- 29 Apr, 2020 1 commit
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Andre Przywara authored
Our fdtw_read_cells() implementation goes to great lengths to sanity-check every parameter and result, but leaves a big hole open: The size of the storage the value pointer points at needs to match the number of cells given. This can't be easily checked at compile time, since we lose the size information by using a void pointer. Regardless the current usage of this function is somewhat wrong anyways, since we use it on single-element, fixed-length properties only, for which the DT binding specifies the size. Typically we use those functions dealing with a number of cells in DT context to deal with *dynamically* sized properties, which depend on other properties (#size-cells, #clock-cells, ...), to specify the number of cells needed. Another problem with the current implementation is the use of ambiguously sized types (uintptr_t, size_t) together with a certain expectation about their size. In general there is no relation between the length of a DT property and the bitness of the code that parses the DTB: AArch64 code could encounter 32-bit addresses (where the physical address space is limited to 4GB [1]), while AArch32 code could read 64-bit sized properties (/memory nodes on LPAE systems, [2]). To make this more clear, fix the potential issues and also align more with other DT users (Linux and U-Boot), introduce functions to explicitly read uint32 and uint64 properties. As the other DT consumers, we do this based on the generic "read array" function. Convert all users to use either of those two new functions, and make sure we never use a pointer to anything other than uint32_t or uint64_t variables directly. This reveals (and fixes) a bug in plat_spmd_manifest.c, where we write 4 bytes into a uint16_t variable (passed via a void pointer). Also we change the implementation of the function to better align with other libfdt users, by using the right types (fdt32_t) and common variable names (*prop, prop_names). [1] https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/tree/arch/arm64/boot/dts/allwinner/sun50i-a64.dtsi#n874 [2] https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/tree/arch/arm/boot/dts/ecx-2000.dts Change-Id: I718de960515117ac7a3331a1b177d2ec224a3890 Signed-off-by:
Andre Przywara <andre.przywara@arm.com>
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- 11 Mar, 2020 1 commit
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Madhukar Pappireddy authored
A populate() function essentially captures the value of a property, defined by a platform, into a fconf related c structure. Such a callback is usually platform specific and is associated to a specific configuration source. For example, a populate() function which captures the hardware topology of the platform can only parse HW_CONFIG DTB. Hence each populator function must be registered with a specific 'config_type' identifier. It broadly represents a logical grouping of configuration properties which is usually a device tree source file. Example: > TB_FW: properties related to trusted firmware such as IO policies, base address of other DTBs, mbedtls heap info etc. > HW_CONFIG: properties related to hardware configuration of the SoC such as topology, GIC controller, PSCI hooks, CPU ID etc. This patch modifies FCONF_REGISTER_POPULATOR macro and fconf_populate() to register and invoke the appropriate callbacks selectively based on configuration type. Change-Id: I6f63b1fd7a8729c6c9137d5b63270af1857bb44a Signed-off-by:Madhukar Pappireddy <madhukar.pappireddy@arm.com>
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- 07 Feb, 2020 2 commits
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Louis Mayencourt authored
Use the firmware configuration framework in arm dynamic configuration to retrieve mbedtls heap information between bl1 and bl2. For this, a new fconf getter is added to expose the device tree base address and size. Change-Id: Ifa5ac9366ae100e2cdd1f4c8e85fc591b170f4b6 Signed-off-by:Louis Mayencourt <louis.mayencourt@arm.com>
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Louis Mayencourt authored
Use fconf to retrieve the `disable_authentication` property. Move this access from arm dynamic configuration to bl common. Change-Id: Ibf184a5c6245d04839222f5457cf5e651f252b86 Signed-off-by:Louis Mayencourt <louis.mayencourt@arm.com>
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