1. 20 Mar, 2017 1 commit
  2. 23 Feb, 2017 2 commits
  3. 22 Feb, 2017 1 commit
  4. 06 Feb, 2017 2 commits
    • Douglas Raillard's avatar
      Replace some memset call by zeromem · 32f0d3c6
      Douglas Raillard authored
      
      
      Replace all use of memset by zeromem when zeroing moderately-sized
      structure by applying the following transformation:
      memset(x, 0, sizeof(x)) => zeromem(x, sizeof(x))
      
      As the Trusted Firmware is compiled with -ffreestanding, it forbids the
      compiler from using __builtin_memset and forces it to generate calls to
      the slow memset implementation. Zeromem is a near drop in replacement
      for this use case, with a more efficient implementation on both AArch32
      and AArch64.
      
      Change-Id: Ia7f3a90e888b96d056881be09f0b4d65b41aa79e
      Signed-off-by: default avatarDouglas Raillard <douglas.raillard@arm.com>
      32f0d3c6
    • Douglas Raillard's avatar
      Introduce unified API to zero memory · 308d359b
      Douglas Raillard authored
      
      
      Introduce zeromem_dczva function on AArch64 that can handle unaligned
      addresses and make use of DC ZVA instruction to zero a whole block at a
      time. This zeroing takes place directly in the cache to speed it up
      without doing external memory access.
      
      Remove the zeromem16 function on AArch64 and replace it with an alias to
      zeromem. This zeromem16 function is now deprecated.
      
      Remove the 16-bytes alignment constraint on __BSS_START__ in
      firmware-design.md as it is now not mandatory anymore (it used to comply
      with zeromem16 requirements).
      
      Change the 16-bytes alignment constraints in SP min's linker script to a
      8-bytes alignment constraint as the AArch32 zeromem implementation is now
      more efficient on 8-bytes aligned addresses.
      
      Introduce zero_normalmem and zeromem helpers in platform agnostic header
      that are implemented this way:
      * AArch32:
      	* zero_normalmem: zero using usual data access
      	* zeromem: alias for zero_normalmem
      * AArch64:
      	* zero_normalmem: zero normal memory  using DC ZVA instruction
      	                  (needs MMU enabled)
      	* zeromem: zero using usual data access
      
      Usage guidelines: in most cases, zero_normalmem should be preferred.
      
      There are 2 scenarios where zeromem (or memset) must be used instead:
      * Code that must run with MMU disabled (which means all memory is
        considered device memory for data accesses).
      * Code that fills device memory with null bytes.
      
      Optionally, the following rule can be applied if performance is
      important:
      * Code zeroing small areas (few bytes) that are not secrets should use
        memset to take advantage of compiler optimizations.
      
        Note: Code zeroing security-related critical information should use
        zero_normalmem/zeromem instead of memset to avoid removal by
        compilers' optimizations in some cases or misbehaving versions of GCC.
      
      Fixes ARM-software/tf-issues#408
      
      Change-Id: Iafd9663fc1070413c3e1904e54091cf60effaa82
      Signed-off-by: default avatarDouglas Raillard <douglas.raillard@arm.com>
      308d359b
  5. 25 Nov, 2015 1 commit
  6. 14 Sep, 2015 1 commit
    • Vikram Kanigiri's avatar
      Tegra: Perform cache maintenance on video carveout memory · e3616819
      Vikram Kanigiri authored
      Currently, the non-overlapping video memory carveout region is cleared after
      disabling the MMU at EL3. If at any exception level the carveout region is being
      marked as cacheable, this zeroing of memory will not have an affect on the
      cached lines. Hence, we first invalidate the dirty lines and update the memory
      and invalidate again so that both caches and memory is zeroed out.
      
      Change-Id: If3b2d139ab7227f6799c0911d59e079849dc86aa
      e3616819
  7. 26 Aug, 2015 1 commit
  8. 17 Jul, 2015 3 commits
  9. 12 Jun, 2015 1 commit
    • Varun Wadekar's avatar
      Reserve a Video Memory aperture in DRAM memory · 9a964510
      Varun Wadekar authored
      
      
      This patch adds support to reserve a memory carveout region in the
      DRAM on Tegra SoCs. The memory controller provides specific registers
      to specify the aperture's base and size. This aperture can also be
      changed dynamically in order to re-size the memory available for
      DRM video playback. In case of the new aperture not overlapping
      the previous one, the previous aperture has to be cleared before
      setting up the new one. This means we do not "leak" any video data
      to the NS world.
      Signed-off-by: default avatarVarun Wadekar <vwadekar@nvidia.com>
      9a964510
  10. 29 May, 2015 1 commit
    • Varun Wadekar's avatar
      Support for NVIDIA's Tegra T210 SoCs · 08438e24
      Varun Wadekar authored
      
      
      T210 is the latest chip in the Tegra family of SoCs from NVIDIA. It is an
      ARM v8 dual-cluster (A57/A53) SoC, with any one of the clusters being active
      at a given point in time.
      
      This patch adds support to boot the Trusted Firmware on T210 SoCs. The patch
      also adds support to boot secondary CPUs, enter/exit core power states for
      all CPUs in the slow/fast clusters. The support to switch between clusters
      is still not available in this patch and would be available later.
      Signed-off-by: default avatarVarun Wadekar <vwadekar@nvidia.com>
      08438e24