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Douglas Raillardd7c21b72017-06-28 15:23:03 +01001ARM Trusted Firmware Porting Guide
2==================================
3
4
5.. section-numbering::
6 :suffix: .
7
8.. contents::
9
10--------------
11
12Introduction
13------------
14
15Please note that this document has been updated for the new platform API
16as required by the PSCI v1.0 implementation. Please refer to the
17`Migration Guide`_ for the previous platform API.
18
19Porting the ARM Trusted Firmware to a new platform involves making some
20mandatory and optional modifications for both the cold and warm boot paths.
21Modifications consist of:
22
23- Implementing a platform-specific function or variable,
24- Setting up the execution context in a certain way, or
25- Defining certain constants (for example #defines).
26
27The platform-specific functions and variables are declared in
28`include/plat/common/platform.h`_. The firmware provides a default implementation
29of variables and functions to fulfill the optional requirements. These
30implementations are all weakly defined; they are provided to ease the porting
31effort. Each platform port can override them with its own implementation if the
32default implementation is inadequate.
33
34Platform ports that want to be aligned with standard ARM platforms (for example
35FVP and Juno) may also use `include/plat/arm/common/plat\_arm.h`_ and the
36corresponding source files in ``plat/arm/common/``. These provide standard
37implementations for some of the required platform porting functions. However,
38using these functions requires the platform port to implement additional
39ARM standard platform porting functions. These additional functions are not
40documented here.
41
42Some modifications are common to all Boot Loader (BL) stages. Section 2
43discusses these in detail. The subsequent sections discuss the remaining
44modifications for each BL stage in detail.
45
46This document should be read in conjunction with the ARM Trusted Firmware
47`User Guide`_.
48
49Common modifications
50--------------------
51
52This section covers the modifications that should be made by the platform for
53each BL stage to correctly port the firmware stack. They are categorized as
54either mandatory or optional.
55
56Common mandatory modifications
57------------------------------
58
59A platform port must enable the Memory Management Unit (MMU) as well as the
60instruction and data caches for each BL stage. Setting up the translation
61tables is the responsibility of the platform port because memory maps differ
62across platforms. A memory translation library (see ``lib/xlat_tables/``) is
Sandrine Bailleux1861b7a2017-07-20 16:11:01 +010063provided to help in this setup.
64
65Note that although this library supports non-identity mappings, this is intended
66only for re-mapping peripheral physical addresses and allows platforms with high
67I/O addresses to reduce their virtual address space. All other addresses
68corresponding to code and data must currently use an identity mapping.
69
70Also, the only translation granule size supported in Trusted Firmware is 4KB, as
71various parts of the code assume that is the case. It is not possible to switch
72to 16 KB or 64 KB granule sizes at the moment.
Douglas Raillardd7c21b72017-06-28 15:23:03 +010073
74In ARM standard platforms, each BL stage configures the MMU in the
75platform-specific architecture setup function, ``blX_plat_arch_setup()``, and uses
76an identity mapping for all addresses.
77
78If the build option ``USE_COHERENT_MEM`` is enabled, each platform can allocate a
79block of identity mapped secure memory with Device-nGnRE attributes aligned to
80page boundary (4K) for each BL stage. All sections which allocate coherent
81memory are grouped under ``coherent_ram``. For ex: Bakery locks are placed in a
82section identified by name ``bakery_lock`` inside ``coherent_ram`` so that its
83possible for the firmware to place variables in it using the following C code
84directive:
85
86::
87
88 __section("bakery_lock")
89
90Or alternatively the following assembler code directive:
91
92::
93
94 .section bakery_lock
95
96The ``coherent_ram`` section is a sum of all sections like ``bakery_lock`` which are
97used to allocate any data structures that are accessed both when a CPU is
98executing with its MMU and caches enabled, and when it's running with its MMU
99and caches disabled. Examples are given below.
100
101The following variables, functions and constants must be defined by the platform
102for the firmware to work correctly.
103
104File : platform\_def.h [mandatory]
105~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
106
107Each platform must ensure that a header file of this name is in the system
108include path with the following constants defined. This may require updating the
109list of ``PLAT_INCLUDES`` in the ``platform.mk`` file. In the ARM development
110platforms, this file is found in ``plat/arm/board/<plat_name>/include/``.
111
112Platform ports may optionally use the file `include/plat/common/common\_def.h`_,
113which provides typical values for some of the constants below. These values are
114likely to be suitable for all platform ports.
115
116Platform ports that want to be aligned with standard ARM platforms (for example
117FVP and Juno) may also use `include/plat/arm/common/arm\_def.h`_, which provides
118standard values for some of the constants below. However, this requires the
119platform port to define additional platform porting constants in
120``platform_def.h``. These additional constants are not documented here.
121
122- **#define : PLATFORM\_LINKER\_FORMAT**
123
124 Defines the linker format used by the platform, for example
125 ``elf64-littleaarch64``.
126
127- **#define : PLATFORM\_LINKER\_ARCH**
128
129 Defines the processor architecture for the linker by the platform, for
130 example ``aarch64``.
131
132- **#define : PLATFORM\_STACK\_SIZE**
133
134 Defines the normal stack memory available to each CPU. This constant is used
135 by `plat/common/aarch64/platform\_mp\_stack.S`_ and
136 `plat/common/aarch64/platform\_up\_stack.S`_.
137
138- **define : CACHE\_WRITEBACK\_GRANULE**
139
140 Defines the size in bits of the largest cache line across all the cache
141 levels in the platform.
142
143- **#define : FIRMWARE\_WELCOME\_STR**
144
145 Defines the character string printed by BL1 upon entry into the ``bl1_main()``
146 function.
147
148- **#define : PLATFORM\_CORE\_COUNT**
149
150 Defines the total number of CPUs implemented by the platform across all
151 clusters in the system.
152
153- **#define : PLAT\_NUM\_PWR\_DOMAINS**
154
155 Defines the total number of nodes in the power domain topology
156 tree at all the power domain levels used by the platform.
157 This macro is used by the PSCI implementation to allocate
158 data structures to represent power domain topology.
159
160- **#define : PLAT\_MAX\_PWR\_LVL**
161
162 Defines the maximum power domain level that the power management operations
163 should apply to. More often, but not always, the power domain level
164 corresponds to affinity level. This macro allows the PSCI implementation
165 to know the highest power domain level that it should consider for power
166 management operations in the system that the platform implements. For
167 example, the Base AEM FVP implements two clusters with a configurable
168 number of CPUs and it reports the maximum power domain level as 1.
169
170- **#define : PLAT\_MAX\_OFF\_STATE**
171
172 Defines the local power state corresponding to the deepest power down
173 possible at every power domain level in the platform. The local power
174 states for each level may be sparsely allocated between 0 and this value
175 with 0 being reserved for the RUN state. The PSCI implementation uses this
176 value to initialize the local power states of the power domain nodes and
177 to specify the requested power state for a PSCI\_CPU\_OFF call.
178
179- **#define : PLAT\_MAX\_RET\_STATE**
180
181 Defines the local power state corresponding to the deepest retention state
182 possible at every power domain level in the platform. This macro should be
183 a value less than PLAT\_MAX\_OFF\_STATE and greater than 0. It is used by the
184 PSCI implementation to distinguish between retention and power down local
185 power states within PSCI\_CPU\_SUSPEND call.
186
187- **#define : PLAT\_MAX\_PWR\_LVL\_STATES**
188
189 Defines the maximum number of local power states per power domain level
190 that the platform supports. The default value of this macro is 2 since
191 most platforms just support a maximum of two local power states at each
192 power domain level (power-down and retention). If the platform needs to
193 account for more local power states, then it must redefine this macro.
194
195 Currently, this macro is used by the Generic PSCI implementation to size
196 the array used for PSCI\_STAT\_COUNT/RESIDENCY accounting.
197
198- **#define : BL1\_RO\_BASE**
199
200 Defines the base address in secure ROM where BL1 originally lives. Must be
201 aligned on a page-size boundary.
202
203- **#define : BL1\_RO\_LIMIT**
204
205 Defines the maximum address in secure ROM that BL1's actual content (i.e.
206 excluding any data section allocated at runtime) can occupy.
207
208- **#define : BL1\_RW\_BASE**
209
210 Defines the base address in secure RAM where BL1's read-write data will live
211 at runtime. Must be aligned on a page-size boundary.
212
213- **#define : BL1\_RW\_LIMIT**
214
215 Defines the maximum address in secure RAM that BL1's read-write data can
216 occupy at runtime.
217
218- **#define : BL2\_BASE**
219
220 Defines the base address in secure RAM where BL1 loads the BL2 binary image.
221 Must be aligned on a page-size boundary.
222
223- **#define : BL2\_LIMIT**
224
225 Defines the maximum address in secure RAM that the BL2 image can occupy.
226
227- **#define : BL31\_BASE**
228
229 Defines the base address in secure RAM where BL2 loads the BL31 binary
230 image. Must be aligned on a page-size boundary.
231
232- **#define : BL31\_LIMIT**
233
234 Defines the maximum address in secure RAM that the BL31 image can occupy.
235
236For every image, the platform must define individual identifiers that will be
237used by BL1 or BL2 to load the corresponding image into memory from non-volatile
238storage. For the sake of performance, integer numbers will be used as
239identifiers. The platform will use those identifiers to return the relevant
240information about the image to be loaded (file handler, load address,
241authentication information, etc.). The following image identifiers are
242mandatory:
243
244- **#define : BL2\_IMAGE\_ID**
245
246 BL2 image identifier, used by BL1 to load BL2.
247
248- **#define : BL31\_IMAGE\_ID**
249
250 BL31 image identifier, used by BL2 to load BL31.
251
252- **#define : BL33\_IMAGE\_ID**
253
254 BL33 image identifier, used by BL2 to load BL33.
255
256If Trusted Board Boot is enabled, the following certificate identifiers must
257also be defined:
258
259- **#define : TRUSTED\_BOOT\_FW\_CERT\_ID**
260
261 BL2 content certificate identifier, used by BL1 to load the BL2 content
262 certificate.
263
264- **#define : TRUSTED\_KEY\_CERT\_ID**
265
266 Trusted key certificate identifier, used by BL2 to load the trusted key
267 certificate.
268
269- **#define : SOC\_FW\_KEY\_CERT\_ID**
270
271 BL31 key certificate identifier, used by BL2 to load the BL31 key
272 certificate.
273
274- **#define : SOC\_FW\_CONTENT\_CERT\_ID**
275
276 BL31 content certificate identifier, used by BL2 to load the BL31 content
277 certificate.
278
279- **#define : NON\_TRUSTED\_FW\_KEY\_CERT\_ID**
280
281 BL33 key certificate identifier, used by BL2 to load the BL33 key
282 certificate.
283
284- **#define : NON\_TRUSTED\_FW\_CONTENT\_CERT\_ID**
285
286 BL33 content certificate identifier, used by BL2 to load the BL33 content
287 certificate.
288
289- **#define : FWU\_CERT\_ID**
290
291 Firmware Update (FWU) certificate identifier, used by NS\_BL1U to load the
292 FWU content certificate.
293
294- **#define : PLAT\_CRYPTOCELL\_BASE**
295
296 This defines the base address of ARM® TrustZone® CryptoCell and must be
297 defined if CryptoCell crypto driver is used for Trusted Board Boot. For
298 capable ARM platforms, this driver is used if ``ARM_CRYPTOCELL_INTEG`` is
299 set.
300
301If the AP Firmware Updater Configuration image, BL2U is used, the following
302must also be defined:
303
304- **#define : BL2U\_BASE**
305
306 Defines the base address in secure memory where BL1 copies the BL2U binary
307 image. Must be aligned on a page-size boundary.
308
309- **#define : BL2U\_LIMIT**
310
311 Defines the maximum address in secure memory that the BL2U image can occupy.
312
313- **#define : BL2U\_IMAGE\_ID**
314
315 BL2U image identifier, used by BL1 to fetch an image descriptor
316 corresponding to BL2U.
317
318If the SCP Firmware Update Configuration Image, SCP\_BL2U is used, the following
319must also be defined:
320
321- **#define : SCP\_BL2U\_IMAGE\_ID**
322
323 SCP\_BL2U image identifier, used by BL1 to fetch an image descriptor
324 corresponding to SCP\_BL2U.
325 NOTE: TF does not provide source code for this image.
326
327If the Non-Secure Firmware Updater ROM, NS\_BL1U is used, the following must
328also be defined:
329
330- **#define : NS\_BL1U\_BASE**
331
332 Defines the base address in non-secure ROM where NS\_BL1U executes.
333 Must be aligned on a page-size boundary.
334 NOTE: TF does not provide source code for this image.
335
336- **#define : NS\_BL1U\_IMAGE\_ID**
337
338 NS\_BL1U image identifier, used by BL1 to fetch an image descriptor
339 corresponding to NS\_BL1U.
340
341If the Non-Secure Firmware Updater, NS\_BL2U is used, the following must also
342be defined:
343
344- **#define : NS\_BL2U\_BASE**
345
346 Defines the base address in non-secure memory where NS\_BL2U executes.
347 Must be aligned on a page-size boundary.
348 NOTE: TF does not provide source code for this image.
349
350- **#define : NS\_BL2U\_IMAGE\_ID**
351
352 NS\_BL2U image identifier, used by BL1 to fetch an image descriptor
353 corresponding to NS\_BL2U.
354
355For the the Firmware update capability of TRUSTED BOARD BOOT, the following
356macros may also be defined:
357
358- **#define : PLAT\_FWU\_MAX\_SIMULTANEOUS\_IMAGES**
359
360 Total number of images that can be loaded simultaneously. If the platform
361 doesn't specify any value, it defaults to 10.
362
363If a SCP\_BL2 image is supported by the platform, the following constants must
364also be defined:
365
366- **#define : SCP\_BL2\_IMAGE\_ID**
367
368 SCP\_BL2 image identifier, used by BL2 to load SCP\_BL2 into secure memory
369 from platform storage before being transfered to the SCP.
370
371- **#define : SCP\_FW\_KEY\_CERT\_ID**
372
373 SCP\_BL2 key certificate identifier, used by BL2 to load the SCP\_BL2 key
374 certificate (mandatory when Trusted Board Boot is enabled).
375
376- **#define : SCP\_FW\_CONTENT\_CERT\_ID**
377
378 SCP\_BL2 content certificate identifier, used by BL2 to load the SCP\_BL2
379 content certificate (mandatory when Trusted Board Boot is enabled).
380
381If a BL32 image is supported by the platform, the following constants must
382also be defined:
383
384- **#define : BL32\_IMAGE\_ID**
385
386 BL32 image identifier, used by BL2 to load BL32.
387
388- **#define : TRUSTED\_OS\_FW\_KEY\_CERT\_ID**
389
390 BL32 key certificate identifier, used by BL2 to load the BL32 key
391 certificate (mandatory when Trusted Board Boot is enabled).
392
393- **#define : TRUSTED\_OS\_FW\_CONTENT\_CERT\_ID**
394
395 BL32 content certificate identifier, used by BL2 to load the BL32 content
396 certificate (mandatory when Trusted Board Boot is enabled).
397
398- **#define : BL32\_BASE**
399
400 Defines the base address in secure memory where BL2 loads the BL32 binary
401 image. Must be aligned on a page-size boundary.
402
403- **#define : BL32\_LIMIT**
404
405 Defines the maximum address that the BL32 image can occupy.
406
407If the Test Secure-EL1 Payload (TSP) instantiation of BL32 is supported by the
408platform, the following constants must also be defined:
409
410- **#define : TSP\_SEC\_MEM\_BASE**
411
412 Defines the base address of the secure memory used by the TSP image on the
413 platform. This must be at the same address or below ``BL32_BASE``.
414
415- **#define : TSP\_SEC\_MEM\_SIZE**
416
417 Defines the size of the secure memory used by the BL32 image on the
418 platform. ``TSP_SEC_MEM_BASE`` and ``TSP_SEC_MEM_SIZE`` must fully accomodate
419 the memory required by the BL32 image, defined by ``BL32_BASE`` and
420 ``BL32_LIMIT``.
421
422- **#define : TSP\_IRQ\_SEC\_PHY\_TIMER**
423
424 Defines the ID of the secure physical generic timer interrupt used by the
425 TSP's interrupt handling code.
426
427If the platform port uses the translation table library code, the following
428constants must also be defined:
429
430- **#define : PLAT\_XLAT\_TABLES\_DYNAMIC**
431
432 Optional flag that can be set per-image to enable the dynamic allocation of
433 regions even when the MMU is enabled. If not defined, only static
434 functionality will be available, if defined and set to 1 it will also
435 include the dynamic functionality.
436
437- **#define : MAX\_XLAT\_TABLES**
438
439 Defines the maximum number of translation tables that are allocated by the
440 translation table library code. To minimize the amount of runtime memory
441 used, choose the smallest value needed to map the required virtual addresses
442 for each BL stage. If ``PLAT_XLAT_TABLES_DYNAMIC`` flag is enabled for a BL
443 image, ``MAX_XLAT_TABLES`` must be defined to accommodate the dynamic regions
444 as well.
445
446- **#define : MAX\_MMAP\_REGIONS**
447
448 Defines the maximum number of regions that are allocated by the translation
449 table library code. A region consists of physical base address, virtual base
450 address, size and attributes (Device/Memory, RO/RW, Secure/Non-Secure), as
451 defined in the ``mmap_region_t`` structure. The platform defines the regions
452 that should be mapped. Then, the translation table library will create the
453 corresponding tables and descriptors at runtime. To minimize the amount of
454 runtime memory used, choose the smallest value needed to register the
455 required regions for each BL stage. If ``PLAT_XLAT_TABLES_DYNAMIC`` flag is
456 enabled for a BL image, ``MAX_MMAP_REGIONS`` must be defined to accommodate
457 the dynamic regions as well.
458
459- **#define : ADDR\_SPACE\_SIZE**
460
461 Defines the total size of the address space in bytes. For example, for a 32
462 bit address space, this value should be ``(1ull << 32)``. This definition is
463 now deprecated, platforms should use ``PLAT_PHY_ADDR_SPACE_SIZE`` and
464 ``PLAT_VIRT_ADDR_SPACE_SIZE`` instead.
465
466- **#define : PLAT\_VIRT\_ADDR\_SPACE\_SIZE**
467
468 Defines the total size of the virtual address space in bytes. For example,
469 for a 32 bit virtual address space, this value should be ``(1ull << 32)``.
470
471- **#define : PLAT\_PHY\_ADDR\_SPACE\_SIZE**
472
473 Defines the total size of the physical address space in bytes. For example,
474 for a 32 bit physical address space, this value should be ``(1ull << 32)``.
475
476If the platform port uses the IO storage framework, the following constants
477must also be defined:
478
479- **#define : MAX\_IO\_DEVICES**
480
481 Defines the maximum number of registered IO devices. Attempting to register
482 more devices than this value using ``io_register_device()`` will fail with
483 -ENOMEM.
484
485- **#define : MAX\_IO\_HANDLES**
486
487 Defines the maximum number of open IO handles. Attempting to open more IO
488 entities than this value using ``io_open()`` will fail with -ENOMEM.
489
490- **#define : MAX\_IO\_BLOCK\_DEVICES**
491
492 Defines the maximum number of registered IO block devices. Attempting to
493 register more devices this value using ``io_dev_open()`` will fail
494 with -ENOMEM. MAX\_IO\_BLOCK\_DEVICES should be less than MAX\_IO\_DEVICES.
495 With this macro, multiple block devices could be supported at the same
496 time.
497
498If the platform needs to allocate data within the per-cpu data framework in
499BL31, it should define the following macro. Currently this is only required if
500the platform decides not to use the coherent memory section by undefining the
501``USE_COHERENT_MEM`` build flag. In this case, the framework allocates the
502required memory within the the per-cpu data to minimize wastage.
503
504- **#define : PLAT\_PCPU\_DATA\_SIZE**
505
506 Defines the memory (in bytes) to be reserved within the per-cpu data
507 structure for use by the platform layer.
508
509The following constants are optional. They should be defined when the platform
510memory layout implies some image overlaying like in ARM standard platforms.
511
512- **#define : BL31\_PROGBITS\_LIMIT**
513
514 Defines the maximum address in secure RAM that the BL31's progbits sections
515 can occupy.
516
517- **#define : TSP\_PROGBITS\_LIMIT**
518
519 Defines the maximum address that the TSP's progbits sections can occupy.
520
521If the platform port uses the PL061 GPIO driver, the following constant may
522optionally be defined:
523
524- **PLAT\_PL061\_MAX\_GPIOS**
525 Maximum number of GPIOs required by the platform. This allows control how
526 much memory is allocated for PL061 GPIO controllers. The default value is
527
528 #. $(eval $(call add\_define,PLAT\_PL061\_MAX\_GPIOS))
529
530If the platform port uses the partition driver, the following constant may
531optionally be defined:
532
533- **PLAT\_PARTITION\_MAX\_ENTRIES**
534 Maximum number of partition entries required by the platform. This allows
535 control how much memory is allocated for partition entries. The default
536 value is 128.
537 `For example, define the build flag in platform.mk`_:
538 PLAT\_PARTITION\_MAX\_ENTRIES := 12
539 $(eval $(call add\_define,PLAT\_PARTITION\_MAX\_ENTRIES))
540
541The following constant is optional. It should be defined to override the default
542behaviour of the ``assert()`` function (for example, to save memory).
543
544- **PLAT\_LOG\_LEVEL\_ASSERT**
545 If ``PLAT_LOG_LEVEL_ASSERT`` is higher or equal than ``LOG_LEVEL_VERBOSE``,
546 ``assert()`` prints the name of the file, the line number and the asserted
547 expression. Else if it is higher than ``LOG_LEVEL_INFO``, it prints the file
548 name and the line number. Else if it is lower than ``LOG_LEVEL_INFO``, it
549 doesn't print anything to the console. If ``PLAT_LOG_LEVEL_ASSERT`` isn't
550 defined, it defaults to ``LOG_LEVEL``.
551
Dimitris Papastamos60346db2017-12-13 10:54:37 +0000552If the platform port uses the Activity Monitor Unit, the following constants
553may be defined:
554
555- **PLAT\_AMU\_GROUP1\_COUNTERS\_MASK**
556 This mask reflects the set of group counters that should be enabled. The
557 maximum number of group 1 counters supported by AMUv1 is 16 so the mask
558 can be at most 0xffff. If the platform does not define this mask, no group 1
559 counters are enabled. If the platform defines this mask, the following
560 constant needs to also be defined.
561
562- **PLAT\_AMU\_GROUP1\_NR\_COUNTERS**
563 This value is used to allocate an array to save and restore the counters
564 specified by ``PLAT_AMU_GROUP1_COUNTERS_MASK`` on CPU suspend.
565 This value should be equal to the highest bit position set in the
566 mask, plus 1. The maximum number of group 1 counters in AMUv1 is 16.
567
Douglas Raillardd7c21b72017-06-28 15:23:03 +0100568File : plat\_macros.S [mandatory]
569~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
570
571Each platform must ensure a file of this name is in the system include path with
572the following macro defined. In the ARM development platforms, this file is
573found in ``plat/arm/board/<plat_name>/include/plat_macros.S``.
574
575- **Macro : plat\_crash\_print\_regs**
576
577 This macro allows the crash reporting routine to print relevant platform
578 registers in case of an unhandled exception in BL31. This aids in debugging
579 and this macro can be defined to be empty in case register reporting is not
580 desired.
581
582 For instance, GIC or interconnect registers may be helpful for
583 troubleshooting.
584
585Handling Reset
586--------------
587
588BL1 by default implements the reset vector where execution starts from a cold
589or warm boot. BL31 can be optionally set as a reset vector using the
590``RESET_TO_BL31`` make variable.
591
592For each CPU, the reset vector code is responsible for the following tasks:
593
594#. Distinguishing between a cold boot and a warm boot.
595
596#. In the case of a cold boot and the CPU being a secondary CPU, ensuring that
597 the CPU is placed in a platform-specific state until the primary CPU
598 performs the necessary steps to remove it from this state.
599
600#. In the case of a warm boot, ensuring that the CPU jumps to a platform-
601 specific address in the BL31 image in the same processor mode as it was
602 when released from reset.
603
604The following functions need to be implemented by the platform port to enable
605reset vector code to perform the above tasks.
606
607Function : plat\_get\_my\_entrypoint() [mandatory when PROGRAMMABLE\_RESET\_ADDRESS == 0]
608~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
609
610::
611
612 Argument : void
613 Return : uintptr_t
614
615This function is called with the MMU and caches disabled
616(``SCTLR_EL3.M`` = 0 and ``SCTLR_EL3.C`` = 0). The function is responsible for
617distinguishing between a warm and cold reset for the current CPU using
618platform-specific means. If it's a warm reset, then it returns the warm
619reset entrypoint point provided to ``plat_setup_psci_ops()`` during
620BL31 initialization. If it's a cold reset then this function must return zero.
621
622This function does not follow the Procedure Call Standard used by the
623Application Binary Interface for the ARM 64-bit architecture. The caller should
624not assume that callee saved registers are preserved across a call to this
625function.
626
627This function fulfills requirement 1 and 3 listed above.
628
629Note that for platforms that support programming the reset address, it is
630expected that a CPU will start executing code directly at the right address,
631both on a cold and warm reset. In this case, there is no need to identify the
632type of reset nor to query the warm reset entrypoint. Therefore, implementing
633this function is not required on such platforms.
634
635Function : plat\_secondary\_cold\_boot\_setup() [mandatory when COLD\_BOOT\_SINGLE\_CPU == 0]
636~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
637
638::
639
640 Argument : void
641
642This function is called with the MMU and data caches disabled. It is responsible
643for placing the executing secondary CPU in a platform-specific state until the
644primary CPU performs the necessary actions to bring it out of that state and
645allow entry into the OS. This function must not return.
646
647In the ARM FVP port, when using the normal boot flow, each secondary CPU powers
648itself off. The primary CPU is responsible for powering up the secondary CPUs
649when normal world software requires them. When booting an EL3 payload instead,
650they stay powered on and are put in a holding pen until their mailbox gets
651populated.
652
653This function fulfills requirement 2 above.
654
655Note that for platforms that can't release secondary CPUs out of reset, only the
656primary CPU will execute the cold boot code. Therefore, implementing this
657function is not required on such platforms.
658
659Function : plat\_is\_my\_cpu\_primary() [mandatory when COLD\_BOOT\_SINGLE\_CPU == 0]
660~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
661
662::
663
664 Argument : void
665 Return : unsigned int
666
667This function identifies whether the current CPU is the primary CPU or a
668secondary CPU. A return value of zero indicates that the CPU is not the
669primary CPU, while a non-zero return value indicates that the CPU is the
670primary CPU.
671
672Note that for platforms that can't release secondary CPUs out of reset, only the
673primary CPU will execute the cold boot code. Therefore, there is no need to
674distinguish between primary and secondary CPUs and implementing this function is
675not required.
676
677Function : platform\_mem\_init() [mandatory]
678~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
679
680::
681
682 Argument : void
683 Return : void
684
685This function is called before any access to data is made by the firmware, in
686order to carry out any essential memory initialization.
687
688Function: plat\_get\_rotpk\_info()
689~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
690
691::
692
693 Argument : void *, void **, unsigned int *, unsigned int *
694 Return : int
695
696This function is mandatory when Trusted Board Boot is enabled. It returns a
697pointer to the ROTPK stored in the platform (or a hash of it) and its length.
698The ROTPK must be encoded in DER format according to the following ASN.1
699structure:
700
701::
702
703 AlgorithmIdentifier ::= SEQUENCE {
704 algorithm OBJECT IDENTIFIER,
705 parameters ANY DEFINED BY algorithm OPTIONAL
706 }
707
708 SubjectPublicKeyInfo ::= SEQUENCE {
709 algorithm AlgorithmIdentifier,
710 subjectPublicKey BIT STRING
711 }
712
713In case the function returns a hash of the key:
714
715::
716
717 DigestInfo ::= SEQUENCE {
718 digestAlgorithm AlgorithmIdentifier,
719 digest OCTET STRING
720 }
721
722The function returns 0 on success. Any other value is treated as error by the
723Trusted Board Boot. The function also reports extra information related
724to the ROTPK in the flags parameter:
725
726::
727
728 ROTPK_IS_HASH : Indicates that the ROTPK returned by the platform is a
729 hash.
730 ROTPK_NOT_DEPLOYED : This allows the platform to skip certificate ROTPK
731 verification while the platform ROTPK is not deployed.
732 When this flag is set, the function does not need to
733 return a platform ROTPK, and the authentication
734 framework uses the ROTPK in the certificate without
735 verifying it against the platform value. This flag
736 must not be used in a deployed production environment.
737
738Function: plat\_get\_nv\_ctr()
739~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
740
741::
742
743 Argument : void *, unsigned int *
744 Return : int
745
746This function is mandatory when Trusted Board Boot is enabled. It returns the
747non-volatile counter value stored in the platform in the second argument. The
748cookie in the first argument may be used to select the counter in case the
749platform provides more than one (for example, on platforms that use the default
750TBBR CoT, the cookie will correspond to the OID values defined in
751TRUSTED\_FW\_NVCOUNTER\_OID or NON\_TRUSTED\_FW\_NVCOUNTER\_OID).
752
753The function returns 0 on success. Any other value means the counter value could
754not be retrieved from the platform.
755
756Function: plat\_set\_nv\_ctr()
757~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
758
759::
760
761 Argument : void *, unsigned int
762 Return : int
763
764This function is mandatory when Trusted Board Boot is enabled. It sets a new
765counter value in the platform. The cookie in the first argument may be used to
766select the counter (as explained in plat\_get\_nv\_ctr()). The second argument is
767the updated counter value to be written to the NV counter.
768
769The function returns 0 on success. Any other value means the counter value could
770not be updated.
771
772Function: plat\_set\_nv\_ctr2()
773~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
774
775::
776
777 Argument : void *, const auth_img_desc_t *, unsigned int
778 Return : int
779
780This function is optional when Trusted Board Boot is enabled. If this
781interface is defined, then ``plat_set_nv_ctr()`` need not be defined. The
782first argument passed is a cookie and is typically used to
783differentiate between a Non Trusted NV Counter and a Trusted NV
784Counter. The second argument is a pointer to an authentication image
785descriptor and may be used to decide if the counter is allowed to be
786updated or not. The third argument is the updated counter value to
787be written to the NV counter.
788
789The function returns 0 on success. Any other value means the counter value
790either could not be updated or the authentication image descriptor indicates
791that it is not allowed to be updated.
792
793Common mandatory function modifications
794---------------------------------------
795
796The following functions are mandatory functions which need to be implemented
797by the platform port.
798
799Function : plat\_my\_core\_pos()
800~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
801
802::
803
804 Argument : void
805 Return : unsigned int
806
807This funtion returns the index of the calling CPU which is used as a
808CPU-specific linear index into blocks of memory (for example while allocating
809per-CPU stacks). This function will be invoked very early in the
810initialization sequence which mandates that this function should be
811implemented in assembly and should not rely on the avalability of a C
812runtime environment. This function can clobber x0 - x8 and must preserve
813x9 - x29.
814
815This function plays a crucial role in the power domain topology framework in
816PSCI and details of this can be found in `Power Domain Topology Design`_.
817
818Function : plat\_core\_pos\_by\_mpidr()
819~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
820
821::
822
823 Argument : u_register_t
824 Return : int
825
826This function validates the ``MPIDR`` of a CPU and converts it to an index,
827which can be used as a CPU-specific linear index into blocks of memory. In
828case the ``MPIDR`` is invalid, this function returns -1. This function will only
829be invoked by BL31 after the power domain topology is initialized and can
830utilize the C runtime environment. For further details about how ARM Trusted
831Firmware represents the power domain topology and how this relates to the
832linear CPU index, please refer `Power Domain Topology Design`_.
833
834Common optional modifications
835-----------------------------
836
837The following are helper functions implemented by the firmware that perform
838common platform-specific tasks. A platform may choose to override these
839definitions.
840
841Function : plat\_set\_my\_stack()
842~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
843
844::
845
846 Argument : void
847 Return : void
848
849This function sets the current stack pointer to the normal memory stack that
850has been allocated for the current CPU. For BL images that only require a
851stack for the primary CPU, the UP version of the function is used. The size
852of the stack allocated to each CPU is specified by the platform defined
853constant ``PLATFORM_STACK_SIZE``.
854
855Common implementations of this function for the UP and MP BL images are
856provided in `plat/common/aarch64/platform\_up\_stack.S`_ and
857`plat/common/aarch64/platform\_mp\_stack.S`_
858
859Function : plat\_get\_my\_stack()
860~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
861
862::
863
864 Argument : void
865 Return : uintptr_t
866
867This function returns the base address of the normal memory stack that
868has been allocated for the current CPU. For BL images that only require a
869stack for the primary CPU, the UP version of the function is used. The size
870of the stack allocated to each CPU is specified by the platform defined
871constant ``PLATFORM_STACK_SIZE``.
872
873Common implementations of this function for the UP and MP BL images are
874provided in `plat/common/aarch64/platform\_up\_stack.S`_ and
875`plat/common/aarch64/platform\_mp\_stack.S`_
876
877Function : plat\_report\_exception()
878~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
879
880::
881
882 Argument : unsigned int
883 Return : void
884
885A platform may need to report various information about its status when an
886exception is taken, for example the current exception level, the CPU security
887state (secure/non-secure), the exception type, and so on. This function is
888called in the following circumstances:
889
890- In BL1, whenever an exception is taken.
891- In BL2, whenever an exception is taken.
892
893The default implementation doesn't do anything, to avoid making assumptions
894about the way the platform displays its status information.
895
896For AArch64, this function receives the exception type as its argument.
897Possible values for exceptions types are listed in the
898`include/common/bl\_common.h`_ header file. Note that these constants are not
899related to any architectural exception code; they are just an ARM Trusted
900Firmware convention.
901
902For AArch32, this function receives the exception mode as its argument.
903Possible values for exception modes are listed in the
904`include/lib/aarch32/arch.h`_ header file.
905
906Function : plat\_reset\_handler()
907~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
908
909::
910
911 Argument : void
912 Return : void
913
914A platform may need to do additional initialization after reset. This function
915allows the platform to do the platform specific intializations. Platform
916specific errata workarounds could also be implemented here. The api should
917preserve the values of callee saved registers x19 to x29.
918
919The default implementation doesn't do anything. If a platform needs to override
920the default implementation, refer to the `Firmware Design`_ for general
921guidelines.
922
923Function : plat\_disable\_acp()
924~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
925
926::
927
928 Argument : void
929 Return : void
930
931This api allows a platform to disable the Accelerator Coherency Port (if
932present) during a cluster power down sequence. The default weak implementation
933doesn't do anything. Since this api is called during the power down sequence,
934it has restrictions for stack usage and it can use the registers x0 - x17 as
935scratch registers. It should preserve the value in x18 register as it is used
936by the caller to store the return address.
937
938Function : plat\_error\_handler()
939~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
940
941::
942
943 Argument : int
944 Return : void
945
946This API is called when the generic code encounters an error situation from
947which it cannot continue. It allows the platform to perform error reporting or
948recovery actions (for example, reset the system). This function must not return.
949
950The parameter indicates the type of error using standard codes from ``errno.h``.
951Possible errors reported by the generic code are:
952
953- ``-EAUTH``: a certificate or image could not be authenticated (when Trusted
954 Board Boot is enabled)
955- ``-ENOENT``: the requested image or certificate could not be found or an IO
956 error was detected
957- ``-ENOMEM``: resources exhausted. Trusted Firmware does not use dynamic
958 memory, so this error is usually an indication of an incorrect array size
959
960The default implementation simply spins.
961
962Function : plat\_panic\_handler()
963~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
964
965::
966
967 Argument : void
968 Return : void
969
970This API is called when the generic code encounters an unexpected error
971situation from which it cannot recover. This function must not return,
972and must be implemented in assembly because it may be called before the C
973environment is initialized.
974
975Note: The address from where it was called is stored in x30 (Link Register).
976The default implementation simply spins.
977
978Function : plat\_get\_bl\_image\_load\_info()
979~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
980
981::
982
983 Argument : void
984 Return : bl_load_info_t *
985
986This function returns pointer to the list of images that the platform has
987populated to load. This function is currently invoked in BL2 to load the
988BL3xx images, when LOAD\_IMAGE\_V2 is enabled.
989
990Function : plat\_get\_next\_bl\_params()
991~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
992
993::
994
995 Argument : void
996 Return : bl_params_t *
997
998This function returns a pointer to the shared memory that the platform has
999kept aside to pass trusted firmware related information that next BL image
1000needs. This function is currently invoked in BL2 to pass this information to
1001the next BL image, when LOAD\_IMAGE\_V2 is enabled.
1002
1003Function : plat\_get\_stack\_protector\_canary()
1004~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1005
1006::
1007
1008 Argument : void
1009 Return : u_register_t
1010
1011This function returns a random value that is used to initialize the canary used
1012when the stack protector is enabled with ENABLE\_STACK\_PROTECTOR. A predictable
1013value will weaken the protection as the attacker could easily write the right
1014value as part of the attack most of the time. Therefore, it should return a
1015true random number.
1016
1017Note: For the protection to be effective, the global data need to be placed at
1018a lower address than the stack bases. Failure to do so would allow an attacker
1019to overwrite the canary as part of the stack buffer overflow attack.
1020
1021Function : plat\_flush\_next\_bl\_params()
1022~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1023
1024::
1025
1026 Argument : void
1027 Return : void
1028
1029This function flushes to main memory all the image params that are passed to
1030next image. This function is currently invoked in BL2 to flush this information
1031to the next BL image, when LOAD\_IMAGE\_V2 is enabled.
1032
Soby Mathewaaf15f52017-09-04 11:49:29 +01001033Function : plat\_log\_get\_prefix()
1034~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1035
1036::
1037
1038 Argument : unsigned int
1039 Return : const char *
1040
1041This function defines the prefix string corresponding to the `log_level` to be
1042prepended to all the log output from ARM Trusted Firmware. The `log_level`
1043(argument) will correspond to one of the standard log levels defined in
1044debug.h. The platform can override the common implementation to define a
1045different prefix string for the log output. The implementation should be
1046robust to future changes that increase the number of log levels.
1047
Douglas Raillardd7c21b72017-06-28 15:23:03 +01001048Modifications specific to a Boot Loader stage
1049---------------------------------------------
1050
1051Boot Loader Stage 1 (BL1)
1052-------------------------
1053
1054BL1 implements the reset vector where execution starts from after a cold or
1055warm boot. For each CPU, BL1 is responsible for the following tasks:
1056
1057#. Handling the reset as described in section 2.2
1058
1059#. In the case of a cold boot and the CPU being the primary CPU, ensuring that
1060 only this CPU executes the remaining BL1 code, including loading and passing
1061 control to the BL2 stage.
1062
1063#. Identifying and starting the Firmware Update process (if required).
1064
1065#. Loading the BL2 image from non-volatile storage into secure memory at the
1066 address specified by the platform defined constant ``BL2_BASE``.
1067
1068#. Populating a ``meminfo`` structure with the following information in memory,
1069 accessible by BL2 immediately upon entry.
1070
1071 ::
1072
1073 meminfo.total_base = Base address of secure RAM visible to BL2
1074 meminfo.total_size = Size of secure RAM visible to BL2
1075 meminfo.free_base = Base address of secure RAM available for
1076 allocation to BL2
1077 meminfo.free_size = Size of secure RAM available for allocation to BL2
1078
1079 BL1 places this ``meminfo`` structure at the beginning of the free memory
1080 available for its use. Since BL1 cannot allocate memory dynamically at the
1081 moment, its free memory will be available for BL2's use as-is. However, this
1082 means that BL2 must read the ``meminfo`` structure before it starts using its
1083 free memory (this is discussed in Section 3.2).
1084
1085 In future releases of the ARM Trusted Firmware it will be possible for
1086 the platform to decide where it wants to place the ``meminfo`` structure for
1087 BL2.
1088
1089 BL1 implements the ``bl1_init_bl2_mem_layout()`` function to populate the
1090 BL2 ``meminfo`` structure. The platform may override this implementation, for
1091 example if the platform wants to restrict the amount of memory visible to
1092 BL2. Details of how to do this are given below.
1093
1094The following functions need to be implemented by the platform port to enable
1095BL1 to perform the above tasks.
1096
1097Function : bl1\_early\_platform\_setup() [mandatory]
1098~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1099
1100::
1101
1102 Argument : void
1103 Return : void
1104
1105This function executes with the MMU and data caches disabled. It is only called
1106by the primary CPU.
1107
1108On ARM standard platforms, this function:
1109
1110- Enables a secure instance of SP805 to act as the Trusted Watchdog.
1111
1112- Initializes a UART (PL011 console), which enables access to the ``printf``
1113 family of functions in BL1.
1114
1115- Enables issuing of snoop and DVM (Distributed Virtual Memory) requests to
1116 the CCI slave interface corresponding to the cluster that includes the
1117 primary CPU.
1118
1119Function : bl1\_plat\_arch\_setup() [mandatory]
1120~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1121
1122::
1123
1124 Argument : void
1125 Return : void
1126
1127This function performs any platform-specific and architectural setup that the
1128platform requires. Platform-specific setup might include configuration of
1129memory controllers and the interconnect.
1130
1131In ARM standard platforms, this function enables the MMU.
1132
1133This function helps fulfill requirement 2 above.
1134
1135Function : bl1\_platform\_setup() [mandatory]
1136~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1137
1138::
1139
1140 Argument : void
1141 Return : void
1142
1143This function executes with the MMU and data caches enabled. It is responsible
1144for performing any remaining platform-specific setup that can occur after the
1145MMU and data cache have been enabled.
1146
Roberto Vargas0cd866c2017-12-12 10:39:44 +00001147if support for multiple boot sources is required, it initializes the boot
1148sequence used by plat\_try\_next\_boot\_source().
1149
Douglas Raillardd7c21b72017-06-28 15:23:03 +01001150In ARM standard platforms, this function initializes the storage abstraction
1151layer used to load the next bootloader image.
1152
1153This function helps fulfill requirement 4 above.
1154
1155Function : bl1\_plat\_sec\_mem\_layout() [mandatory]
1156~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1157
1158::
1159
1160 Argument : void
1161 Return : meminfo *
1162
1163This function should only be called on the cold boot path. It executes with the
1164MMU and data caches enabled. The pointer returned by this function must point to
1165a ``meminfo`` structure containing the extents and availability of secure RAM for
1166the BL1 stage.
1167
1168::
1169
1170 meminfo.total_base = Base address of secure RAM visible to BL1
1171 meminfo.total_size = Size of secure RAM visible to BL1
1172 meminfo.free_base = Base address of secure RAM available for allocation
1173 to BL1
1174 meminfo.free_size = Size of secure RAM available for allocation to BL1
1175
1176This information is used by BL1 to load the BL2 image in secure RAM. BL1 also
1177populates a similar structure to tell BL2 the extents of memory available for
1178its own use.
1179
1180This function helps fulfill requirements 4 and 5 above.
1181
1182Function : bl1\_init\_bl2\_mem\_layout() [optional]
1183~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1184
1185::
1186
1187 Argument : meminfo *, meminfo *
1188 Return : void
1189
1190BL1 needs to tell the next stage the amount of secure RAM available
1191for it to use. This information is populated in a ``meminfo``
1192structure.
1193
1194Depending upon where BL2 has been loaded in secure RAM (determined by
1195``BL2_BASE``), BL1 calculates the amount of free memory available for BL2 to use.
1196BL1 also ensures that its data sections resident in secure RAM are not visible
1197to BL2. An illustration of how this is done in ARM standard platforms is given
1198in the **Memory layout on ARM development platforms** section in the
1199`Firmware Design`_.
1200
1201Function : bl1\_plat\_prepare\_exit() [optional]
1202~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1203
1204::
1205
1206 Argument : entry_point_info_t *
1207 Return : void
1208
1209This function is called prior to exiting BL1 in response to the
1210``BL1_SMC_RUN_IMAGE`` SMC request raised by BL2. It should be used to perform
1211platform specific clean up or bookkeeping operations before transferring
1212control to the next image. It receives the address of the ``entry_point_info_t``
1213structure passed from BL2. This function runs with MMU disabled.
1214
1215Function : bl1\_plat\_set\_ep\_info() [optional]
1216~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1217
1218::
1219
1220 Argument : unsigned int image_id, entry_point_info_t *ep_info
1221 Return : void
1222
1223This function allows platforms to override ``ep_info`` for the given ``image_id``.
1224
1225The default implementation just returns.
1226
1227Function : bl1\_plat\_get\_next\_image\_id() [optional]
1228~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1229
1230::
1231
1232 Argument : void
1233 Return : unsigned int
1234
1235This and the following function must be overridden to enable the FWU feature.
1236
1237BL1 calls this function after platform setup to identify the next image to be
1238loaded and executed. If the platform returns ``BL2_IMAGE_ID`` then BL1 proceeds
1239with the normal boot sequence, which loads and executes BL2. If the platform
1240returns a different image id, BL1 assumes that Firmware Update is required.
1241
1242The default implementation always returns ``BL2_IMAGE_ID``. The ARM development
1243platforms override this function to detect if firmware update is required, and
1244if so, return the first image in the firmware update process.
1245
1246Function : bl1\_plat\_get\_image\_desc() [optional]
1247~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1248
1249::
1250
1251 Argument : unsigned int image_id
1252 Return : image_desc_t *
1253
1254BL1 calls this function to get the image descriptor information ``image_desc_t``
1255for the provided ``image_id`` from the platform.
1256
1257The default implementation always returns a common BL2 image descriptor. ARM
1258standard platforms return an image descriptor corresponding to BL2 or one of
1259the firmware update images defined in the Trusted Board Boot Requirements
1260specification.
1261
1262Function : bl1\_plat\_fwu\_done() [optional]
1263~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1264
1265::
1266
1267 Argument : unsigned int image_id, uintptr_t image_src,
1268 unsigned int image_size
1269 Return : void
1270
1271BL1 calls this function when the FWU process is complete. It must not return.
1272The platform may override this function to take platform specific action, for
1273example to initiate the normal boot flow.
1274
1275The default implementation spins forever.
1276
1277Function : bl1\_plat\_mem\_check() [mandatory]
1278~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1279
1280::
1281
1282 Argument : uintptr_t mem_base, unsigned int mem_size,
1283 unsigned int flags
1284 Return : int
1285
1286BL1 calls this function while handling FWU related SMCs, more specifically when
1287copying or authenticating an image. Its responsibility is to ensure that the
1288region of memory identified by ``mem_base`` and ``mem_size`` is mapped in BL1, and
1289that this memory corresponds to either a secure or non-secure memory region as
1290indicated by the security state of the ``flags`` argument.
1291
1292This function can safely assume that the value resulting from the addition of
1293``mem_base`` and ``mem_size`` fits into a ``uintptr_t`` type variable and does not
1294overflow.
1295
1296This function must return 0 on success, a non-null error code otherwise.
1297
1298The default implementation of this function asserts therefore platforms must
1299override it when using the FWU feature.
1300
1301Boot Loader Stage 2 (BL2)
1302-------------------------
1303
1304The BL2 stage is executed only by the primary CPU, which is determined in BL1
1305using the ``platform_is_primary_cpu()`` function. BL1 passed control to BL2 at
1306``BL2_BASE``. BL2 executes in Secure EL1 and is responsible for:
1307
1308#. (Optional) Loading the SCP\_BL2 binary image (if present) from platform
1309 provided non-volatile storage. To load the SCP\_BL2 image, BL2 makes use of
1310 the ``meminfo`` returned by the ``bl2_plat_get_scp_bl2_meminfo()`` function.
1311 The platform also defines the address in memory where SCP\_BL2 is loaded
1312 through the optional constant ``SCP_BL2_BASE``. BL2 uses this information
1313 to determine if there is enough memory to load the SCP\_BL2 image.
1314 Subsequent handling of the SCP\_BL2 image is platform-specific and is
1315 implemented in the ``bl2_plat_handle_scp_bl2()`` function.
1316 If ``SCP_BL2_BASE`` is not defined then this step is not performed.
1317
1318#. Loading the BL31 binary image into secure RAM from non-volatile storage. To
1319 load the BL31 image, BL2 makes use of the ``meminfo`` structure passed to it
1320 by BL1. This structure allows BL2 to calculate how much secure RAM is
1321 available for its use. The platform also defines the address in secure RAM
1322 where BL31 is loaded through the constant ``BL31_BASE``. BL2 uses this
1323 information to determine if there is enough memory to load the BL31 image.
1324
1325#. (Optional) Loading the BL32 binary image (if present) from platform
1326 provided non-volatile storage. To load the BL32 image, BL2 makes use of
1327 the ``meminfo`` returned by the ``bl2_plat_get_bl32_meminfo()`` function.
1328 The platform also defines the address in memory where BL32 is loaded
1329 through the optional constant ``BL32_BASE``. BL2 uses this information
1330 to determine if there is enough memory to load the BL32 image.
1331 If ``BL32_BASE`` is not defined then this and the next step is not performed.
1332
1333#. (Optional) Arranging to pass control to the BL32 image (if present) that
1334 has been pre-loaded at ``BL32_BASE``. BL2 populates an ``entry_point_info``
1335 structure in memory provided by the platform with information about how
1336 BL31 should pass control to the BL32 image.
1337
1338#. (Optional) Loading the normal world BL33 binary image (if not loaded by
1339 other means) into non-secure DRAM from platform storage and arranging for
1340 BL31 to pass control to this image. This address is determined using the
1341 ``plat_get_ns_image_entrypoint()`` function described below.
1342
1343#. BL2 populates an ``entry_point_info`` structure in memory provided by the
1344 platform with information about how BL31 should pass control to the
1345 other BL images.
1346
1347The following functions must be implemented by the platform port to enable BL2
1348to perform the above tasks.
1349
1350Function : bl2\_early\_platform\_setup() [mandatory]
1351~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1352
1353::
1354
1355 Argument : meminfo *
1356 Return : void
1357
1358This function executes with the MMU and data caches disabled. It is only called
1359by the primary CPU. The arguments to this function is the address of the
1360``meminfo`` structure populated by BL1.
1361
1362The platform may copy the contents of the ``meminfo`` structure into a private
1363variable as the original memory may be subsequently overwritten by BL2. The
1364copied structure is made available to all BL2 code through the
1365``bl2_plat_sec_mem_layout()`` function.
1366
1367On ARM standard platforms, this function also:
1368
1369- Initializes a UART (PL011 console), which enables access to the ``printf``
1370 family of functions in BL2.
1371
1372- Initializes the storage abstraction layer used to load further bootloader
1373 images. It is necessary to do this early on platforms with a SCP\_BL2 image,
1374 since the later ``bl2_platform_setup`` must be done after SCP\_BL2 is loaded.
1375
1376Function : bl2\_plat\_arch\_setup() [mandatory]
1377~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1378
1379::
1380
1381 Argument : void
1382 Return : void
1383
1384This function executes with the MMU and data caches disabled. It is only called
1385by the primary CPU.
1386
1387The purpose of this function is to perform any architectural initialization
1388that varies across platforms.
1389
1390On ARM standard platforms, this function enables the MMU.
1391
1392Function : bl2\_platform\_setup() [mandatory]
1393~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1394
1395::
1396
1397 Argument : void
1398 Return : void
1399
1400This function may execute with the MMU and data caches enabled if the platform
1401port does the necessary initialization in ``bl2_plat_arch_setup()``. It is only
1402called by the primary CPU.
1403
1404The purpose of this function is to perform any platform initialization
1405specific to BL2.
1406
1407In ARM standard platforms, this function performs security setup, including
1408configuration of the TrustZone controller to allow non-secure masters access
1409to most of DRAM. Part of DRAM is reserved for secure world use.
1410
1411Function : bl2\_plat\_sec\_mem\_layout() [mandatory]
1412~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1413
1414::
1415
1416 Argument : void
1417 Return : meminfo *
1418
1419This function should only be called on the cold boot path. It may execute with
1420the MMU and data caches enabled if the platform port does the necessary
1421initialization in ``bl2_plat_arch_setup()``. It is only called by the primary CPU.
1422
1423The purpose of this function is to return a pointer to a ``meminfo`` structure
1424populated with the extents of secure RAM available for BL2 to use. See
1425``bl2_early_platform_setup()`` above.
1426
1427Following function is required only when LOAD\_IMAGE\_V2 is enabled.
1428
1429Function : bl2\_plat\_handle\_post\_image\_load() [mandatory]
1430~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1431
1432::
1433
1434 Argument : unsigned int
1435 Return : int
1436
1437This function can be used by the platforms to update/use image information
1438for given ``image_id``. This function is currently invoked in BL2 to handle
1439BL image specific information based on the ``image_id`` passed, when
1440LOAD\_IMAGE\_V2 is enabled.
1441
1442Following functions are required only when LOAD\_IMAGE\_V2 is disabled.
1443
1444Function : bl2\_plat\_get\_scp\_bl2\_meminfo() [mandatory]
1445~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1446
1447::
1448
1449 Argument : meminfo *
1450 Return : void
1451
1452This function is used to get the memory limits where BL2 can load the
1453SCP\_BL2 image. The meminfo provided by this is used by load\_image() to
1454validate whether the SCP\_BL2 image can be loaded within the given
1455memory from the given base.
1456
1457Function : bl2\_plat\_handle\_scp\_bl2() [mandatory]
1458~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1459
1460::
1461
1462 Argument : image_info *
1463 Return : int
1464
1465This function is called after loading SCP\_BL2 image and it is used to perform
1466any platform-specific actions required to handle the SCP firmware. Typically it
1467transfers the image into SCP memory using a platform-specific protocol and waits
1468until SCP executes it and signals to the Application Processor (AP) for BL2
1469execution to continue.
1470
1471This function returns 0 on success, a negative error code otherwise.
1472
1473Function : bl2\_plat\_get\_bl31\_params() [mandatory]
1474~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1475
1476::
1477
1478 Argument : void
1479 Return : bl31_params *
1480
1481BL2 platform code needs to return a pointer to a ``bl31_params`` structure it
1482will use for passing information to BL31. The ``bl31_params`` structure carries
1483the following information.
1484- Header describing the version information for interpreting the bl31\_param
1485structure
1486- Information about executing the BL33 image in the ``bl33_ep_info`` field
1487- Information about executing the BL32 image in the ``bl32_ep_info`` field
1488- Information about the type and extents of BL31 image in the
1489``bl31_image_info`` field
1490- Information about the type and extents of BL32 image in the
1491``bl32_image_info`` field
1492- Information about the type and extents of BL33 image in the
1493``bl33_image_info`` field
1494
1495The memory pointed by this structure and its sub-structures should be
1496accessible from BL31 initialisation code. BL31 might choose to copy the
1497necessary content, or maintain the structures until BL33 is initialised.
1498
1499Funtion : bl2\_plat\_get\_bl31\_ep\_info() [mandatory]
1500~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1501
1502::
1503
1504 Argument : void
1505 Return : entry_point_info *
1506
1507BL2 platform code returns a pointer which is used to populate the entry point
1508information for BL31 entry point. The location pointed by it should be
1509accessible from BL1 while processing the synchronous exception to run to BL31.
1510
1511In ARM standard platforms this is allocated inside a bl2\_to\_bl31\_params\_mem
1512structure in BL2 memory.
1513
1514Function : bl2\_plat\_set\_bl31\_ep\_info() [mandatory]
1515~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1516
1517::
1518
1519 Argument : image_info *, entry_point_info *
1520 Return : void
1521
1522In the normal boot flow, this function is called after loading BL31 image and
1523it can be used to overwrite the entry point set by loader and also set the
1524security state and SPSR which represents the entry point system state for BL31.
1525
1526When booting an EL3 payload instead, this function is called after populating
1527its entry point address and can be used for the same purpose for the payload
1528image. It receives a null pointer as its first argument in this case.
1529
1530Function : bl2\_plat\_set\_bl32\_ep\_info() [mandatory]
1531~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1532
1533::
1534
1535 Argument : image_info *, entry_point_info *
1536 Return : void
1537
1538This function is called after loading BL32 image and it can be used to
1539overwrite the entry point set by loader and also set the security state
1540and SPSR which represents the entry point system state for BL32.
1541
1542Function : bl2\_plat\_set\_bl33\_ep\_info() [mandatory]
1543~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1544
1545::
1546
1547 Argument : image_info *, entry_point_info *
1548 Return : void
1549
1550This function is called after loading BL33 image and it can be used to
1551overwrite the entry point set by loader and also set the security state
1552and SPSR which represents the entry point system state for BL33.
1553
1554In the preloaded BL33 alternative boot flow, this function is called after
1555populating its entry point address. It is passed a null pointer as its first
1556argument in this case.
1557
1558Function : bl2\_plat\_get\_bl32\_meminfo() [mandatory]
1559~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1560
1561::
1562
1563 Argument : meminfo *
1564 Return : void
1565
1566This function is used to get the memory limits where BL2 can load the
1567BL32 image. The meminfo provided by this is used by load\_image() to
1568validate whether the BL32 image can be loaded with in the given
1569memory from the given base.
1570
1571Function : bl2\_plat\_get\_bl33\_meminfo() [mandatory]
1572~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1573
1574::
1575
1576 Argument : meminfo *
1577 Return : void
1578
1579This function is used to get the memory limits where BL2 can load the
1580BL33 image. The meminfo provided by this is used by load\_image() to
1581validate whether the BL33 image can be loaded with in the given
1582memory from the given base.
1583
1584This function isn't needed if either ``PRELOADED_BL33_BASE`` or ``EL3_PAYLOAD_BASE``
1585build options are used.
1586
1587Function : bl2\_plat\_flush\_bl31\_params() [mandatory]
1588~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1589
1590::
1591
1592 Argument : void
1593 Return : void
1594
1595Once BL2 has populated all the structures that needs to be read by BL1
1596and BL31 including the bl31\_params structures and its sub-structures,
1597the bl31\_ep\_info structure and any platform specific data. It flushes
1598all these data to the main memory so that it is available when we jump to
1599later Bootloader stages with MMU off
1600
1601Function : plat\_get\_ns\_image\_entrypoint() [mandatory]
1602~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1603
1604::
1605
1606 Argument : void
1607 Return : uintptr_t
1608
1609As previously described, BL2 is responsible for arranging for control to be
1610passed to a normal world BL image through BL31. This function returns the
1611entrypoint of that image, which BL31 uses to jump to it.
1612
1613BL2 is responsible for loading the normal world BL33 image (e.g. UEFI).
1614
1615This function isn't needed if either ``PRELOADED_BL33_BASE`` or ``EL3_PAYLOAD_BASE``
1616build options are used.
1617
Roberto Vargasbc1ae1f2017-09-26 12:53:01 +01001618Function : bl2\_plat\_preload\_setup [optional]
1619~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1620
1621::
1622 Argument : void
1623 Return : void
1624
1625This optional function performs any BL2 platform initialization
1626required before image loading, that is not done later in
1627bl2\_platform\_setup(). Specifically, if support for multiple
1628boot sources is required, it initializes the boot sequence used by
1629plat\_try\_next\_boot\_source().
1630
1631Function : plat\_try\_next\_boot\_source() [optional]
1632~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1633
1634::
1635 Argument : void
1636 Return : int
1637
1638This optional function passes to the next boot source in the redundancy
1639sequence.
1640
1641This function moves the current boot redundancy source to the next
1642element in the boot sequence. If there are no more boot sources then it
1643must return 0, otherwise it must return 1. The default implementation
1644of this always returns 0.
1645
Roberto Vargasb1584272017-11-20 13:36:10 +00001646Boot Loader Stage 2 (BL2) at EL3
1647--------------------------------
1648
1649When the platform has a non-TF Boot ROM it is desirable to jump
1650directly to BL2 instead of TF BL1. In this case BL2 is expected to
1651execute at EL3 instead of executing at EL1. Refer to the `Firmware
1652Design`_ for more information.
1653
1654All mandatory functions of BL2 must be implemented, except the functions
1655bl2\_early\_platform\_setup and bl2\_el3\_plat\_arch\_setup, because
1656their work is done now by bl2\_el3\_early\_platform\_setup and
1657bl2\_el3\_plat\_arch\_setup. These functions should generally implement
1658the bl1\_plat\_xxx() and bl2\_plat\_xxx() functionality combined.
1659
1660
1661Function : bl2\_el3\_early\_platform\_setup() [mandatory]
1662~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1663
1664::
1665 Argument : u_register_t, u_register_t, u_register_t, u_register_t
1666 Return : void
1667
1668This function executes with the MMU and data caches disabled. It is only called
1669by the primary CPU. This function receives four parameters which can be used
1670by the platform to pass any needed information from the Boot ROM to BL2.
1671
1672On ARM standard platforms, this function does the following:
1673
1674- Initializes a UART (PL011 console), which enables access to the ``printf``
1675 family of functions in BL2.
1676
1677- Initializes the storage abstraction layer used to load further bootloader
1678 images. It is necessary to do this early on platforms with a SCP\_BL2 image,
1679 since the later ``bl2_platform_setup`` must be done after SCP\_BL2 is loaded.
1680
1681- Initializes the private variables that define the memory layout used.
1682
1683Function : bl2\_el3\_plat\_arch\_setup() [mandatory]
1684~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1685
1686::
1687 Argument : void
1688 Return : void
1689
1690This function executes with the MMU and data caches disabled. It is only called
1691by the primary CPU.
1692
1693The purpose of this function is to perform any architectural initialization
1694that varies across platforms.
1695
1696On ARM standard platforms, this function enables the MMU.
1697
1698Function : bl2\_el3\_plat\_prepare\_exit() [optional]
1699~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1700
1701::
1702 Argument : void
1703 Return : void
1704
1705This function is called prior to exiting BL2 and run the next image.
1706It should be used to perform platform specific clean up or bookkeeping
1707operations before transferring control to the next image. This function
1708runs with MMU disabled.
1709
Douglas Raillardd7c21b72017-06-28 15:23:03 +01001710FWU Boot Loader Stage 2 (BL2U)
1711------------------------------
1712
1713The AP Firmware Updater Configuration, BL2U, is an optional part of the FWU
1714process and is executed only by the primary CPU. BL1 passes control to BL2U at
1715``BL2U_BASE``. BL2U executes in Secure-EL1 and is responsible for:
1716
1717#. (Optional) Transfering the optional SCP\_BL2U binary image from AP secure
1718 memory to SCP RAM. BL2U uses the SCP\_BL2U ``image_info`` passed by BL1.
1719 ``SCP_BL2U_BASE`` defines the address in AP secure memory where SCP\_BL2U
1720 should be copied from. Subsequent handling of the SCP\_BL2U image is
1721 implemented by the platform specific ``bl2u_plat_handle_scp_bl2u()`` function.
1722 If ``SCP_BL2U_BASE`` is not defined then this step is not performed.
1723
1724#. Any platform specific setup required to perform the FWU process. For
1725 example, ARM standard platforms initialize the TZC controller so that the
1726 normal world can access DDR memory.
1727
1728The following functions must be implemented by the platform port to enable
1729BL2U to perform the tasks mentioned above.
1730
1731Function : bl2u\_early\_platform\_setup() [mandatory]
1732~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1733
1734::
1735
1736 Argument : meminfo *mem_info, void *plat_info
1737 Return : void
1738
1739This function executes with the MMU and data caches disabled. It is only
1740called by the primary CPU. The arguments to this function is the address
1741of the ``meminfo`` structure and platform specific info provided by BL1.
1742
1743The platform may copy the contents of the ``mem_info`` and ``plat_info`` into
1744private storage as the original memory may be subsequently overwritten by BL2U.
1745
1746On ARM CSS platforms ``plat_info`` is interpreted as an ``image_info_t`` structure,
1747to extract SCP\_BL2U image information, which is then copied into a private
1748variable.
1749
1750Function : bl2u\_plat\_arch\_setup() [mandatory]
1751~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1752
1753::
1754
1755 Argument : void
1756 Return : void
1757
1758This function executes with the MMU and data caches disabled. It is only
1759called by the primary CPU.
1760
1761The purpose of this function is to perform any architectural initialization
1762that varies across platforms, for example enabling the MMU (since the memory
1763map differs across platforms).
1764
1765Function : bl2u\_platform\_setup() [mandatory]
1766~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1767
1768::
1769
1770 Argument : void
1771 Return : void
1772
1773This function may execute with the MMU and data caches enabled if the platform
1774port does the necessary initialization in ``bl2u_plat_arch_setup()``. It is only
1775called by the primary CPU.
1776
1777The purpose of this function is to perform any platform initialization
1778specific to BL2U.
1779
1780In ARM standard platforms, this function performs security setup, including
1781configuration of the TrustZone controller to allow non-secure masters access
1782to most of DRAM. Part of DRAM is reserved for secure world use.
1783
1784Function : bl2u\_plat\_handle\_scp\_bl2u() [optional]
1785~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1786
1787::
1788
1789 Argument : void
1790 Return : int
1791
1792This function is used to perform any platform-specific actions required to
1793handle the SCP firmware. Typically it transfers the image into SCP memory using
1794a platform-specific protocol and waits until SCP executes it and signals to the
1795Application Processor (AP) for BL2U execution to continue.
1796
1797This function returns 0 on success, a negative error code otherwise.
1798This function is included if SCP\_BL2U\_BASE is defined.
1799
1800Boot Loader Stage 3-1 (BL31)
1801----------------------------
1802
1803During cold boot, the BL31 stage is executed only by the primary CPU. This is
1804determined in BL1 using the ``platform_is_primary_cpu()`` function. BL1 passes
1805control to BL31 at ``BL31_BASE``. During warm boot, BL31 is executed by all
1806CPUs. BL31 executes at EL3 and is responsible for:
1807
1808#. Re-initializing all architectural and platform state. Although BL1 performs
1809 some of this initialization, BL31 remains resident in EL3 and must ensure
1810 that EL3 architectural and platform state is completely initialized. It
1811 should make no assumptions about the system state when it receives control.
1812
1813#. Passing control to a normal world BL image, pre-loaded at a platform-
1814 specific address by BL2. BL31 uses the ``entry_point_info`` structure that BL2
1815 populated in memory to do this.
1816
1817#. Providing runtime firmware services. Currently, BL31 only implements a
1818 subset of the Power State Coordination Interface (PSCI) API as a runtime
1819 service. See Section 3.3 below for details of porting the PSCI
1820 implementation.
1821
1822#. Optionally passing control to the BL32 image, pre-loaded at a platform-
1823 specific address by BL2. BL31 exports a set of apis that allow runtime
1824 services to specify the security state in which the next image should be
1825 executed and run the corresponding image. BL31 uses the ``entry_point_info``
1826 structure populated by BL2 to do this.
1827
1828If BL31 is a reset vector, It also needs to handle the reset as specified in
1829section 2.2 before the tasks described above.
1830
1831The following functions must be implemented by the platform port to enable BL31
1832to perform the above tasks.
1833
1834Function : bl31\_early\_platform\_setup() [mandatory]
1835~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1836
1837::
1838
1839 Argument : bl31_params *, void *
1840 Return : void
1841
1842This function executes with the MMU and data caches disabled. It is only called
1843by the primary CPU. The arguments to this function are:
1844
1845- The address of the ``bl31_params`` structure populated by BL2.
1846- An opaque pointer that the platform may use as needed.
1847
1848The platform can copy the contents of the ``bl31_params`` structure and its
1849sub-structures into private variables if the original memory may be
1850subsequently overwritten by BL31 and similarly the ``void *`` pointing
1851to the platform data also needs to be saved.
1852
1853In ARM standard platforms, BL2 passes a pointer to a ``bl31_params`` structure
1854in BL2 memory. BL31 copies the information in this pointer to internal data
1855structures. It also performs the following:
1856
1857- Initialize a UART (PL011 console), which enables access to the ``printf``
1858 family of functions in BL31.
1859
1860- Enable issuing of snoop and DVM (Distributed Virtual Memory) requests to the
1861 CCI slave interface corresponding to the cluster that includes the primary
1862 CPU.
1863
1864Function : bl31\_plat\_arch\_setup() [mandatory]
1865~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1866
1867::
1868
1869 Argument : void
1870 Return : void
1871
1872This function executes with the MMU and data caches disabled. It is only called
1873by the primary CPU.
1874
1875The purpose of this function is to perform any architectural initialization
1876that varies across platforms.
1877
1878On ARM standard platforms, this function enables the MMU.
1879
1880Function : bl31\_platform\_setup() [mandatory]
1881~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1882
1883::
1884
1885 Argument : void
1886 Return : void
1887
1888This function may execute with the MMU and data caches enabled if the platform
1889port does the necessary initialization in ``bl31_plat_arch_setup()``. It is only
1890called by the primary CPU.
1891
1892The purpose of this function is to complete platform initialization so that both
1893BL31 runtime services and normal world software can function correctly.
1894
1895On ARM standard platforms, this function does the following:
1896
1897- Initialize the generic interrupt controller.
1898
1899 Depending on the GIC driver selected by the platform, the appropriate GICv2
1900 or GICv3 initialization will be done, which mainly consists of:
1901
1902 - Enable secure interrupts in the GIC CPU interface.
1903 - Disable the legacy interrupt bypass mechanism.
1904 - Configure the priority mask register to allow interrupts of all priorities
1905 to be signaled to the CPU interface.
1906 - Mark SGIs 8-15 and the other secure interrupts on the platform as secure.
1907 - Target all secure SPIs to CPU0.
1908 - Enable these secure interrupts in the GIC distributor.
1909 - Configure all other interrupts as non-secure.
1910 - Enable signaling of secure interrupts in the GIC distributor.
1911
1912- Enable system-level implementation of the generic timer counter through the
1913 memory mapped interface.
1914
1915- Grant access to the system counter timer module
1916
1917- Initialize the power controller device.
1918
1919 In particular, initialise the locks that prevent concurrent accesses to the
1920 power controller device.
1921
1922Function : bl31\_plat\_runtime\_setup() [optional]
1923~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1924
1925::
1926
1927 Argument : void
1928 Return : void
1929
1930The purpose of this function is allow the platform to perform any BL31 runtime
1931setup just prior to BL31 exit during cold boot. The default weak
Julius Werneraae9bb12017-09-18 16:49:48 -07001932implementation of this function will invoke ``console_switch_state()`` to switch
1933console output to consoles marked for use in the ``runtime`` state.
Douglas Raillardd7c21b72017-06-28 15:23:03 +01001934
1935Function : bl31\_get\_next\_image\_info() [mandatory]
1936~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1937
1938::
1939
1940 Argument : unsigned int
1941 Return : entry_point_info *
1942
1943This function may execute with the MMU and data caches enabled if the platform
1944port does the necessary initializations in ``bl31_plat_arch_setup()``.
1945
1946This function is called by ``bl31_main()`` to retrieve information provided by
1947BL2 for the next image in the security state specified by the argument. BL31
1948uses this information to pass control to that image in the specified security
1949state. This function must return a pointer to the ``entry_point_info`` structure
1950(that was copied during ``bl31_early_platform_setup()``) if the image exists. It
1951should return NULL otherwise.
1952
1953Function : plat\_get\_syscnt\_freq2() [mandatory]
1954~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1955
1956::
1957
1958 Argument : void
1959 Return : unsigned int
1960
1961This function is used by the architecture setup code to retrieve the counter
1962frequency for the CPU's generic timer. This value will be programmed into the
1963``CNTFRQ_EL0`` register. In ARM standard platforms, it returns the base frequency
1964of the system counter, which is retrieved from the first entry in the frequency
1965modes table.
1966
1967#define : PLAT\_PERCPU\_BAKERY\_LOCK\_SIZE [optional]
1968~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1969
1970When ``USE_COHERENT_MEM = 0``, this constant defines the total memory (in
1971bytes) aligned to the cache line boundary that should be allocated per-cpu to
1972accommodate all the bakery locks.
1973
1974If this constant is not defined when ``USE_COHERENT_MEM = 0``, the linker
1975calculates the size of the ``bakery_lock`` input section, aligns it to the
1976nearest ``CACHE_WRITEBACK_GRANULE``, multiplies it with ``PLATFORM_CORE_COUNT``
1977and stores the result in a linker symbol. This constant prevents a platform
1978from relying on the linker and provide a more efficient mechanism for
1979accessing per-cpu bakery lock information.
1980
1981If this constant is defined and its value is not equal to the value
1982calculated by the linker then a link time assertion is raised. A compile time
1983assertion is raised if the value of the constant is not aligned to the cache
1984line boundary.
1985
Jeenu Viswambharan04e3a7f2017-10-16 08:43:14 +01001986SDEI porting requirements
1987~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1988
1989The SDEI dispatcher requires the platform to provide the following macros
1990and functions, of which some are optional, and some others mandatory.
1991
1992Macros
1993......
1994
1995Macro: PLAT_SDEI_NORMAL_PRI [mandatory]
1996^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1997
1998This macro must be defined to the EL3 exception priority level associated with
1999Normal SDEI events on the platform. This must have a higher value (therefore of
2000lower priority) than ``PLAT_SDEI_CRITICAL_PRI``.
2001
2002Macro: PLAT_SDEI_CRITICAL_PRI [mandatory]
2003^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2004
2005This macro must be defined to the EL3 exception priority level associated with
2006Critical SDEI events on the platform. This must have a lower value (therefore of
2007higher priority) than ``PLAT_SDEI_NORMAL_PRI``.
2008
2009It's recommended that SDEI exception priorities in general are assigned the
2010lowest among Secure priorities. Among the SDEI exceptions, Critical SDEI
2011priority must be higher than Normal SDEI priority.
2012
2013Functions
2014.........
2015
2016Function: int plat_sdei_validate_entry_point(uintptr_t ep) [optional]
2017^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2018
2019::
2020
2021 Argument: uintptr_t
2022 Return: int
2023
2024This function validates the address of client entry points provided for both
2025event registration and *Complete and Resume* SDEI calls. The function takes one
2026argument, which is the address of the handler the SDEI client requested to
2027register. The function must return ``0`` for successful validation, or ``-1``
2028upon failure.
2029
2030The default implementation always returns ``0``. On ARM platforms, this function
2031is implemented to translate the entry point to physical address, and further to
2032ensure that the address is located in Non-secure DRAM.
2033
2034Function: void plat_sdei_handle_masked_trigger(uint64_t mpidr, unsigned int intr) [optional]
2035^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2036
2037::
2038
2039 Argument: uint64_t
2040 Argument: unsigned int
2041 Return: void
2042
2043SDEI specification requires that a PE comes out of reset with the events masked.
2044The client therefore is expected to call ``PE_UNMASK`` to unmask SDEI events on
2045the PE. No SDEI events can be dispatched until such time.
2046
2047Should a PE receive an interrupt that was bound to an SDEI event while the
2048events are masked on the PE, the dispatcher implementation invokes the function
2049``plat_sdei_handle_masked_trigger``. The MPIDR of the PE that received the
2050interrupt and the interrupt ID are passed as parameters.
2051
2052The default implementation only prints out a warning message.
2053
Douglas Raillardd7c21b72017-06-28 15:23:03 +01002054Power State Coordination Interface (in BL31)
2055--------------------------------------------
2056
2057The ARM Trusted Firmware's implementation of the PSCI API is based around the
2058concept of a *power domain*. A *power domain* is a CPU or a logical group of
2059CPUs which share some state on which power management operations can be
2060performed as specified by `PSCI`_. Each CPU in the system is assigned a cpu
2061index which is a unique number between ``0`` and ``PLATFORM_CORE_COUNT - 1``.
2062The *power domains* are arranged in a hierarchical tree structure and
2063each *power domain* can be identified in a system by the cpu index of any CPU
2064that is part of that domain and a *power domain level*. A processing element
2065(for example, a CPU) is at level 0. If the *power domain* node above a CPU is
2066a logical grouping of CPUs that share some state, then level 1 is that group
2067of CPUs (for example, a cluster), and level 2 is a group of clusters
2068(for example, the system). More details on the power domain topology and its
2069organization can be found in `Power Domain Topology Design`_.
2070
2071BL31's platform initialization code exports a pointer to the platform-specific
2072power management operations required for the PSCI implementation to function
2073correctly. This information is populated in the ``plat_psci_ops`` structure. The
2074PSCI implementation calls members of the ``plat_psci_ops`` structure for performing
2075power management operations on the power domains. For example, the target
2076CPU is specified by its ``MPIDR`` in a PSCI ``CPU_ON`` call. The ``pwr_domain_on()``
2077handler (if present) is called for the CPU power domain.
2078
2079The ``power-state`` parameter of a PSCI ``CPU_SUSPEND`` call can be used to
2080describe composite power states specific to a platform. The PSCI implementation
2081defines a generic representation of the power-state parameter viz which is an
2082array of local power states where each index corresponds to a power domain
2083level. Each entry contains the local power state the power domain at that power
2084level could enter. It depends on the ``validate_power_state()`` handler to
2085convert the power-state parameter (possibly encoding a composite power state)
2086passed in a PSCI ``CPU_SUSPEND`` call to this representation.
2087
2088The following functions form part of platform port of PSCI functionality.
2089
2090Function : plat\_psci\_stat\_accounting\_start() [optional]
2091~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2092
2093::
2094
2095 Argument : const psci_power_state_t *
2096 Return : void
2097
2098This is an optional hook that platforms can implement for residency statistics
2099accounting before entering a low power state. The ``pwr_domain_state`` field of
2100``state_info`` (first argument) can be inspected if stat accounting is done
2101differently at CPU level versus higher levels. As an example, if the element at
2102index 0 (CPU power level) in the ``pwr_domain_state`` array indicates a power down
2103state, special hardware logic may be programmed in order to keep track of the
2104residency statistics. For higher levels (array indices > 0), the residency
2105statistics could be tracked in software using PMF. If ``ENABLE_PMF`` is set, the
2106default implementation will use PMF to capture timestamps.
2107
2108Function : plat\_psci\_stat\_accounting\_stop() [optional]
2109~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2110
2111::
2112
2113 Argument : const psci_power_state_t *
2114 Return : void
2115
2116This is an optional hook that platforms can implement for residency statistics
2117accounting after exiting from a low power state. The ``pwr_domain_state`` field
2118of ``state_info`` (first argument) can be inspected if stat accounting is done
2119differently at CPU level versus higher levels. As an example, if the element at
2120index 0 (CPU power level) in the ``pwr_domain_state`` array indicates a power down
2121state, special hardware logic may be programmed in order to keep track of the
2122residency statistics. For higher levels (array indices > 0), the residency
2123statistics could be tracked in software using PMF. If ``ENABLE_PMF`` is set, the
2124default implementation will use PMF to capture timestamps.
2125
2126Function : plat\_psci\_stat\_get\_residency() [optional]
2127~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2128
2129::
2130
2131 Argument : unsigned int, const psci_power_state_t *, int
2132 Return : u_register_t
2133
2134This is an optional interface that is is invoked after resuming from a low power
2135state and provides the time spent resident in that low power state by the power
2136domain at a particular power domain level. When a CPU wakes up from suspend,
2137all its parent power domain levels are also woken up. The generic PSCI code
2138invokes this function for each parent power domain that is resumed and it
2139identified by the ``lvl`` (first argument) parameter. The ``state_info`` (second
2140argument) describes the low power state that the power domain has resumed from.
2141The current CPU is the first CPU in the power domain to resume from the low
2142power state and the ``last_cpu_idx`` (third parameter) is the index of the last
2143CPU in the power domain to suspend and may be needed to calculate the residency
2144for that power domain.
2145
2146Function : plat\_get\_target\_pwr\_state() [optional]
2147~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2148
2149::
2150
2151 Argument : unsigned int, const plat_local_state_t *, unsigned int
2152 Return : plat_local_state_t
2153
2154The PSCI generic code uses this function to let the platform participate in
2155state coordination during a power management operation. The function is passed
2156a pointer to an array of platform specific local power state ``states`` (second
2157argument) which contains the requested power state for each CPU at a particular
2158power domain level ``lvl`` (first argument) within the power domain. The function
2159is expected to traverse this array of upto ``ncpus`` (third argument) and return
2160a coordinated target power state by the comparing all the requested power
2161states. The target power state should not be deeper than any of the requested
2162power states.
2163
2164A weak definition of this API is provided by default wherein it assumes
2165that the platform assigns a local state value in order of increasing depth
2166of the power state i.e. for two power states X & Y, if X < Y
2167then X represents a shallower power state than Y. As a result, the
2168coordinated target local power state for a power domain will be the minimum
2169of the requested local power state values.
2170
2171Function : plat\_get\_power\_domain\_tree\_desc() [mandatory]
2172~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2173
2174::
2175
2176 Argument : void
2177 Return : const unsigned char *
2178
2179This function returns a pointer to the byte array containing the power domain
2180topology tree description. The format and method to construct this array are
2181described in `Power Domain Topology Design`_. The BL31 PSCI initilization code
2182requires this array to be described by the platform, either statically or
2183dynamically, to initialize the power domain topology tree. In case the array
2184is populated dynamically, then plat\_core\_pos\_by\_mpidr() and
2185plat\_my\_core\_pos() should also be implemented suitably so that the topology
2186tree description matches the CPU indices returned by these APIs. These APIs
2187together form the platform interface for the PSCI topology framework.
2188
2189Function : plat\_setup\_psci\_ops() [mandatory]
Douglas Raillard0929f092017-08-02 14:44:42 +01002190~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Douglas Raillardd7c21b72017-06-28 15:23:03 +01002191
2192::
2193
2194 Argument : uintptr_t, const plat_psci_ops **
2195 Return : int
2196
2197This function may execute with the MMU and data caches enabled if the platform
2198port does the necessary initializations in ``bl31_plat_arch_setup()``. It is only
2199called by the primary CPU.
2200
2201This function is called by PSCI initialization code. Its purpose is to let
2202the platform layer know about the warm boot entrypoint through the
2203``sec_entrypoint`` (first argument) and to export handler routines for
2204platform-specific psci power management actions by populating the passed
2205pointer with a pointer to BL31's private ``plat_psci_ops`` structure.
2206
2207A description of each member of this structure is given below. Please refer to
2208the ARM FVP specific implementation of these handlers in
2209`plat/arm/board/fvp/fvp\_pm.c`_ as an example. For each PSCI function that the
2210platform wants to support, the associated operation or operations in this
2211structure must be provided and implemented (Refer section 4 of
2212`Firmware Design`_ for the PSCI API supported in Trusted Firmware). To disable
2213a PSCI function in a platform port, the operation should be removed from this
2214structure instead of providing an empty implementation.
2215
2216plat\_psci\_ops.cpu\_standby()
Douglas Raillard0929f092017-08-02 14:44:42 +01002217..............................
Douglas Raillardd7c21b72017-06-28 15:23:03 +01002218
2219Perform the platform-specific actions to enter the standby state for a cpu
2220indicated by the passed argument. This provides a fast path for CPU standby
2221wherein overheads of PSCI state management and lock acquistion is avoided.
2222For this handler to be invoked by the PSCI ``CPU_SUSPEND`` API implementation,
2223the suspend state type specified in the ``power-state`` parameter should be
2224STANDBY and the target power domain level specified should be the CPU. The
2225handler should put the CPU into a low power retention state (usually by
2226issuing a wfi instruction) and ensure that it can be woken up from that
2227state by a normal interrupt. The generic code expects the handler to succeed.
2228
2229plat\_psci\_ops.pwr\_domain\_on()
Douglas Raillard0929f092017-08-02 14:44:42 +01002230.................................
Douglas Raillardd7c21b72017-06-28 15:23:03 +01002231
2232Perform the platform specific actions to power on a CPU, specified
2233by the ``MPIDR`` (first argument). The generic code expects the platform to
2234return PSCI\_E\_SUCCESS on success or PSCI\_E\_INTERN\_FAIL for any failure.
2235
2236plat\_psci\_ops.pwr\_domain\_off()
Douglas Raillard0929f092017-08-02 14:44:42 +01002237..................................
Douglas Raillardd7c21b72017-06-28 15:23:03 +01002238
2239Perform the platform specific actions to prepare to power off the calling CPU
2240and its higher parent power domain levels as indicated by the ``target_state``
2241(first argument). It is called by the PSCI ``CPU_OFF`` API implementation.
2242
2243The ``target_state`` encodes the platform coordinated target local power states
2244for the CPU power domain and its parent power domain levels. The handler
2245needs to perform power management operation corresponding to the local state
2246at each power level.
2247
2248For this handler, the local power state for the CPU power domain will be a
2249power down state where as it could be either power down, retention or run state
2250for the higher power domain levels depending on the result of state
2251coordination. The generic code expects the handler to succeed.
2252
Varun Wadekarae87f4b2017-07-10 16:02:05 -07002253plat\_psci\_ops.pwr\_domain\_suspend\_pwrdown\_early() [optional]
Douglas Raillard0929f092017-08-02 14:44:42 +01002254.................................................................
Varun Wadekarae87f4b2017-07-10 16:02:05 -07002255
2256This optional function may be used as a performance optimization to replace
2257or complement pwr_domain_suspend() on some platforms. Its calling semantics
2258are identical to pwr_domain_suspend(), except the PSCI implementation only
2259calls this function when suspending to a power down state, and it guarantees
2260that data caches are enabled.
2261
2262When HW_ASSISTED_COHERENCY = 0, the PSCI implementation disables data caches
2263before calling pwr_domain_suspend(). If the target_state corresponds to a
2264power down state and it is safe to perform some or all of the platform
2265specific actions in that function with data caches enabled, it may be more
2266efficient to move those actions to this function. When HW_ASSISTED_COHERENCY
2267= 1, data caches remain enabled throughout, and so there is no advantage to
2268moving platform specific actions to this function.
2269
Douglas Raillardd7c21b72017-06-28 15:23:03 +01002270plat\_psci\_ops.pwr\_domain\_suspend()
Douglas Raillard0929f092017-08-02 14:44:42 +01002271......................................
Douglas Raillardd7c21b72017-06-28 15:23:03 +01002272
2273Perform the platform specific actions to prepare to suspend the calling
2274CPU and its higher parent power domain levels as indicated by the
2275``target_state`` (first argument). It is called by the PSCI ``CPU_SUSPEND``
2276API implementation.
2277
2278The ``target_state`` has a similar meaning as described in
2279the ``pwr_domain_off()`` operation. It encodes the platform coordinated
2280target local power states for the CPU power domain and its parent
2281power domain levels. The handler needs to perform power management operation
2282corresponding to the local state at each power level. The generic code
2283expects the handler to succeed.
2284
Douglas Raillarda84996b2017-08-02 16:57:32 +01002285The difference between turning a power domain off versus suspending it is that
2286in the former case, the power domain is expected to re-initialize its state
2287when it is next powered on (see ``pwr_domain_on_finish()``). In the latter
2288case, the power domain is expected to save enough state so that it can resume
2289execution by restoring this state when its powered on (see
Douglas Raillardd7c21b72017-06-28 15:23:03 +01002290``pwr_domain_suspend_finish()``).
2291
Douglas Raillarda84996b2017-08-02 16:57:32 +01002292When suspending a core, the platform can also choose to power off the GICv3
2293Redistributor and ITS through an implementation-defined sequence. To achieve
2294this safely, the ITS context must be saved first. The architectural part is
2295implemented by the ``gicv3_its_save_disable()`` helper, but most of the needed
2296sequence is implementation defined and it is therefore the responsibility of
2297the platform code to implement the necessary sequence. Then the GIC
2298Redistributor context can be saved using the ``gicv3_rdistif_save()`` helper.
2299Powering off the Redistributor requires the implementation to support it and it
2300is the responsibility of the platform code to execute the right implementation
2301defined sequence.
2302
2303When a system suspend is requested, the platform can also make use of the
2304``gicv3_distif_save()`` helper to save the context of the GIC Distributor after
2305it has saved the context of the Redistributors and ITS of all the cores in the
2306system. The context of the Distributor can be large and may require it to be
2307allocated in a special area if it cannot fit in the platform's global static
2308data, for example in DRAM. The Distributor can then be powered down using an
2309implementation-defined sequence.
2310
Douglas Raillardd7c21b72017-06-28 15:23:03 +01002311plat\_psci\_ops.pwr\_domain\_pwr\_down\_wfi()
Douglas Raillard0929f092017-08-02 14:44:42 +01002312.............................................
Douglas Raillardd7c21b72017-06-28 15:23:03 +01002313
2314This is an optional function and, if implemented, is expected to perform
2315platform specific actions including the ``wfi`` invocation which allows the
2316CPU to powerdown. Since this function is invoked outside the PSCI locks,
2317the actions performed in this hook must be local to the CPU or the platform
2318must ensure that races between multiple CPUs cannot occur.
2319
2320The ``target_state`` has a similar meaning as described in the ``pwr_domain_off()``
2321operation and it encodes the platform coordinated target local power states for
2322the CPU power domain and its parent power domain levels. This function must
2323not return back to the caller.
2324
2325If this function is not implemented by the platform, PSCI generic
2326implementation invokes ``psci_power_down_wfi()`` for power down.
2327
2328plat\_psci\_ops.pwr\_domain\_on\_finish()
Douglas Raillard0929f092017-08-02 14:44:42 +01002329.........................................
Douglas Raillardd7c21b72017-06-28 15:23:03 +01002330
2331This function is called by the PSCI implementation after the calling CPU is
2332powered on and released from reset in response to an earlier PSCI ``CPU_ON`` call.
2333It performs the platform-specific setup required to initialize enough state for
2334this CPU to enter the normal world and also provide secure runtime firmware
2335services.
2336
2337The ``target_state`` (first argument) is the prior state of the power domains
2338immediately before the CPU was turned on. It indicates which power domains
2339above the CPU might require initialization due to having previously been in
2340low power states. The generic code expects the handler to succeed.
2341
2342plat\_psci\_ops.pwr\_domain\_suspend\_finish()
Douglas Raillard0929f092017-08-02 14:44:42 +01002343..............................................
Douglas Raillardd7c21b72017-06-28 15:23:03 +01002344
2345This function is called by the PSCI implementation after the calling CPU is
2346powered on and released from reset in response to an asynchronous wakeup
2347event, for example a timer interrupt that was programmed by the CPU during the
2348``CPU_SUSPEND`` call or ``SYSTEM_SUSPEND`` call. It performs the platform-specific
2349setup required to restore the saved state for this CPU to resume execution
2350in the normal world and also provide secure runtime firmware services.
2351
2352The ``target_state`` (first argument) has a similar meaning as described in
2353the ``pwr_domain_on_finish()`` operation. The generic code expects the platform
2354to succeed.
2355
Douglas Raillarda84996b2017-08-02 16:57:32 +01002356If the Distributor, Redistributors or ITS have been powered off as part of a
2357suspend, their context must be restored in this function in the reverse order
2358to how they were saved during suspend sequence.
2359
Douglas Raillardd7c21b72017-06-28 15:23:03 +01002360plat\_psci\_ops.system\_off()
Douglas Raillard0929f092017-08-02 14:44:42 +01002361.............................
Douglas Raillardd7c21b72017-06-28 15:23:03 +01002362
2363This function is called by PSCI implementation in response to a ``SYSTEM_OFF``
2364call. It performs the platform-specific system poweroff sequence after
2365notifying the Secure Payload Dispatcher.
2366
2367plat\_psci\_ops.system\_reset()
Douglas Raillard0929f092017-08-02 14:44:42 +01002368...............................
Douglas Raillardd7c21b72017-06-28 15:23:03 +01002369
2370This function is called by PSCI implementation in response to a ``SYSTEM_RESET``
2371call. It performs the platform-specific system reset sequence after
2372notifying the Secure Payload Dispatcher.
2373
2374plat\_psci\_ops.validate\_power\_state()
Douglas Raillard0929f092017-08-02 14:44:42 +01002375........................................
Douglas Raillardd7c21b72017-06-28 15:23:03 +01002376
2377This function is called by the PSCI implementation during the ``CPU_SUSPEND``
2378call to validate the ``power_state`` parameter of the PSCI API and if valid,
2379populate it in ``req_state`` (second argument) array as power domain level
2380specific local states. If the ``power_state`` is invalid, the platform must
2381return PSCI\_E\_INVALID\_PARAMS as error, which is propagated back to the
2382normal world PSCI client.
2383
2384plat\_psci\_ops.validate\_ns\_entrypoint()
Douglas Raillard0929f092017-08-02 14:44:42 +01002385..........................................
Douglas Raillardd7c21b72017-06-28 15:23:03 +01002386
2387This function is called by the PSCI implementation during the ``CPU_SUSPEND``,
2388``SYSTEM_SUSPEND`` and ``CPU_ON`` calls to validate the non-secure ``entry_point``
2389parameter passed by the normal world. If the ``entry_point`` is invalid,
2390the platform must return PSCI\_E\_INVALID\_ADDRESS as error, which is
2391propagated back to the normal world PSCI client.
2392
2393plat\_psci\_ops.get\_sys\_suspend\_power\_state()
Douglas Raillard0929f092017-08-02 14:44:42 +01002394.................................................
Douglas Raillardd7c21b72017-06-28 15:23:03 +01002395
2396This function is called by the PSCI implementation during the ``SYSTEM_SUSPEND``
2397call to get the ``req_state`` parameter from platform which encodes the power
2398domain level specific local states to suspend to system affinity level. The
2399``req_state`` will be utilized to do the PSCI state coordination and
2400``pwr_domain_suspend()`` will be invoked with the coordinated target state to
2401enter system suspend.
2402
2403plat\_psci\_ops.get\_pwr\_lvl\_state\_idx()
Douglas Raillard0929f092017-08-02 14:44:42 +01002404...........................................
Douglas Raillardd7c21b72017-06-28 15:23:03 +01002405
2406This is an optional function and, if implemented, is invoked by the PSCI
2407implementation to convert the ``local_state`` (first argument) at a specified
2408``pwr_lvl`` (second argument) to an index between 0 and
2409``PLAT_MAX_PWR_LVL_STATES`` - 1. This function is only needed if the platform
2410supports more than two local power states at each power domain level, that is
2411``PLAT_MAX_PWR_LVL_STATES`` is greater than 2, and needs to account for these
2412local power states.
2413
2414plat\_psci\_ops.translate\_power\_state\_by\_mpidr()
Douglas Raillard0929f092017-08-02 14:44:42 +01002415....................................................
Douglas Raillardd7c21b72017-06-28 15:23:03 +01002416
2417This is an optional function and, if implemented, verifies the ``power_state``
2418(second argument) parameter of the PSCI API corresponding to a target power
2419domain. The target power domain is identified by using both ``MPIDR`` (first
2420argument) and the power domain level encoded in ``power_state``. The power domain
2421level specific local states are to be extracted from ``power_state`` and be
2422populated in the ``output_state`` (third argument) array. The functionality
2423is similar to the ``validate_power_state`` function described above and is
2424envisaged to be used in case the validity of ``power_state`` depend on the
2425targeted power domain. If the ``power_state`` is invalid for the targeted power
2426domain, the platform must return PSCI\_E\_INVALID\_PARAMS as error. If this
2427function is not implemented, then the generic implementation relies on
2428``validate_power_state`` function to translate the ``power_state``.
2429
2430This function can also be used in case the platform wants to support local
2431power state encoding for ``power_state`` parameter of PSCI\_STAT\_COUNT/RESIDENCY
2432APIs as described in Section 5.18 of `PSCI`_.
2433
2434plat\_psci\_ops.get\_node\_hw\_state()
Douglas Raillard0929f092017-08-02 14:44:42 +01002435......................................
Douglas Raillardd7c21b72017-06-28 15:23:03 +01002436
2437This is an optional function. If implemented this function is intended to return
2438the power state of a node (identified by the first parameter, the ``MPIDR``) in
2439the power domain topology (identified by the second parameter, ``power_level``),
2440as retrieved from a power controller or equivalent component on the platform.
2441Upon successful completion, the implementation must map and return the final
2442status among ``HW_ON``, ``HW_OFF`` or ``HW_STANDBY``. Upon encountering failures, it
2443must return either ``PSCI_E_INVALID_PARAMS`` or ``PSCI_E_NOT_SUPPORTED`` as
2444appropriate.
2445
2446Implementations are not expected to handle ``power_levels`` greater than
2447``PLAT_MAX_PWR_LVL``.
2448
Roberto Vargasd963e3e2017-09-12 10:28:35 +01002449plat\_psci\_ops.system\_reset2()
2450................................
2451
2452This is an optional function. If implemented this function is
2453called during the ``SYSTEM_RESET2`` call to perform a reset
2454based on the first parameter ``reset_type`` as specified in
2455`PSCI`_. The parameter ``cookie`` can be used to pass additional
2456reset information. If the ``reset_type`` is not supported, the
2457function must return ``PSCI_E_NOT_SUPPORTED``. For architectural
2458resets, all failures must return ``PSCI_E_INVALID_PARAMETERS``
2459and vendor reset can return other PSCI error codes as defined
2460in `PSCI`_. On success this function will not return.
2461
2462plat\_psci\_ops.write\_mem\_protect()
2463....................................
2464
2465This is an optional function. If implemented it enables or disables the
2466``MEM_PROTECT`` functionality based on the value of ``val``.
2467A non-zero value enables ``MEM_PROTECT`` and a value of zero
2468disables it. Upon encountering failures it must return a negative value
2469and on success it must return 0.
2470
2471plat\_psci\_ops.read\_mem\_protect()
2472.....................................
2473
2474This is an optional function. If implemented it returns the current
2475state of ``MEM_PROTECT`` via the ``val`` parameter. Upon encountering
2476failures it must return a negative value and on success it must
2477return 0.
2478
2479plat\_psci\_ops.mem\_protect\_chk()
2480...................................
2481
2482This is an optional function. If implemented it checks if a memory
2483region defined by a base address ``base`` and with a size of ``length``
2484bytes is protected by ``MEM_PROTECT``. If the region is protected
2485then it must return 0, otherwise it must return a negative number.
2486
Douglas Raillardd7c21b72017-06-28 15:23:03 +01002487Interrupt Management framework (in BL31)
2488----------------------------------------
2489
2490BL31 implements an Interrupt Management Framework (IMF) to manage interrupts
2491generated in either security state and targeted to EL1 or EL2 in the non-secure
2492state or EL3/S-EL1 in the secure state. The design of this framework is
2493described in the `IMF Design Guide`_
2494
2495A platform should export the following APIs to support the IMF. The following
2496text briefly describes each api and its implementation in ARM standard
2497platforms. The API implementation depends upon the type of interrupt controller
2498present in the platform. ARM standard platform layer supports both
2499`ARM Generic Interrupt Controller version 2.0 (GICv2)`_
2500and `3.0 (GICv3)`_. Juno builds the ARM
2501Standard layer to use GICv2 and the FVP can be configured to use either GICv2 or
2502GICv3 depending on the build flag ``FVP_USE_GIC_DRIVER`` (See FVP platform
2503specific build options in `User Guide`_ for more details).
2504
Jeenu Viswambharanb1e957e2017-09-22 08:32:09 +01002505See also: `Interrupt Controller Abstraction APIs`__.
2506
2507.. __: platform-interrupt-controller-API.rst
2508
Douglas Raillardd7c21b72017-06-28 15:23:03 +01002509Function : plat\_interrupt\_type\_to\_line() [mandatory]
2510~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2511
2512::
2513
2514 Argument : uint32_t, uint32_t
2515 Return : uint32_t
2516
2517The ARM processor signals an interrupt exception either through the IRQ or FIQ
2518interrupt line. The specific line that is signaled depends on how the interrupt
2519controller (IC) reports different interrupt types from an execution context in
2520either security state. The IMF uses this API to determine which interrupt line
2521the platform IC uses to signal each type of interrupt supported by the framework
2522from a given security state. This API must be invoked at EL3.
2523
2524The first parameter will be one of the ``INTR_TYPE_*`` values (see
2525`IMF Design Guide`_) indicating the target type of the interrupt, the second parameter is the
2526security state of the originating execution context. The return result is the
2527bit position in the ``SCR_EL3`` register of the respective interrupt trap: IRQ=1,
2528FIQ=2.
2529
2530In the case of ARM standard platforms using GICv2, S-EL1 interrupts are
2531configured as FIQs and Non-secure interrupts as IRQs from either security
2532state.
2533
2534In the case of ARM standard platforms using GICv3, the interrupt line to be
2535configured depends on the security state of the execution context when the
2536interrupt is signalled and are as follows:
2537
2538- The S-EL1 interrupts are signaled as IRQ in S-EL0/1 context and as FIQ in
2539 NS-EL0/1/2 context.
2540- The Non secure interrupts are signaled as FIQ in S-EL0/1 context and as IRQ
2541 in the NS-EL0/1/2 context.
2542- The EL3 interrupts are signaled as FIQ in both S-EL0/1 and NS-EL0/1/2
2543 context.
2544
2545Function : plat\_ic\_get\_pending\_interrupt\_type() [mandatory]
2546~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2547
2548::
2549
2550 Argument : void
2551 Return : uint32_t
2552
2553This API returns the type of the highest priority pending interrupt at the
2554platform IC. The IMF uses the interrupt type to retrieve the corresponding
2555handler function. ``INTR_TYPE_INVAL`` is returned when there is no interrupt
2556pending. The valid interrupt types that can be returned are ``INTR_TYPE_EL3``,
2557``INTR_TYPE_S_EL1`` and ``INTR_TYPE_NS``. This API must be invoked at EL3.
2558
2559In the case of ARM standard platforms using GICv2, the *Highest Priority
2560Pending Interrupt Register* (``GICC_HPPIR``) is read to determine the id of
2561the pending interrupt. The type of interrupt depends upon the id value as
2562follows.
2563
2564#. id < 1022 is reported as a S-EL1 interrupt
2565#. id = 1022 is reported as a Non-secure interrupt.
2566#. id = 1023 is reported as an invalid interrupt type.
2567
2568In the case of ARM standard platforms using GICv3, the system register
2569``ICC_HPPIR0_EL1``, *Highest Priority Pending group 0 Interrupt Register*,
2570is read to determine the id of the pending interrupt. The type of interrupt
2571depends upon the id value as follows.
2572
2573#. id = ``PENDING_G1S_INTID`` (1020) is reported as a S-EL1 interrupt
2574#. id = ``PENDING_G1NS_INTID`` (1021) is reported as a Non-secure interrupt.
2575#. id = ``GIC_SPURIOUS_INTERRUPT`` (1023) is reported as an invalid interrupt type.
2576#. All other interrupt id's are reported as EL3 interrupt.
2577
2578Function : plat\_ic\_get\_pending\_interrupt\_id() [mandatory]
2579~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2580
2581::
2582
2583 Argument : void
2584 Return : uint32_t
2585
2586This API returns the id of the highest priority pending interrupt at the
2587platform IC. ``INTR_ID_UNAVAILABLE`` is returned when there is no interrupt
2588pending.
2589
2590In the case of ARM standard platforms using GICv2, the *Highest Priority
2591Pending Interrupt Register* (``GICC_HPPIR``) is read to determine the id of the
2592pending interrupt. The id that is returned by API depends upon the value of
2593the id read from the interrupt controller as follows.
2594
2595#. id < 1022. id is returned as is.
2596#. id = 1022. The *Aliased Highest Priority Pending Interrupt Register*
2597 (``GICC_AHPPIR``) is read to determine the id of the non-secure interrupt.
2598 This id is returned by the API.
2599#. id = 1023. ``INTR_ID_UNAVAILABLE`` is returned.
2600
2601In the case of ARM standard platforms using GICv3, if the API is invoked from
2602EL3, the system register ``ICC_HPPIR0_EL1``, *Highest Priority Pending Interrupt
2603group 0 Register*, is read to determine the id of the pending interrupt. The id
2604that is returned by API depends upon the value of the id read from the
2605interrupt controller as follows.
2606
2607#. id < ``PENDING_G1S_INTID`` (1020). id is returned as is.
2608#. id = ``PENDING_G1S_INTID`` (1020) or ``PENDING_G1NS_INTID`` (1021). The system
2609 register ``ICC_HPPIR1_EL1``, *Highest Priority Pending Interrupt group 1
2610 Register* is read to determine the id of the group 1 interrupt. This id
2611 is returned by the API as long as it is a valid interrupt id
2612#. If the id is any of the special interrupt identifiers,
2613 ``INTR_ID_UNAVAILABLE`` is returned.
2614
2615When the API invoked from S-EL1 for GICv3 systems, the id read from system
2616register ``ICC_HPPIR1_EL1``, *Highest Priority Pending group 1 Interrupt
2617Register*, is returned if is not equal to GIC\_SPURIOUS\_INTERRUPT (1023) else
2618``INTR_ID_UNAVAILABLE`` is returned.
2619
2620Function : plat\_ic\_acknowledge\_interrupt() [mandatory]
2621~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2622
2623::
2624
2625 Argument : void
2626 Return : uint32_t
2627
2628This API is used by the CPU to indicate to the platform IC that processing of
Jeenu Viswambharan055af4b2017-10-24 15:13:59 +01002629the highest pending interrupt has begun. It should return the raw, unmodified
2630value obtained from the interrupt controller when acknowledging an interrupt.
2631The actual interrupt number shall be extracted from this raw value using the API
2632`plat_ic_get_interrupt_id()`__.
2633
2634.. __: platform-interrupt-controller-API.rst#function-unsigned-int-plat-ic-get-interrupt-id-unsigned-int-raw-optional
Douglas Raillardd7c21b72017-06-28 15:23:03 +01002635
2636This function in ARM standard platforms using GICv2, reads the *Interrupt
2637Acknowledge Register* (``GICC_IAR``). This changes the state of the highest
2638priority pending interrupt from pending to active in the interrupt controller.
Jeenu Viswambharan055af4b2017-10-24 15:13:59 +01002639It returns the value read from the ``GICC_IAR``, unmodified.
Douglas Raillardd7c21b72017-06-28 15:23:03 +01002640
2641In the case of ARM standard platforms using GICv3, if the API is invoked
2642from EL3, the function reads the system register ``ICC_IAR0_EL1``, *Interrupt
2643Acknowledge Register group 0*. If the API is invoked from S-EL1, the function
2644reads the system register ``ICC_IAR1_EL1``, *Interrupt Acknowledge Register
2645group 1*. The read changes the state of the highest pending interrupt from
2646pending to active in the interrupt controller. The value read is returned
Jeenu Viswambharan055af4b2017-10-24 15:13:59 +01002647unmodified.
Douglas Raillardd7c21b72017-06-28 15:23:03 +01002648
2649The TSP uses this API to start processing of the secure physical timer
2650interrupt.
2651
2652Function : plat\_ic\_end\_of\_interrupt() [mandatory]
2653~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2654
2655::
2656
2657 Argument : uint32_t
2658 Return : void
2659
2660This API is used by the CPU to indicate to the platform IC that processing of
2661the interrupt corresponding to the id (passed as the parameter) has
2662finished. The id should be the same as the id returned by the
2663``plat_ic_acknowledge_interrupt()`` API.
2664
2665ARM standard platforms write the id to the *End of Interrupt Register*
2666(``GICC_EOIR``) in case of GICv2, and to ``ICC_EOIR0_EL1`` or ``ICC_EOIR1_EL1``
2667system register in case of GICv3 depending on where the API is invoked from,
2668EL3 or S-EL1. This deactivates the corresponding interrupt in the interrupt
2669controller.
2670
2671The TSP uses this API to finish processing of the secure physical timer
2672interrupt.
2673
2674Function : plat\_ic\_get\_interrupt\_type() [mandatory]
2675~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2676
2677::
2678
2679 Argument : uint32_t
2680 Return : uint32_t
2681
2682This API returns the type of the interrupt id passed as the parameter.
2683``INTR_TYPE_INVAL`` is returned if the id is invalid. If the id is valid, a valid
2684interrupt type (one of ``INTR_TYPE_EL3``, ``INTR_TYPE_S_EL1`` and ``INTR_TYPE_NS``) is
2685returned depending upon how the interrupt has been configured by the platform
2686IC. This API must be invoked at EL3.
2687
2688ARM standard platforms using GICv2 configures S-EL1 interrupts as Group0 interrupts
2689and Non-secure interrupts as Group1 interrupts. It reads the group value
2690corresponding to the interrupt id from the relevant *Interrupt Group Register*
2691(``GICD_IGROUPRn``). It uses the group value to determine the type of interrupt.
2692
2693In the case of ARM standard platforms using GICv3, both the *Interrupt Group
2694Register* (``GICD_IGROUPRn``) and *Interrupt Group Modifier Register*
2695(``GICD_IGRPMODRn``) is read to figure out whether the interrupt is configured
2696as Group 0 secure interrupt, Group 1 secure interrupt or Group 1 NS interrupt.
2697
2698Crash Reporting mechanism (in BL31)
2699-----------------------------------
2700
Julius Werneraae9bb12017-09-18 16:49:48 -07002701NOTE: This section assumes that your platform is enabling the MULTI_CONSOLE_API
2702flag in its platform.mk. Not using this flag is deprecated for new platforms.
2703
Douglas Raillardd7c21b72017-06-28 15:23:03 +01002704BL31 implements a crash reporting mechanism which prints the various registers
Julius Werneraae9bb12017-09-18 16:49:48 -07002705of the CPU to enable quick crash analysis and debugging. By default, the
2706definitions in ``plat/common/aarch64/platform\_helpers.S`` will cause the crash
2707output to be routed over the normal console infrastructure and get printed on
2708consoles configured to output in crash state. ``console_set_scope()`` can be
2709used to control whether a console is used for crash output.
Douglas Raillardd7c21b72017-06-28 15:23:03 +01002710
Julius Werneraae9bb12017-09-18 16:49:48 -07002711In some cases (such as debugging very early crashes that happen before the
2712normal boot console can be set up), platforms may want to control crash output
2713more explicitly. For these, the following functions can be overridden by
2714platform code. They are executed outside of a C environment and without a stack.
Douglas Raillardd7c21b72017-06-28 15:23:03 +01002715
2716Function : plat\_crash\_console\_init
2717~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2718
2719::
2720
2721 Argument : void
2722 Return : int
2723
2724This API is used by the crash reporting mechanism to initialize the crash
Julius Werneraae9bb12017-09-18 16:49:48 -07002725console. It must only use the general purpose registers x0 through x7 to do the
Douglas Raillardd7c21b72017-06-28 15:23:03 +01002726initialization and returns 1 on success.
2727
Julius Werneraae9bb12017-09-18 16:49:48 -07002728If you are trying to debug crashes before the console driver would normally get
2729registered, you can use this to register a driver from assembly with hardcoded
2730parameters. For example, you could register the 16550 driver like this:
2731
2732::
2733
2734 .section .data.crash_console /* Reserve space for console structure */
2735 crash_console:
2736 .zero 6 * 8 /* console_16550_t has 6 8-byte words */
2737 func plat_crash_console_init
2738 ldr x0, =YOUR_16550_BASE_ADDR
2739 ldr x1, =YOUR_16550_SRCCLK_IN_HZ
2740 ldr x2, =YOUR_16550_TARGET_BAUD_RATE
2741 adrp x3, crash_console
2742 add x3, x3, :lo12:crash_console
2743 b console_16550_register /* tail call, returns 1 on success */
2744 endfunc plat_crash_console_init
2745
2746If you're trying to debug crashes in BL1, you can call the console_xxx_core_init
2747function exported by some console drivers from here.
2748
Douglas Raillardd7c21b72017-06-28 15:23:03 +01002749Function : plat\_crash\_console\_putc
2750~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2751
2752::
2753
2754 Argument : int
2755 Return : int
2756
2757This API is used by the crash reporting mechanism to print a character on the
2758designated crash console. It must only use general purpose registers x1 and
2759x2 to do its work. The parameter and the return value are in general purpose
2760register x0.
2761
Julius Werneraae9bb12017-09-18 16:49:48 -07002762If you have registered a normal console driver in ``plat_crash_console_init``,
2763you can keep the default implementation here (which calls ``console_putc()``).
2764
2765If you're trying to debug crashes in BL1, you can call the console_xxx_core_putc
2766function exported by some console drivers from here.
2767
Douglas Raillardd7c21b72017-06-28 15:23:03 +01002768Function : plat\_crash\_console\_flush
2769~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2770
2771::
2772
2773 Argument : void
2774 Return : int
2775
2776This API is used by the crash reporting mechanism to force write of all buffered
2777data on the designated crash console. It should only use general purpose
Julius Werneraae9bb12017-09-18 16:49:48 -07002778registers x0 through x5 to do its work. The return value is 0 on successful
Douglas Raillardd7c21b72017-06-28 15:23:03 +01002779completion; otherwise the return value is -1.
2780
Julius Werneraae9bb12017-09-18 16:49:48 -07002781If you have registered a normal console driver in ``plat_crash_console_init``,
2782you can keep the default implementation here (which calls ``console_flush()``).
2783
2784If you're trying to debug crashes in BL1, you can call the console_xx_core_flush
2785function exported by some console drivers from here.
2786
Douglas Raillardd7c21b72017-06-28 15:23:03 +01002787Build flags
2788-----------
2789
2790- **ENABLE\_PLAT\_COMPAT**
2791 All the platforms ports conforming to this API specification should define
2792 the build flag ``ENABLE_PLAT_COMPAT`` to 0 as the compatibility layer should
2793 be disabled. For more details on compatibility layer, refer
2794 `Migration Guide`_.
2795
2796There are some build flags which can be defined by the platform to control
2797inclusion or exclusion of certain BL stages from the FIP image. These flags
2798need to be defined in the platform makefile which will get included by the
2799build system.
2800
2801- **NEED\_BL33**
2802 By default, this flag is defined ``yes`` by the build system and ``BL33``
2803 build option should be supplied as a build option. The platform has the
2804 option of excluding the BL33 image in the ``fip`` image by defining this flag
2805 to ``no``. If any of the options ``EL3_PAYLOAD_BASE`` or ``PRELOADED_BL33_BASE``
2806 are used, this flag will be set to ``no`` automatically.
2807
2808C Library
2809---------
2810
2811To avoid subtle toolchain behavioral dependencies, the header files provided
2812by the compiler are not used. The software is built with the ``-nostdinc`` flag
2813to ensure no headers are included from the toolchain inadvertently. Instead the
2814required headers are included in the ARM Trusted Firmware source tree. The
2815library only contains those C library definitions required by the local
2816implementation. If more functionality is required, the needed library functions
2817will need to be added to the local implementation.
2818
2819Versions of `FreeBSD`_ headers can be found in ``include/lib/stdlib``. Some of
2820these headers have been cut down in order to simplify the implementation. In
2821order to minimize changes to the header files, the `FreeBSD`_ layout has been
2822maintained. The generic C library definitions can be found in
2823``include/lib/stdlib`` with more system and machine specific declarations in
2824``include/lib/stdlib/sys`` and ``include/lib/stdlib/machine``.
2825
2826The local C library implementations can be found in ``lib/stdlib``. In order to
2827extend the C library these files may need to be modified. It is recommended to
2828use a release version of `FreeBSD`_ as a starting point.
2829
2830The C library header files in the `FreeBSD`_ source tree are located in the
2831``include`` and ``sys/sys`` directories. `FreeBSD`_ machine specific definitions
2832can be found in the ``sys/<machine-type>`` directories. These files define things
2833like 'the size of a pointer' and 'the range of an integer'. Since an AArch64
2834port for `FreeBSD`_ does not yet exist, the machine specific definitions are
2835based on existing machine types with similar properties (for example SPARC64).
2836
2837Where possible, C library function implementations were taken from `FreeBSD`_
2838as found in the ``lib/libc`` directory.
2839
2840A copy of the `FreeBSD`_ sources can be downloaded with ``git``.
2841
2842::
2843
2844 git clone git://github.com/freebsd/freebsd.git -b origin/release/9.2.0
2845
2846Storage abstraction layer
2847-------------------------
2848
2849In order to improve platform independence and portability an storage abstraction
2850layer is used to load data from non-volatile platform storage.
2851
2852Each platform should register devices and their drivers via the Storage layer.
2853These drivers then need to be initialized by bootloader phases as
2854required in their respective ``blx_platform_setup()`` functions. Currently
2855storage access is only required by BL1 and BL2 phases. The ``load_image()``
2856function uses the storage layer to access non-volatile platform storage.
2857
2858It is mandatory to implement at least one storage driver. For the ARM
2859development platforms the Firmware Image Package (FIP) driver is provided as
2860the default means to load data from storage (see the "Firmware Image Package"
2861section in the `User Guide`_). The storage layer is described in the header file
2862``include/drivers/io/io_storage.h``. The implementation of the common library
2863is in ``drivers/io/io_storage.c`` and the driver files are located in
2864``drivers/io/``.
2865
2866Each IO driver must provide ``io_dev_*`` structures, as described in
2867``drivers/io/io_driver.h``. These are returned via a mandatory registration
2868function that is called on platform initialization. The semi-hosting driver
2869implementation in ``io_semihosting.c`` can be used as an example.
2870
2871The Storage layer provides mechanisms to initialize storage devices before
2872IO operations are called. The basic operations supported by the layer
2873include ``open()``, ``close()``, ``read()``, ``write()``, ``size()`` and ``seek()``.
2874Drivers do not have to implement all operations, but each platform must
2875provide at least one driver for a device capable of supporting generic
2876operations such as loading a bootloader image.
2877
2878The current implementation only allows for known images to be loaded by the
2879firmware. These images are specified by using their identifiers, as defined in
2880[include/plat/common/platform\_def.h] (or a separate header file included from
2881there). The platform layer (``plat_get_image_source()``) then returns a reference
2882to a device and a driver-specific ``spec`` which will be understood by the driver
2883to allow access to the image data.
2884
2885The layer is designed in such a way that is it possible to chain drivers with
2886other drivers. For example, file-system drivers may be implemented on top of
2887physical block devices, both represented by IO devices with corresponding
2888drivers. In such a case, the file-system "binding" with the block device may
2889be deferred until the file-system device is initialised.
2890
2891The abstraction currently depends on structures being statically allocated
2892by the drivers and callers, as the system does not yet provide a means of
2893dynamically allocating memory. This may also have the affect of limiting the
2894amount of open resources per driver.
2895
2896--------------
2897
Jeenu Viswambharanb1e957e2017-09-22 08:32:09 +01002898*Copyright (c) 2013-2017, ARM Limited and Contributors. All rights reserved.*
Douglas Raillardd7c21b72017-06-28 15:23:03 +01002899
2900.. _Migration Guide: platform-migration-guide.rst
2901.. _include/plat/common/platform.h: ../include/plat/common/platform.h
2902.. _include/plat/arm/common/plat\_arm.h: ../include/plat/arm/common/plat_arm.h%5D
2903.. _User Guide: user-guide.rst
2904.. _include/plat/common/common\_def.h: ../include/plat/common/common_def.h
2905.. _include/plat/arm/common/arm\_def.h: ../include/plat/arm/common/arm_def.h
2906.. _plat/common/aarch64/platform\_mp\_stack.S: ../plat/common/aarch64/platform_mp_stack.S
2907.. _plat/common/aarch64/platform\_up\_stack.S: ../plat/common/aarch64/platform_up_stack.S
2908.. _For example, define the build flag in platform.mk: PLAT_PL061_MAX_GPIOS%20:=%20160
2909.. _Power Domain Topology Design: psci-pd-tree.rst
2910.. _include/common/bl\_common.h: ../include/common/bl_common.h
2911.. _include/lib/aarch32/arch.h: ../include/lib/aarch32/arch.h
2912.. _Firmware Design: firmware-design.rst
2913.. _PSCI: http://infocenter.arm.com/help/topic/com.arm.doc.den0022c/DEN0022C_Power_State_Coordination_Interface.pdf
2914.. _plat/arm/board/fvp/fvp\_pm.c: ../plat/arm/board/fvp/fvp_pm.c
2915.. _IMF Design Guide: interrupt-framework-design.rst
2916.. _ARM Generic Interrupt Controller version 2.0 (GICv2): http://infocenter.arm.com/help/topic/com.arm.doc.ihi0048b/index.html
2917.. _3.0 (GICv3): http://infocenter.arm.com/help/topic/com.arm.doc.ihi0069b/index.html
2918.. _FreeBSD: http://www.freebsd.org