| Coding Guidelines |
| ================= |
| |
| This document provides some additional guidelines to consider when writing |
| |TF-A| code. These are not intended to be strictly-enforced rules like the |
| contents of the :ref:`Coding Style`. |
| |
| Automatic Editor Configuration |
| ------------------------------ |
| |
| Many of the rules given below (such as indentation size, use of tabs, and |
| newlines) can be set automatically using the `EditorConfig`_ configuration file |
| in the root of the repository: ``.editorconfig``. With a supported editor, the |
| rules set out in this file can be automatically applied when you are editing |
| files in the |TF-A| repository. |
| |
| Several editors include built-in support for EditorConfig files, and many others |
| support its functionality through plugins. |
| |
| Use of the EditorConfig file is suggested but is not required. |
| |
| |
| Automatic Compliance Checking |
| ----------------------------- |
| |
| To assist with coding style compliance, the project Makefile contains two |
| targets which both utilise the `checkpatch.pl` script that ships with the Linux |
| source tree. The project also defines certain *checkpatch* options in the |
| ``.checkpatch.conf`` file in the top-level directory. |
| |
| .. note:: |
| Checkpatch errors will gate upstream merging of pull requests. |
| Checkpatch warnings will not gate merging but should be reviewed and fixed if |
| possible. |
| |
| To check the entire source tree, you must first download copies of |
| ``checkpatch.pl``, ``spelling.txt`` and ``const_structs.checkpatch`` available |
| in the `Linux master tree`_ *scripts* directory, then set the ``CHECKPATCH`` |
| environment variable to point to ``checkpatch.pl`` (with the other 2 files in |
| the same directory) and build the `checkcodebase` target: |
| |
| .. code:: shell |
| |
| make CHECKPATCH=<path-to-linux>/linux/scripts/checkpatch.pl checkcodebase |
| |
| To just check the style on the files that differ between your local branch and |
| the remote master, use: |
| |
| .. code:: shell |
| |
| make CHECKPATCH=<path-to-linux>/linux/scripts/checkpatch.pl checkpatch |
| |
| If you wish to check your patch against something other than the remote master, |
| set the ``BASE_COMMIT`` variable to your desired branch. By default, |
| ``BASE_COMMIT`` is set to ``origin/master``. |
| |
| Ignored Checkpatch Warnings |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| Some checkpatch warnings in the TF codebase are deliberately ignored. These |
| include: |
| |
| - ``**WARNING: line over 80 characters**``: Although the codebase should |
| generally conform to the 80 character limit this is overly restrictive in some |
| cases. |
| |
| - ``**WARNING: Use of volatile is usually wrong``: see |
| `Why the “volatile” type class should not be used`_ . Although this document |
| contains some very useful information, there are several legimate uses of the |
| volatile keyword within the TF codebase. |
| |
| Performance considerations |
| -------------------------- |
| |
| Avoid printf and use logging macros |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| ``debug.h`` provides logging macros (for example, ``WARN`` and ``ERROR``) |
| which wrap ``tf_log`` and which allow the logging call to be compiled-out |
| depending on the ``make`` command. Use these macros to avoid print statements |
| being compiled unconditionally into the binary. |
| |
| Each logging macro has a numerical log level: |
| |
| .. code:: c |
| |
| #define LOG_LEVEL_NONE 0 |
| #define LOG_LEVEL_ERROR 10 |
| #define LOG_LEVEL_NOTICE 20 |
| #define LOG_LEVEL_WARNING 30 |
| #define LOG_LEVEL_INFO 40 |
| #define LOG_LEVEL_VERBOSE 50 |
| |
| By default, all logging statements with a log level ``<= LOG_LEVEL_INFO`` will |
| be compiled into debug builds and all statements with a log level |
| ``<= LOG_LEVEL_NOTICE`` will be compiled into release builds. This can be |
| overridden from the command line or by the platform makefile (although it may be |
| necessary to clean the build directory first). For example, to enable |
| ``VERBOSE`` logging on FVP: |
| |
| ``make PLAT=fvp LOG_LEVEL=50 all`` |
| |
| Use const data where possible |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| For example, the following code: |
| |
| .. code:: c |
| |
| struct my_struct { |
| int arg1; |
| int arg2; |
| }; |
| |
| void init(struct my_struct *ptr); |
| |
| void main(void) |
| { |
| struct my_struct x; |
| x.arg1 = 1; |
| x.arg2 = 2; |
| init(&x); |
| } |
| |
| is better written as: |
| |
| .. code:: c |
| |
| struct my_struct { |
| int arg1; |
| int arg2; |
| }; |
| |
| void init(const struct my_struct *ptr); |
| |
| void main(void) |
| { |
| const struct my_struct x = { 1, 2 }; |
| init(&x); |
| } |
| |
| This allows the linker to put the data in a read-only data section instead of a |
| writeable data section, which may result in a smaller and faster binary. Note |
| that this may require dependent functions (``init()`` in the above example) to |
| have ``const`` arguments, assuming they don't need to modify the data. |
| |
| Libc functions that are banned or to be used with caution |
| --------------------------------------------------------- |
| |
| Below is a list of functions that present security risks and either must not be |
| used (Banned) or are discouraged from use and must be used with care (Caution). |
| |
| +------------------------+-----------+--------------------------------------+ |
| | libc function | Status | Comments | |
| +========================+===========+======================================+ |
| | ``strcpy, wcscpy``, | Banned | use strlcpy instead | |
| | ``strncpy`` | | | |
| +------------------------+-----------+--------------------------------------+ |
| | ``strcat, wcscat``, | Banned | use strlcat instead | |
| | ``strncat`` | | | |
| +------------------------+-----------+--------------------------------------+ |
| | ``sprintf, vsprintf`` | Banned | use snprintf, vsnprintf | |
| | | | instead | |
| +------------------------+-----------+--------------------------------------+ |
| | ``snprintf`` | Caution | ensure result fits in buffer | |
| | | | i.e : snprintf(buf,size...) < size | |
| +------------------------+-----------+--------------------------------------+ |
| | ``vsnprintf`` | Caution | inspect va_list match types | |
| | | | specified in format string | |
| +------------------------+-----------+--------------------------------------+ |
| | ``strtok`` | Banned | use strtok_r or strsep instead | |
| +------------------------+-----------+--------------------------------------+ |
| | ``strtok_r, strsep`` | Caution | inspect for terminated input buffer | |
| +------------------------+-----------+--------------------------------------+ |
| | ``ato*`` | Banned | use equivalent strto* functions | |
| +------------------------+-----------+--------------------------------------+ |
| | ``*toa`` | Banned | Use snprintf instead | |
| +------------------------+-----------+--------------------------------------+ |
| |
| The `libc` component in the codebase will not add support for the banned APIs. |
| |
| Error handling and robustness |
| ----------------------------- |
| |
| Using CASSERT to check for compile time data errors |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| Where possible, use the ``CASSERT`` macro to check the validity of data known at |
| compile time instead of checking validity at runtime, to avoid unnecessary |
| runtime code. |
| |
| For example, this can be used to check that the assembler's and compiler's views |
| of the size of an array is the same. |
| |
| .. code:: c |
| |
| #include <cassert.h> |
| |
| define MY_STRUCT_SIZE 8 /* Used by assembler source files */ |
| |
| struct my_struct { |
| uint32_t arg1; |
| uint32_t arg2; |
| }; |
| |
| CASSERT(MY_STRUCT_SIZE == sizeof(struct my_struct), assert_my_struct_size_mismatch); |
| |
| |
| If ``MY_STRUCT_SIZE`` in the above example were wrong then the compiler would |
| emit an error like this: |
| |
| :: |
| |
| my_struct.h:10:1: error: size of array ‘assert_my_struct_size_mismatch’ is negative |
| |
| |
| Using assert() to check for programming errors |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| In general, each secure world TF image (BL1, BL2, BL31 and BL32) should be |
| treated as a tightly integrated package; the image builder should be aware of |
| and responsible for all functionality within the image, even if code within that |
| image is provided by multiple entities. This allows us to be more aggressive in |
| interpreting invalid state or bad function arguments as programming errors using |
| ``assert()``, including arguments passed across platform porting interfaces. |
| This is in contrast to code in a Linux environment, which is less tightly |
| integrated and may attempt to be more defensive by passing the error back up the |
| call stack. |
| |
| Where possible, badly written TF code should fail early using ``assert()``. This |
| helps reduce the amount of untested conditional code. By default these |
| statements are not compiled into release builds, although this can be overridden |
| using the ``ENABLE_ASSERTIONS`` build flag. |
| |
| Examples: |
| |
| - Bad argument supplied to library function |
| - Bad argument provided by platform porting function |
| - Internal secure world image state is inconsistent |
| |
| |
| Handling integration errors |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| Each secure world image may be provided by a different entity (for example, a |
| Trusted Boot vendor may provide the BL2 image, a TEE vendor may provide the BL32 |
| image and the OEM/SoC vendor may provide the other images). |
| |
| An image may contain bugs that are only visible when the images are integrated. |
| The system integrator may not even have access to the debug variants of all the |
| images in order to check if asserts are firing. For example, the release variant |
| of BL1 may have already been burnt into the SoC. Therefore, TF code that detects |
| an integration error should _not_ consider this a programming error, and should |
| always take action, even in release builds. |
| |
| If an integration error is considered non-critical it should be treated as a |
| recoverable error. If the error is considered critical it should be treated as |
| an unexpected unrecoverable error. |
| |
| Handling recoverable errors |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| The secure world **must not** crash when supplied with bad data from an external |
| source. For example, data from the normal world or a hardware device. Similarly, |
| the secure world **must not** crash if it detects a non-critical problem within |
| itself or the system. It must make every effort to recover from the problem by |
| emitting a ``WARN`` message, performing any necessary error handling and |
| continuing. |
| |
| Examples: |
| |
| - Secure world receives SMC from normal world with bad arguments. |
| - Secure world receives SMC from normal world at an unexpected time. |
| - BL31 receives SMC from BL32 with bad arguments. |
| - BL31 receives SMC from BL32 at unexpected time. |
| - Secure world receives recoverable error from hardware device. Retrying the |
| operation may help here. |
| - Non-critical secure world service is not functioning correctly. |
| - BL31 SPD discovers minor configuration problem with corresponding SP. |
| |
| Handling unrecoverable errors |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| In some cases it may not be possible for the secure world to recover from an |
| error. This situation should be handled in one of the following ways: |
| |
| 1. If the unrecoverable error is unexpected then emit an ``ERROR`` message and |
| call ``panic()``. This will end up calling the platform-specific function |
| ``plat_panic_handler()``. |
| 2. If the unrecoverable error is expected to occur in certain circumstances, |
| then emit an ``ERROR`` message and call the platform-specific function |
| ``plat_error_handler()``. |
| |
| Cases 1 and 2 are subtly different. A platform may implement |
| ``plat_panic_handler`` and ``plat_error_handler`` in the same way (for example, |
| by waiting for a secure watchdog to time-out or by invoking an interface on the |
| platform's power controller to reset the platform). However, |
| ``plat_error_handler`` may take additional action for some errors (for example, |
| it may set a flag so the platform resets into a different mode). Also, |
| ``plat_panic_handler()`` may implement additional debug functionality (for |
| example, invoking a hardware breakpoint). |
| |
| Examples of unexpected unrecoverable errors: |
| |
| - BL32 receives an unexpected SMC response from BL31 that it is unable to |
| recover from. |
| - BL31 Trusted OS SPD code discovers that BL2 has not loaded the corresponding |
| Trusted OS, which is critical for platform operation. |
| - Secure world discovers that a critical hardware device is an unexpected and |
| unrecoverable state. |
| - Secure world receives an unexpected and unrecoverable error from a critical |
| hardware device. |
| - Secure world discovers that it is running on unsupported hardware. |
| |
| Examples of expected unrecoverable errors: |
| |
| - BL1/BL2 fails to load the next image due to missing/corrupt firmware on disk. |
| - BL1/BL2 fails to authenticate the next image due to an invalid certificate. |
| - Secure world continuously receives recoverable errors from a hardware device |
| but is unable to proceed without a valid response. |
| |
| Handling critical unresponsiveness |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| If the secure world is waiting for a response from an external source (for |
| example, the normal world or a hardware device) which is critical for continued |
| operation, it must not wait indefinitely. It must have a mechanism (for example, |
| a secure watchdog) for resetting itself and/or the external source to prevent |
| the system from executing in this state indefinitely. |
| |
| Examples: |
| |
| - BL1 is waiting for the normal world to raise an SMC to proceed to the next |
| stage of the secure firmware update process. |
| - A Trusted OS is waiting for a response from a proxy in the normal world that |
| is critical for continued operation. |
| - Secure world is waiting for a hardware response that is critical for continued |
| operation. |
| |
| Use of built-in *C* and *libc* data types |
| ----------------------------------------- |
| |
| The |TF-A| codebase should be kept as portable as possible, especially since |
| both 64-bit and 32-bit platforms are supported. To help with this, the following |
| data type usage guidelines should be followed: |
| |
| - Where possible, use the built-in *C* data types for variable storage (for |
| example, ``char``, ``int``, ``long long``, etc) instead of the standard *C99* |
| types. Most code is typically only concerned with the minimum size of the |
| data stored, which the built-in *C* types guarantee. |
| |
| - Avoid using the exact-size standard *C99* types in general (for example, |
| ``uint16_t``, ``uint32_t``, ``uint64_t``, etc) since they can prevent the |
| compiler from making optimizations. There are legitimate uses for them, |
| for example to represent data of a known structure. When using them in struct |
| definitions, consider how padding in the struct will work across architectures. |
| For example, extra padding may be introduced in |AArch32| systems if a struct |
| member crosses a 32-bit boundary. |
| |
| - Use ``int`` as the default integer type - it's likely to be the fastest on all |
| systems. Also this can be assumed to be 32-bit as a consequence of the |
| `Procedure Call Standard for the Arm Architecture`_ and the `Procedure Call |
| Standard for the Arm 64-bit Architecture`_ . |
| |
| - Avoid use of ``short`` as this may end up being slower than ``int`` in some |
| systems. If a variable must be exactly 16-bit, use ``int16_t`` or |
| ``uint16_t``. |
| |
| - Avoid use of ``long``. This is guaranteed to be at least 32-bit but, given |
| that `int` is 32-bit on Arm platforms, there is no use for it. For integers of |
| at least 64-bit, use ``long long``. |
| |
| - Use ``char`` for storing text. Use ``uint8_t`` for storing other 8-bit data. |
| |
| - Use ``unsigned`` for integers that can never be negative (counts, |
| indices, sizes, etc). TF intends to comply with MISRA "essential type" coding |
| rules (10.X), where signed and unsigned types are considered different |
| essential types. Choosing the correct type will aid this. MISRA static |
| analysers will pick up any implicit signed/unsigned conversions that may lead |
| to unexpected behaviour. |
| |
| - For pointer types: |
| |
| - If an argument in a function declaration is pointing to a known type then |
| simply use a pointer to that type (for example: ``struct my_struct *``). |
| |
| - If a variable (including an argument in a function declaration) is pointing |
| to a general, memory-mapped address, an array of pointers or another |
| structure that is likely to require pointer arithmetic then use |
| ``uintptr_t``. This will reduce the amount of casting required in the code. |
| Avoid using ``unsigned long`` or ``unsigned long long`` for this purpose; it |
| may work but is less portable. |
| |
| - For other pointer arguments in a function declaration, use ``void *``. This |
| includes pointers to types that are abstracted away from the known API and |
| pointers to arbitrary data. This allows the calling function to pass a |
| pointer argument to the function without any explicit casting (the cast to |
| ``void *`` is implicit). The function implementation can then do the |
| appropriate casting to a specific type. |
| |
| - Avoid pointer arithmetic generally (as this violates MISRA C 2012 rule |
| 18.4) and especially on void pointers (as this is only supported via |
| language extensions and is considered non-standard). In TF-A, setting the |
| ``W`` build flag to ``W=3`` enables the *-Wpointer-arith* compiler flag and |
| this will emit warnings where pointer arithmetic is used. |
| |
| - Use ``ptrdiff_t`` to compare the difference between 2 pointers. |
| |
| - Use ``size_t`` when storing the ``sizeof()`` something. |
| |
| - Use ``ssize_t`` when returning the ``sizeof()`` something from a function that |
| can also return an error code; the signed type allows for a negative return |
| code in case of error. This practice should be used sparingly. |
| |
| - Use ``u_register_t`` when it's important to store the contents of a register |
| in its native size (32-bit in |AArch32| and 64-bit in |AArch64|). This is not a |
| standard *C99* type but is widely available in libc implementations, |
| including the FreeBSD version included with the TF codebase. Where possible, |
| cast the variable to a more appropriate type before interpreting the data. For |
| example, the following struct in ``ep_info.h`` could use this type to minimize |
| the storage required for the set of registers: |
| |
| .. code:: c |
| |
| typedef struct aapcs64_params { |
| u_register_t arg0; |
| u_register_t arg1; |
| u_register_t arg2; |
| u_register_t arg3; |
| u_register_t arg4; |
| u_register_t arg5; |
| u_register_t arg6; |
| u_register_t arg7; |
| } aapcs64_params_t; |
| |
| If some code wants to operate on ``arg0`` and knows that it represents a 32-bit |
| unsigned integer on all systems, cast it to ``unsigned int``. |
| |
| These guidelines should be updated if additional types are needed. |
| |
| -------------- |
| |
| *Copyright (c) 2020, Arm Limited and Contributors. All rights reserved.* |
| |
| .. _`Linux master tree`: https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/tree/ |
| .. _`Procedure Call Standard for the Arm Architecture`: https://developer.arm.com/docs/ihi0042/latest/ |
| .. _`Procedure Call Standard for the Arm 64-bit Architecture`: https://developer.arm.com/docs/ihi0055/latest/ |
| .. _`EditorConfig`: http://editorconfig.org/ |
| .. _`Why the “volatile” type class should not be used`: https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/latest/process/volatile-considered-harmful.html |
| .. _`MISRA C:2012 Guidelines`: https://www.misra.org.uk/Activities/MISRAC/tabid/160/Default.aspx |
| .. _`a spreadsheet`: https://developer.trustedfirmware.org/file/download/lamajxif3w7c4mpjeoo5/PHID-FILE-fp7c7acszn6vliqomyhn/MISRA-and-TF-Analysis-v1.3.ods |