- 10 Sep, 2020 1 commit
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Ruari Phipps authored
UUID's in the device tree files were stored in little endian. So to keep all entries in these files RFC 4122 compliant, store them in big endian then convert it to little endian when they are read so they can be used in the UUID data structure. Signed-off-by: Ruari Phipps <ruari.phipps@arm.com> Change-Id: I5674159b82b245104381df10a4e3291160d9b3b5
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- 14 Aug, 2020 1 commit
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Manish Pandey authored
For Arm platforms SPs are loaded by parsing tb_fw_config.dts and adding them to SP structure sequentially, which in-turn is appended to loadable image list. With recently introduced dualroot CoT for SPs where they are owned either by SiP or by Platform. SiP owned SPs index starts at SP_PKG1_ID and Plat owned SPs index starts at SP_PKG5_ID. As the start index of SP depends on the owner, there should be a mechanism to parse owner of a SP and put it at the correct index in SP structure. This patch adds support for parsing a new optional field "owner" and based on it put SP details(UUID & Load-address) at the correct index in SP structure. Change-Id: Ibd255b60d5c45023cc7fdb10971bef6626cb560b Signed-off-by: Manish Pandey <manish.pandey2@arm.com>
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- 31 Jul, 2020 1 commit
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Manish Pandey authored
Currently only single signing domain is supported for SP packages but there is plan to support dual signing domains if CoT is dualroot. SP_CONTENT_CERT_ID is the certificate file which is currently generated and signed with trusted world key which in-turn is derived from Silicon provider RoT key. To allow dual signing domain for SP packages, other certificate file will be derived from Platform owned RoT key. This patch renames "SP_CONTENT_CERT_ID" to "SIP_SP_CONTENT_CERT_ID" and does other related changes. Signed-off-by: Manish Pandey <manish.pandey2@arm.com> Change-Id: I0bc445a3ab257e2dac03faa64f46e36a9fed5e93
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- 24 Jun, 2020 1 commit
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Louis Mayencourt authored
fw_config image is authenticated using secure boot framework by adding it into the single root and dual root chain of trust. The COT for fw_config image looks as below: +------------------+ +-------------------+ | ROTPK/ROTPK Hash |------>| Trusted Boot fw | +------------------+ | Certificate | | (Auth Image) | /+-------------------+ / | / | / | / | L v +------------------+ +-------------------+ | fw_config hash |------>| fw_config | | | | (Data Image) | +------------------+ +-------------------+ Signed-off-by: Louis Mayencourt <louis.mayencourt@arm.com> Signed-off-by: Manish V Badarkhe <Manish.Badarkhe@arm.com> Change-Id: I08fc8ee95c29a95bb140c807dd06e772474c7367
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- 09 Jun, 2020 1 commit
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Manish Pandey authored
A new certificate "sip-sp-cert" has been added for Silicon Provider(SiP) owned Secure Partitions(SP). A similar support for Platform owned SP can be added in future. The certificate is also protected against anti- rollback using the trusted Non-Volatile counter. To avoid deviating from TBBR spec, support for SP CoT is only provided in dualroot. Secure Partition content certificate is assigned image ID 31 and SP images follows after it. The CoT for secure partition look like below. +------------------+ +-------------------+ | ROTPK/ROTPK Hash |------>| Trusted Key | +------------------+ | Certificate | | (Auth Image) | /+-------------------+ / | / | / | / | L v +------------------+ +-------------------+ | Trusted World |------>| SiP owned SPs | | Public Key | | Content Cert | +------------------+ | (Auth Image) | / +-------------------+ / | / v| +------------------+ L +-------------------+ | SP_PKG1 Hash |------>| SP_PKG1 | | | | (Data Image) | +------------------+ +-------------------+ . . . . . . +------------------+ +-------------------+ | SP_PKG8 Hash |------>| SP_PKG8 | | | | (Data Image) | +------------------+ +-------------------+ Signed-off-by: Manish Pandey <manish.pandey2@arm.com> Change-Id: Ia31546bac1327a3e0b5d37e8b99c808442d5e53f
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- 28 Apr, 2020 1 commit
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Andre Przywara authored
Currently our fdtw_read_array() implementation requires the length of the property to exactly match the requested size, which makes it less flexible for parsing generic device trees. Also the name is slightly misleading, since we treat the cells of the array as 32 bit unsigned integers, performing the endianess conversion. To fix those issues and align the code more with other DT users (Linux kernel or U-Boot), rename the function to "fdt_read_uint32_array", and relax the length check to only check if the property covers at least the number of cells we request. This also changes the variable names to be more in-line with other DT users, and switches to the proper data types. This makes this function more useful in later patches. Change-Id: Id86f4f588ffcb5106d4476763ecdfe35a735fa6c Signed-off-by: Andre Przywara <andre.przywara@arm.com>
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- 16 Mar, 2020 1 commit
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Louis Mayencourt authored
Merge the previously introduced arm_fconf_io_storage into arm_io_storage. This removes the duplicate io_policies and functions definition. This patch: - replace arm_io_storage.c with the content of arm_fconf_io_storage.c - rename the USE_FCONF_BASED_IO option into ARM_IO_IN_DTB. - use the ARM_IO_IN_DTB option to compile out io_policies moved in dtb. - propagate DEFINES when parsing dts. - use ARM_IO_IN_DTB to include or not uuid nodes in fw_config dtb. - set the ARM_IO_IN_DTB to 0 by default for fvp. This ensure that the behavior of fvp stays the same as it was before the introduction of fconf. Change-Id: Ia774a96d1d3a2bccad29f7ce2e2b4c21b26c080e Signed-off-by: Louis Mayencourt <louis.mayencourt@arm.com>
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- 11 Mar, 2020 1 commit
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Madhukar Pappireddy authored
A populate() function essentially captures the value of a property, defined by a platform, into a fconf related c structure. Such a callback is usually platform specific and is associated to a specific configuration source. For example, a populate() function which captures the hardware topology of the platform can only parse HW_CONFIG DTB. Hence each populator function must be registered with a specific 'config_type' identifier. It broadly represents a logical grouping of configuration properties which is usually a device tree source file. Example: > TB_FW: properties related to trusted firmware such as IO policies, base address of other DTBs, mbedtls heap info etc. > HW_CONFIG: properties related to hardware configuration of the SoC such as topology, GIC controller, PSCI hooks, CPU ID etc. This patch modifies FCONF_REGISTER_POPULATOR macro and fconf_populate() to register and invoke the appropriate callbacks selectively based on configuration type. Change-Id: I6f63b1fd7a8729c6c9137d5b63270af1857bb44a Signed-off-by: Madhukar Pappireddy <madhukar.pappireddy@arm.com>
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- 27 Feb, 2020 1 commit
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Louis Mayencourt authored
MISRA C-2012 Rule 20.7: Macro parameter expands into an expression without being wrapped by parentheses. MISRA C-2012 Rule 12.1: Missing explicit parentheses on sub-expression. MISRA C-2012 Rule 18.4: Essential type of the left hand operand is not the same as that of the right operand. Include does not provide any needed symbols. Change-Id: Ie1c6451cfbc8f519146c28b2cf15c50b1f36adc8 Signed-off-by: Louis Mayencourt <louis.mayencourt@arm.com>
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- 07 Feb, 2020 1 commit
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Louis Mayencourt authored
Use the firmware configuration framework to store the io_policies information inside the configuration device tree instead of the static structure in the code base. The io_policies required by BL1 can't be inside the dtb, as this one is loaded by BL1, and only available at BL2. This change currently only applies to FVP platform. Change-Id: Ic9c1ac3931a4a136aa36f7f58f66d3764c1bfca1 Signed-off-by: Louis Mayencourt <louis.mayencourt@arm.com>
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