In GICv3 mode, the non secure group1 interrupts are signalled via the
FIQ line in EL3. To support waking up from CPU_SUSPEND to standby on
these systems, EL3 should route FIQ to EL3 temporarily before wfi and
restore the original setting after resume. This patch makes this change
for the CSS platforms in the `css_cpu_standby` psci pm ops hook.
Change-Id: Ibf3295d16e2f08da490847c1457bc839e1bac144
ARM Trusted Firmware supports 2 different interconnect peripheral
drivers: CCI and CCN. ARM platforms are implemented using either of the
interconnect peripherals.
This patch adds a layer of abstraction to help ARM platform ports to
choose the right interconnect driver and corresponding platform support.
This is as described below:
1. A set of ARM common functions have been implemented to initialise an
interconnect and for entering/exiting a cluster from coherency. These
functions are prefixed as "plat_arm_interconnect_". Weak definitions of
these functions have been provided for each type of driver.
2.`plat_print_interconnect_regs` macro used for printing CCI registers is
moved from a common arm_macros.S to cci_macros.S.
3. The `ARM_CONFIG_HAS_CCI` flag used in `arm_config_flags` structure
is renamed to `ARM_CONFIG_HAS_INTERCONNECT`.
Change-Id: I02f31184fbf79b784175892d5ce1161b65a0066c
Suport for ARM GIC v2.0 and v3.0 drivers has been reworked to create three
separate drivers instead of providing a single driver that can work on both
versions of the GIC architecture. These drivers correspond to the following
software use cases:
1. A GICv2 only driver that can run only on ARM GIC v2.0 implementations
e.g. GIC-400
2. A GICv3 only driver that can run only on ARM GIC v3.0 implementations
e.g. GIC-500 in a mode where all interrupt regimes use GICv3 features
3. A deprecated GICv3 driver that operates in legacy mode. This driver can
operate only in the GICv2 mode in the secure world. On a GICv3 system, this
driver allows normal world to run in either GICv3 mode (asymmetric mode)
or in the GICv2 mode. Both modes of operation are deprecated on GICv3
systems.
ARM platforms implement both versions of the GIC architecture. This patch adds a
layer of abstraction to help ARM platform ports chose the right GIC driver and
corresponding platform support. This is as described below:
1. A set of ARM common functions have been introduced to initialise the GIC and
the driver during cold and warm boot. These functions are prefixed as
"plat_arm_gic_". Weak definitions of these functions have been provided for
each type of driver.
2. Each platform includes the sources that implement the right functions
directly into the its makefile. The FVP can be instantiated with different
versions of the GIC architecture. It uses the FVP_USE_GIC_DRIVER build option
to specify which of the three drivers should be included in the build.
3. A list of secure interrupts has to be provided to initialise each of the
three GIC drivers. For GIC v3.0 the interrupt ids have to be further
categorised as Group 0 and Group 1 Secure interrupts. For GIC v2.0, the two
types are merged and treated as Group 0 interrupts.
The two lists of interrupts are exported from the platform_def.h. The lists
are constructed by adding a list of board specific interrupt ids to a list of
ids common to all ARM platforms and Compute sub-systems.
This patch also makes some fields of `arm_config` data structure in FVP redundant
and these unused fields are removed.
Change-Id: Ibc8c087be7a8a6b041b78c2c3bd0c648cd2035d8
This patch adds platform helpers for the new GICv2 and GICv3 drivers in
plat_gicv2.c and plat_gicv3.c. The platforms can include the appropriate
file in their build according to the GIC driver to be used. The existing
plat_gic.c is only meant for the legacy GIC driver.
In the case of ARM platforms, the major changes are as follows:
1. The crash reporting helper macro `arm_print_gic_regs` that prints the GIC CPU
interface register values has been modified to detect the type of CPU
interface being used (System register or memory mappped interface) before
using the right interface to print the registers.
2. The power management helper function that is called after a core is powered
up has been further refactored. This is to highlight that the per-cpu
distributor interface should be initialised only when the core was originally
powered down using the CPU_OFF PSCI API and not when the CPU_SUSPEND PSCI API
was used.
3. In the case of CSS platforms, the system power domain restore helper
`arm_system_pwr_domain_resume()` is now only invoked in the `suspend_finish`
handler as the system power domain is always expected to be initialized when
the `on_finish` handler is invoked.
Change-Id: I7fc27d61fc6c2a60cea2436b676c5737d0257df6
This patch adds the capability to power down at system power domain level
on Juno via the PSCI SYSTEM SUSPEND API. The CSS power management helpers
are modified to add support for power management operations at system
power domain level. A new helper for populating `get_sys_suspend_power_state`
handler in plat_psci_ops is defined. On entering the system suspend state,
the SCP powers down the SYSTOP power domain on the SoC and puts the memory
into retention mode. On wakeup from the power down, the system components
on the CSS will be reinitialized by the platform layer and the PSCI client
is responsible for restoring the context of these system components.
According to PSCI Specification, interrupts targeted to cores in PSCI CPU
SUSPEND should be able to resume it. On Juno, when the system power domain
is suspended, the GIC is also powered down. The SCP resumes the final core
to be suspend when an external wake-up event is received. But the other
cores cannot be woken up by a targeted interrupt, because GIC doesn't
forward these interrupts to the SCP. Due to this hardware limitation,
we down-grade PSCI CPU SUSPEND requests targeted to the system power domain
level to cluster power domain level in `juno_validate_power_state()`
and the CSS default `plat_arm_psci_ops` is overridden in juno_pm.c.
A system power domain resume helper `arm_system_pwr_domain_resume()` is
defined for ARM standard platforms which resumes/re-initializes the
system components on wakeup from system suspend. The security setup also
needs to be done on resume from system suspend, which means
`plat_arm_security_setup()` must now be included in the BL3-1 image in
addition to previous BL images if system suspend need to be supported.
Change-Id: Ie293f75f09bad24223af47ab6c6e1268f77bcc47
This patch implements the necessary topology changes for supporting
system power domain on CSS platforms. The definition of PLAT_MAX_PWR_LVL and
PLAT_NUM_PWR_DOMAINS macros are removed from arm_def.h and are made platform
specific. In addition, the `arm_power_domain_tree_desc[]` and
`arm_pm_idle_states[]` are modified to support the system power domain
at level 2. With this patch, even though the power management operations
involving the system power domain will not return any error, the platform
layer will silently ignore any operations to the power domain. The actual
power management support for the system power domain will be added later.
Change-Id: I791867eded5156754fe898f9cdc6bba361e5a379
This patch does the following reorganization to psci power management (PM)
handler setup for ARM standard platform ports :
1. The mailbox programming required during `plat_setup_psci_ops()` is identical
for all ARM platforms. Hence the implementation of this API is now moved
to the common `arm_pm.c` file. Each ARM platform now must define the
PLAT_ARM_TRUSTED_MAILBOX_BASE macro, which in current platforms is the same
as ARM_SHARED_RAM_BASE.
2. The PSCI PM handler callback structure, `plat_psci_ops`, must now be
exported via `plat_arm_psci_pm_ops`. This allows the common implementation
of `plat_setup_psci_ops()` to return a platform specific `plat_psci_ops`.
In the case of CSS platforms, a default weak implementation of the same is
provided in `css_pm.c` which can be overridden by each CSS platform.
3. For CSS platforms, the PSCI PM handlers defined in `css_pm.c` are now
made library functions and a new header file `css_pm.h` is added to export
these generic PM handlers. This allows the platform to reuse the
adequate CSS PM handlers and redefine others which need to be customized
when overriding the default `plat_arm_psci_pm_ops` in `css_pm.c`.
Change-Id: I277910f609e023ee5d5ff0129a80ecfce4356ede
This patch implements the platform power managment handler to verify
non secure entrypoint for ARM platforms. The handler ensures that the
entry point specified by the normal world during CPU_SUSPEND, CPU_ON
or SYSTEM_SUSPEND PSCI API is a valid address within the non secure
DRAM.
Change-Id: I4795452df99f67a24682b22f0e0967175c1de429
Since there is a unique warm reset entry point, the FVP and Juno
port can use a single mailbox instead of maintaining one per core.
The mailbox gets programmed only once when plat_setup_psci_ops()
is invoked during PSCI initialization. This means mailbox is not
zeroed out during wakeup.
Change-Id: Ieba032a90b43650f970f197340ebb0ce5548d432
This patch adds support to the Juno and FVP ports for composite power states
with both the original and extended state-id power-state formats. Both the
platform ports use the recommended state-id encoding as specified in
Section 6.5 of the PSCI specification (ARM DEN 0022C). The platform build flag
ARM_RECOM_STATE_ID_ENC is used to include this support.
By default, to maintain backwards compatibility, the original power state
parameter format is used and the state-id field is expected to be zero.
Change-Id: Ie721b961957eaecaca5bf417a30952fe0627ef10
This patch migrates ARM reference platforms, Juno and FVP, to the new platform
API mandated by the new PSCI power domain topology and composite power state
frameworks. The platform specific makefiles now exports the build flag
ENABLE_PLAT_COMPAT=0 to disable the platform compatibility layer.
Change-Id: I3040ed7cce446fc66facaee9c67cb54a8cd7ca29
This major change pulls out the common functionality from the
FVP and Juno platform ports into the following categories:
* (include/)plat/common. Common platform porting functionality that
typically may be used by all platforms.
* (include/)plat/arm/common. Common platform porting functionality
that may be used by all ARM standard platforms. This includes all
ARM development platforms like FVP and Juno but may also include
non-ARM-owned platforms.
* (include/)plat/arm/board/common. Common platform porting
functionality for ARM development platforms at the board
(off SoC) level.
* (include/)plat/arm/css/common. Common platform porting
functionality at the ARM Compute SubSystem (CSS) level. Juno
is an example of a CSS-based platform.
* (include/)plat/arm/soc/common. Common platform porting
functionality at the ARM SoC level, which is not already defined
at the ARM CSS level.
No guarantees are made about the backward compatibility of
functionality provided in (include/)plat/arm.
Also remove any unnecessary variation between the ARM development
platform ports, including:
* Unify the way BL2 passes `bl31_params_t` to BL3-1. Use the
Juno implementation, which copies the information from BL2 memory
instead of expecting it to persist in shared memory.
* Unify the TZC configuration. There is no need to add a region
for SCP in Juno; it's enough to simply not allow any access to
this reserved region. Also set region 0 to provide no access by
default instead of assuming this is the case.
* Unify the number of memory map regions required for ARM
development platforms, although the actual ranges mapped for each
platform may be different. For the FVP port, this reduces the
mapped peripheral address space.
These latter changes will only be observed when the platform ports
are migrated to use the new common platform code in subsequent
patches.
Change-Id: Id9c269dd3dc6e74533d0e5116fdd826d53946dc8