- 20 Feb, 2014 4 commits
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Achin Gupta authored
This patch reworks the service provided by the TSP to perform common arithmetic operations on a set of arguments provided by the non-secure world. For a addition, division, subtraction & multiplication operation requested on two arguments in x0 and x1 the steps are: 1. TSPD saves the non-secure context and passes the operation and its arguments to the TSP. 2. TSP asks the TSPD to return the same arguments once again. This exercises an additional SMC path. 3. TSP now has two copies of both x0 and x1. It performs the operation on the corresponding copies i.e. in case of addition it returns x0+x0 and x1+x1. 4. TSPD receives the result, saves the secure context, restores the non-secure context and passes the result back to the non-secure client. Change-Id: I6eebfa2ae0a6f28b1d2e11a31f575c7a4b96724b Co-authored-by: Jeenu Viswambharan <jeenu.viswambharan@arm.com>
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Achin Gupta authored
This patch implements a set of handlers in the SPD which are called by the PSCI runtime service upon receiving a power management operation. These handlers in turn pass control to the Secure Payload image if required before returning control to PSCI. This ensures that the Secure Payload has complete visibility of all power transitions in the system and can prepare accordingly. Change-Id: I2d1dba5629b7cf2d53999d39fe807dfcf3f62fe2
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Achin Gupta authored
This patch adds the TSPD service which is responsible for managing communication between the non-secure state and the Test Secure Payload (TSP) executing in S-EL1. The TSPD does the following: 1. Determines the location of the TSP (BL3-2) image and passes control to it for initialization. This is done by exporting the 'bl32_init()' function. 2. Receives a structure containing the various entry points into the TSP image as a response to being initialized. The TSPD uses this information to determine how the TSP should be entered depending on the type of operation. 3. Implements a synchronous mechanism for entering into and returning from the TSP image. This mechanism saves the current C runtime context on top of the current stack and jumps to the TSP through an ERET instruction. The TSP issues an SMC to indicate completion of the previous request. The TSPD restores the saved C runtime context and resumes TSP execution. This patch also introduces a Make variable 'SPD' to choose the specific SPD to include in the build. By default, no SPDs are included in the build. Change-Id: I124da5695cdc510999b859a1bf007f4d049e04f3 Co-authored-by: Jeenu Viswambharan <jeenu.viswambharan@arm.com>
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Achin Gupta authored
This patch adds a simple TSP as the BL3-2 image. The secure payload executes in S-EL1. It paves the way for the addition of the TSP dispatcher runtime service to BL3-1. The TSP and the dispatcher service will serve as an example of the runtime firmware's ability to toggle execution between the non-secure and secure states in response to SMC request from the non-secure state. The TSP will be replaced by a Trusted OS in a real system. The TSP also exports a set of handlers which should be called in response to a PSCI power management event e.g a cpu being suspended or turned off. For now it runs out of Secure DRAM on the ARM FVP port and will be moved to Secure SRAM later. The default translation table setup code assumes that the caller is executing out of secure SRAM. Hence the TSP exports its own translation table setup function. The TSP only services Fast SMCs, is non-reentrant and non-interruptible. It does arithmetic operations on two sets of four operands, one set supplied by the non-secure client, and the other supplied by the TSP dispatcher in EL3. It returns the result according to the Secure Monitor Calling convention standard. This TSP has two functional entry points: - An initial, one-time entry point through which the TSP is initialized and prepares for receiving further requests from secure monitor/dispatcher - A fast SMC service entry point through which the TSP dispatcher requests secure services on behalf of the non-secure client Change-Id: I24377df53399307e2560a025eb2c82ce98ab3931 Co-authored-by: Jeenu Viswambharan <jeenu.viswambharan@arm.com>
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