- 23 May, 2014 1 commit
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Soby Mathew authored
Implements support for Non Secure Interrupts preempting the Standard SMC call in EL1. Whenever an IRQ is trapped in the Secure world we securely handover to the Normal world to process the interrupt. The normal world then issues "resume" smc call to resume the previous interrupted SMC call. Fixes ARM-software/tf-issues#105 Change-Id: I72b760617dee27438754cdfc9fe9bcf4cc024858
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- 22 May, 2014 6 commits
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Achin Gupta authored
This patch adds support in the TSPD for registering a handler for S-EL1 interrupts. This handler ferries the interrupts generated in the non-secure state to the TSP at 'tsp_fiq_entry'. Support has been added to the smc handler to resume execution in the non-secure state once interrupt handling has been completed by the TSP. There is also support for resuming execution in the normal world if the TSP receives a EL3 interrupt. This code is currently unused. Change-Id: I816732595a2635e299572965179f11aa0bf93b69
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Achin Gupta authored
This patch adds a common handler for FIQ and IRQ exceptions in the BL3-1 runtime exception vector table. This function determines the interrupt type and calls its handler. A crash is reported if an inconsistency in the interrupt management framework is detected. In the event of a spurious interrupt, execution resumes from the instruction where the interrupt was generated. This patch also removes 'cm_macros.S' as its contents have been moved to 'runtime_exceptions.S' Change-Id: I3c85ecf8eaf43a3fac429b119ed0bd706d2e2093
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Achin Gupta authored
This patch introduces a framework for registering interrupts routed to EL3. The interrupt routing model is governed by the SCR_EL3.IRQ and FIQ bits and the security state an interrupt is generated in. The framework recognizes three type of interrupts depending upon which exception level and security state they should be handled in i.e. Secure EL1 interrupts, Non-secure interrupts and EL3 interrupts. It provides an API and macros that allow a runtime service to register an handler for a type of interrupt and specify the routing model. The framework validates the routing model and uses the context management framework to ensure that it is applied to the SCR_EL3 prior to entry into the target security state. It saves the handler in internal data structures. An API is provided to retrieve the handler when an interrupt of a particular type is asserted. Registration is expected to be done once by the primary CPU. The same handler and routing model is used for all CPUs. Support for EL3 interrupts will be added to the framework in the future. A makefile flag has been added to allow the FVP port choose between ARM GIC v2 and v3 support in EL3. The latter version is currently unsupported. A framework for handling interrupts in BL3-1 will be introduced in subsequent patches. The default routing model in the absence of any handlers expects no interrupts to be routed to EL3. Change-Id: Idf7c023b34fcd4800a5980f2bef85e4b5c29e649
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Achin Gupta authored
This patch adds an API to write to any bit in the SCR_EL3 member of the 'cpu_context' structure of the current CPU for a specified security state. This API will be used in subsequent patches which introduce interrupt management in EL3 to specify the interrupt routing model when execution is not in EL3. It also renames the cm_set_el3_elr() function to cm_set_elr_el3() which is more in line with the system register name being targeted by the API. Change-Id: I310fa7d8f827ad3f350325eca2fb28cb350a85ed
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Vikram Kanigiri authored
The issues addressed in this patch are: 1. Remove meminfo_t from the common interfaces in BL3-x, expecting that platform code will find a suitable mechanism to determine the memory extents in these images and provide it to the BL3-x images. 2. Remove meminfo_t and bl31_plat_params_t from all FVP BL3-x code as the images use link-time information to determine memory extents. meminfo_t is still used by common interface in BL1/BL2 for loading images Change-Id: I4e825ebf6f515b59d84dc2bdddf6edbf15e2d60f
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Vikram Kanigiri authored
This patch is based on spec published at https://github.com/ARM-software/tf-issues/issues/133 It rearranges the bl31_args struct into bl31_params and bl31_plat_params which provide the information needed for Trusted firmware and platform specific data via x0 and x1 On the FVP platform BL3-1 params and BL3-1 plat params and its constituents are stored at the start of TZDRAM. The information about memory availability and size for BL3-1, BL3-2 and BL3-3 is moved into platform specific data. Change-Id: I8b32057a3d0dd3968ea26c2541a0714177820da9
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- 16 May, 2014 2 commits
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Jeenu Viswambharan authored
At present, non-secure timer register contents are saved and restored as part of world switch by BL3-1. This effectively means that the non-secure timer stops, and non-secure timer interrupts are prevented from asserting until BL3-1 switches back, introducing latency for non-secure services. Often, secure world might depend on alternate sources for secure interrupts (secure timer or platform timer) instead of non-secure timers, in which case this save and restore is unnecessary. This patch introduces a boolean build-time configuration NS_TIMER_SWITCH to choose whether or not to save and restore non-secure timer registers upon world switch. The default choice is made not to save and restore them. Fixes ARM-software/tf-issues#148 Change-Id: I1b9d623606acb9797c3e0b02fb5ec7c0a414f37e
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Soby Mathew authored
This patch implements the register reporting when unhandled exceptions are taken in BL3-1. Unhandled exceptions will result in a dump of registers to the console, before halting execution by that CPU. The Crash Stack, previously called the Exception Stack, is used for this activity. This stack is used to preserve the CPU context and runtime stack contents for debugging and analysis. This also introduces the per_cpu_ptr_cache, referenced by tpidr_el3, to provide easy access to some of BL3-1 per-cpu data structures. Initially, this is used to provide a pointer to the Crash stack. panic() now prints the the error file and line number in Debug mode and prints the PC value in release mode. The Exception Stack is renamed to Crash Stack with this patch. The original intention of exception stack is no longer valid since we intend to support several valid exceptions like IRQ and FIQ in the trusted firmware context. This stack is now utilized for dumping and reporting the system state when a crash happens and hence the rename. Fixes ARM-software/tf-issues#79 Improve reporting of unhandled exception Change-Id: I260791dc05536b78547412d147193cdccae7811a
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- 08 May, 2014 1 commit
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Soby Mathew authored
Previously exception handlers in BL3-1, X19-X29 were not saved and restored on every SMC/trap into EL3. Instead these registers were 'saved as needed' as a side effect of the A64 ABI used by the C compiler. That approach failed when world switching but was not visible with the TSP/TSPD code because the TSP is 64-bit, did not clobber these registers when running and did not support pre-emption by normal world interrupts. These scenarios showed that the values in these registers can be passed through a world switch, which broke the normal and trusted world assumptions about these registers being preserved. The Ideal solution saves and restores these registers when a world switch occurs - but that type of implementation is more complex. So this patch always saves and restores these registers on entry and exit of EL3. Fixes ARM-software/tf-issues#141 Change-Id: I9a727167bbc594454e81cf78a97ca899dfb11c27
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- 06 May, 2014 6 commits
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Dan Handley authored
Reduce the number of header files included from other header files as much as possible without splitting the files. Use forward declarations where possible. This allows removal of some unnecessary "#ifndef __ASSEMBLY__" statements. Also, review the .c and .S files for which header files really need including and reorder the #include statements alphabetically. Fixes ARM-software/tf-issues#31 Change-Id: Iec92fb976334c77453e010b60bcf56f3be72bd3e
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Dan Handley authored
Add tag names to all unnamed structs in header files. This allows forward declaration of structs, which is necessary to reduce header file nesting (to be implemented in a subsequent commit). Also change the typedef names across the codebase to use the _t suffix to be more conformant with the Linux coding style. The coding style actually prefers us not to use typedefs at all but this is considered a step too far for Trusted Firmware. Also change the IO framework structs defintions to use typedef'd structs to be consistent with the rest of the codebase. Change-Id: I722b2c86fc0d92e4da3b15e5cab20373dd26786f
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Dan Handley authored
Move the PSCI global functions out of psci_private.h and into psci.h to allow the standard service to only depend on psci.h. Change-Id: I8306924a3814b46e70c1dcc12524c7aefe06eed1
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Dan Handley authored
Move the BL function prototypes out of arch.h and into the appropriate header files to allow more efficient header file inclusion. Create new BL private header files where there is no sensible existing header file. Change-Id: I45f3e10b72b5d835254a6f25a5e47cf4cfb274c3
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Dan Handley authored
Separate out the CASSERT macro out of bl_common.h into its own header to allow more efficient header inclusion. Change-Id: I291be0b6b8f9879645e839a8f0dd1ec9b3db9639
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Dan Handley authored
Move almost all system include files to a logical sub-directory under ./include. The only remaining system include directories not under ./include are specific to the platform. Move the corresponding source files to match the include directory structure. Also remove pm.h as it is no longer used. Change-Id: Ie5ea6368ec5fad459f3e8a802ad129135527f0b3
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