- 09 Dec, 2015 1 commit
-
-
Achin Gupta authored
Suport for ARM GIC v2.0 and v3.0 drivers has been reworked to create three separate drivers instead of providing a single driver that can work on both versions of the GIC architecture. These drivers correspond to the following software use cases: 1. A GICv2 only driver that can run only on ARM GIC v2.0 implementations e.g. GIC-400 2. A GICv3 only driver that can run only on ARM GIC v3.0 implementations e.g. GIC-500 in a mode where all interrupt regimes use GICv3 features 3. A deprecated GICv3 driver that operates in legacy mode. This driver can operate only in the GICv2 mode in the secure world. On a GICv3 system, this driver allows normal world to run in either GICv3 mode (asymmetric mode) or in the GICv2 mode. Both modes of operation are deprecated on GICv3 systems. ARM platforms implement both versions of the GIC architecture. This patch adds a layer of abstraction to help ARM platform ports chose the right GIC driver and corresponding platform support. This is as described below: 1. A set of ARM common functions have been introduced to initialise the GIC and the driver during cold and warm boot. These functions are prefixed as "plat_arm_gic_". Weak definitions of these functions have been provided for each type of driver. 2. Each platform includes the sources that implement the right functions directly into the its makefile. The FVP can be instantiated with different versions of the GIC architecture. It uses the FVP_USE_GIC_DRIVER build option to specify which of the three drivers should be included in the build. 3. A list of secure interrupts has to be provided to initialise each of the three GIC drivers. For GIC v3.0 the interrupt ids have to be further categorised as Group 0 and Group 1 Secure interrupts. For GIC v2.0, the two types are merged and treated as Group 0 interrupts. The two lists of interrupts are exported from the platform_def.h. The lists are constructed by adding a list of board specific interrupt ids to a list of ids common to all ARM platforms and Compute sub-systems. This patch also makes some fields of `arm_config` data structure in FVP redundant and these unused fields are removed. Change-Id: Ibc8c087be7a8a6b041b78c2c3bd0c648cd2035d8
-
- 02 Dec, 2015 1 commit
-
-
Juan Castillo authored
This patch adds watchdog support on ARM platforms (FVP and Juno). A secure instance of SP805 is used as Trusted Watchdog. It is entirely managed in BL1, being enabled in the early platform setup hook and disabled in the exit hook. By default, the watchdog is enabled in every build (even when TBB is disabled). A new ARM platform specific build option `ARM_DISABLE_TRUSTED_WDOG` has been introduced to allow the user to disable the watchdog at build time. This feature may be used for testing or debugging purposes. Specific error handlers for Juno and FVP are also provided in this patch. These handlers will be called after an image load or authentication error. On FVP, the Table of Contents (ToC) in the FIP is erased. On Juno, the corresponding error code is stored in the V2M Non-Volatile flags register. In both cases, the CPU spins until a watchdog reset is generated after 256 seconds (as specified in the TBBR document). Change-Id: I9ca11dcb0fe15af5dbc5407ab3cf05add962f4b4
-
- 26 Nov, 2015 1 commit
-
-
Sandrine Bailleux authored
This patch adds support for booting EL3 payloads on CSS platforms, for example Juno. In this scenario, the Trusted Firmware follows its normal boot flow up to the point where it would normally pass control to the BL31 image. At this point, it jumps to the EL3 payload entry point address instead. Before handing over to the EL3 payload, the data SCP writes for AP at the beginning of the Trusted SRAM is restored, i.e. we zero the first 128 bytes and restore the SCP Boot configuration. The latter is saved before transferring the BL30 image to SCP and is restored just after the transfer (in BL2). The goal is to make it appear that the EL3 payload is the first piece of software to run on the target. The BL31 entrypoint info structure is updated to make the primary CPU jump to the EL3 payload instead of the BL31 image. The mailbox is populated with the EL3 payload entrypoint address, which releases the secondary CPUs out of their holding pen (if the SCP has powered them on). The arm_program_trusted_mailbox() function has been exported for this purpose. The TZC-400 configuration in BL2 is simplified: it grants secure access only to the whole DRAM. Other security initialization is unchanged. This alternative boot flow is disabled by default. A new build option EL3_PAYLOAD_BASE has been introduced to enable it and provide the EL3 payload's entry point address. The build system has been modified such that BL31 and BL33 are not compiled and/or not put in the FIP in this case, as those images are not used in this boot flow. Change-Id: Id2e26fa57988bbc32323a0effd022ab42f5b5077
-
- 14 Sep, 2015 1 commit
-
-
Achin Gupta authored
This patch adds a device driver which can be used to program the following aspects of ARM CCN IP: 1. Specify the mapping between ACE/ACELite/ACELite+DVM/CHI master interfaces and Request nodes. 2. Add and remove master interfaces from the snoop and dvm domains. 3. Place the L3 cache in a given power state. 4. Configuring system adress map and enabling 3 SN striping mode of memory controller operation. Change-Id: I0f665c6a306938e5b66f6a92f8549b529aa8f325
-
- 13 Aug, 2015 2 commits
-
-
Soby Mathew authored
This patch adds support to the Juno and FVP ports for composite power states with both the original and extended state-id power-state formats. Both the platform ports use the recommended state-id encoding as specified in Section 6.5 of the PSCI specification (ARM DEN 0022C). The platform build flag ARM_RECOM_STATE_ID_ENC is used to include this support. By default, to maintain backwards compatibility, the original power state parameter format is used and the state-id field is expected to be zero. Change-Id: Ie721b961957eaecaca5bf417a30952fe0627ef10
-
Soby Mathew authored
This patch migrates ARM reference platforms, Juno and FVP, to the new platform API mandated by the new PSCI power domain topology and composite power state frameworks. The platform specific makefiles now exports the build flag ENABLE_PLAT_COMPAT=0 to disable the platform compatibility layer. Change-Id: I3040ed7cce446fc66facaee9c67cb54a8cd7ca29
-
- 25 Jun, 2015 2 commits
-
-
Juan Castillo authored
This patch modifies the Trusted Board Boot implementation to use the new authentication framework, making use of the authentication module, the cryto module and the image parser module to authenticate the images in the Chain of Trust. A new function 'load_auth_image()' has been implemented. When TBB is enabled, this function will call the authentication module to authenticate parent images following the CoT up to the root of trust to finally load and authenticate the requested image. The platform is responsible for picking up the right makefiles to build the corresponding cryptographic and image parser libraries. ARM platforms use the mbedTLS based libraries. The platform may also specify what key algorithm should be used to sign the certificates. This is done by declaring the 'KEY_ALG' variable in the platform makefile. FVP and Juno use ECDSA keys. On ARM platforms, BL2 and BL1-RW regions have been increased 4KB each to accommodate the ECDSA code. REMOVED BUILD OPTIONS: * 'AUTH_MOD' Change-Id: I47d436589fc213a39edf5f5297bbd955f15ae867
-
Juan Castillo authored
This patch adds a CoT based on the Trusted Board Boot Requirements document*. The CoT consists of an array of authentication image descriptors indexed by the image identifiers. A new header file with TBBR image identifiers has been added. Platforms that use the TBBR (i.e. ARM platforms) may reuse these definitions as part of their platform porting. PLATFORM PORT - IMPORTANT: Default image IDs have been removed from the platform common definitions file (common_def.h). As a consequence, platforms that used those common definitons must now either include the IDs provided by the TBBR header file or define their own IDs. *The NVCounter authentication method has not been implemented yet. Change-Id: I7c4d591863ef53bb0cd4ce6c52a60b06fa0102d5
-
- 28 Apr, 2015 1 commit
-
-
Dan Handley authored
This major change pulls out the common functionality from the FVP and Juno platform ports into the following categories: * (include/)plat/common. Common platform porting functionality that typically may be used by all platforms. * (include/)plat/arm/common. Common platform porting functionality that may be used by all ARM standard platforms. This includes all ARM development platforms like FVP and Juno but may also include non-ARM-owned platforms. * (include/)plat/arm/board/common. Common platform porting functionality for ARM development platforms at the board (off SoC) level. * (include/)plat/arm/css/common. Common platform porting functionality at the ARM Compute SubSystem (CSS) level. Juno is an example of a CSS-based platform. * (include/)plat/arm/soc/common. Common platform porting functionality at the ARM SoC level, which is not already defined at the ARM CSS level. No guarantees are made about the backward compatibility of functionality provided in (include/)plat/arm. Also remove any unnecessary variation between the ARM development platform ports, including: * Unify the way BL2 passes `bl31_params_t` to BL3-1. Use the Juno implementation, which copies the information from BL2 memory instead of expecting it to persist in shared memory. * Unify the TZC configuration. There is no need to add a region for SCP in Juno; it's enough to simply not allow any access to this reserved region. Also set region 0 to provide no access by default instead of assuming this is the case. * Unify the number of memory map regions required for ARM development platforms, although the actual ranges mapped for each platform may be different. For the FVP port, this reduces the mapped peripheral address space. These latter changes will only be observed when the platform ports are migrated to use the new common platform code in subsequent patches. Change-Id: Id9c269dd3dc6e74533d0e5116fdd826d53946dc8
-
- 16 Mar, 2015 1 commit
-
-
Vikram Kanigiri authored
This patch updates the FVP and Juno platform ports to use the common driver for ARM Cache Coherent Interconnects. Change-Id: Ib142f456b9b673600592616a2ec99e9b230d6542
-
- 28 Jan, 2015 1 commit
-
-
Juan Castillo authored
This patch adds the function plat_match_rotpk() to the platform porting layer to provide a Root Of Trust Public key (ROTPK) verification mechanism. This function is called during the Trusted Board Boot process and receives a supposed valid copy of the ROTPK as a parameter, usually obtained from an external source (for instance, a certificate). It returns 0 (success) if that key matches the actual ROTPK stored in the system or any other value otherwise. The mechanism to access the actual ROTPK stored in the system is platform specific and should be implemented as part of this function. The format of the ROTPK is also platform specific (to save memory, some platforms might store a hash of the key instead of the whole key). TRUSTED_BOARD_BOOT build option has been added to allow the user to enable the Trusted Board Boot features. The implementation of the plat_match_rotpk() funtion is mandatory when Trusted Board Boot is enabled. For development purposes, FVP and Juno ports provide a dummy function that returns always success (valid key). A safe trusted boot implementation should provide a proper matching function. Documentation updated accordingly. Change-Id: I74ff12bc2b041556c48533375527d9e8c035b8c3
-
- 26 Jan, 2015 1 commit
-
-
Juan Castillo authored
This patch allows the secure payload (BL3-2) to be loaded in the DRAM region secured by the TrustZone controller (top 16 MB of DRAM1). The location of BL3-2 can be selected at build time by setting the build flag FVP_TSP_RAM_LOCATION to one of the following options: - 'tsram' : Trusted SRAM (this is the default option) - 'tdram' : Trusted DRAM - 'dram' : Secure region in DRAM1 (top 16MB configured by the TrustZone controller) The number of MMU tables in BL3-2 depends on its location in memory: 3 in case it is loaded in DRAM, 2 otherwise. Documentation updated accordingly. Fixes ARM-software/tf-issues#212 Change-Id: I371eef3a4159f06a0c9e3c6c1f4c905b2f93803a
-
- 22 Oct, 2014 1 commit
-
-
Juan Castillo authored
This patch deprecates the build option to relocate the shared data into Trusted DRAM in FVP. After this change, shared data is always located at the base of Trusted SRAM. This reduces the complexity of the memory map and the number of combinations in the build options. Fixes ARM-software/tf-issues#257 Change-Id: I68426472567b9d8c6d22d8884cb816f6b61bcbd3
-
- 20 Aug, 2014 1 commit
-
-
Soby Mathew authored
This patch introduces a framework which will allow CPUs to perform implementation defined actions after a CPU reset, during a CPU or cluster power down, and when a crash occurs. CPU specific reset handlers have been implemented in this patch. Other handlers will be implemented in subsequent patches. Also moved cpu_helpers.S to the new directory lib/cpus/aarch64/. Change-Id: I1ca1bade4d101d11a898fb30fea2669f9b37b956
-
- 14 Aug, 2014 2 commits
-
-
Dan Handley authored
Move the remaining IO storage source file (io_storage.c) from the lib to the drivers directory. This requires that platform ports explicitly add this file to the list of source files. Also move the IO header files to a new sub-directory, include/io. Change-Id: I862b1252a796b3bcac0d93e50b11e7fb2ded93d6
-
Juan Castillo authored
This patch groups the current contents of the Trusted DRAM region at address 0x00_0600_0000 (entrypoint mailboxes and BL3-1 parameters) in a single shared memory area that may be allocated to Trusted SRAM (default) or Trusted DRAM at build time by setting the FVP_SHARED_DATA_LOCATION make variable. The size of this shared memory is 4096 bytes. The combination 'Shared data in Trusted SRAM + TSP in Trusted DRAM' is not currently supported due to restrictions in the maximum number of mmu tables that can be created. Documentation has been updated to reflect these changes. Fixes ARM-software/tf-issues#100 Change-Id: I26ff04d33ce4cacf8d770d1a1e24132b4fc53ff0
-
- 12 Aug, 2014 1 commit
-
-
Juan Castillo authored
Secure ROM at address 0x0000_0000 is defined as FVP_TRUSTED_ROM Secure RAM at address 0x0400_0000 is defined as FVP_TRUSTED_SRAM Secure RAM at address 0x0600_0000 is defined as FVP_TRUSTED_DRAM BLn_BASE and BLn_LIMIT definitions have been updated and are based on these new memory regions. The available memory for each bootloader in the linker script is defined by BLn_BASE and BLn_LIMIT, instead of the complete memory region. TZROM_BASE/SIZE and TZRAM_BASE/SIZE are no longer required as part of the platform porting. FVP common definitions are defined in fvp_def.h while platform_def.h contains exclusively (with a few exceptions) the definitions that are mandatory in the porting guide. Therefore, platform_def.h now includes fvp_def.h instead of the other way around. Porting guide has been updated to reflect these changes. Change-Id: I39a6088eb611fc4a347db0db4b8f1f0417dbab05
-
- 28 Jul, 2014 1 commit
-
-
Soby Mathew authored
This patch replaces the pl011 console family of functions with their equivalents defined in assembly. The baud rate is defined by the PL011_BAUDRATE macro and IBRD and FBRD values for pl011 are computed statically. This patch will enable us to invoke the console functions without the C Runtime Stack. Change-Id: Ic3f7b7370ded38bf9020bf746b362081b76642c7
-
- 17 Jul, 2014 1 commit
-
-
Sandrine Bailleux authored
The ARM_GIC_ARCH build option was supposed to default to 2 on all platforms. However, the default value was set in the FVP makefile so for all other platforms it wasn't even defined. This patch moves the default value to the main Makefile. The platform port can then override it if needed. Change-Id: I8e2da1cce7ffa3ed18814bbdcbcf2578101f18a6
-
- 09 Jul, 2014 1 commit
-
-
Dan Handley authored
Refactor the FVP gic code in plat/fvp/fvp_gic.c to be a generic ARM GIC driver in drivers/arm/gic/arm_gic.c. Provide the platform specific inputs in the arm_gic_setup() function so that the driver has no explicit dependency on platform code. Provide weak implementations of the platform interrupt controller API in a new file, plat/common/plat_gic.c. These simply call through to the ARM GIC driver. Move the only remaining FVP GIC function, fvp_gic_init() to plat/fvp/aarch64/fvp_common.c and remove plat/fvp/fvp_gic.c Fixes ARM-software/tf-issues#182 Change-Id: Iea82fe095fad62dd33ba9efbddd48c57717edd21
-
- 24 Jun, 2014 2 commits
-
-
Andrew Thoelke authored
Making the simple mmio_read_*() and mmio_write_*() functions inline saves 360 bytes of code in FVP release build. Fixes ARM-software/tf-issues#210 Change-Id: I65134f9069f3b2d8821d882daaa5fdfe16355e2f
-
Vikram Kanigiri authored
This patch reworks FVP specific code responsible for determining the entry point information for BL3-2 and BL3-3 stages when BL3-1 is configured as the reset handler. Change-Id: Ia661ff0a6a44c7aabb0b6c1684b2e8d3642d11ec
-
- 10 Jun, 2014 1 commit
-
-
Andrew Thoelke authored
Replace the current out-of-line assembler implementations of the system register and system instruction operations with inline assembler. This enables better compiler optimisation and code generation when accessing system registers. Fixes ARM-software/tf-issues#91 Change-Id: I149af3a94e1e5e5140a3e44b9abfc37ba2324476
-
- 23 May, 2014 2 commits
-
-
Dan Handley authored
Previously, the enable_mmu_elX() functions were implicitly part of the platform porting layer since they were included by generic code. These functions have been placed behind 2 new platform functions, bl31_plat_enable_mmu() and bl32_plat_enable_mmu(). These are weakly defined so that they can be optionally overridden by platform ports. Also, the enable_mmu_elX() functions have been moved to lib/aarch64/xlat_tables.c for optional re-use by platform ports. These functions are tightly coupled with the translation table initialization code. Fixes ARM-software/tf-issues#152 Change-Id: I0a2251ce76acfa3c27541f832a9efaa49135cc1c
-
Dan Handley authored
FVP specific files and functions containing the word "plat" have been renamed to use the word "fvp" to distinguish them from the common platform functionality and porting functions. Change-Id: I39f9673dab3ee9c74bd18b3e62b7c21027232f7d
-
- 22 May, 2014 3 commits
-
-
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
-
Sandrine Bailleux authored
The TSP used to execute from secure DRAM on the FVPs because there was not enough space in Trusted SRAM to fit it in. Thanks to recent RAM usage enhancements being implemented, we have made enough savings for the TSP to execute in SRAM. However, there is no contiguous free chunk of SRAM big enough to hold the TSP. Therefore, the different bootloader images need to be moved around to reduce memory fragmentation. This patch keeps the overall memory layout (i.e. keeping BL1 R/W at the bottom, BL2 at the top and BL3-1 in between) but moves the base addresses of all the bootloader images in such a way that: - memory fragmentation is reduced enough to fit BL3-2 in; - new base addresses are suitable for release builds as well as debug ones; - each image has a few extra kilobytes for future growth. BL3-1 and BL3-2 are the images which received the biggest slice of the cake since they will most probably grow the most. A few useful numbers for reference (valid at the time of this patch): |-----------------------|------------------------------- | image size (debug) | extra space for the future --------|-----------------------|------------------------------- BL1 R/W | 20 KB | 4 KB BL2 | 44 KB | 4 KB BL3-1 | 108 KB | 12 KB BL3-2 | 56 KB | 8 KB --------|-----------------------|------------------------------- Total | 228 KB | 28 KB = 256 KB --------|-----------------------|------------------------------- Although on FVPs the TSP now executes from Trusted SRAM by default, this patch keeps the option to execute it from Trusted DRAM. This is controlled by the build configuration 'TSP_RAM_LOCATION'. Fixes ARM-Software/tf-issues#81 Change-Id: Ifb9ef2befa9a2d5ac0813f7f79834df7af992b94
-
Vikram Kanigiri authored
This change adds optional reset vector support to BL3-1 which means BL3-1 entry point can detect cold/warm boot, initialise primary cpu, set up cci and mail box. When using BL3-1 as a reset vector it is assumed that the BL3-1 platform code can determine the location of the BL3-2 images, or load them as there are no parameters that can be passed to BL3-1 at reset. It also fixes the incorrect initialisation of mailbox registers on the FVP platform This feature can be enabled by building the code with make variable RESET_TO_BL31 set as 1 Fixes ARM-software/TF-issues#133 Fixes ARM-software/TF-issues#20 Change-Id: I4e23939b1c518614b899f549f1e8d412538ee570
-
- 16 May, 2014 1 commit
-
-
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
-
- 06 May, 2014 3 commits
-
-
Dan Handley authored
Remove all usage of the vpath keyword in makefiles as it was prone to mistakes. Specify the relative paths to source files instead. Also reorder source files in makefiles alphabetically. Fixes ARM-software/tf-issues#121 Change-Id: Id15f60655444bae60e0e2165259efac71a50928b
-
Dan Handley authored
Move the FVP power driver to a directory under the FVP platform port as this is not a generically usable driver. Change-Id: Ibc78bd88752eb3e3964336741488349ac345f4f0
-
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
-
- 24 Apr, 2014 1 commit
-
-
Harry Liebel authored
- Use the TrustZone controller on Base FVP to program DRAM access permissions. By default no access to DRAM is allowed if 'secure memory' is enabled on the Base FVP. - The Foundation FVP does not have a TrustZone controller but instead has fixed access permissions. - Update FDTs for Linux to use timers at the correct security level. - Starting the FVPs with 'secure memory' disabled is also supported. Limitations: Virtio currently uses a reserved NSAID. This will be corrected in future FVP releases. Change-Id: I0b6c003a7b5982267815f62bcf6eb82aa4c50a31
-
- 15 Apr, 2014 1 commit
-
-
Andrew Thoelke authored
The BL images share common stack management code which provides one coherent and one cacheable stack for every CPU. BL1 and BL2 just execute on the primary CPU during boot and do not require the additional CPU stacks. This patch provides separate stack support code for UP and MP images, substantially reducing the RAM usage for BL1 and BL2 for the FVP platform. This patch also provides macros for declaring stacks and calculating stack base addresses to improve consistency where this has to be done in the firmware. The stack allocation source files are now included via platform.mk rather than the common BLx makefiles. This allows each platform to select the appropriate MP/UP stack support for each BL image. Each platform makefile must be updated when including this commit. Fixes ARM-software/tf-issues#76 Change-Id: Ia251f61b8148ffa73eae3f3711f57b1ffebfa632
-
- 14 Apr, 2014 1 commit
-
-
Dan Handley authored
Rename drivers/console/console.c to drivers/arm/peripherals/pl011/pl011_console.c. This makes it clear that this is a pl011 specific console implementation. Fixes ARM-software/tf-issues#129 Change-Id: Ie2f8109602134c5b86993e32452c70734c45a3ed
-
- 26 Mar, 2014 1 commit
-
-
Soby Mathew authored
This commit isolates the accessor functions in pl011.c and builds a wrapper layer for console functions. This also modifies the console driver to use the pl011 FIFO. Fixes ARM-software/tf-issues#63 Change-Id: I3b402171cd14a927831bf5e5d4bb310b6da0e9a8
-
- 05 Mar, 2014 2 commits
-
-
Jon Medhurst authored
Change-Id: I559c5a4d86cad55ce3f6ad71285b538d3cfd76dc Signed-off-by: Jon Medhurst <tixy@linaro.org>
-
Jon Medhurst authored
This change requires all platforms to now specify a list of source files rather than object files. New source files should preferably be specified by using the path as well and we should add this in the future for all files so we can remove use of vpath. This is desirable because vpath hides issues like the fact that BL2 currently pulls in a BL1 file bl1/aarch64/early_exceptions.S and if in the future we added bl2/aarch64/early_exceptions.S then it's likely only one of the two version would be used for both bootloaders. This change also removes the 'dump' build target and simply gets bootloaders to always generate a dump file. At the same time the -x option is added so the section headers and symbols table are listed. Fixes ARM-software/tf-issues#11 Change-Id: Ie38f7be76fed95756c8576cf3f3ea3b7015a18dc Signed-off-by: Jon Medhurst <tixy@linaro.org>
-
- 20 Feb, 2014 1 commit
-
-
Achin Gupta authored
This patch factors out the ARM FVP specific code to create MMU translation tables so that it is possible for a boot loader stage to create a different set of tables instead of using the default ones. The default translation tables are created with the assumption that the calling boot loader stage executes out of secure SRAM. This might not be true for the BL3_2 stage in the future. A boot loader stage can define the `fill_xlation_tables()` function as per its requirements. It returns a reference to the level 1 translation table which is used by the common platform code to setup the TTBR_EL3. This patch is a temporary solution before a larger rework of translation table creation logic is introduced. Change-Id: I09a075d5da16822ee32a411a9dbe284718fb4ff6
-
- 17 Feb, 2014 1 commit
-
-
Harry Liebel authored
The Firmware Image Package (FIP) driver allows for data to be loaded from a FIP on platform storage. The FVP supports loading bootloader images from a FIP located in NOR FLASH. The implemented FVP policy states that bootloader images will be loaded from a FIP in NOR FLASH if available and fall back to loading individual images from semi-hosting. NOTE: - BL3-3(e.g. UEFI) is loaded into DRAM and needs to be configured to run from the BL33_BASE address. This is currently set to DRAM_BASE+128MB for the FVP. Change-Id: I2e4821748e3376b5f9e467cf3ec09509e43579a0
-