- 18 Jul, 2016 2 commits
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Soby Mathew authored
This patch moves the PSCI services and BL31 frameworks like context management and per-cpu data into new library components `PSCI` and `el3_runtime` respectively. This enables PSCI to be built independently from BL31. A new `psci_lib.mk` makefile is introduced which adds the relevant PSCI library sources and gets included by `bl31.mk`. Other changes which are done as part of this patch are: * The runtime services framework is now moved to the `common/` folder to enable reuse. * The `asm_macros.S` and `assert_macros.S` helpers are moved to architecture specific folder. * The `plat_psci_common.c` is moved from the `plat/common/aarch64/` folder to `plat/common` folder. The original file location now has a stub which just includes the file from new location to maintain platform compatibility. Most of the changes wouldn't affect platform builds as they just involve changes to the generic bl1.mk and bl31.mk makefiles. NOTE: THE `plat_psci_common.c` FILE HAS MOVED LOCATION AND THE STUB FILE AT THE ORIGINAL LOCATION IS NOW DEPRECATED. PLATFORMS SHOULD MODIFY THEIR MAKEFILES TO INCLUDE THE FILE FROM THE NEW LOCATION. Change-Id: I6bd87d5b59424995c6a65ef8076d4fda91ad5e86
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Soby Mathew authored
This patch reworks type usage in generic code, drivers and ARM platform files to make it more portable. The major changes done with respect to type usage are as listed below: * Use uintptr_t for storing address instead of uint64_t or unsigned long. * Review usage of unsigned long as it can no longer be assumed to be 64 bit. * Use u_register_t for register values whose width varies depending on whether AArch64 or AArch32. * Use generic C types where-ever possible. In addition to the above changes, this patch also modifies format specifiers in print invocations so that they are AArch64/AArch32 agnostic. Only files related to upcoming feature development have been reworked. Change-Id: I9f8c78347c5a52ba7027ff389791f1dad63ee5f8
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- 12 Jul, 2016 1 commit
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Naga Sureshkumar Relli authored
This patch adds cpumerrsr_el1 and l2merrsr_el1 to the register dump on error for applicable CPUs. These registers hold the ECC errors on L1 and L2 caches. This patch updates the A53, A57, A72, A73 (l2merrsr_el1 only) CPU libraries. Signed-off-by: Naga Sureshkumar Relli <nagasure@xilinx.com>
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- 08 Jul, 2016 3 commits
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Sandrine Bailleux authored
This patch introduces the round_up() and round_down() macros, which round up (respectively down) a value to a given boundary. The boundary must be a power of two. Change-Id: I589dd1074aeb5ec730dd523b4ebf098d55a7e967
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Sandrine Bailleux authored
This patch introduces a new header file: include/lib/utils.h. Its purpose is to provide generic macros and helper functions that are independent of any BL image, architecture, platform and even not specific to Trusted Firmware. For now, it contains only 2 macros: ARRAY_SIZE() and IS_POWER_OF_TWO(). These were previously defined in bl_common.h and xlat_tables.c respectively. bl_common.h includes utils.h to retain compatibility for platforms that relied on bl_common.h for the ARRAY_SIZE() macro. Upstream platform ports that use this macro have been updated to include utils.h. Change-Id: I960450f54134f25d1710bfbdc4184f12c049a9a9
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Sandrine Bailleux authored
This patch introduces the MT_EXECUTE/MT_EXECUTE_NEVER memory mapping attributes in the translation table library to specify the access permissions for instruction execution of a memory region. These new attributes should be used only for normal, read-only memory regions. For other types of memory, the translation table library still enforces the following rules, regardless of the MT_EXECUTE/MT_EXECUTE_NEVER attribute: - Device memory is always marked as execute-never. - Read-write normal memory is always marked as execute-never. Change-Id: I8bd27800a8c1d8ac1559910caf4a4840cf25b8b0
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- 16 Jun, 2016 1 commit
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Yatharth Kochar authored
This patch adds Performance Measurement Framework(PMF) in the ARM Trusted Firmware. PMF is implemented as a library and the SMC interface is provided through ARM SiP service. The PMF provides capturing, storing, dumping and retrieving the time-stamps, by enabling the development of services by different providers, that can be easily integrated into ARM Trusted Firmware. The PMF capture and retrieval APIs can also do appropriate cache maintenance operations to the timestamp memory when the caller indicates so. `pmf_main.c` consists of core functions that implement service registration, initialization, storing, dumping and retrieving the time-stamp. `pmf_smc.c` consists SMC handling for registered PMF services. `pmf.h` consists of the macros that can be used by the PMF service providers to register service and declare time-stamp functions. `pmf_helpers.h` consists of internal macros that are used by `pmf.h` By default this feature is disabled in the ARM trusted firmware. To enable it set the boolean flag `ENABLE_PMF` to 1. NOTE: The caller is responsible for specifying the appropriate cache maintenance flags and for acquiring/releasing appropriate locks before/after capturing/retrieving the time-stamps. Change-Id: Ib45219ac07c2a81b9726ef6bd9c190cc55e81854
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- 03 Jun, 2016 2 commits
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Dan Handley authored
* Move libfdt API headers to include/lib/libfdt * Add libfdt.mk helper makefile * Remove unused libfdt files * Minor changes to fdt.h and libfdt.h to make them C99 compliant Co-Authored-By: Jens Wiklander <jens.wiklander@linaro.org> Change-Id: I425842c2b111dcd5fb6908cc698064de4f77220e
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Dan Handley authored
* Move stdlib header files from include/stdlib to include/lib/stdlib for consistency with other library headers. * Fix checkpatch paths to continue excluding stdlib files. * Create stdlib.mk to define the stdlib source files and include directories. * Include stdlib.mk from the top level Makefile. * Update stdlib header path in the fip_create Makefile. * Update porting-guide.md with the new paths. Change-Id: Ia92c2dc572e9efb54a783e306b5ceb2ce24d27fa
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- 02 Jun, 2016 1 commit
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Sandrine Bailleux authored
As of commit e1ea9290, if the attributes of an inner memory region are different than the outer region, new page tables are generated regardless of how "restrictive" they are. This patch removes an out-dated comment still referring to the old priority system based on which attributes were more restrictive. Change-Id: Ie7fc1629c90ea91fe50315145f6de2f3995e5e00
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- 01 Jun, 2016 1 commit
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Yatharth Kochar authored
This patch adds ARM Cortex-A73 MPCore Processor support in the CPU specific operations framework. It also includes this support for the Base FVP port. Change-Id: I0e26b594f2ec1d28eb815db9810c682e3885716d
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- 21 Apr, 2016 5 commits
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Sandrine Bailleux authored
Change-Id: I86ac81ffd7cd094ce68c4cceb01c16563671a063
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Sandrine Bailleux authored
Change-Id: Icaacd19c4cef9c10d02adcc2f84a4d7c97d4bcfa
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Sandrine Bailleux authored
Change-Id: Ia2ce8aa752efb090cfc734c1895c8f2539e82439
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Sandrine Bailleux authored
Change-Id: I632a8c5bb517ff89c69268e865be33101059be7d
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Sandrine Bailleux authored
Change-Id: I45641551474f4c58c638aff8c42c0ab9a8ec78b4
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- 14 Apr, 2016 1 commit
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Sandrine Bailleux authored
If Trusted Firmware is built with optimizations disabled (-O0), the linker throws the following error: undefined reference to 'xxx' Where 'xxx' is a raw inline function defined in a header file. The reason is that, with optimizations disabled, GCC may decide to skip the inlining. If that is the case, an external definition to the compilation unit must be provided. Because no external definition is present, the linker throws the error. This patch fixes the problem by declaring the following inline functions static, so the internal definition is used: - cm_set_next_context() - bakery_lock_init() Note that building the TF with optimizations disabled when Trusted Board Boot is enabled is currently unsupported, as this makes the BL2 image too big to fit in memory without any adjustment of its base address. Similarly, disabling optimizations for debug builds on FVP is unsupported at the moment. Change-Id: I284a9f84cc8df96a0c1a52dfe05c9e8544c0cefe
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- 13 Apr, 2016 1 commit
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Soby Mathew authored
The AArch32 long descriptor format and the AArch64 descriptor format correspond to each other which allows possible sharing of xlat_tables library code between AArch64 and AArch32. This patch refactors the xlat_tables library code to seperate the common functionality from architecture specific code. Prior to this patch, all of the xlat_tables library code were in `lib/aarch64/xlat_tables.c` file. The refactored code is now in `lib/xlat_tables/` directory. The AArch64 specific programming for xlat_tables is in `lib/xlat_tables/aarch64/xlat_tables.c` and the rest of the code common to AArch64 and AArch32 is in `lib/xlat_tables/xlat_tables_common.c`. Also the data types used in xlat_tables library APIs are reworked to make it compatible between AArch64 and AArch32. The `lib/aarch64/xlat_tables.c` file now includes the new xlat_tables library files to retain compatibility for existing platform ports. The macros related to xlat_tables library are also moved from `include/lib/aarch64/arch.h` to the header `include/lib/xlat_tables.h`. NOTE: THE `lib/aarch64/xlat_tables.c` FILE IS DEPRECATED AND PLATFORM PORTS ARE EXPECTED TO INCLUDE THE NEW XLAT_TABLES LIBRARY FILES IN THEIR MAKEFILES. Change-Id: I3d17217d24aaf3a05a4685d642a31d4d56255a0f
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- 31 Mar, 2016 1 commit
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Antonio Nino Diaz authored
lib/aarch64/xlat_helpers.c defines helper functions to build translation descriptors, but no common code or upstream platform port uses them. As the rest of the xlat_tables code evolves, there may be conflicts with these helpers, therefore this code should be removed. Change-Id: I9f5be99720f929264818af33db8dada785368711
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- 30 Mar, 2016 2 commits
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Gerald Lejeune authored
Bring ISR bits definition as a mnemonic for troublershooters as well. Signed-off-by: Gerald Lejeune <gerald.lejeune@st.com>
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Gerald Lejeune authored
These macros are unused and redundant with other CPU system registers functions. Moreover enable_serror() function implementation may not reach its purpose because it does not handle the value of SCR_EL3.EA. Signed-off-by: Gerald Lejeune <gerald.lejeune@st.com>
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- 03 Mar, 2016 1 commit
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Sandrine Bailleux authored
At the moment, the memory translation library allows to create memory mappings of 2 types: - Device nGnRE memory (named MT_DEVICE in the library); - Normal, Inner Write-back non-transient, Outer Write-back non-transient memory (named MT_MEMORY in the library). As a consequence, the library code treats the memory type field as a boolean: everything that is not device memory is normal memory and vice-versa. In reality, the ARMv8 architecture allows up to 8 types of memory to be used at a single time for a given exception level. This patch reworks the memory attributes such that the memory type is now defined as an integer ranging from 0 to 7 instead of a boolean. This makes it possible to extend the list of memory types supported by the memory translation library. The priority system dictating memory attributes for overlapping memory regions has been extended to cope with these changes but the algorithm at its core has been preserved. When a memory region is re-mapped with different memory attributes, the memory translation library examines the former attributes and updates them only if the new attributes create a more restrictive mapping. This behaviour is unchanged, only the manipulation of the value has been modified to cope with the new format. This patch also introduces a new type of memory mapping in the memory translation library: MT_NON_CACHEABLE, meaning Normal, Inner Non-cacheable, Outer Non-cacheable memory. This can be useful to map a non-cacheable memory region, such as a DMA buffer for example. The rules around the Execute-Never (XN) bit in a translation table for an MT_NON_CACHEABLE memory mapping have been aligned on the rules used for MT_MEMORY mappings: - If the memory is read-only then it is also executable (XN = 0); - If the memory is read-write then it is not executable (XN = 1). The shareability field for MT_NON_CACHEABLE mappings is always set as 'Outer-Shareable'. Note that this is not strictly needed since shareability is only relevant if the memory is a Normal Cacheable memory type, but this is to align with the existing device memory mappings setup. All Device and Normal Non-cacheable memory regions are always treated as Outer Shareable, regardless of the translation table shareability attributes. This patch also removes the 'ATTR_SO' and 'ATTR_SO_INDEX' #defines. They were introduced to map memory as Device nGnRnE (formerly called "Strongly-Ordered" memory in the ARMv7 architecture) but were not used anywhere in the code base. Removing them avoids any confusion about the memory types supported by the library. Upstream platforms do not currently use the MT_NON_CACHEABLE memory type. NOTE: THIS CHANGE IS SOURCE COMPATIBLE BUT PLATFORMS THAT RELY ON THE BINARY VALUES OF `mmap_attr_t` or the `attr` argument of `mmap_add_region()` MAY BE BROKEN. Change-Id: I717d6ed79b4c845a04e34132432f98b93d661d79
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- 18 Feb, 2016 1 commit
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Juan Castillo authored
The shared memory region on ARM platforms contains the mailboxes and, on Juno, the payload area for communication with the SCP. This shared memory may be configured as normal memory or device memory at build time by setting the platform flag 'PLAT_ARM_SHARED_RAM_CACHED' (on Juno, the value of this flag is defined by 'MHU_PAYLOAD_CACHED'). When set as normal memory, the platform port performs the corresponding cache maintenance operations. From a functional point of view, this is the equivalent of setting the shared memory as device memory, so there is no need to maintain both options. This patch removes the option to specify the shared memory as normal memory on ARM platforms. Shared memory is always treated as device memory. Cache maintenance operations are no longer needed and have been replaced by data memory barriers to guarantee that payload and MHU are accessed in the right order. Change-Id: I7f958621d6a536dd4f0fa8768385eedc4295e79f
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- 08 Feb, 2016 1 commit
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Sandrine Bailleux authored
The LDNP/STNP instructions as implemented on Cortex-A53 and Cortex-A57 do not behave in a way most programmers expect, and will most probably result in a significant speed degradation to any code that employs them. The ARMv8-A architecture (see Document ARM DDI 0487A.h, section D3.4.3) allows cores to ignore the non-temporal hint and treat LDNP/STNP as LDP/STP instead. This patch introduces 2 new build flags: A53_DISABLE_NON_TEMPORAL_HINT and A57_DISABLE_NON_TEMPORAL_HINT to enforce this behaviour on Cortex-A53 and Cortex-A57. They are enabled by default. The string printed in debug builds when a specific CPU errata workaround is compiled in but skipped at runtime has been generalised, so that it can be reused for the non-temporal hint use case as well. Change-Id: I3e354f4797fd5d3959872a678e160322b13867a1
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- 14 Jan, 2016 1 commit
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Soren Brinkmann authored
Migrate all direct usage of __attribute__ to usage of their corresponding macros from cdefs.h. e.g.: - __attribute__((unused)) -> __unused Signed-off-by: Soren Brinkmann <soren.brinkmann@xilinx.com>
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- 12 Jan, 2016 1 commit
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Sandrine Bailleux authored
This patch adds support for ARM Cortex-A35 processor in the CPU specific framework, as described in the Cortex-A35 TRM (r0p0). Change-Id: Ief930a0bdf6cd82f6cb1c3b106f591a71c883464
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- 14 Dec, 2015 1 commit
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Juan Castillo authored
This patch removes the dash character from the image name, to follow the image terminology in the Trusted Firmware Wiki page: https://github.com/ARM-software/arm-trusted-firmware/wiki Changes apply to output messages, comments and documentation. non-ARM platform files have been left unmodified. Change-Id: Ic2a99be4ed929d52afbeb27ac765ceffce46ed76
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- 09 Dec, 2015 1 commit
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Sandrine Bailleux authored
In the situation that EL1 is selected as the exception level for the next image upon BL31 exit for a processor that supports EL2, the context management code must configure all essential EL2 register state to ensure correct execution of EL1. VTTBR_EL2 should be part of this set of EL2 registers because: - The ARMv8-A architecture does not define a reset value for this register. - Cache maintenance operations depend on VTTBR_EL2.VMID even when non-secure EL1&0 stage 2 address translation are disabled. This patch initializes the VTTBR_EL2 register to 0 when bypassing EL2 to address this issue. Note that this bug has not yet manifested itself on FVP or Juno because VTTBR_EL2.VMID resets to 0 on the Cortex-A53 and Cortex-A57. Change-Id: I58ce2d16a71687126f437577a506d93cb5eecf33
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- 26 Nov, 2015 1 commit
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Achin Gupta authored
This patch adds a driver for ARM GICv3 systems that need to run software stacks where affinity routing is enabled across all privileged exception levels for both security states. This driver is a partial implementation of the ARM Generic Interrupt Controller Architecture Specification, GIC architecture version 3.0 and version 4.0 (ARM IHI 0069A). The driver does not cater for legacy support of interrupts and asymmetric configurations. The existing GIC driver has been preserved unchanged. The common code for GICv2 and GICv3 systems has been refactored into a new file, `drivers/arm/gic/common/gic_common.c`. The corresponding header is in `include/drivers/arm/gic_common.h`. The driver interface is implemented in `drivers/arm/gic/v3/gicv3_main.c`. The corresponding header is in `include/drivers/arm/gicv3.h`. Helper functions are implemented in `drivers/arm/gic/v3/arm_gicv3_helpers.c` and are accessible through the `drivers/arm/gic/v3/gicv3_private.h` header. Change-Id: I8c3c834a1d049d05b776b4dcb76b18ccb927444a
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- 19 Nov, 2015 1 commit
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Sandrine Bailleux authored
The default reset values for the L2 Data & Tag RAM latencies on the Cortex-A72 on Juno R2 are not suitable. This patch modifies the Juno platform reset handler to configure the right settings on Juno R2. Change-Id: I20953de7ba0619324a389e0b7bbf951b64057db8
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- 13 Nov, 2015 1 commit
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Vikram Kanigiri authored
As per Section D7.2.81 in the ARMv8-A Reference Manual (DDI0487A Issue A.h), bits[29:28], bits[23:22], bit[20] and bit[11] in the SCTLR_EL1 are RES1. This patch adds the missing bit[20] to the SCTLR_EL1_RES1 macro. Change-Id: I827982fa2856d04def6b22d8200a79fe6922a28e
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- 19 Oct, 2015 1 commit
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Sandrine Bailleux authored
The CASSERT() macro introduces a typedef for the sole purpose of triggering a compilation error if the condition to check is false. This typedef is not used afterwards. As a consequence, when the CASSERT() macro is called from withing a function block, the compiler complains and outputs the following error message: error: typedef 'msg' locally defined but not used [-Werror=unused-local-typedefs] This patch adds the "unused" attribute for the aforementioned typedef. This silences the compiler warning and thus makes the CASSERT() macro callable from within function blocks as well. Change-Id: Ie36b58fcddae01a21584c48bb6ef43ec85590479
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- 14 Sep, 2015 1 commit
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Achin Gupta authored
On the ARMv8 architecture, cache maintenance operations by set/way on the last level of integrated cache do not affect the system cache. This means that such a flush or clean operation could result in the data being pushed out to the system cache rather than main memory. Another CPU could access this data before it enables its data cache or MMU. Such accesses could be serviced from the main memory instead of the system cache. If the data in the sysem cache has not yet been flushed or evicted to main memory then there could be a loss of coherency. The only mechanism to guarantee that the main memory will be updated is to use cache maintenance operations to the PoC by MVA(See section D3.4.11 (System level caches) of ARMv8-A Reference Manual (Issue A.g/ARM DDI0487A.G). This patch removes the reliance of Trusted Firmware on the flush by set/way operation to ensure visibility of data in the main memory. Cache maintenance operations by MVA are now used instead. The following are the broad category of changes: 1. The RW areas of BL2/BL31/BL32 are invalidated by MVA before the C runtime is initialised. This ensures that any stale cache lines at any level of cache are removed. 2. Updates to global data in runtime firmware (BL31) by the primary CPU are made visible to secondary CPUs using a cache clean operation by MVA. 3. Cache maintenance by set/way operations are only used prior to power down. NOTE: NON-UPSTREAM TRUSTED FIRMWARE CODE SHOULD MAKE EQUIVALENT CHANGES IN ORDER TO FUNCTION CORRECTLY ON PLATFORMS WITH SUPPORT FOR SYSTEM CACHES. Fixes ARM-software/tf-issues#205 Change-Id: I64f1b398de0432813a0e0881d70f8337681f6e9a
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- 11 Sep, 2015 1 commit
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Andrew Thoelke authored
This patch unifies the bakery lock api's across coherent and normal memory implementation of locks by using same data type `bakery_lock_t` and similar arguments to functions. A separate section `bakery_lock` has been created and used to allocate memory for bakery locks using `DEFINE_BAKERY_LOCK`. When locks are allocated in normal memory, each lock for a core has to spread across multiple cache lines. By using the total size allocated in a separate cache line for a single core at compile time, the memory for other core locks is allocated at link time by multiplying the single core locks size with (PLATFORM_CORE_COUNT - 1). The normal memory lock algorithm now uses lock address instead of the `id` in the per_cpu_data. For locks allocated in coherent memory, it moves locks from tzfw_coherent_memory to bakery_lock section. The bakery locks are allocated as part of bss or in coherent memory depending on usage of coherent memory. Both these regions are initialised to zero as part of run_time_init before locks are used. Hence, bakery_lock_init() is made an empty function as the lock memory is already initialised to zero. The above design lead to the removal of psci bakery locks from non_cpu_power_pd_node to psci_locks. NOTE: THE BAKERY LOCK API WHEN USE_COHERENT_MEM IS NOT SET HAS CHANGED. THIS IS A BREAKING CHANGE FOR ALL PLATFORM PORTS THAT ALLOCATE BAKERY LOCKS IN NORMAL MEMORY. Change-Id: Ic3751c0066b8032dcbf9d88f1d4dc73d15f61d8b
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- 24 Aug, 2015 1 commit
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Varun Wadekar authored
This patch adds macros suitable for programming the Advanced SIMD/Floating-point (only Cortex-A53), CPU and L2 dynamic retention control policy in the CPUECTLR_EL1 and L2ECTLR registers. Signed-off-by: Varun Wadekar <vwadekar@nvidia.com>
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- 05 Aug, 2015 2 commits
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Jimmy Huang authored
- Apply a53 errata #826319 to revision <= r0p2 - Apply a53 errata #836870 to revision <= r0p3 - Update docs/cpu-specific-build-macros.md for newly added errata build flags Change-Id: I44918e36b47dca1fa29695b68700ff9bf888865e Signed-off-by: Jimmy Huang <jimmy.huang@mediatek.com>
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Jimmy Huang authored
- Add mmio 16 bits read/write functions. - Add clear/set/clear-and-set utility functions. Change-Id: I00fdbdf24af537424f8666b1cadaa5f77a2a46ed Signed-off-by: Jimmy Huang <jimmy.huang@mediatek.com>
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- 24 Jul, 2015 1 commit
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Varun Wadekar authored
Denver is NVIDIA's own custom-designed, 64-bit, dual-core CPU which is fully ARMv8 architecture compatible. Each of the two Denver cores implements a 7-way superscalar microarchitecture (up to 7 concurrent micro-ops can be executed per clock), and includes a 128KB 4-way L1 instruction cache, a 64KB 4-way L1 data cache, and a 2MB 16-way L2 cache, which services both cores. Denver implements an innovative process called Dynamic Code Optimization, which optimizes frequently used software routines at runtime into dense, highly tuned microcode-equivalent routines. These are stored in a dedicated, 128MB main-memory-based optimization cache. After being read into the instruction cache, the optimized micro-ops are executed, re-fetched and executed from the instruction cache as long as needed and capacity allows. Effectively, this reduces the need to re-optimize the software routines. Instead of using hardware to extract the instruction-level parallelism (ILP) inherent in the code, Denver extracts the ILP once via software techniques, and then executes those routines repeatedly, thus amortizing the cost of ILP extraction over the many execution instances. Denver also features new low latency power-state transitions, in addition to extensive power-gating and dynamic voltage and clock scaling based on workloads. Signed-off-by: Varun Wadekar <vwadekar@nvidia.com>
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- 27 Apr, 2015 2 commits
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Dan Handley authored
Some assembly files containing macros are included like header files into other assembly files. This will cause assembler errors if they are included multiple times. Add header guards to assembly macro files to avoid assembler errors. Change-Id: Ia632e767ed7df7bf507b294982b8d730a6f8fe69
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Dan Handley authored
The required platform constant PLATFORM_CACHE_LINE_SIZE is unnecessary since CACHE_WRITEBACK_GRANULE effectively provides the same information. CACHE_WRITEBACK_GRANULE is preferred since this is an architecturally defined term and allows comparison with the corresponding hardware register value. Replace all usage of PLATFORM_CACHE_LINE_SIZE with CACHE_WRITEBACK_GRANULE. Also, add a runtime assert in BL1 to check that the provided CACHE_WRITEBACK_GRANULE matches the value provided in CTR_EL0. Change-Id: If87286be78068424217b9f3689be358356500dcd
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