- 30 Sep, 2019 1 commit
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Artsem Artsemenka authored
Not tested on FVP Model. Change-Id: Iedebc5c1fbc7ea577e94142b7feafa5546f1f4f9 Signed-off-by: Artsem Artsemenka <artsem.artsemenka@arm.com>
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- 27 Sep, 2019 8 commits
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Soby Mathew authored
* changes: stm32mp1: add authentication support for stm32image bsec: move bsec_mode_is_closed_device() service to platform crypto: stm32_hash: Add HASH driver
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Soby Mathew authored
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Soby Mathew authored
* changes: amlogic: g12a: Add support for the S905X2 (G12A) platform amlogic: makefile: Use PLAT variable when possible amlogic: sha_dma: Move register mappings to platform header
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Soby Mathew authored
* changes: a5ds: add multicore support a5ds: Hold the secondary cpus in pen rather than panic
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Soby Mathew authored
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Soby Mathew authored
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Soby Mathew authored
* changes: rpi4: Add initial documentation file rpi4: Add stdout-path to device tree rpi4: Add GIC maintenance interrupt to GIC DT node rpi4: Cleanup memory regions, move pens to first page rpi4: Reserve resident BL31 region from non-secure world rpi4: Amend DTB to advertise PSCI rpi4: Determine BL33 entry point at runtime rpi4: Accommodate "armstub8.bin" header at the beginning of BL31 image Add basic support for Raspberry Pi 4 rpi3: Allow runtime determination of UART base clock rate FDT helper functions: Respect architecture in PSCI function IDs FDT helper functions: Add function documentation
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Soby Mathew authored
* changes: Migrate ARM platforms to use the new GICv3 API Adding new optional PSCI hook pwr_domain_on_finish_late GICv3: Enable multi socket GIC redistributor frame discovery
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- 26 Sep, 2019 5 commits
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Paul Beesley authored
* changes: hikey: fix to load FIP by partition table. hikey960: fix to load FIP by partition table drivers: partition: support different block size
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Carlo Caione authored
Introduce the preliminary support for the Amlogic S905X2 (G12A) SoC. This port is a minimal implementation of BL31 capable of booting mainline U-Boot and Linux. Tested on a SEI510 board. Signed-off-by: Carlo Caione <ccaione@baylibre.com> Change-Id: Ife958f10e815a4530292c45446adb71239f3367f
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Madhukar Pappireddy authored
This patch invokes the new function gicv3_rdistif_probe() in the ARM platform specific gicv3 driver. Since this API modifies the shared GIC related data structure, it must be invoked coherently by using the platform specific pwr_domain_on_finish_late hook. Change-Id: I6efb17d5da61545a1c5a6641b8f58472b31e62a8 Signed-off-by: Madhukar Pappireddy <madhukar.pappireddy@arm.com>
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Madhukar Pappireddy authored
This PSCI hook is similar to pwr_domain_on_finish but is guaranteed to be invoked with the respective core and cluster are participating in coherency. This will be necessary to safely invoke the new GICv3 API which modifies shared GIC data structures concurrently. Change-Id: I8e54f05c9d4ef5712184c9c18ba45ac97a29eb7a Signed-off-by: Madhukar Pappireddy <madhukar.pappireddy@arm.com>
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Madhukar Pappireddy authored
This patch provides declaration and definition of new GICv3 driver API: gicv3_rdistif_probe().This function delegates the responsibility of discovering the corresponding Redistributor base frame to each CPU itself. It is a modified version of gicv3_rdistif_base_addrs_probe() and is executed by each CPU in the platform unlike the previous approach in which only the Primary CPU did the discovery of all the Redistributor frames for every CPU. The flush operations as part of gicv3_driver_init() function are made necessary even for platforms with WARMBOOT_ENABLE_DCACHE_EARLY because the GICv3 driver data structure contents are accessed by CPU with D-Cache turned off during power down operations. Change-Id: I1833e81d3974b32a3e4a3df4766a33d070982268 Signed-off-by: Madhukar Pappireddy <madhukar.pappireddy@arm.com>
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- 25 Sep, 2019 16 commits
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Paul Beesley authored
This patch: - Adds any leftover platform ports that were not having their documentation built (not in the index.rst table of contents) - Corrects a handful of RST formatting errors that cause poor rendering - Reorders the list of platforms so that they are displayed in alphabetical order Change-Id: If8c135a822d581c3c5c4fca2936d501ccfd2e94c Signed-off-by: Paul Beesley <paul.beesley@arm.com>
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Paul Beesley authored
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Paul Beesley authored
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Andre Przywara authored
As the Raspberry Pi4 port is now in a usable state, add the build instructions together with some background information to the documentation directory. The port differs quite a bit from the Raspberry Pi 3, so we use a separate file for that. Change-Id: I7d9f5967fdf3ec3bfe97d78141f59cbcf03388d4 Signed-off-by: Andre Przywara <andre.przywara@arm.com>
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Andre Przywara authored
Some device tree users like to find a pointer to the standard serial console in the device tree, in the "stdout-path" property of the /chosen node. Add the location of the Mini UART in that property, so that DT users are happy, for instance Linux' earlycon detection. Change-Id: I178e55016e5640de5ab0bc6e061944bd3583ea96 Signed-off-by: Andre Przywara <andre.przywara@arm.com>
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Andre Przywara authored
For being able to use the virtualisation support the GIC offers, we need to know the interrupt number of the maintenance interrupt. This information is missing from the official RPi4 device tree. Use libfdt to add the "interrupts" property to the GIC node, which allows hypervisors like KVM or Xen to be able to use the GIC's help on virtualising interrupts. Change-Id: Iab84f0885a5bf29fb84ca8f385e8a39d27700c75 Signed-off-by: Andre Przywara <andre.przywara@arm.com>
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Andre Przywara authored
Now that we have the SMP pens in the first page of DRAM, we can get rid of all the fancy RPi3 memory regions that our RPi4 port does not really need. This avoids using up memory all over the place, restricting ATF to just run in the first 512KB of DRAM. Remove the now unused regions. This also moves the SMP pens into our first memory page (holding the firmware magic), where the original firmware put them, but where there is also enough space for them. Since the pens will require code execution privileges, we amend the memory attributes used for that page to include write and execution rights. Change-Id: I131633abeb4a4d7b9057e737b9b0d163b73e47c6 Signed-off-by: Andre Przywara <andre.przywara@arm.com>
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Andre Przywara authored
The GPU firmware loads the armstub8.bin (BL31) image at address 0, the beginning of DRAM. As this holds the resident PSCI code and the SMP pens, the non-secure world should better know about this, to avoid accessing memory owned by TF-A. This is particularly criticial as the Raspberry Pi 4 does not feature a secure memory controller, so overwriting code is a very real danger. Use the newly introduced function to add a node into reserved-memory node, where non-secure world can check for regions to be excluded from its mappings. Reserve the first 512KB of memory for now. We can refine this later if need be. Change-Id: I00e55e70c5c02615320d79ff35bc32b805d30770 Signed-off-by: Andre Przywara <andre.przywara@arm.com>
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Andre Przywara authored
The device tree provided by the official Raspberry Pi firmware uses spin tables for SMP bringup. One of the benefit of having TF-A is that it provides PSCI services, so let's rewrite the DTB to advertise PSCI instead of spin tables. This uses the (newly exported) routine from the QEMU platform port. Change-Id: Ifddcb14041ca253a333f8c2d5e97a42db152470c Signed-off-by: Andre Przywara <andre.przywara@arm.com>
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Andre Przywara authored
Now that we have the armstub magic value in place, the GPU firmware will write the kernel load address (and DTB address) into our special page, so we can always easily access the actual location without hardcoding any addresses into the BL31 image. Make the compile-time defined PRELOADED_BL33_BASE macro optional, and read the BL33 entry point from the magic location, if the macro was not defined. We do the same for the DTB address. This also splits the currently "common" definition of plat_get_ns_image_entrypoint() to be separate between RPi3 and RPi4. Change-Id: I6f26c0adc6fce2df47786b271c490928b4529abb Signed-off-by: Andre Przywara <andre.przywara@arm.com>
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Andre Przywara authored
The Raspberry Pi GPU firmware checks for a magic value at offset 240 (0xf0) of the armstub8.bin image it loads. If that value matches, it writes the kernel load address and the DTB address into subsequent memory locations. We can use these addresses to avoid hardcoding these values into the BL31 image, to make it more flexible and a drop-in replacement for the official armstub8.bin. Reserving just 16 bytes at offset 240 of the final image file is not easily possible, though, as this location is in the middle of the generic BL31 entry point code. However we can prepend an extra section before the actual BL31 image, to contain the magic and addresses. This needs to be 4KB, because the actual BL31 entry point needs to be page aligned. Use the platform linker script hook that the generic code provides, to add an almost empty 4KB code block before the entry point code. The very first word contains a branch instruction to jump over this page, into the actual entry code. This also gives us plenty of room for the SMP pens later. Change-Id: I38caa5e7195fa39cbef8600933a03d86f09263d6 Signed-off-by: Andre Przywara <andre.przywara@arm.com>
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Andre Przywara authored
The Raspberry Pi 4 is a single board computer with four Cortex-A72 cores. From a TF-A perspective it is quite similar to the Raspberry Pi 3, although it comes with more memory (up to 4GB) and has a GIC. This initial port though differs quite a lot from the existing rpi3 platform port, mainly due to taking a much simpler and more robust approach to loading the non-secure payload: The GPU firmware of the SoC, which is responsible for initial platform setup (including DRAM initialisation), already loads the kernel, device tree and the "armstub" into DRAM. We take advantage of this, by placing just a BL31 component into the armstub8.bin component, which will be executed first, in AArch64 EL3. The non-secure payload can be a kernel or a boot loader (U-Boot or EDK-2), disguised as the "kernel" image and loaded by the GPU firmware. So this is just a BL31-only port, which directly drops into EL2 and executes whatever has been loaded as the "kernel" image, handing over the DTB address in x0. Change-Id: I636f4d1f661821566ad9e341d69ba36f6bbfb546 Signed-off-by: Andre Przywara <andre.przywara@arm.com>
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Andre Przywara authored
At the moment the UART input clock rate is hard coded at compile time. This works as long as the GPU firmware always sets up the same rate, which does not seem to be true for the Raspberry Pi 4. In preparation for being able to change this at runtime, add a base clock parameter to the console setup function. This is still hardcoded for the Raspberry Pi 3. Change-Id: I398bc2f1e9b46f7af9a84cb0b33cbe8e78f2d900 Signed-off-by: Andre Przywara <andre.przywara@arm.com>
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Andre Przywara authored
PSCI uses different function IDs for CPU_SUSPEND and CPU_ON, depending on the architecture used (AArch64 or AArch32). For recent PSCI versions the client will determine the right version, but for PSCI v0.1 we need to put some ID in the DT node. At the moment we always add the 64-bit IDs, which is not correct if TF-A is built for AArch32. Use the function IDs matching the TF-A build architecture, for the two IDs where this differs. This only affects legacy OSes using PSCI v0.1. On the way remove the sys_poweroff and sys_reset properties, which were never described in the official PSCI DT binding. Change-Id: If77bc6daec215faeb2dc67112e765aacafd17f33 Signed-off-by: Andre Przywara <andre.przywara@arm.com>
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Andre Przywara authored
Since we moved some functions that amend a DT blob in memory to common code, let's add proper function documentation. This covers the three exported functions in common/fdt_fixup.c. Change-Id: I67d7d27344e62172c789d308662f78d54903cf57 Signed-off-by: Andre Przywara <andre.przywara@arm.com>
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Sandrine Bailleux authored
The Fast Models provide a non-volatile counter component, which is used in the Trusted Board Boot implementation to protect against rollback attacks. This component comes in 2 versions (see [1]). - Version 0 is the default and models a locked non-volatile counter, whose value is fixed. - Version 1 of the counter may be incremented in a monotonic fashion. plat_set_nv_ctr() must cope with both versions. This is achieved by: 1) Attempting to write the new value in the counter. 2) Reading the value back. 3) If there is a mismatch, we know the counter upgrade failed. When using version 0 of the counter, no upgrade is possible so the function is expected to fail all the time. However, the code is missing a compiler barrier between the write operation and the next read. Thus, the compiler may optimize and remove the read operation on the basis that the counter value has not changed. With the default optimization level used in TF-A (-Os), this is what's happening. The fix introduced in this patch marks the write and subsequent read accesses to the counter as volatile, such that the compiler makes no assumption about the value of the counter. Note that the comment above plat_set_nv_ctr() was clearly stating that when using the read-only version of the non-volatile counter, "we expect the values in the certificates to always match the RO values so that this function is never called". However, the fact that the counter value was read back seems to contradict this comment, as it is implementing a counter-measure against misuse of the function. The comment has been reworded to avoid any confusion. Without this patch, this bug may be demonstrated on the Base AEM FVP: - Using version 0 of the non-volatile counter (default version). - With certificates embedding a revision number value of 32 (compiling TF-A with TFW_NVCTR_VAL=32). In this configuration, the non-volatile counter is tied to value 31 by default. When BL1 loads the Trusted Boot Firmware certificate, it notices that the two values do not match and tries to upgrade the non-volatile counter. This write operation is expected to fail (because the counter is locked) and the function is expected to return an error but it succeeds instead. As a result, the trusted boot does not abort as soon as it should and incorrectly boots BL2. The boot is finally aborted when BL2 verifies the BL31 image and figures out that the version of the SoC Firmware Key Certificate does not match. On Arm platforms, only certificates signed with the Root-of-Trust Key may trigger an upgrade of the non-volatile Trusted counter. [1] https://developer.arm.com/docs/100964/1160/fast-models-components/peripheral-components/nonvolatilecounter Change-Id: I9979f29c23b47b338b9b484013d1fb86c59db92f Signed-off-by: Sandrine Bailleux <sandrine.bailleux@arm.com>
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- 23 Sep, 2019 4 commits
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Usama Arif authored
Enable cores 1-3 using psci. On receiving the smc call from kernel, core 0 will bring the secondary cores out pen and signal an event for the cores. Currently on switching the cores is enabled i.e. it is not possible to suspend, switch cores off, etc. Change-Id: I6087e1d2ec650e1d587fd543efc1b08cbb50ae5f Signed-off-by: Usama Arif <usama.arif@arm.com>
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Usama Arif authored
For the secondary CPUs, hold the cpu in wfe rather then panic. This will be needed when multicore support is added to a5ds as the smc call will write to the hold base and signal an event to power on the secondary CPUs. Change-Id: I0ffc2059e9ef894c21375ca5c94def859bfa6599 Signed-off-by: Usama Arif <usama.arif@arm.com>
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Sandrine Bailleux authored
* changes: rockchip: Update BL31_BASE to 0x40000 rockchip: Fix typo for TF content text
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Lionel Debieve authored
This commit adds authentication binary support for STM32MP1. It prints the bootrom authentication result if signed image is used and authenticates the next loaded STM32 images. It also enables the dynamic translation table support (PLAT_XLAT_TABLES_DYNAMIC) to use bootrom services. Signed-off-by: Lionel Debieve <lionel.debieve@st.com> Change-Id: Iba706519e0dc6b6fae1f3dd498383351f0f75f51
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- 20 Sep, 2019 6 commits
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Lionel Debieve authored
This BSEC service is a platform specific service. Implementation moved to the platform part. Signed-off-by: Lionel Debieve <lionel.debieve@st.com> Change-Id: I1f70ed48a446860498ed111acce01187568538c9
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Lionel Debieve authored
The driver manages the HASH processor IP on STM32MP1 Signed-off-by: Lionel Debieve <lionel.debieve@st.com> Change-Id: I3b67c80c16d819f86b951dae29a6c465e51ad585
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Paul Beesley authored
The documentation for Marvell platforms was not included in the rendered document output until now because, while it was mostly valid RST format, the files were saved with a .txt extension. This patch corrects some RST formatting errors, creates a document tree (index page) for the Marvell documents, and adds the Marvell subtree to the main index. Change-Id: Id7d4ac37eded636f8f62322a153e1e5f652ff51a Signed-off-by: Paul Beesley <paul.beesley@arm.com>
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Justin Chadwell authored
assert() calls are removed in release builds, and if that assert call is the only use of a variable, an unused variable warning will be triggered in a release build. This patch fixes this problem when CTX_INCLUDE_MTE_REGS by not using an intermediate variable to store the results of get_armv8_5_mte_support(). Change-Id: I529e10ec0b2c8650d2c3ab52c4f0cecc0b3a670e Signed-off-by: Justin Chadwell <justin.chadwell@arm.com>
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Kever Yang authored
Rockchip platform is using the first 1MB of DRAM as secure ram space, and there is a vendor loader who loads and runs the BL31/BL32/BL33, this loader is usually load by SoC BootRom to the start addres of DRAM, we need to reserve enough space for this loader so that it doesn't need to do the relocate when loading the BL31. eg. We use U-Boot SPL to load ATF BL31 and U-Boot proper as BL33, the SPL TEXT BASE is offset 0 of DRAM which is decide by Bootrom; if we update the BL31_BASE to offset 0x40000(256KB), then the 0~0x40000 should be enough for SPL and no need to do the relocate while the space size 0x10000(64KB) may not enough for SPL. After this update, the BL31 can use the rest 768KB of the first 1MB, which is also enough, and the loader who is using BL31 elf file can support this update without any change. Change-Id: I66dc685594d77f10f9a49c3be015fd6729250ece Signed-off-by: Kever Yang <kever.yang@rock-chips.com>
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Kever Yang authored
The 'txet' should be 'text'. Change-Id: I2217a1adf50c3b86f3087b83c77d9291b280627c Signed-off-by: Kever Yang <kever.yang@rock-chips.com>
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