This function returns soc revision in below format |
| |
| :: |
| |
| soc_revision[0:30] = SOC revision of specific SOC |
| |
| Function : plat_is_smccc_feature_available() |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : u_register_t |
| Return : int32_t |
| |
| This function returns SMC_ARCH_CALL_SUCCESS if the platform supports |
| the SMCCC function specified in the argument; otherwise returns |
| SMC_ARCH_CALL_NOT_SUPPORTED. |
| |
| Function : plat_can_cmo() |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : void |
| Return : uint64_t |
| |
| When CONDITIONAL_CMO flag is enabled: |
| |
| - This function indicates whether cache management operations should be |
| performed. It returns 0 if CMOs should be skipped and non-zero |
| otherwise. |
| - The function must not clobber x1, x2 and x3. It's also not safe to rely on |
| stack. Otherwise obey AAPCS. |
| |
| Struct: plat_try_images_ops [optional] |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| This optional structure holds platform hooks for alternative images load. |
| It has to be defined in platform code and registered by calling |
| plat_setup_try_img_ops() function, passing it the address of the |
| plat_try_images_ops struct. |
| |
| Function : plat_setup_try_img_ops [optional] |
| ............................................ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : const struct plat_try_images_ops * |
| Return : void |
| |
| This optional function is called to register platform try images ops, given |
| as argument. |
| |
| Function : plat_try_images_ops.next_instance [optional] |
| ....................................................... |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : unsigned int image_id |
| Return : int |
| |
| This optional function tries to load images from alternative places. |
| In case PSA FWU is not used, it can be any instance or media. If PSA FWU is |
| used, it is mandatory that the backup image is on the same media. |
| This is required for MTD devices like NAND. |
| The argument is the ID of the image for which we are looking for an alternative |
| place. It returns 0 in case of success and a negative errno value otherwise. |
| |
| Modifications specific to a Boot Loader stage |
| --------------------------------------------- |
| |
| Boot Loader Stage 1 (BL1) |
| ------------------------- |
| |
| BL1 implements the reset vector where execution starts from after a cold or |
| warm boot. For each CPU, BL1 is responsible for the following tasks: |
| |
| #. Handling the reset as described in section 2.2 |
| |
| #. In the case of a cold boot and the CPU being the primary CPU, ensuring that |
| only this CPU executes the remaining BL1 code, including loading and passing |
| control to the BL2 stage. |
| |
| #. Identifying and starting the Firmware Update process (if required). |
| |
| #. Loading the BL2 image from non-volatile storage into secure memory at the |
| address specified by the platform defined constant ``BL2_BASE``. |
| |
| #. Populating a ``meminfo`` structure with the following information in memory, |
| accessible by BL2 immediately upon entry. |
| |
| :: |
| |
| meminfo.total_base = Base address of secure RAM visible to BL2 |
| meminfo.total_size = Size of secure RAM visible to BL2 |
| |
| By default, BL1 places this ``meminfo`` structure at the end of secure |
| memory visible to BL2. |
| |
| It is possible for the platform to decide where it wants to place the |
| ``meminfo`` structure for BL2 or restrict the amount of memory visible to |
| BL2 by overriding the weak default implementation of |
| ``bl1_plat_handle_post_image_load`` API. |
| |
| The following functions need to be implemented by the platform port to enable |
| BL1 to perform the above tasks. |
| |
| Function : bl1_early_platform_setup() [mandatory] |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : void |
| Return : void |
| |
| This function executes with the MMU and data caches disabled. It is only called |
| by the primary CPU. |
| |
| On Arm standard platforms, this function: |
| |
| - Enables a secure instance of SP805 to act as the Trusted Watchdog. |
| |
| - Initializes a UART (PL011 console), which enables access to the ``printf`` |
| family of functions in BL1. |
| |
| - Enables issuing of snoop and DVM (Distributed Virtual Memory) requests to |
| the CCI slave interface corresponding to the cluster that includes the |
| primary CPU. |
| |
| Function : bl1_plat_arch_setup() [mandatory] |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : void |
| Return : void |
| |
| This function performs any platform-specific and architectural setup that the |
| platform requires. Platform-specific setup might include configuration of |
| memory controllers and the interconnect. |
| |
| In Arm standard platforms, this function enables the MMU. |
| |
| This function helps fulfill requirement 2 above. |
| |
| Function : bl1_platform_setup() [mandatory] |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : void |
| Return : void |
| |
| This function executes with the MMU and data caches enabled. It is responsible |
| for performing any remaining platform-specific setup that can occur after the |
| MMU and data cache have been enabled. |
| |
| In Arm standard platforms, this function initializes the storage abstraction |
| layer used to load the next bootloader image. |
| |
| This function helps fulfill requirement 4 above. |
| |
| Function : bl1_plat_sec_mem_layout() [mandatory] |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : void |
| Return : meminfo * |
| |
| This function should only be called on the cold boot path. It executes with the |
| MMU and data caches enabled. The pointer returned by this function must point to |
| a ``meminfo`` structure containing the extents and availability of secure RAM for |
| the BL1 stage. |
| |
| :: |
| |
| meminfo.total_base = Base address of secure RAM visible to BL1 |
| meminfo.total_size = Size of secure RAM visible to BL1 |
| |
| This information is used by BL1 to load the BL2 image in secure RAM. BL1 also |
| populates a similar structure to tell BL2 the extents of memory available for |
| its own use. |
| |
| This function helps fulfill requirements 4 and 5 above. |
| |
| Function : bl1_plat_prepare_exit() [optional] |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : entry_point_info_t * |
| Return : void |
| |
| This function is called prior to exiting BL1 in response to the |
| ``BL1_SMC_RUN_IMAGE`` SMC request raised by BL2. It should be used to perform |
| platform specific clean up or bookkeeping operations before transferring |
| control to the next image. It receives the address of the ``entry_point_info_t`` |
| structure passed from BL2. This function runs with MMU disabled. |
| |
| Function : bl1_plat_set_ep_info() [optional] |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : unsigned int image_id, entry_point_info_t *ep_info |
| Return : void |
| |
| This function allows platforms to override ``ep_info`` for the given ``image_id``. |
| |
| The default implementation just returns. |
| |
| Function : bl1_plat_get_next_image_id() [optional] |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : void |
| Return : unsigned int |
| |
| This and the following function must be overridden to enable the FWU feature. |
| |
| BL1 calls this function after platform setup to identify the next image to be |
| loaded and executed. If the platform returns ``BL2_IMAGE_ID`` then BL1 proceeds |
| with the normal boot sequence, which loads and executes BL2. If the platform |
| returns a different image id, BL1 assumes that Firmware Update is required. |
| |
| The default implementation always returns ``BL2_IMAGE_ID``. The Arm development |
| platforms override this function to detect if firmware update is required, and |
| if so, return the first image in the firmware update process. |
| |
| Function : bl1_plat_get_image_desc() [optional] |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : unsigned int image_id |
| Return : image_desc_t * |
| |
| BL1 calls this function to get the image descriptor information ``image_desc_t`` |
| for the provided ``image_id`` from the platform. |
| |
| The default implementation always returns a common BL2 image descriptor. Arm |
| standard platforms return an image descriptor corresponding to BL2 or one of |
| the firmware update images defined in the Trusted Board Boot Requirements |
| specification. |
| |
| Function : bl1_plat_handle_pre_image_load() [optional] |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : unsigned int image_id |
| Return : int |
| |
| This function can be used by the platforms to update/use image information |
| corresponding to ``image_id``. This function is invoked in BL1, both in cold |
| boot and FWU code path, before loading the image. |
| |
| Function : bl1_plat_calc_bl2_layout() [optional] |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : const meminfo_t *bl1_mem_layout, meminfo_t *bl2_mem_layout |
| Return : void |
| |
| This utility function calculates the memory layout of BL2, representing it in a |
| `meminfo_t` structure. The default implementation derives this layout from the |
| positioning of BL1’s RW data at the top of the memory layout. |
| |
| Function : bl1_plat_handle_post_image_load() [optional] |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : unsigned int image_id |
| Return : int |
| |
| This function can be used by the platforms to update/use image information |
| corresponding to ``image_id``. This function is invoked in BL1, both in cold |
| boot and FWU code path, after loading and authenticating the image. |
| |
| The default weak implementation of this function calculates the amount of |
| Trusted SRAM that can be used by BL2 and allocates a ``meminfo_t`` |
| structure at the beginning of this free memory and populates it. The address |
| of ``meminfo_t`` structure is updated in ``arg1`` of the entrypoint |
| information to BL2. |
| |
| Function : bl1_plat_fwu_done() [optional] |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : unsigned int image_id, uintptr_t image_src, |
| unsigned int image_size |
| Return : void |
| |
| BL1 calls this function when the FWU process is complete. It must not return. |
| The platform may override this function to take platform specific action, for |
| example to initiate the normal boot flow. |
| |
| The default implementation spins forever. |
| |
| Function : bl1_plat_mem_check() [mandatory] |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : uintptr_t mem_base, unsigned int mem_size, |
| unsigned int flags |
| Return : int |
| |
| BL1 calls this function while handling FWU related SMCs, more specifically when |
| copying or authenticating an image. Its responsibility is to ensure that the |
| region of memory identified by ``mem_base`` and ``mem_size`` is mapped in BL1, and |
| that this memory corresponds to either a secure or non-secure memory region as |
| indicated by the security state of the ``flags`` argument. |
| |
| This function can safely assume that the value resulting from the addition of |
| ``mem_base`` and ``mem_size`` fits into a ``uintptr_t`` type variable and does not |
| overflow. |
| |
| This function must return 0 on success, a non-null error code otherwise. |
| |
| The default implementation of this function asserts therefore platforms must |
| override it when using the FWU feature. |
| |
| Boot Loader Stage 2 (BL2) |
| ------------------------- |
| |
| The BL2 stage is executed only by the primary CPU, which is determined in BL1 |
| using the ``platform_is_primary_cpu()`` function. BL1 passed control to BL2 at |
| ``BL2_BASE``. BL2 executes in Secure EL1 and and invokes |
| ``plat_get_bl_image_load_info()`` to retrieve the list of images to load from |
| non-volatile storage to secure/non-secure RAM. After all the images are loaded |
| then BL2 invokes ``plat_get_next_bl_params()`` to get the list of executable |
| images to be passed to the next BL image. |
| |
| The following functions must be implemented by the platform port to enable BL2 |
| to perform the above tasks. |
| |
| Function : bl2_early_platform_setup2() [mandatory] |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : u_register_t, u_register_t, u_register_t, u_register_t |
| Return : void |
| |
| This function executes with the MMU and data caches disabled. It is only called |
| by the primary CPU. The 4 arguments are passed by BL1 to BL2 and these arguments |
| are platform specific. |
| |
| On Arm standard platforms, the arguments received are : |
| |
| arg0 - Points to load address of FW_CONFIG |
| |
| arg1 - ``meminfo`` structure populated by BL1. The platform copies |
| the contents of ``meminfo`` as it may be subsequently overwritten by BL2. |
| |
| On Arm standard platforms, this function also: |
| |
| - Initializes a UART (PL011 console), which enables access to the ``printf`` |
| family of functions in BL2. |
| |
| - Initializes the storage abstraction layer used to load further bootloader |
| images. It is necessary to do this early on platforms with a SCP_BL2 image, |
| since the later ``bl2_platform_setup`` must be done after SCP_BL2 is loaded. |
| |
| Function : bl2_plat_arch_setup() [mandatory] |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : void |
| Return : void |
| |
| This function executes with the MMU and data caches disabled. It is only called |
| by the primary CPU. |
| |
| The purpose of this function is to perform any architectural initialization |
| that varies across platforms. |
| |
| On Arm standard platforms, this function enables the MMU. |
| |
| Function : bl2_platform_setup() [mandatory] |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : void |
| Return : void |
| |
| This function may execute with the MMU and data caches enabled if the platform |
| port does the necessary initialization in ``bl2_plat_arch_setup()``. It is only |
| called by the primary CPU. |
| |
| The purpose of this function is to perform any platform initialization |
| specific to BL2. |
| |
| In Arm standard platforms, this function performs security setup, including |
| configuration of the TrustZone controller to allow non-secure masters access |
| to most of DRAM. Part of DRAM is reserved for secure world use. |
| |
| Function : bl2_plat_handle_pre_image_load() [optional] |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : unsigned int |
| Return : int |
| |
| This function can be used by the platforms to update/use image information |
| for given ``image_id``. This function is currently invoked in BL2 before |
| loading each image. |
| |
| Function : bl2_plat_handle_post_image_load() [optional] |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : unsigned int |
| Return : int |
| |
| This function can be used by the platforms to update/use image information |
| for given ``image_id``. This function is currently invoked in BL2 after |
| loading each image. |
| |
| Function : bl2_plat_preload_setup [optional] |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : void |
| Return : void |
| |
| This optional function performs any BL2 platform initialization |
| required before image loading, that is not done later in |
| bl2_platform_setup(). |
| |
| Boot Loader Stage 2 (BL2) at EL3 |
| -------------------------------- |
| |
| When the platform has a non-TF-A Boot ROM it is desirable to jump |
| directly to BL2 instead of TF-A BL1. In this case BL2 is expected to |
| execute at EL3 instead of executing at EL1. Refer to the :ref:`Firmware Design` |
| document for more information. |
| |
| All mandatory functions of BL2 must be implemented, except the functions |
| bl2_early_platform_setup and bl2_el3_plat_arch_setup, because |
| their work is done now by bl2_el3_early_platform_setup and |
| bl2_el3_plat_arch_setup. These functions should generally implement |
| the bl1_plat_xxx() and bl2_plat_xxx() functionality combined. |
| |
| |
| Function : bl2_el3_early_platform_setup() [mandatory] |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : u_register_t, u_register_t, u_register_t, u_register_t |
| Return : void |
| |
| This function executes with the MMU and data caches disabled. It is only called |
| by the primary CPU. This function receives four parameters which can be used |
| by the platform to pass any needed information from the Boot ROM to BL2. |
| |
| On Arm standard platforms, this function does the following: |
| |
| - Initializes a UART (PL011 console), which enables access to the ``printf`` |
| family of functions in BL2. |
| |
| - Initializes the storage abstraction layer used to load further bootloader |
| images. It is necessary to do this early on platforms with a SCP_BL2 image, |
| since the later ``bl2_platform_setup`` must be done after SCP_BL2 is loaded. |
| |
| - Initializes the private variables that define the memory layout used. |
| |
| Function : bl2_el3_plat_arch_setup() [mandatory] |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : void |
| Return : void |
| |
| This function executes with the MMU and data caches disabled. It is only called |
| by the primary CPU. |
| |
| The purpose of this function is to perform any architectural initialization |
| that varies across platforms. |
| |
| On Arm standard platforms, this function enables the MMU. |
| |
| Function : bl2_el3_plat_prepare_exit() [optional] |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : void |
| Return : void |
| |
| This function is called prior to exiting BL2 and run the next image. |
| It should be used to perform platform specific clean up or bookkeeping |
| operations before transferring control to the next image. This function |
| runs with MMU disabled. |
| |
| FWU Boot Loader Stage 2 (BL2U) |
| ------------------------------ |
| |
| The AP Firmware Updater Configuration, BL2U, is an optional part of the FWU |
| process and is executed only by the primary CPU. BL1 passes control to BL2U at |
| ``BL2U_BASE``. BL2U executes in Secure-EL1 and is responsible for: |
| |
| #. (Optional) Transferring the optional SCP_BL2U binary image from AP secure |
| memory to SCP RAM. BL2U uses the SCP_BL2U ``image_info`` passed by BL1. |
| ``SCP_BL2U_BASE`` defines the address in AP secure memory where SCP_BL2U |
| should be copied from. Subsequent handling of the SCP_BL2U image is |
| implemented by the platform specific ``bl2u_plat_handle_scp_bl2u()`` function. |
| If ``SCP_BL2U_BASE`` is not defined then this step is not performed. |
| |
| #. Any platform specific setup required to perform the FWU process. For |
| example, Arm standard platforms initialize the TZC controller so that the |
| normal world can access DDR memory. |
| |
| The following functions must be implemented by the platform port to enable |
| BL2U to perform the tasks mentioned above. |
| |
| Function : bl2u_early_platform_setup() [mandatory] |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : meminfo *mem_info, void *plat_info |
| Return : void |
| |
| This function executes with the MMU and data caches disabled. It is only |
| called by the primary CPU. The arguments to this function is the address |
| of the ``meminfo`` structure and platform specific info provided by BL1. |
| |
| The platform may copy the contents of the ``mem_info`` and ``plat_info`` into |
| private storage as the original memory may be subsequently overwritten by BL2U. |
| |
| On Arm CSS platforms ``plat_info`` is interpreted as an ``image_info_t`` structure, |
| to extract SCP_BL2U image information, which is then copied into a private |
| variable. |
| |
| Function : bl2u_plat_arch_setup() [mandatory] |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : void |
| Return : void |
| |
| This function executes with the MMU and data caches disabled. It is only |
| called by the primary CPU. |
| |
| The purpose of this function is to perform any architectural initialization |
| that varies across platforms, for example enabling the MMU (since the memory |
| map differs across platforms). |
| |
| Function : bl2u_platform_setup() [mandatory] |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : void |
| Return : void |
| |
| This function may execute with the MMU and data caches enabled if the platform |
| port does the necessary initialization in ``bl2u_plat_arch_setup()``. It is only |
| called by the primary CPU. |
| |
| The purpose of this function is to perform any platform initialization |
| specific to BL2U. |
| |
| In Arm standard platforms, this function performs security setup, including |
| configuration of the TrustZone controller to allow non-secure masters access |
| to most of DRAM. Part of DRAM is reserved for secure world use. |
| |
| Function : bl2u_plat_handle_scp_bl2u() [optional] |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : void |
| Return : int |
| |
| This function is used to perform any platform-specific actions required to |
| handle the SCP firmware. Typically it transfers the image into SCP memory using |
| a platform-specific protocol and waits until SCP executes it and signals to the |
| Application Processor (AP) for BL2U execution to continue. |
| |
| This function returns 0 on success, a negative error code otherwise. |
| This function is included if SCP_BL2U_BASE is defined. |
| |
| Boot Loader Stage 3-1 (BL31) |
| ---------------------------- |
| |
| During cold boot, the BL31 stage is executed only by the primary CPU. This is |
| determined in BL1 using the ``platform_is_primary_cpu()`` function. BL1 passes |
| control to BL31 at ``BL31_BASE``. During warm boot, BL31 is executed by all |
| CPUs. BL31 executes at EL3 and is responsible for: |
| |
| #. Re-initializing all architectural and platform state. Although BL1 performs |
| some of this initialization, BL31 remains resident in EL3 and must ensure |
| that EL3 architectural and platform state is completely initialized. It |
| should make no assumptions about the system state when it receives control. |
| |
| #. Passing control to a normal world BL image, pre-loaded at a platform- |
| specific address by BL2. On ARM platforms, BL31 uses the ``bl_params`` list |
| populated by BL2 in memory to do this. |
| |
| #. Providing runtime firmware services. Currently, BL31 only implements a |
| subset of the Power State Coordination Interface (PSCI) API as a runtime |
| service. See :ref:`psci_in_bl31` below for details of porting the PSCI |
| implementation. |
| |
| #. Optionally passing control to the BL32 image, pre-loaded at a platform- |
| specific address by BL2. BL31 exports a set of APIs that allow runtime |
| services to specify the security state in which the next image should be |
| executed and run the corresponding image. On ARM platforms, BL31 uses the |
| ``bl_params`` list populated by BL2 in memory to do this. |
| |
| If BL31 is a reset vector, It also needs to handle the reset as specified in |
| section 2.2 before the tasks described above. |
| |
| The following functions must be implemented by the platform port to enable BL31 |
| to perform the above tasks. |
| |
| Function : bl31_early_platform_setup2() [mandatory] |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : u_register_t, u_register_t, u_register_t, u_register_t |
| Return : void |
| |
| This function executes with the MMU and data caches disabled. It is only called |
| by the primary CPU. BL2 can pass 4 arguments to BL31 and these arguments are |
| platform specific. |
| |
| In Arm standard platforms, the arguments received are : |
| |
| arg0 - The pointer to the head of `bl_params_t` list |
| which is list of executable images following BL31, |
| |
| arg1 - Points to load address of SOC_FW_CONFIG if present |
| except in case of Arm FVP and Juno platform. |
| |
| In case of Arm FVP and Juno platform, points to load address |
| of FW_CONFIG. |
| |
| arg2 - Points to load address of HW_CONFIG if present |
| |
| arg3 - A special value to verify platform parameters from BL2 to BL31. Not |
| used in release builds. |
| |
| The function runs through the `bl_param_t` list and extracts the entry point |
| information for BL32 and BL33. It also performs the following: |
| |
| - Initialize a UART (PL011 console), which enables access to the ``printf`` |
| family of functions in BL31. |
| |
| - Enable issuing of snoop and DVM (Distributed Virtual Memory) requests to the |
| CCI slave interface corresponding to the cluster that includes the primary |
| CPU. |
| |
| Function : bl31_plat_arch_setup() [mandatory] |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : void |
| Return : void |
| |
| This function executes with the MMU and data caches disabled. It is only called |
| by the primary CPU. |
| |
| The purpose of this function is to perform any architectural initialization |
| that varies across platforms. |
| |
| On Arm standard platforms, this function enables the MMU. |
| |
| Function : bl31_platform_setup() [mandatory] |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : void |
| Return : void |
| |
| This function may execute with the MMU and data caches enabled if the platform |
| port does the necessary initialization in ``bl31_plat_arch_setup()``. It is only |
| called by the primary CPU. |
| |
| The purpose of this function is to complete platform initialization so that both |
| BL31 runtime services and normal world software can function correctly. |
| |
| On Arm standard platforms, this function does the following: |
| |
| - Initialize the generic interrupt controller. |
| |
| Depending on the GIC driver selected by the platform, the appropriate GICv2 |
| or GICv3 initialization will be done, which mainly consists of: |
| |
| - Enable secure interrupts in the GIC CPU interface. |
| - Disable the legacy interrupt bypass mechanism. |
| - Configure the priority mask register to allow interrupts of all priorities |
| to be signaled to the CPU interface. |
| - Mark SGIs 8-15 and the other secure interrupts on the platform as secure. |
| - Target all secure SPIs to CPU0. |
| - Enable these secure interrupts in the GIC distributor. |
| - Configure all other interrupts as non-secure. |
| - Enable signaling of secure interrupts in the GIC distributor. |
| |
| - Enable system-level implementation of the generic timer counter through the |
| memory mapped interface. |
| |
| - Grant access to the system counter timer module |
| |
| - Initialize the power controller device. |
| |
| In particular, initialise the locks that prevent concurrent accesses to the |
| power controller device. |
| |
| Function : bl31_plat_runtime_setup() [optional] |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : void |
| Return : void |
| |
| The purpose of this function is allow the platform to perform any BL31 runtime |
| setup just prior to BL31 exit during cold boot. The default weak |
| implementation of this function will invoke ``console_switch_state()`` to switch |
| console output to consoles marked for use in the ``runtime`` state. |
| |
| Function : bl31_plat_get_next_image_ep_info() [mandatory] |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : uint32_t |
| Return : entry_point_info * |
| |
| This function may execute with the MMU and data caches enabled if the platform |
| port does the necessary initializations in ``bl31_plat_arch_setup()``. |
| |
| This function is called by ``bl31_main()`` to retrieve information provided by |
| BL2 for the next image in the security state specified by the argument. BL31 |
| uses this information to pass control to that image in the specified security |
| state. This function must return a pointer to the ``entry_point_info`` structure |
| (that was copied during ``bl31_early_platform_setup()``) if the image exists. It |
| should return NULL otherwise. |
| |
| Function : plat_rmmd_get_cca_attest_token() [mandatory when ENABLE_RME == 1] |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : uintptr_t, size_t *, uintptr_t, size_t, size_t * |
| Return : int |
| |
| This function returns the Platform attestation token. If the full token does |
| not fit in the buffer, the function will return a hunk of the token and |
| indicate how many bytes were copied and how many are pending. Multiple calls |
| to this function may be needed to retrieve the entire token. |
| |
| The parameters of the function are: |
| |
| arg0 - A pointer to the buffer where the Platform token should be copied by |
| this function. If the platform token does not completely fit in the |
| buffer, the function may return a piece of the token only. |
| |
| arg1 - Contains the size (in bytes) of the buffer passed in arg0. In |
| addition, this parameter is used by the function to return the size |
| of the platform token length hunk copied to the buffer. |
| |
| arg2 - A pointer to the buffer where the challenge object is stored. |
| |
| arg3 - The length of the challenge object in bytes. Possible values are 32, |
| 48 and 64. This argument must be zero for subsequent calls to |
| retrieve the remaining hunks of the token. |
| |
| arg4 - Returns the remaining length of the token (in bytes) that is yet to |
| be returned in further calls. |
| |
| The function returns 0 on success, -EINVAL on failure and -EAGAIN if the |
| resource associated with the platform token retrieval is busy. |
| |
| Function : plat_rmmd_get_cca_realm_attest_key() [mandatory when ENABLE_RME == 1] |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : uintptr_t, size_t *, unsigned int |
| Return : int |
| |
| This function returns the delegated realm attestation key which will be used to |
| sign Realm attestation token. The API currently only supports P-384 ECC curve |
| key. |
| |
| The parameters of the function are: |
| |
| arg0 - A pointer to the buffer where the attestation key should be copied |
| by this function. The buffer must be big enough to hold the |
| attestation key. |
| |
| arg1 - Contains the size (in bytes) of the buffer passed in arg0. The |
| function returns the attestation key length in this parameter. |
| |
| arg2 - The type of the elliptic curve to which the requested attestation key |
| belongs. |
| |
| The function returns 0 on success, -EINVAL on failure. |
| |
| Function : plat_rmmd_get_el3_rmm_shared_mem() [when ENABLE_RME == 1] |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : uintptr_t * |
| Return : size_t |
| |
| This function returns the size of the shared area between EL3 and RMM (or 0 on |
| failure). A pointer to the shared area (or a NULL pointer on failure) is stored |
| in the pointer passed as argument. |
| |
| Function : plat_rmmd_load_manifest() [when ENABLE_RME == 1] |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Arguments : rmm_manifest_t *manifest |
| Return : int |
| |
| When ENABLE_RME is enabled, this function populates a boot manifest for the |
| RMM image and stores it in the area specified by manifest. |
| |
| When ENABLE_RME is disabled, this function is not used. |
| |
| Function : bl31_plat_enable_mmu [optional] |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : uint32_t |
| Return : void |
| |
| This function enables the MMU. The boot code calls this function with MMU and |
| caches disabled. This function should program necessary registers to enable |
| translation, and upon return, the MMU on the calling PE must be enabled. |
| |
| The function must honor flags passed in the first argument. These flags are |
| defined by the translation library, and can be found in the file |
| ``include/lib/xlat_tables/xlat_mmu_helpers.h``. |
| |
| On DynamIQ systems, this function must not use stack while enabling MMU, which |
| is how the function in xlat table library version 2 is implemented. |
| |
| Function : plat_init_apkey [optional] |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : void |
| Return : uint128_t |
| |
| This function returns the 128-bit value which can be used to program ARMv8.3 |
| pointer authentication keys. |
| |
| The value should be obtained from a reliable source of randomness. |
| |
| This function is only needed if ARMv8.3 pointer authentication is used in the |
| Trusted Firmware by building with ``BRANCH_PROTECTION`` option set to non-zero. |
| |
| Function : plat_get_syscnt_freq2() [mandatory] |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : void |
| Return : unsigned int |
| |
| This function is used by the architecture setup code to retrieve the counter |
| frequency for the CPU's generic timer. This value will be programmed into the |
| ``CNTFRQ_EL0`` register. In Arm standard platforms, it returns the base frequency |
| of the system counter, which is retrieved from the first entry in the frequency |
| modes table. |
| |
| #define : PLAT_PERCPU_BAKERY_LOCK_SIZE [optional] |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| When ``USE_COHERENT_MEM = 0``, this constant defines the total memory (in |
| bytes) aligned to the cache line boundary that should be allocated per-cpu to |
| accommodate all the bakery locks. |
| |
| If this constant is not defined when ``USE_COHERENT_MEM = 0``, the linker |
| calculates the size of the ``.bakery_lock`` input section, aligns it to the |
| nearest ``CACHE_WRITEBACK_GRANULE``, multiplies it with ``PLATFORM_CORE_COUNT`` |
| and stores the result in a linker symbol. This constant prevents a platform |
| from relying on the linker and provide a more efficient mechanism for |
| accessing per-cpu bakery lock information. |
| |
| If this constant is defined and its value is not equal to the value |
| calculated by the linker then a link time assertion is raised. A compile time |
| assertion is raised if the value of the constant is not aligned to the cache |
| line boundary. |
| |
| .. _porting_guide_sdei_requirements: |
| |
| SDEI porting requirements |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| The |SDEI| dispatcher requires the platform to provide the following macros |
| and functions, of which some are optional, and some others mandatory. |
| |
| Macros |
| ...... |
| |
| Macro: PLAT_SDEI_NORMAL_PRI [mandatory] |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| This macro must be defined to the EL3 exception priority level associated with |
| Normal |SDEI| events on the platform. This must have a higher value |
| (therefore of lower priority) than ``PLAT_SDEI_CRITICAL_PRI``. |
| |
| Macro: PLAT_SDEI_CRITICAL_PRI [mandatory] |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| This macro must be defined to the EL3 exception priority level associated with |
| Critical |SDEI| events on the platform. This must have a lower value |
| (therefore of higher priority) than ``PLAT_SDEI_NORMAL_PRI``. |
| |
| **Note**: |SDEI| exception priorities must be the lowest among Secure |
| priorities. Among the |SDEI| exceptions, Critical |SDEI| priority must |
| be higher than Normal |SDEI| priority. |
| |
| Functions |
| ......... |
| |
| Function: int plat_sdei_validate_entry_point() [optional] |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument: uintptr_t ep, unsigned int client_mode |
| Return: int |
| |
| This function validates the entry point address of the event handler provided by |
| the client for both event registration and *Complete and Resume* |SDEI| calls. |
| The function ensures that the address is valid in the client translation regime. |
| |
| The second argument is the exception level that the client is executing in. It |
| can be Non-Secure EL1 or Non-Secure EL2. |
| |
| The function must return ``0`` for successful validation, or ``-1`` upon failure. |
| |
| The default implementation always returns ``0``. On Arm platforms, this function |
| translates the entry point address within the client translation regime and |
| further ensures that the resulting physical address is located in Non-secure |
| DRAM. |
| |
| Function: void plat_sdei_handle_masked_trigger(uint64_t mpidr, unsigned int intr) [optional] |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument: uint64_t |
| Argument: unsigned int |
| Return: void |
| |
| |SDEI| specification requires that a PE comes out of reset with the events |
| masked. The client therefore is expected to call ``PE_UNMASK`` to unmask |
| |SDEI| events on the PE. No |SDEI| events can be dispatched until such |
| time. |
| |
| Should a PE receive an interrupt that was bound to an |SDEI| event while the |
| events are masked on the PE, the dispatcher implementation invokes the function |
| ``plat_sdei_handle_masked_trigger``. The MPIDR of the PE that received the |
| interrupt and the interrupt ID are passed as parameters. |
| |
| The default implementation only prints out a warning message. |
| |
| .. _porting_guide_trng_requirements: |
| |
| TRNG porting requirements |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| The |TRNG| backend requires the platform to provide the following values |
| and mandatory functions. |
| |
| Values |
| ...... |
| |
| value: uuid_t plat_trng_uuid [mandatory] |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| This value must be defined to the UUID of the TRNG backend that is specific to |
| the hardware after ``plat_entropy_setup`` function is called. This value must |
| conform to the SMCCC calling convention; The most significant 32 bits of the |
| UUID must not equal ``0xffffffff`` or the signed integer ``-1`` as this value in |
| w0 indicates failure to get a TRNG source. |
| |
| Functions |
| ......... |
| |
| Function: void plat_entropy_setup(void) [mandatory] |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument: none |
| Return: none |
| |
| This function is expected to do platform-specific initialization of any TRNG |
| hardware. This may include generating a UUID from a hardware-specific seed. |
| |
| Function: bool plat_get_entropy(uint64_t \*out) [mandatory] |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument: uint64_t * |
| Return: bool |
| Out : when the return value is true, the entropy has been written into the |
| storage pointed to |
| |
| This function writes entropy into storage provided by the caller. If no entropy |
| is available, it must return false and the storage must not be written. |
| |
| .. _psci_in_bl31: |
| |
| Power State Coordination Interface (in BL31) |
| -------------------------------------------- |
| |
| The TF-A implementation of the PSCI API is based around the concept of a |
| *power domain*. A *power domain* is a CPU or a logical group of CPUs which |
| share some state on which power management operations can be performed as |
| specified by `PSCI`_. Each CPU in the system is assigned a cpu index which is |
| a unique number between ``0`` and ``PLATFORM_CORE_COUNT - 1``. The |
| *power domains* are arranged in a hierarchical tree structure and each |
| *power domain* can be identified in a system by the cpu index of any CPU that |
| is part of that domain and a *power domain level*. A processing element (for |
| example, a CPU) is at level 0. If the *power domain* node above a CPU is a |
| logical grouping of CPUs that share some state, then level 1 is that group of |
| CPUs (for example, a cluster), and level 2 is a group of clusters (for |
| example, the system). More details on the power domain topology and its |
| organization can be found in :ref:`PSCI Power Domain Tree Structure`. |
| |
| BL31's platform initialization code exports a pointer to the platform-specific |
| power management operations required for the PSCI implementation to function |
| correctly. This information is populated in the ``plat_psci_ops`` structure. The |
| PSCI implementation calls members of the ``plat_psci_ops`` structure for performing |
| power management operations on the power domains. For example, the target |
| CPU is specified by its ``MPIDR`` in a PSCI ``CPU_ON`` call. The ``pwr_domain_on()`` |
| handler (if present) is called for the CPU power domain. |
| |
| The ``power-state`` parameter of a PSCI ``CPU_SUSPEND`` call can be used to |
| describe composite power states specific to a platform. The PSCI implementation |
| defines a generic representation of the power-state parameter, which is an |
| array of local power states where each index corresponds to a power domain |
| level. Each entry contains the local power state the power domain at that power |
| level could enter. It depends on the ``validate_power_state()`` handler to |
| convert the power-state parameter (possibly encoding a composite power state) |
| passed in a PSCI ``CPU_SUSPEND`` call to this representation. |
| |
| The following functions form part of platform port of PSCI functionality. |
| |
| Function : plat_psci_stat_accounting_start() [optional] |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : const psci_power_state_t * |
| Return : void |
| |
| This is an optional hook that platforms can implement for residency statistics |
| accounting before entering a low power state. The ``pwr_domain_state`` field of |
| ``state_info`` (first argument) can be inspected if stat accounting is done |
| differently at CPU level versus higher levels. As an example, if the element at |
| index 0 (CPU power level) in the ``pwr_domain_state`` array indicates a power down |
| state, special hardware logic may be programmed in order to keep track of the |
| residency statistics. For higher levels (array indices > 0), the residency |
| statistics could be tracked in software using PMF. If ``ENABLE_PMF`` is set, the |
| default implementation will use PMF to capture timestamps. |
| |
| Function : plat_psci_stat_accounting_stop() [optional] |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : const psci_power_state_t * |
| Return : void |
| |
| This is an optional hook that platforms can implement for residency statistics |
| accounting after exiting from a low power state. The ``pwr_domain_state`` field |
| of ``state_info`` (first argument) can be inspected if stat accounting is done |
| differently at CPU level versus higher levels. As an example, if the element at |
| index 0 (CPU power level) in the ``pwr_domain_state`` array indicates a power down |
| state, special hardware logic may be programmed in order to keep track of the |
| residency statistics. For higher levels (array indices > 0), the residency |
| statistics could be tracked in software using PMF. If ``ENABLE_PMF`` is set, the |
| default implementation will use PMF to capture timestamps. |
| |
| Function : plat_psci_stat_get_residency() [optional] |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : unsigned int, const psci_power_state_t *, unsigned int |
| Return : u_register_t |
| |
| This is an optional interface that is is invoked after resuming from a low power |
| state and provides the time spent resident in that low power state by the power |
| domain at a particular power domain level. When a CPU wakes up from suspend, |
| all its parent power domain levels are also woken up. The generic PSCI code |
| invokes this function for each parent power domain that is resumed and it |
| identified by the ``lvl`` (first argument) parameter. The ``state_info`` (second |
| argument) describes the low power state that the power domain has resumed from. |
| The current CPU is the first CPU in the power domain to resume from the low |
| power state and the ``last_cpu_idx`` (third parameter) is the index of the last |
| CPU in the power domain to suspend and may be needed to calculate the residency |
| for that power domain. |
| |
| Function : plat_get_target_pwr_state() [optional] |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : unsigned int, const plat_local_state_t *, unsigned int |
| Return : plat_local_state_t |
| |
| The PSCI generic code uses this function to let the platform participate in |
| state coordination during a power management operation. The function is passed |
| a pointer to an array of platform specific local power state ``states`` (second |
| argument) which contains the requested power state for each CPU at a particular |
| power domain level ``lvl`` (first argument) within the power domain. The function |
| is expected to traverse this array of upto ``ncpus`` (third argument) and return |
| a coordinated target power state by the comparing all the requested power |
| states. The target power state should not be deeper than any of the requested |
| power states. |
| |
| A weak definition of this API is provided by default wherein it assumes |
| that the platform assigns a local state value in order of increasing depth |
| of the power state i.e. for two power states X & Y, if X < Y |
| then X represents a shallower power state than Y. As a result, the |
| coordinated target local power state for a power domain will be the minimum |
| of the requested local power state values. |
| |
| Function : plat_get_power_domain_tree_desc() [mandatory] |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : void |
| Return : const unsigned char * |
| |
| This function returns a pointer to the byte array containing the power domain |
| topology tree description. The format and method to construct this array are |
| described in :ref:`PSCI Power Domain Tree Structure`. The BL31 PSCI |
| initialization code requires this array to be described by the platform, either |
| statically or dynamically, to initialize the power domain topology tree. In case |
| the array is populated dynamically, then plat_core_pos_by_mpidr() and |
| plat_my_core_pos() should also be implemented suitably so that the topology tree |
| description matches the CPU indices returned by these APIs. These APIs together |
| form the platform interface for the PSCI topology framework. |
| |
| Function : plat_setup_psci_ops() [mandatory] |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : uintptr_t, const plat_psci_ops ** |
| Return : int |
| |
| This function may execute with the MMU and data caches enabled if the platform |
| port does the necessary initializations in ``bl31_plat_arch_setup()``. It is only |
| called by the primary CPU. |
| |
| This function is called by PSCI initialization code. Its purpose is to let |
| the platform layer know about the warm boot entrypoint through the |
| ``sec_entrypoint`` (first argument) and to export handler routines for |
| platform-specific psci power management actions by populating the passed |
| pointer with a pointer to BL31's private ``plat_psci_ops`` structure. |
| |
| A description of each member of this structure is given below. Please refer to |
| the Arm FVP specific implementation of these handlers in |
| ``plat/arm/board/fvp/fvp_pm.c`` as an example. For each PSCI function that the |
| platform wants to support, the associated operation or operations in this |
| structure must be provided and implemented (Refer section 4 of |
| :ref:`Firmware Design` for the PSCI API supported in TF-A). To disable a PSCI |
| function in a platform port, the operation should be removed from this |
| structure instead of providing an empty implementation. |
| |
| plat_psci_ops.cpu_standby() |
| ........................... |
| |
| Perform the platform-specific actions to enter the standby state for a cpu |
| indicated by the passed argument. This provides a fast path for CPU standby |
| wherein overheads of PSCI state management and lock acquisition is avoided. |
| For this handler to be invoked by the PSCI ``CPU_SUSPEND`` API implementation, |
| the suspend state type specified in the ``power-state`` parameter should be |
| STANDBY and the target power domain level specified should be the CPU. The |
| handler should put the CPU into a low power retention state (usually by |
| issuing a wfi instruction) and ensure that it can be woken up from that |
| state by a normal interrupt. The generic code expects the handler to succeed. |
| |
| plat_psci_ops.pwr_domain_on() |
| ............................. |
| |
| Perform the platform specific actions to power on a CPU, specified |
| by the ``MPIDR`` (first argument). The generic code expects the platform to |
| return PSCI_E_SUCCESS on success or PSCI_E_INTERN_FAIL for any failure. |
| |
| plat_psci_ops.pwr_domain_off_early() [optional] |
| ............................................... |
| |
| This optional function performs the platform specific actions to check if |
| powering off the calling CPU and its higher parent power domain levels as |
| indicated by the ``target_state`` (first argument) is possible or allowed. |
| |
| The ``target_state`` encodes the platform coordinated target local power states |
| for the CPU power domain and its parent power domain levels. |
| |
| For this handler, the local power state for the CPU power domain will be a |
| power down state where as it could be either power down, retention or run state |
| for the higher power domain levels depending on the result of state |
| coordination. The generic code expects PSCI_E_DENIED return code if the |
| platform thinks that CPU_OFF should not proceed on the calling CPU. |
| |
| plat_psci_ops.pwr_domain_off() |
| .............................. |
| |
| Perform the platform specific actions to prepare to power off the calling CPU |
| and its higher parent power domain levels as indicated by the ``target_state`` |
| (first argument). It is called by the PSCI ``CPU_OFF`` API implementation. |
| |
| The ``target_state`` encodes the platform coordinated target local power states |
| for the CPU power domain and its parent power domain levels. The handler |
| needs to perform power management operation corresponding to the local state |
| at each power level. |
| |
| For this handler, the local power state for the CPU power domain will be a |
| power down state where as it could be either power down, retention or run state |
| for the higher power domain levels depending on the result of state |
| coordination. The generic code expects the handler to succeed. |
| |
| plat_psci_ops.pwr_domain_validate_suspend() [optional] |
| ...................................................... |
| |
| This is an optional function that is only compiled into the build if the build |
| option ``PSCI_OS_INIT_MODE`` is enabled. |
| |
| If implemented, this function allows the platform to perform platform specific |
| validations based on hardware states. The generic code expects this function to |
| return PSCI_E_SUCCESS on success, or either PSCI_E_DENIED or |
| PSCI_E_INVALID_PARAMS as appropriate for any invalid requests. |
| |
| plat_psci_ops.pwr_domain_suspend_pwrdown_early() [optional] |
| ........................................................... |
| |
| This optional function may be used as a performance optimization to replace |
| or complement pwr_domain_suspend() on some platforms. Its calling semantics |
| are identical to pwr_domain_suspend(), except the PSCI implementation only |
| calls this function when suspending to a power down state, and it guarantees |
| that data caches are enabled. |
| |
| When HW_ASSISTED_COHERENCY = 0, the PSCI implementation disables data caches |
| before calling pwr_domain_suspend(). If the target_state corresponds to a |
| power down state and it is safe to perform some or all of the platform |
| specific actions in that function with data caches enabled, it may be more |
| efficient to move those actions to this function. When HW_ASSISTED_COHERENCY |
| = 1, data caches remain enabled throughout, and so there is no advantage to |
| moving platform specific actions to this function. |
| |
| plat_psci_ops.pwr_domain_suspend() |
| .................................. |
| |
| Perform the platform specific actions to prepare to suspend the calling |
| CPU and its higher parent power domain levels as indicated by the |
| ``target_state`` (first argument). It is called by the PSCI ``CPU_SUSPEND`` |
| API implementation. |
| |
| The ``target_state`` has a similar meaning as described in |
| the ``pwr_domain_off()`` operation. It encodes the platform coordinated |
| target local power states for the CPU power domain and its parent |
| power domain levels. The handler needs to perform power management operation |
| corresponding to the local state at each power level. The generic code |
| expects the handler to succeed. |
| |
| The difference between turning a power domain off versus suspending it is that |
| in the former case, the power domain is expected to re-initialize its state |
| when it is next powered on (see ``pwr_domain_on_finish()``). In the latter |
| case, the power domain is expected to save enough state so that it can resume |
| execution by restoring this state when its powered on (see |
| ``pwr_domain_suspend_finish()``). |
| |
| When suspending a core, the platform can also choose to power off the GICv3 |
| Redistributor and ITS through an implementation-defined sequence. To achieve |
| this safely, the ITS context must be saved first. The architectural part is |
| implemented by the ``gicv3_its_save_disable()`` helper, but most of the needed |
| sequence is implementation defined and it is therefore the responsibility of |
| the platform code to implement the necessary sequence. Then the GIC |
| Redistributor context can be saved using the ``gicv3_rdistif_save()`` helper. |
| Powering off the Redistributor requires the implementation to support it and it |
| is the responsibility of the platform code to execute the right implementation |
| defined sequence. |
| |
| When a system suspend is requested, the platform can also make use of the |
| ``gicv3_distif_save()`` helper to save the context of the GIC Distributor after |
| it has saved the context of the Redistributors and ITS of all the cores in the |
| system. The context of the Distributor can be large and may require it to be |
| allocated in a special area if it cannot fit in the platform's global static |
| data, for example in DRAM. The Distributor can then be powered down using an |
| implementation-defined sequence. |
| |
| plat_psci_ops.pwr_domain_pwr_down_wfi() |
| ....................................... |
| |
| This is an optional function and, if implemented, is expected to perform |
| platform specific actions including the ``wfi`` invocation which allows the |
| CPU to powerdown. Since this function is invoked outside the PSCI locks, |
| the actions performed in this hook must be local to the CPU or the platform |
| must ensure that races between multiple CPUs cannot occur. |
| |
| The ``target_state`` has a similar meaning as described in the ``pwr_domain_off()`` |
| operation and it encodes the platform coordinated target local power states for |
| the CPU power domain and its parent power domain levels. This function must |
| not return back to the caller (by calling wfi in an infinite loop to ensure |
| some CPUs power down mitigations work properly). |
| |
| If this function is not implemented by the platform, PSCI generic |
| implementation invokes ``psci_power_down_wfi()`` for power down. |
| |
| plat_psci_ops.pwr_domain_on_finish() |
| .................................... |
| |
| This function is called by the PSCI implementation after the calling CPU is |
| powered on and released from reset in response to an earlier PSCI ``CPU_ON`` call. |
| It performs the platform-specific setup required to initialize enough state for |
| this CPU to enter the normal world and also provide secure runtime firmware |
| services. |
| |
| The ``target_state`` (first argument) is the prior state of the power domains |
| immediately before the CPU was turned on. It indicates which power domains |
| above the CPU might require initialization due to having previously been in |
| low power states. The generic code expects the handler to succeed. |
| |
| plat_psci_ops.pwr_domain_on_finish_late() [optional] |
| ........................................................... |
| |
| This optional function is called by the PSCI implementation after the calling |
| CPU is fully powered on with respective data caches enabled. The calling CPU and |
| the associated cluster are guaranteed to be participating in coherency. This |
| function gives the flexibility to perform any platform-specific actions safely, |
| such as initialization or modification of shared data structures, without the |
| overhead of explicit cache maintainace operations. |
| |
| The ``target_state`` has a similar meaning as described in the ``pwr_domain_on_finish()`` |
| operation. The generic code expects the handler to succeed. |
| |
| plat_psci_ops.pwr_domain_suspend_finish() |
| ......................................... |
| |
| This function is called by the PSCI implementation after the calling CPU is |
| powered on and released from reset in response to an asynchronous wakeup |
| event, for example a timer interrupt that was programmed by the CPU during the |
| ``CPU_SUSPEND`` call or ``SYSTEM_SUSPEND`` call. It performs the platform-specific |
| setup required to restore the saved state for this CPU to resume execution |
| in the normal world and also provide secure runtime firmware services. |
| |
| The ``target_state`` (first argument) has a similar meaning as described in |
| the ``pwr_domain_on_finish()`` operation. The generic code expects the platform |
| to succeed. |
| |
| If the Distributor, Redistributors or ITS have been powered off as part of a |
| suspend, their context must be restored in this function in the reverse order |
| to how they were saved during suspend sequence. |
| |
| plat_psci_ops.system_off() |
| .......................... |
| |
| This function is called by PSCI implementation in response to a ``SYSTEM_OFF`` |
| call. It performs the platform-specific system poweroff sequence after |
| notifying the Secure Payload Dispatcher. |
| |
| plat_psci_ops.system_reset() |
| ............................ |
| |
| This function is called by PSCI implementation in response to a ``SYSTEM_RESET`` |
| call. It performs the platform-specific system reset sequence after |
| notifying the Secure Payload Dispatcher. |
| |
| plat_psci_ops.validate_power_state() |
| .................................... |
| |
| This function is called by the PSCI implementation during the ``CPU_SUSPEND`` |
| call to validate the ``power_state`` parameter of the PSCI API and if valid, |
| populate it in ``req_state`` (second argument) array as power domain level |
| specific local states. If the ``power_state`` is invalid, the platform must |
| return PSCI_E_INVALID_PARAMS as error, which is propagated back to the |
| normal world PSCI client. |
| |
| plat_psci_ops.validate_ns_entrypoint() |
| ...................................... |
| |
| This function is called by the PSCI implementation during the ``CPU_SUSPEND``, |
| ``SYSTEM_SUSPEND`` and ``CPU_ON`` calls to validate the non-secure ``entry_point`` |
| parameter passed by the normal world. If the ``entry_point`` is invalid, |
| the platform must return PSCI_E_INVALID_ADDRESS as error, which is |
| propagated back to the normal world PSCI client. |
| |
| plat_psci_ops.get_sys_suspend_power_state() |
| ........................................... |
| |
| This function is called by the PSCI implementation during the ``SYSTEM_SUSPEND`` |
| call to get the ``req_state`` parameter from platform which encodes the power |
| domain level specific local states to suspend to system affinity level. The |
| ``req_state`` will be utilized to do the PSCI state coordination and |
| ``pwr_domain_suspend()`` will be invoked with the coordinated target state to |
| enter system suspend. |
| |
| plat_psci_ops.get_pwr_lvl_state_idx() |
| ..................................... |
| |
| This is an optional function and, if implemented, is invoked by the PSCI |
| implementation to convert the ``local_state`` (first argument) at a specified |
| ``pwr_lvl`` (second argument) to an index between 0 and |
| ``PLAT_MAX_PWR_LVL_STATES`` - 1. This function is only needed if the platform |
| supports more than two local power states at each power domain level, that is |
| ``PLAT_MAX_PWR_LVL_STATES`` is greater than 2, and needs to account for these |
| local power states. |
| |
| plat_psci_ops.translate_power_state_by_mpidr() |
| .............................................. |
| |
| This is an optional function and, if implemented, verifies the ``power_state`` |
| (second argument) parameter of the PSCI API corresponding to a target power |
| domain. The target power domain is identified by using both ``MPIDR`` (first |
| argument) and the power domain level encoded in ``power_state``. The power domain |
| level specific local states are to be extracted from ``power_state`` and be |
| populated in the ``output_state`` (third argument) array. The functionality |
| is similar to the ``validate_power_state`` function described above and is |
| envisaged to be used in case the validity of ``power_state`` depend on the |
| targeted power domain. If the ``power_state`` is invalid for the targeted power |
| domain, the platform must return PSCI_E_INVALID_PARAMS as error. If this |
| function is not implemented, then the generic implementation relies on |
| ``validate_power_state`` function to translate the ``power_state``. |
| |
| This function can also be used in case the platform wants to support local |
| power state encoding for ``power_state`` parameter of PSCI_STAT_COUNT/RESIDENCY |
| APIs as described in Section 5.18 of `PSCI`_. |
| |
| plat_psci_ops.get_node_hw_state() |
| ................................. |
| |
| This is an optional function. If implemented this function is intended to return |
| the power state of a node (identified by the first parameter, the ``MPIDR``) in |
| the power domain topology (identified by the second parameter, ``power_level``), |
| as retrieved from a power controller or equivalent component on the platform. |
| Upon successful completion, the implementation must map and return the final |
| status among ``HW_ON``, ``HW_OFF`` or ``HW_STANDBY``. Upon encountering failures, it |
| must return either ``PSCI_E_INVALID_PARAMS`` or ``PSCI_E_NOT_SUPPORTED`` as |
| appropriate. |
| |
| Implementations are not expected to handle ``power_levels`` greater than |
| ``PLAT_MAX_PWR_LVL``. |
| |
| plat_psci_ops.system_reset2() |
| ............................. |
| |
| This is an optional function. If implemented this function is |
| called during the ``SYSTEM_RESET2`` call to perform a reset |
| based on the first parameter ``reset_type`` as specified in |
| `PSCI`_. The parameter ``cookie`` can be used to pass additional |
| reset information. If the ``reset_type`` is not supported, the |
| function must return ``PSCI_E_NOT_SUPPORTED``. For architectural |
| resets, all failures must return ``PSCI_E_INVALID_PARAMETERS`` |
| and vendor reset can return other PSCI error codes as defined |
| in `PSCI`_. On success this function will not return. |
| |
| plat_psci_ops.write_mem_protect() |
| ................................. |
| |
| This is an optional function. If implemented it enables or disables the |
| ``MEM_PROTECT`` functionality based on the value of ``val``. |
| A non-zero value enables ``MEM_PROTECT`` and a value of zero |
| disables it. Upon encountering failures it must return a negative value |
| and on success it must return 0. |
| |
| plat_psci_ops.read_mem_protect() |
| ................................ |
| |
| This is an optional function. If implemented it returns the current |
| state of ``MEM_PROTECT`` via the ``val`` parameter. Upon encountering |
| failures it must return a negative value and on success it must |
| return 0. |
| |
| plat_psci_ops.mem_protect_chk() |
| ............................... |
| |
| This is an optional function. If implemented it checks if a memory |
| region defined by a base address ``base`` and with a size of ``length`` |
| bytes is protected by ``MEM_PROTECT``. If the region is protected |
| then it must return 0, otherwise it must return a negative number. |
| |
| .. _porting_guide_imf_in_bl31: |
| |
| Interrupt Management framework (in BL31) |
| ---------------------------------------- |
| |
| BL31 implements an Interrupt Management Framework (IMF) to manage interrupts |
| generated in either security state and targeted to EL1 or EL2 in the non-secure |
| state or EL3/S-EL1 in the secure state. The design of this framework is |
| described in the :ref:`Interrupt Management Framework` |
| |
| A platform should export the following APIs to support the IMF. The following |
| text briefly describes each API and its implementation in Arm standard |
| platforms. The API implementation depends upon the type of interrupt controller |
| present in the platform. Arm standard platform layer supports both |
| `Arm Generic Interrupt Controller version 2.0 (GICv2)`_ |
| and `3.0 (GICv3)`_. Juno builds the Arm platform layer to use GICv2 and the |
| FVP can be configured to use either GICv2 or GICv3 depending on the build flag |
| ``FVP_USE_GIC_DRIVER`` (See :ref:`build_options_arm_fvp_platform` for more |
| details). |
| |
| See also: :ref:`Interrupt Controller Abstraction APIs<Platform Interrupt Controller API>`. |
| |
| Function : plat_interrupt_type_to_line() [mandatory] |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : uint32_t, uint32_t |
| Return : uint32_t |
| |
| The Arm processor signals an interrupt exception either through the IRQ or FIQ |
| interrupt line. The specific line that is signaled depends on how the interrupt |
| controller (IC) reports different interrupt types from an execution context in |
| either security state. The IMF uses this API to determine which interrupt line |
| the platform IC uses to signal each type of interrupt supported by the framework |
| from a given security state. This API must be invoked at EL3. |
| |
| The first parameter will be one of the ``INTR_TYPE_*`` values (see |
| :ref:`Interrupt Management Framework`) indicating the target type of the |
| interrupt, the second parameter is the security state of the originating |
| execution context. The return result is the bit position in the ``SCR_EL3`` |
| register of the respective interrupt trap: IRQ=1, FIQ=2. |
| |
| In the case of Arm standard platforms using GICv2, S-EL1 interrupts are |
| configured as FIQs and Non-secure interrupts as IRQs from either security |
| state. |
| |
| In the case of Arm standard platforms using GICv3, the interrupt line to be |
| configured depends on the security state of the execution context when the |
| interrupt is signalled and are as follows: |
| |
| - The S-EL1 interrupts are signaled as IRQ in S-EL0/1 context and as FIQ in |
| NS-EL0/1/2 context. |
| - The Non secure interrupts are signaled as FIQ in S-EL0/1 context and as IRQ |
| in the NS-EL0/1/2 context. |
| - The EL3 interrupts are signaled as FIQ in both S-EL0/1 and NS-EL0/1/2 |
| context. |
| |
| Function : plat_ic_get_pending_interrupt_type() [mandatory] |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : void |
| Return : uint32_t |
| |
| This API returns the type of the highest priority pending interrupt at the |
| platform IC. The IMF uses the interrupt type to retrieve the corresponding |
| handler function. ``INTR_TYPE_INVAL`` is returned when there is no interrupt |
| pending. The valid interrupt types that can be returned are ``INTR_TYPE_EL3``, |
| ``INTR_TYPE_S_EL1`` and ``INTR_TYPE_NS``. This API must be invoked at EL3. |
| |
| In the case of Arm standard platforms using GICv2, the *Highest Priority |
| Pending Interrupt Register* (``GICC_HPPIR``) is read to determine the id of |
| the pending interrupt. The type of interrupt depends upon the id value as |
| follows. |
| |
| #. id < 1022 is reported as a S-EL1 interrupt |
| #. id = 1022 is reported as a Non-secure interrupt. |
| #. id = 1023 is reported as an invalid interrupt type. |
| |
| In the case of Arm standard platforms using GICv3, the system register |
| ``ICC_HPPIR0_EL1``, *Highest Priority Pending group 0 Interrupt Register*, |
| is read to determine the id of the pending interrupt. The type of interrupt |
| depends upon the id value as follows. |
| |
| #. id = ``PENDING_G1S_INTID`` (1020) is reported as a S-EL1 interrupt |
| #. id = ``PENDING_G1NS_INTID`` (1021) is reported as a Non-secure interrupt. |
| #. id = ``GIC_SPURIOUS_INTERRUPT`` (1023) is reported as an invalid interrupt type. |
| #. All other interrupt id's are reported as EL3 interrupt. |
| |
| Function : plat_ic_get_pending_interrupt_id() [mandatory] |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : void |
| Return : uint32_t |
| |
| This API returns the id of the highest priority pending interrupt at the |
| platform IC. ``INTR_ID_UNAVAILABLE`` is returned when there is no interrupt |
| pending. |
| |
| In the case of Arm standard platforms using GICv2, the *Highest Priority |
| Pending Interrupt Register* (``GICC_HPPIR``) is read to determine the id of the |
| pending interrupt. The id that is returned by API depends upon the value of |
| the id read from the interrupt controller as follows. |
| |
| #. id < 1022. id is returned as is. |
| #. id = 1022. The *Aliased Highest Priority Pending Interrupt Register* |
| (``GICC_AHPPIR``) is read to determine the id of the non-secure interrupt. |
| This id is returned by the API. |
| #. id = 1023. ``INTR_ID_UNAVAILABLE`` is returned. |
| |
| In the case of Arm standard platforms using GICv3, if the API is invoked from |
| EL3, the system register ``ICC_HPPIR0_EL1``, *Highest Priority Pending Interrupt |
| group 0 Register*, is read to determine the id of the pending interrupt. The id |
| that is returned by API depends upon the value of the id read from the |
| interrupt controller as follows. |
| |
| #. id < ``PENDING_G1S_INTID`` (1020). id is returned as is. |
| #. id = ``PENDING_G1S_INTID`` (1020) or ``PENDING_G1NS_INTID`` (1021). The system |
| register ``ICC_HPPIR1_EL1``, *Highest Priority Pending Interrupt group 1 |
| Register* is read to determine the id of the group 1 interrupt. This id |
| is returned by the API as long as it is a valid interrupt id |
| #. If the id is any of the special interrupt identifiers, |
| ``INTR_ID_UNAVAILABLE`` is returned. |
| |
| When the API invoked from S-EL1 for GICv3 systems, the id read from system |
| register ``ICC_HPPIR1_EL1``, *Highest Priority Pending group 1 Interrupt |
| Register*, is returned if is not equal to GIC_SPURIOUS_INTERRUPT (1023) else |
| ``INTR_ID_UNAVAILABLE`` is returned. |
| |
| Function : plat_ic_acknowledge_interrupt() [mandatory] |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : void |
| Return : uint32_t |
| |
| This API is used by the CPU to indicate to the platform IC that processing of |
| the highest pending interrupt has begun. It should return the raw, unmodified |
| value obtained from the interrupt controller when acknowledging an interrupt. |
| The actual interrupt number shall be extracted from this raw value using the API |
| `plat_ic_get_interrupt_id()<plat_ic_get_interrupt_id>`. |
| |
| This function in Arm standard platforms using GICv2, reads the *Interrupt |
| Acknowledge Register* (``GICC_IAR``). This changes the state of the highest |
| priority pending interrupt from pending to active in the interrupt controller. |
| It returns the value read from the ``GICC_IAR``, unmodified. |
| |
| In the case of Arm standard platforms using GICv3, if the API is invoked |
| from EL3, the function reads the system register ``ICC_IAR0_EL1``, *Interrupt |
| Acknowledge Register group 0*. If the API is invoked from S-EL1, the function |
| reads the system register ``ICC_IAR1_EL1``, *Interrupt Acknowledge Register |
| group 1*. The read changes the state of the highest pending interrupt from |
| pending to active in the interrupt controller. The value read is returned |
| unmodified. |
| |
| The TSP uses this API to start processing of the secure physical timer |
| interrupt. |
| |
| Function : plat_ic_end_of_interrupt() [mandatory] |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : uint32_t |
| Return : void |
| |
| This API is used by the CPU to indicate to the platform IC that processing of |
| the interrupt corresponding to the id (passed as the parameter) has |
| finished. The id should be the same as the id returned by the |
| ``plat_ic_acknowledge_interrupt()`` API. |
| |
| Arm standard platforms write the id to the *End of Interrupt Register* |
| (``GICC_EOIR``) in case of GICv2, and to ``ICC_EOIR0_EL1`` or ``ICC_EOIR1_EL1`` |
| system register in case of GICv3 depending on where the API is invoked from, |
| EL3 or S-EL1. This deactivates the corresponding interrupt in the interrupt |
| controller. |
| |
| The TSP uses this API to finish processing of the secure physical timer |
| interrupt. |
| |
| Function : plat_ic_get_interrupt_type() [mandatory] |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : uint32_t |
| Return : uint32_t |
| |
| This API returns the type of the interrupt id passed as the parameter. |
| ``INTR_TYPE_INVAL`` is returned if the id is invalid. If the id is valid, a valid |
| interrupt type (one of ``INTR_TYPE_EL3``, ``INTR_TYPE_S_EL1`` and ``INTR_TYPE_NS``) is |
| returned depending upon how the interrupt has been configured by the platform |
| IC. This API must be invoked at EL3. |
| |
| Arm standard platforms using GICv2 configures S-EL1 interrupts as Group0 interrupts |
| and Non-secure interrupts as Group1 interrupts. It reads the group value |
| corresponding to the interrupt id from the relevant *Interrupt Group Register* |
| (``GICD_IGROUPRn``). It uses the group value to determine the type of interrupt. |
| |
| In the case of Arm standard platforms using GICv3, both the *Interrupt Group |
| Register* (``GICD_IGROUPRn``) and *Interrupt Group Modifier Register* |
| (``GICD_IGRPMODRn``) is read to figure out whether the interrupt is configured |
| as Group 0 secure interrupt, Group 1 secure interrupt or Group 1 NS interrupt. |
| |
| Common helper functions |
| ----------------------- |
| Function : elx_panic() |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : void |
| Return : void |
| |
| This API is called from assembly files when reporting a critical failure |
| that has occured in lower EL and is been trapped in EL3. This call |
| **must not** return. |
| |
| Function : el3_panic() |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : void |
| Return : void |
| |
| This API is called from assembly files when encountering a critical failure that |
| cannot be recovered from. This function assumes that it is invoked from a C |
| runtime environment i.e. valid stack exists. This call **must not** return. |
| |
| Function : panic() |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : void |
| Return : void |
| |
| This API called from C files when encountering a critical failure that cannot |
| be recovered from. This function in turn prints backtrace (if enabled) and calls |
| el3_panic(). This call **must not** return. |
| |
| Crash Reporting mechanism (in BL31) |
| ----------------------------------- |
| |
| BL31 implements a crash reporting mechanism which prints the various registers |
| of the CPU to enable quick crash analysis and debugging. This mechanism relies |
| on the platform implementing ``plat_crash_console_init``, |
| ``plat_crash_console_putc`` and ``plat_crash_console_flush``. |
| |
| The file ``plat/common/aarch64/crash_console_helpers.S`` contains sample |
| implementation of all of them. Platforms may include this file to their |
| makefiles in order to benefit from them. By default, they will cause the crash |
| output to be routed over the normal console infrastructure and get printed on |
| consoles configured to output in crash state. ``console_set_scope()`` can be |
| used to control whether a console is used for crash output. |
| |
| .. note:: |
| Platforms are responsible for making sure that they only mark consoles for |
| use in the crash scope that are able to support this, i.e. that are written |
| in assembly and conform with the register clobber rules for putc() |
| (x0-x2, x16-x17) and flush() (x0-x3, x16-x17) crash callbacks. |
| |
| In some cases (such as debugging very early crashes that happen before the |
| normal boot console can be set up), platforms may want to control crash output |
| more explicitly. These platforms may instead provide custom implementations for |
| these. They are executed outside of a C environment and without a stack. Many |
| console drivers provide functions named ``console_xxx_core_init/putc/flush`` |
| that are designed to be used by these functions. See Arm platforms (like juno) |
| for an example of this. |
| |
| Function : plat_crash_console_init [mandatory] |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : void |
| Return : int |
| |
| This API is used by the crash reporting mechanism to initialize the crash |
| console. It must only use the general purpose registers x0 through x7 to do the |
| initialization and returns 1 on success. |
| |
| Function : plat_crash_console_putc [mandatory] |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : int |
| Return : int |
| |
| This API is used by the crash reporting mechanism to print a character on the |
| designated crash console. It must only use general purpose registers x1 and |
| x2 to do its work. The parameter and the return value are in general purpose |
| register x0. |
| |
| Function : plat_crash_console_flush [mandatory] |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : void |
| Return : void |
| |
| This API is used by the crash reporting mechanism to force write of all buffered |
| data on the designated crash console. It should only use general purpose |
| registers x0 through x5 to do its work. |
| |
| Function : plat_setup_early_console [optional] |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : void |
| Return : void |
| |
| This API is used to setup the early console, it is required only if the flag |
| ``EARLY_CONSOLE`` is enabled. |
| |
| .. _External Abort handling and RAS Support: |
| |
| External Abort handling and RAS Support |
| --------------------------------------- |
| |
| Function : plat_ea_handler |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : int |
| Argument : uint64_t |
| Argument : void * |
| Argument : void * |
| Argument : uint64_t |
| Return : void |
| |
| This function is invoked by the runtime exception handling framework for the |
| platform to handle an External Abort received at EL3. The intention of the |
| function is to attempt to resolve the cause of External Abort and return; |
| if that's not possible then an orderly shutdown of the system is initiated. |
| |
| The first parameter (``int ea_reason``) indicates the reason for External Abort. |
| Its value is one of ``ERROR_EA_*`` constants defined in ``ea_handle.h``. |
| |
| The second parameter (``uint64_t syndrome``) is the respective syndrome |
| presented to EL3 after having received the External Abort. Depending on the |
| nature of the abort (as can be inferred from the ``ea_reason`` parameter), this |
| can be the content of either ``ESR_EL3`` or ``DISR_EL1``. |
| |
| The third parameter (``void *cookie``) is unused for now. The fourth parameter |
| (``void *handle``) is a pointer to the preempted context. The fifth parameter |
| (``uint64_t flags``) indicates the preempted security state. These parameters |
| are received from the top-level exception handler. |
| |
| This function must be implemented if a platform expects Firmware First handling |
| of External Aborts. |
| |
| Function : plat_handle_uncontainable_ea |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : int |
| Argument : uint64_t |
| Return : void |
| |
| This function is invoked by the RAS framework when an External Abort of |
| Uncontainable type is received at EL3. Due to the critical nature of |
| Uncontainable errors, the intention of this function is to initiate orderly |
| shutdown of the system, and is not expected to return. |
| |
| This function must be implemented in assembly. |
| |
| The first and second parameters are the same as that of ``plat_ea_handler``. |
| |
| The default implementation of this function calls |
| ``report_unhandled_exception``. |
| |
| Function : plat_handle_double_fault |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : int |
| Argument : uint64_t |
| Return : void |
| |
| This function is invoked by the RAS framework when another External Abort is |
| received at EL3 while one is already being handled. I.e., a call to |
| ``plat_ea_handler`` is outstanding. Due to its critical nature, the intention of |
| this function is to initiate orderly shutdown of the system, and is not expected |
| recover or return. |
| |
| This function must be implemented in assembly. |
| |
| The first and second parameters are the same as that of ``plat_ea_handler``. |
| |
| The default implementation of this function calls |
| ``report_unhandled_exception``. |
| |
| Function : plat_handle_el3_ea |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Return : void |
| |
| This function is invoked when an External Abort is received while executing in |
| EL3. Due to its critical nature, the intention of this function is to initiate |
| orderly shutdown of the system, and is not expected recover or return. |
| |
| This function must be implemented in assembly. |
| |
| The default implementation of this function calls |
| ``report_unhandled_exception``. |
| |
| Function : plat_handle_rng_trap |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : uint64_t |
| Argument : cpu_context_t * |
| Return : int |
| |
| This function is invoked by BL31's exception handler when there is a synchronous |
| system register trap caused by access to the RNDR or RNDRRS registers. It allows |
| platforms implementing ``FEAT_RNG_TRAP`` and enabling ``ENABLE_FEAT_RNG_TRAP`` to |
| emulate those system registers by returing back some entropy to the lower EL. |
| |
| The first parameter (``uint64_t esr_el3``) contains the content of the ESR_EL3 |
| syndrome register, which encodes the instruction that was trapped. The interesting |
| information in there is the target register (``get_sysreg_iss_rt()``). |
| |
| The second parameter (``cpu_context_t *ctx``) represents the CPU state in the |
| lower exception level, at the time when the execution of the ``mrs`` instruction |
| was trapped. Its content can be changed, to put the entropy into the target |
| register. |
| |
| The return value indicates how to proceed: |
| |
| - When returning ``TRAP_RET_UNHANDLED`` (-1), the machine will panic. |
| - When returning ``TRAP_RET_REPEAT`` (0), the exception handler will return |
| to the same instruction, so its execution will be repeated. |
| - When returning ``TRAP_RET_CONTINUE`` (1), the exception handler will return |
| to the next instruction. |
| |
| This function needs to be implemented by a platform if it enables FEAT_RNG_TRAP. |
| |
| Function : plat_handle_impdef_trap |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :: |
| |
| Argument : uint64_t |
| Argument : cpu_context_t * |
| Return : int |
| |
| This function is invoked by BL31's exception handler when there is a synchronous |
| system register trap caused by access to the implementation defined registers. |
| It allows platforms enabling ``IMPDEF_SYSREG_TRAP`` to emulate those system |
| registers choosing to program bits of their choice. |
| |
| The first parameter (``uint64_t esr_el3``) contains the content of the ESR_EL3 |
| syndrome register, which encodes the instruction that was trapped. |
| |
| The second parameter (``cpu_context_t *ctx``) represents the CPU state in the |
| lower exception level, at the time when the execution of the ``mrs`` instruction |
| was trapped. |
| |
| The return value indicates how to proceed: |
| |
| - When returning ``TRAP_RET_UNHANDLED`` (-1), the machine will panic. |
| - When returning ``TRAP_RET_REPEAT`` (0), the exception handler will return |
| to the same instruction, so its execution will be repeated. |
| - When returning ``TRAP_RET_CONTINUE`` (1), the exception handler will return |
| to the next instruction. |
| |
| This function needs to be implemented by a platform if it enables |
| IMPDEF_SYSREG_TRAP. |
| |
| Build flags |
| ----------- |
| |
| There are some build flags which can be defined by the platform to control |
| inclusion or exclusion of certain BL stages from the FIP image. These flags |
| need to be defined in the platform makefile which will get included by the |
| build system. |
| |
| - **NEED_BL33** |
| By default, this flag is defined ``yes`` by the build system and ``BL33`` |
| build option should be supplied as a build option. The platform has the |
| option of excluding the BL33 image in the ``fip`` image by defining this flag |
| to ``no``. If any of the options ``EL3_PAYLOAD_BASE`` or ``PRELOADED_BL33_BASE`` |
| are used, this flag will be set to ``no`` automatically. |
| |
| - **ARM_ARCH_MAJOR and ARM_ARCH_MINOR** |
| By default, ARM_ARCH_MAJOR.ARM_ARCH_MINOR is set to 8.0 in ``defaults.mk``, |
| if the platform makefile/build defines or uses the correct ARM_ARCH_MAJOR and |
| ARM_ARCH_MINOR then mandatory Architectural features available for that Arch |
| version will be enabled by default and any optional Arch feature supported by |
| the Architecture and available in TF-A can be enabled from platform specific |
| makefile. Look up to ``arch_features.mk`` for details pertaining to mandatory |
| and optional Arch specific features. |
| |
| Platform include paths |
| ---------------------- |
| |
| Platforms are allowed to add more include paths to be passed to the compiler. |
| The ``PLAT_INCLUDES`` variable is used for this purpose. This is needed in |
| particular for the file ``platform_def.h``. |
| |
| Example: |
| |
| .. code:: c |
| |
| PLAT_INCLUDES += -Iinclude/plat/myplat/include |
| |
| C Library |
| --------- |
| |
| To avoid subtle toolchain behavioral dependencies, the header files provided |
| by the compiler are not used. The software is built with the ``-nostdinc`` flag |
| to ensure no headers are included from the toolchain inadvertently. Instead the |
| required headers are included in the TF-A source tree. The library only |
| contains those C library definitions required by the local implementation. If |
| more functionality is required, the needed library functions will need to be |
| added to the local implementation. |
| |
| Some C headers have been obtained from `FreeBSD`_ and `SCC`_, while others have |
| been written specifically for TF-A. Some implementation files have been obtained |
| from `FreeBSD`_, others have been written specifically for TF-A as well. The |
| files can be found in ``include/lib/libc`` and ``lib/libc``. |
| |
| SCC can be found in http://www.simple-cc.org/. A copy of the `FreeBSD`_ sources |
| can be obtained from http://github.com/freebsd/freebsd. |
| |
| Storage abstraction layer |
| ------------------------- |
| |
| In order to improve platform independence and portability a storage abstraction |
| layer is used to load data from non-volatile platform storage. Currently |
| storage access is only required by BL1 and BL2 phases and performed inside the |
| ``load_image()`` function in ``bl_common.c``. |
| |
| .. uml:: resources/diagrams/plantuml/io_framework_usage_overview.puml |
| |
| It is mandatory to implement at least one storage driver. For the Arm |
| development platforms the Firmware Image Package (FIP) driver is provided as |
| the default means to load data from storage (see :ref:`firmware_design_fip`). |
| The storage layer is described in the header file |
| ``include/drivers/io/io_storage.h``. The implementation of the common library is |
| in ``drivers/io/io_storage.c`` and the driver files are located in |
| ``drivers/io/``. |
| |
| .. uml:: resources/diagrams/plantuml/io_arm_class_diagram.puml |
| |
| Each IO driver must provide ``io_dev_*`` structures, as described in |
| ``drivers/io/io_driver.h``. These are returned via a mandatory registration |
| function that is called on platform initialization. The semi-hosting driver |
| implementation in ``io_semihosting.c`` can be used as an example. |
| |
| Each platform should register devices and their drivers via the storage |
| abstraction layer. These drivers then need to be initialized by bootloader |
| phases as required in their respective ``blx_platform_setup()`` functions. |
| |
| .. uml:: resources/diagrams/plantuml/io_dev_registration.puml |
| |
| The storage abstraction layer provides mechanisms (``io_dev_init()``) to |
| initialize storage devices before IO operations are called. |
| |
| .. uml:: resources/diagrams/plantuml/io_dev_init_and_check.puml |
| |
| The basic operations supported by the layer |
| include ``open()``, ``close()``, ``read()``, ``write()``, ``size()`` and ``seek()``. |
| Drivers do not have to implement all operations, but each platform must |
| provide at least one driver for a device capable of supporting generic |
| operations such as loading a bootloader image. |
| |
| The current implementation only allows for known images to be loaded by the |
| firmware. These images are specified by using their identifiers, as defined in |
| ``include/plat/common/common_def.h`` (or a separate header file included from |
| there). The platform layer (``plat_get_image_source()``) then returns a reference |
| to a device and a driver-specific ``spec`` which will be understood by the driver |
| to allow access to the image data. |
| |
| The layer is designed in such a way that is it possible to chain drivers with |
| other drivers. For example, file-system drivers may be implemented on top of |
| physical block devices, both represented by IO devices with corresponding |
| drivers. In such a case, the file-system "binding" with the block device may |
| be deferred until the file-system device is initialised. |
| |
| The abstraction currently depends on structures being statically allocated |
| by the drivers and callers, as the system does not yet provide a means of |
| dynamically allocating memory. This may also have the affect of limiting the |
| amount of open resources per driver. |
| |
| Measured Boot Platform Interface |
| -------------------------------- |
| |
| Enabling the MEASURED_BOOT flag adds extra platform requirements. Please refer |
| to :ref:`Measured Boot Design` for more details. |
| |
| -------------- |
| |
| *Copyright (c) 2013-2024, Arm Limited and Contributors. All rights reserved.* |
| |
| .. _PSCI: https://developer.arm.com/documentation/den0022/latest/ |
| .. _Arm Generic Interrupt Controller version 2.0 (GICv2): http://infocenter.arm.com/help/topic/com.arm.doc.ihi0048b/index.html |
| .. _3.0 (GICv3): http://infocenter.arm.com/help/topic/com.arm.doc.ihi0069b/index.html |
| .. _FreeBSD: https://www.freebsd.org |
| .. _SCC: http://www.simple-cc.org/ |
| .. _DRTM: https://developer.arm.com/documentation/den0113/a |