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Olivier Deprez8c4cb2d2023-10-27 16:07:11 +02001Foreword
2========
3
4- This document describes the FF-A implementation from `[1]`_ for the
5 configuration where the SPMC resides at S-EL2 on platforms implementing the
6 FEAT_SEL2 architecture extension.
7- It is not an architecture specification and it might provide assumptions on
8 sections mandated as implementation-defined in the specification.
9- It covers the implications of TF-A used as a bootloader, and Hafnium used as a
10 reference code base for an SPMC.
11
Olivier Deprezcbf7d5b2023-05-22 12:12:24 +020012Terminology
J-Alvesf7490db2023-10-19 17:57:22 +010013===========
Olivier Deprezcbf7d5b2023-05-22 12:12:24 +020014
15- The term Hypervisor refers to the NS-EL2 component managing Virtual Machines
16 (or partitions) in the normal world.
17- The term SPMC refers to the S-EL2 component managing secure partitions in
18 the secure world when the FEAT_SEL2 architecture extension is implemented.
19- Alternatively, SPMC can refer to an S-EL1 component, itself being a secure
20 partition and implementing the FF-A ABI on platforms not implementing the
21 FEAT_SEL2 architecture extension.
22- The term VM refers to a normal world Virtual Machine managed by an Hypervisor.
23- The term SP refers to a secure world "Virtual Machine" managed by an SPMC.
24
Olivier Deprezcbf7d5b2023-05-22 12:12:24 +020025Sample reference stack
26======================
27
28The following diagram illustrates a possible configuration when the
J-Alves5eafd222023-10-26 14:19:21 +010029FEAT_SEL2 architecture extension is implemented, showing the |SPMD|
30and |SPMC|, one or multiple secure partitions, with an optional
Olivier Deprezcbf7d5b2023-05-22 12:12:24 +020031Hypervisor:
32
J-Alvesc1693772023-10-26 12:41:53 +010033.. image:: ../resources/diagrams/Hafnium_overview_SPMD.png
Olivier Deprezcbf7d5b2023-05-22 12:12:24 +020034
J-Alves5eafd222023-10-26 14:19:21 +010035Integration with TF-A (Bootloader and SPMD)
36===========================================
37
38The `TF-A project`_ provides the reference implementation for the secure monitor
39for Arm A class devices, executing at EL3. It includes the implementation of the
40|SPMD|, which manages the world-switch, to relay the FF-A calls to the |SPMC|.
41
42TF-A also serves as the system bootlader, and it was used in the reference
43implemenation for the SPMC and SPs.
44SPs may be signed by different parties (SiP, OEM/ODM, TOS vendor, etc.).
45Thus they are supplied as distinct signed entities within the FIP flash
46image. The FIP image itself is not signed hence this provides the ability
47to upgrade SPs in the field.
48
Olivier Deprezcbf7d5b2023-05-22 12:12:24 +020049TF-A build options
J-Alves5eafd222023-10-26 14:19:21 +010050------------------
Olivier Deprezcbf7d5b2023-05-22 12:12:24 +020051
J-Alvesd8094162023-10-26 12:44:33 +010052This section explains the TF-A build options for an FF-A based SPM, in which SPMD
53is located at EL3.
54
55This is a step needed for integrating Hafnium as the S-EL2 SPMC and
56the TF-A as SPMD, together making the SPM component.
Olivier Deprezcbf7d5b2023-05-22 12:12:24 +020057
58- **SPD=spmd**: this option selects the SPMD component to relay the FF-A
59 protocol from NWd to SWd back and forth. It is not possible to
60 enable another Secure Payload Dispatcher when this option is chosen.
61- **SPMD_SPM_AT_SEL2**: this option adjusts the SPMC exception
62 level to being at S-EL2. It defaults to enabled (value 1) when
J-Alvesd8094162023-10-26 12:44:33 +010063 SPD=spmd is chosen.The context save/restore routine and exhaustive list
64 of registers is visible at `[4]`_. When set the reference software stack
65 assumes enablement of FEAT_PAuth, FEAT_BTI and FEAT_MTE architecture
66 extensions.
Olivier Deprezcbf7d5b2023-05-22 12:12:24 +020067- **SP_LAYOUT_FILE**: this option specifies a text description file
68 providing paths to SP binary images and manifests in DTS format
J-Alves5eafd222023-10-26 14:19:21 +010069 (see `Secure Partitions Layout File`_). It is required when ``SPMD_SPM_AT_SEL2``
J-Alvesd8094162023-10-26 12:44:33 +010070 is enabled, i.e. when multiple secure partitions are to be loaded by BL2 on
71 behalf of the SPMC.
72- **BL32** option is re-purposed to specify the SPMC image. It can specify either
Olivier Deprezcbf7d5b2023-05-22 12:12:24 +020073 the Hafnium binary path (built for the secure world) or the path to a TEE
74 binary implementing FF-A interfaces.
J-Alvesd8094162023-10-26 12:44:33 +010075- **BL33** option to specify normal world loader such as U-Boot or the UEFI
76 framework payload, which would use FF-A calls during runtime to interact with
77 Hafnium as the SPMC.
Olivier Deprezcbf7d5b2023-05-22 12:12:24 +020078
J-Alvesd8094162023-10-26 12:44:33 +010079As a result of configuring ``SPD=spmd`` and ``SPMD_SPM_AT_SEL2`` TF-A provides
80context save/restore operations when entering/exiting an EL2 execution context.
Olivier Deprezcbf7d5b2023-05-22 12:12:24 +020081
J-Alvesd8094162023-10-26 12:44:33 +010082There are other build options that relate support other valid FF-A
83system configurations where the SPMC is implemented at S-EL1 and EL3.
84Note that they conflict with those needed to integrate with Hafnium as the SPMC.
85For more details refer to |TF-A| build options `[10]`_.
Olivier Deprezcbf7d5b2023-05-22 12:12:24 +020086
87Sample TF-A build command line when FEAT_SEL2 architecture extension is
J-Alvesd8094162023-10-26 12:44:33 +010088implemented and the SPMC is located at S-EL2, for Arm's FVP platform:
Olivier Deprezcbf7d5b2023-05-22 12:12:24 +020089
90.. code:: shell
91
92 make \
93 CROSS_COMPILE=aarch64-none-elf- \
94 PLAT=fvp \
95 SPD=spmd \
96 ARM_ARCH_MINOR=5 \
97 BRANCH_PROTECTION=1 \
J-Alves874737a2024-03-20 17:30:24 +000098 ENABLE_FEAT_MTE2=1 \
Olivier Deprezcbf7d5b2023-05-22 12:12:24 +020099 BL32=<path-to-hafnium-binary> \
100 BL33=<path-to-bl33-binary> \
101 SP_LAYOUT_FILE=sp_layout.json \
102 all fip
103
104Sample TF-A build command line when FEAT_SEL2 architecture extension is
105implemented, the SPMC is located at S-EL2, and enabling secure boot:
106
107.. code:: shell
108
109 make \
110 CROSS_COMPILE=aarch64-none-elf- \
111 PLAT=fvp \
112 SPD=spmd \
113 ARM_ARCH_MINOR=5 \
114 BRANCH_PROTECTION=1 \
J-Alves874737a2024-03-20 17:30:24 +0000115 ENABLE_FEAT_MTE2=1 \
Olivier Deprezcbf7d5b2023-05-22 12:12:24 +0200116 BL32=<path-to-hafnium-binary> \
117 BL33=<path-to-bl33-binary> \
118 SP_LAYOUT_FILE=sp_layout.json \
119 MBEDTLS_DIR=<path-to-mbedtls-lib> \
120 TRUSTED_BOARD_BOOT=1 \
121 COT=dualroot \
122 ARM_ROTPK_LOCATION=devel_rsa \
123 ROT_KEY=plat/arm/board/common/rotpk/arm_rotprivk_rsa.pem \
124 GENERATE_COT=1 \
125 all fip
126
Olivier Deprezcbf7d5b2023-05-22 12:12:24 +0200127FVP model invocation
J-Alves5eafd222023-10-26 14:19:21 +0100128--------------------
Olivier Deprezcbf7d5b2023-05-22 12:12:24 +0200129
130The FVP command line needs the following options to exercise the S-EL2 SPMC:
131
132+---------------------------------------------------+------------------------------------+
133| - cluster0.has_arm_v8-5=1 | Implements FEAT_SEL2, FEAT_PAuth, |
134| - cluster1.has_arm_v8-5=1 | and FEAT_BTI. |
135+---------------------------------------------------+------------------------------------+
136| - pci.pci_smmuv3.mmu.SMMU_AIDR=2 | Parameters required for the |
137| - pci.pci_smmuv3.mmu.SMMU_IDR0=0x0046123B | SMMUv3.2 modeling. |
138| - pci.pci_smmuv3.mmu.SMMU_IDR1=0x00600002 | |
139| - pci.pci_smmuv3.mmu.SMMU_IDR3=0x1714 | |
140| - pci.pci_smmuv3.mmu.SMMU_IDR5=0xFFFF0472 | |
141| - pci.pci_smmuv3.mmu.SMMU_S_IDR1=0xA0000002 | |
142| - pci.pci_smmuv3.mmu.SMMU_S_IDR2=0 | |
143| - pci.pci_smmuv3.mmu.SMMU_S_IDR3=0 | |
144+---------------------------------------------------+------------------------------------+
145| - cluster0.has_branch_target_exception=1 | Implements FEAT_BTI. |
146| - cluster1.has_branch_target_exception=1 | |
147+---------------------------------------------------+------------------------------------+
148| - cluster0.has_pointer_authentication=2 | Implements FEAT_PAuth |
149| - cluster1.has_pointer_authentication=2 | |
150+---------------------------------------------------+------------------------------------+
151| - cluster0.memory_tagging_support_level=2 | Implements FEAT_MTE2 |
152| - cluster1.memory_tagging_support_level=2 | |
153| - bp.dram_metadata.is_enabled=1 | |
154+---------------------------------------------------+------------------------------------+
155
156Sample FVP command line invocation:
157
158.. code:: shell
159
160 <path-to-fvp-model>/FVP_Base_RevC-2xAEMvA -C pctl.startup=0.0.0.0 \
161 -C cluster0.NUM_CORES=4 -C cluster1.NUM_CORES=4 -C bp.secure_memory=1 \
162 -C bp.secureflashloader.fname=trusted-firmware-a/build/fvp/debug/bl1.bin \
163 -C bp.flashloader0.fname=trusted-firmware-a/build/fvp/debug/fip.bin \
164 -C bp.pl011_uart0.out_file=fvp-uart0.log -C bp.pl011_uart1.out_file=fvp-uart1.log \
165 -C bp.pl011_uart2.out_file=fvp-uart2.log \
166 -C cluster0.has_arm_v8-5=1 -C cluster1.has_arm_v8-5=1 \
167 -C cluster0.has_pointer_authentication=2 -C cluster1.has_pointer_authentication=2 \
168 -C cluster0.has_branch_target_exception=1 -C cluster1.has_branch_target_exception=1 \
169 -C cluster0.memory_tagging_support_level=2 -C cluster1.memory_tagging_support_level=2 \
170 -C bp.dram_metadata.is_enabled=1 \
171 -C pci.pci_smmuv3.mmu.SMMU_AIDR=2 -C pci.pci_smmuv3.mmu.SMMU_IDR0=0x0046123B \
172 -C pci.pci_smmuv3.mmu.SMMU_IDR1=0x00600002 -C pci.pci_smmuv3.mmu.SMMU_IDR3=0x1714 \
173 -C pci.pci_smmuv3.mmu.SMMU_IDR5=0xFFFF0472 -C pci.pci_smmuv3.mmu.SMMU_S_IDR1=0xA0000002 \
174 -C pci.pci_smmuv3.mmu.SMMU_S_IDR2=0 -C pci.pci_smmuv3.mmu.SMMU_S_IDR3=0
175
J-Alves5eafd222023-10-26 14:19:21 +0100176SPMC Configuration
177==================
Olivier Deprezcbf7d5b2023-05-22 12:12:24 +0200178
J-Alves5eafd222023-10-26 14:19:21 +0100179This section details the configuration files required to deploy Hafnium as the SPMC,
180along with those required to configure each secure partion.
Olivier Deprezcbf7d5b2023-05-22 12:12:24 +0200181
J-Alves5eafd222023-10-26 14:19:21 +0100182SPMC Manifest
183-------------
Olivier Deprezcbf7d5b2023-05-22 12:12:24 +0200184
J-Alves5eafd222023-10-26 14:19:21 +0100185This manifest contains the SPMC *attribute* node consumed by the SPMD at boot
186time. It implements `[1]`_ (SP manifest at physical FF-A instance) and serves
187two different cases:
Olivier Deprezcbf7d5b2023-05-22 12:12:24 +0200188
J-Alves5eafd222023-10-26 14:19:21 +0100189The SPMC manifest is used by the SPMD to setup the environment required by the
190SPMC to run at S-EL2. SPs run at S-EL1 or S-EL0.
Olivier Deprezcbf7d5b2023-05-22 12:12:24 +0200191
J-Alves5eafd222023-10-26 14:19:21 +0100192.. code:: shell
193
194 attribute {
195 spmc_id = <0x8000>;
196 maj_ver = <0x1>;
197 min_ver = <0x1>;
198 exec_state = <0x0>;
199 load_address = <0x0 0x6000000>;
200 entrypoint = <0x0 0x6000000>;
201 binary_size = <0x60000>;
202 };
203
204- *spmc_id* defines the endpoint ID value that SPMC can query through
205 ``FFA_ID_GET``.
206- *maj_ver/min_ver*. SPMD checks provided FF-A version versus its internal
207 version and aborts if not matching.
208- *exec_state* defines the SPMC execution state (AArch64 or AArch32).
209 Notice Hafnium used as a SPMC only supports AArch64.
210- *load_address* and *binary_size* are mostly used to verify secondary
211 entry points fit into the loaded binary image.
212- *entrypoint* defines the cold boot primary core entry point used by
213 SPMD (currently matches ``BL32_BASE``) to enter the SPMC.
214
215Other nodes in the manifest are consumed by Hafnium in the secure world.
216A sample can be found at `[7]`_:
217
218- The *hypervisor* node describes SPs. *is_ffa_partition* boolean attribute
219 indicates a FF-A compliant SP. The *load_address* field specifies the load
220 address at which BL2 loaded the SP package.
221- The *cpus* node provides the platform topology and allows MPIDR to VMPIDR mapping.
222 Note the primary core is declared first, then secondary cores are declared
223 in reverse order.
224- The *memory* nodes provide platform information on the ranges of memory
225 available for use by SPs at runtime. These ranges relate to either
226 secure or non-secure memory, depending on the *device_type* field.
227 If the field specifies "memory" the range is secure, else if it specifies
228 "ns-memory" the memory is non-secure. The system integrator must exclude
229 the memory used by other components that are not SPs, such as the monitor,
230 or the SPMC itself, the OS Kernel/Hypervisor, or other NWd VMs.
231 The SPMC limits the SP's address space such that they can only refer to memory
232 inside of those ranges, either by defining memory region nodes in their manifest
233 as well as memory starting at the load address until the limit defined by the memory
234 size. Thus, the SPMC prevents rogue SPs from tampering with memory from other
235 components.
236
J-Alvesc143a342023-11-07 12:17:44 +0000237.. code:: shell
238
239 memory@0 {
240 device_type = "memory";
241 reg = <0x0 0x6000000 0x2000000 0x0 0xff000000 0x1000000>;
242 };
243
244 memory@1 {
245 device_type = "ns-memory";
246 reg = <0x0 0x90010000 0x70000000>;
247 };
248
249Above find an example representation of the referred memory description. The
250ranges are described in a list of unsigned 32-bit values, in which the first
251two addresses relate to the based physical address, followed by the respective
252page size. The first secure range defined in the node below has base address
253`0x0 0x6000000` and size `0x2000000`; following there is another range with
254base address `0x0 0xff000000` and size `0x1000000`.
255
J-Alves5eafd222023-10-26 14:19:21 +0100256Secure Partitions Configuration
257-------------------------------
258
259SP Manifests
Olivier Deprezcbf7d5b2023-05-22 12:12:24 +0200260~~~~~~~~~~~~
261
262An SP manifest describes SP attributes as defined in `[1]`_
263(partition manifest at virtual FF-A instance) in DTS format. It is
264represented as a single file associated with the SP. A sample is
265provided by `[5]`_. A binding document is provided by `[6]`_.
266
J-Alves5eafd222023-10-26 14:19:21 +0100267Platform topology
268~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
269
270The *execution-ctx-count* SP manifest field can take the value of one or the
271total number of PEs. The FF-A specification `[1]`_ recommends the
272following SP types:
273
274- Pinned MP SPs: an execution context matches a physical PE. MP SPs must
275 implement the same number of ECs as the number of PEs in the platform.
276- Migratable UP SPs: a single execution context can run and be migrated on any
277 physical PE. Such SP declares a single EC in its SP manifest. An UP SP can
278 receive a direct message request originating from any physical core targeting
279 the single execution context.
280
Olivier Deprezcbf7d5b2023-05-22 12:12:24 +0200281Secure Partition packages
282~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
283
284Secure partitions are bundled as independent package files consisting
285of:
286
287- a header
288- a DTB
289- an image payload
290
291The header starts with a magic value and offset values to SP DTB and
292image payload. Each SP package is loaded independently by BL2 loader
293and verified for authenticity and integrity.
294
295The SP package identified by its UUID (matching FF-A uuid property) is
296inserted as a single entry into the FIP at end of the TF-A build flow
297as shown:
298
299.. code:: shell
300
301 Trusted Boot Firmware BL2: offset=0x1F0, size=0x8AE1, cmdline="--tb-fw"
302 EL3 Runtime Firmware BL31: offset=0x8CD1, size=0x13000, cmdline="--soc-fw"
303 Secure Payload BL32 (Trusted OS): offset=0x1BCD1, size=0x15270, cmdline="--tos-fw"
304 Non-Trusted Firmware BL33: offset=0x30F41, size=0x92E0, cmdline="--nt-fw"
305 HW_CONFIG: offset=0x3A221, size=0x2348, cmdline="--hw-config"
306 TB_FW_CONFIG: offset=0x3C569, size=0x37A, cmdline="--tb-fw-config"
307 SOC_FW_CONFIG: offset=0x3C8E3, size=0x48, cmdline="--soc-fw-config"
308 TOS_FW_CONFIG: offset=0x3C92B, size=0x427, cmdline="--tos-fw-config"
309 NT_FW_CONFIG: offset=0x3CD52, size=0x48, cmdline="--nt-fw-config"
310 B4B5671E-4A90-4FE1-B81F-FB13DAE1DACB: offset=0x3CD9A, size=0xC168, cmdline="--blob"
311 D1582309-F023-47B9-827C-4464F5578FC8: offset=0x48F02, size=0xC168, cmdline="--blob"
312
313.. uml:: ../resources/diagrams/plantuml/fip-secure-partitions.puml
314
J-Alves5eafd222023-10-26 14:19:21 +0100315Secure Partitions Layout File
316~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Olivier Deprezcbf7d5b2023-05-22 12:12:24 +0200317
318A json-formatted description file is passed to the build flow specifying paths
319to the SP binary image and associated DTS partition manifest file. The latter
320is processed by the dtc compiler to generate a DTB fed into the SP package.
Karl Meakin82593ce2023-08-30 16:38:28 +0100321Each partition can be configured with the following fields:
322
323:code:`image`
324 - Specifies the filename and offset of the image within the SP package.
325 - Can be written as :code:`"image": { "file": "path", "offset": 0x1234 }` to
326 give both :code:`image.file` and :code:`image.offset` values explicitly, or
327 can be written as :code:`"image": "path"` to give :code:`image.file` and value
328 and leave :code:`image.offset` absent.
329
330 :code:`image.file`
331 - Specifies the filename of the image.
332
333 :code:`image.offset`
334 - Specifies the offset of the image within the SP package.
335 - Must be 4KB aligned, because that is the translation granule supported by Hafnium SPMC.
336 - Optional. Defaults to :code:`0x4000`.
337
338:code:`pm`
339 - Specifies the filename and offset of the partition manifest within the SP package.
340 - Can be written as :code:`"pm": { "file": "path", "offset": 0x1234 }` to
341 give both :code:`pm.file` and :code:`pm.offset` values explicitly, or
342 can be written as :code:`"pm": "path"` to give :code:`pm.file` and value
343 and leave :code:`pm.offset` absent.
344
345 :code:`pm.file`
346 - Specifies the filename of the partition manifest.
347
348 :code:`pm.offset`
349 - Specifies the offset of the partition manifest within the SP package.
350 - Must be 4KB aligned, because that is the translation granule supported by Hafnium SPMC.
351 - Optional. Defaults to :code:`0x1000`.
352
353:code:`image.offset` and :code:`pm.offset` can be leveraged to support SPs with
354S1 translation granules that differ from 4KB, and to configure the regions
355allocated within the SP package, as well as to comply with the requirements for
356the implementation of the boot information protocol (see `Passing boot data to
357the SP`_ for more details).
358
359:code:`owner`
360 - Specifies the SP owner, identifying the signing domain in case of dual root CoT.
361 - Possible values are :code:`SiP` (silicon owner) or :code:`Plat` (platform owner).
362 - Optional. Defaults to :code:`SiP`.
363
364:code:`uuid`
365 - Specifies the UUID of the partition.
366 - Optional. Defaults to the value of the :code:`uuid` field from the DTS partition manifest.
367
368:code:`physical-load-address`
369 - Specifies the :code:`load_address` field of the generated DTS fragment.
370 - Optional. Defaults to the value of the :code:`load-address` from the DTS partition manifest.
Olivier Deprezcbf7d5b2023-05-22 12:12:24 +0200371
372.. code:: shell
373
374 {
375 "tee1" : {
376 "image": "tee1.bin",
377 "pm": "tee1.dts",
378 "owner": "SiP",
379 "uuid": "1b1820fe-48f7-4175-8999-d51da00b7c9f"
380 },
381
382 "tee2" : {
383 "image": "tee2.bin",
384 "pm": "tee2.dts",
385 "owner": "Plat"
386 },
387
388 "tee3" : {
389 "image": {
390 "file": "tee3.bin",
391 "offset":"0x2000"
392 },
393 "pm": {
394 "file": "tee3.dts",
395 "offset":"0x6000"
396 },
397 "owner": "Plat"
398 },
399 }
400
Olivier Deprezcbf7d5b2023-05-22 12:12:24 +0200401SPMC boot
J-Alves5eafd222023-10-26 14:19:21 +0100402=========
Olivier Deprezcbf7d5b2023-05-22 12:12:24 +0200403
404The SPMC is loaded by BL2 as the BL32 image.
405
406The SPMC manifest is loaded by BL2 as the ``TOS_FW_CONFIG`` image `[9]`_.
407
408BL2 passes the SPMC manifest address to BL31 through a register.
409
410At boot time, the SPMD in BL31 runs from the primary core, initializes the core
411contexts and launches the SPMC (BL32) passing the following information through
412registers:
413
414- X0 holds the ``TOS_FW_CONFIG`` physical address (or SPMC manifest blob).
415- X1 holds the ``HW_CONFIG`` physical address.
416- X4 holds the currently running core linear id.
417
Olivier Deprezcbf7d5b2023-05-22 12:12:24 +0200418Secure boot
J-Alves5eafd222023-10-26 14:19:21 +0100419-----------
Olivier Deprezcbf7d5b2023-05-22 12:12:24 +0200420
421The SP content certificate is inserted as a separate FIP item so that BL2 loads SPMC,
422SPMC manifest, secure partitions and verifies them for authenticity and integrity.
423Refer to TBBR specification `[3]`_.
424
425The multiple-signing domain feature (in current state dual signing domain `[8]`_) allows
426the use of two root keys namely S-ROTPK and NS-ROTPK:
427
428- SPMC (BL32) and SPMC manifest are signed by the SiP using the S-ROTPK.
429- BL33 may be signed by the OEM using NS-ROTPK.
430- An SP may be signed either by SiP (using S-ROTPK) or by OEM (using NS-ROTPK).
431- A maximum of 4 partitions can be signed with the S-ROTPK key and 4 partitions
432 signed with the NS-ROTPK key.
433
J-Alves5eafd222023-10-26 14:19:21 +0100434Also refer to `Secure Partitions Configuration`_ and `TF-A build options`_ sections.
Olivier Deprezcbf7d5b2023-05-22 12:12:24 +0200435
436Boot phases
437-----------
438
439Primary core boot-up
440~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
441
442Upon boot-up, BL31 hands over to the SPMC (BL32) on the primary boot physical
443core. The SPMC performs its platform initializations and registers the SPMC
444secondary physical core entry point physical address by the use of the
445`FFA_SECONDARY_EP_REGISTER`_ interface (SMC invocation from the SPMC to the SPMD
446at secure physical FF-A instance).
447
J-Alvesc143a342023-11-07 12:17:44 +0000448The SPMC then creates secure partitions base on SP packages and manifests. Each
Olivier Deprezcbf7d5b2023-05-22 12:12:24 +0200449secure partition is launched in sequence (`SP Boot order`_) on their "primary"
450execution context. If the primary boot physical core linear id is N, an MP SP is
451started using EC[N] on PE[N] (see `Platform topology`_). If the partition is a
452UP SP, it is started using its unique EC0 on PE[N].
453
454The SP primary EC (or the EC used when the partition is booted as described
455above):
456
457- Performs the overall SP boot time initialization, and in case of a MP SP,
458 prepares the SP environment for other execution contexts.
459- In the case of a MP SP, it invokes the FFA_SECONDARY_EP_REGISTER at secure
460 virtual FF-A instance (SMC invocation from SP to SPMC) to provide the IPA
461 entry point for other execution contexts.
462- Exits through ``FFA_MSG_WAIT`` to indicate successful initialization or
463 ``FFA_ERROR`` in case of failure.
464
465Secondary cores boot-up
466~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
467
468Once the system is started and NWd brought up, a secondary physical core is
469woken up by the ``PSCI_CPU_ON`` service invocation. The TF-A SPD hook mechanism
470calls into the SPMD on the newly woken up physical core. Then the SPMC is
471entered at the secondary physical core entry point.
472
473In the current implementation, the first SP is resumed on the coresponding EC
474(the virtual CPU which matches the physical core). The implication is that the
475first SP must be a MP SP.
476
477In a linux based system, once secure and normal worlds are booted but prior to
478a NWd FF-A driver has been loaded:
479
480- The first SP has initialized all its ECs in response to primary core boot up
481 (at system initialization) and secondary core boot up (as a result of linux
482 invoking PSCI_CPU_ON for all secondary cores).
483- Other SPs have their first execution context initialized as a result of secure
484 world initialization on the primary boot core. Other ECs for those SPs have to
485 be run first through ffa_run to complete their initialization (which results
486 in the EC completing with FFA_MSG_WAIT).
487
488Refer to `Power management`_ for further details.
489
J-Alves5eafd222023-10-26 14:19:21 +0100490Loading of SPs
491--------------
Olivier Deprezcbf7d5b2023-05-22 12:12:24 +0200492
J-Alves5eafd222023-10-26 14:19:21 +0100493At boot time, BL2 loads SPs sequentially in addition to the SPMC as depicted
494below:
Olivier Deprezcbf7d5b2023-05-22 12:12:24 +0200495
J-Alves5eafd222023-10-26 14:19:21 +0100496.. uml:: ../resources/diagrams/plantuml/bl2-loading-sp.puml
Olivier Deprezcbf7d5b2023-05-22 12:12:24 +0200497
J-Alves5eafd222023-10-26 14:19:21 +0100498Note this boot flow is an implementation sample on Arm's FVP platform.
499Platforms not using TF-A's *Firmware CONFiguration* framework would adjust to a
500different boot flow. The flow restricts to a maximum of 8 secure partitions.
Olivier Deprezcbf7d5b2023-05-22 12:12:24 +0200501
J-Alves5eafd222023-10-26 14:19:21 +0100502SP Boot order
503~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Olivier Deprezcbf7d5b2023-05-22 12:12:24 +0200504
J-Alves5eafd222023-10-26 14:19:21 +0100505SP manifests provide an optional boot order attribute meant to resolve
506dependencies such as an SP providing a service required to properly boot
507another SP. SPMC boots the SPs in accordance to the boot order attribute,
508lowest to the highest value. If the boot order attribute is absent from the FF-A
509manifest, the SP is treated as if it had the highest boot order value
510(i.e. lowest booting priority). The FF-A specification mandates this field
511is unique to each SP.
Olivier Deprezcbf7d5b2023-05-22 12:12:24 +0200512
J-Alves5eafd222023-10-26 14:19:21 +0100513It is possible for an SP to call into another SP through a direct request
514provided the latter SP has already been booted.
Olivier Deprezcbf7d5b2023-05-22 12:12:24 +0200515
J-Alves5eafd222023-10-26 14:19:21 +0100516Passing boot data to the SP
517~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Olivier Deprezcbf7d5b2023-05-22 12:12:24 +0200518
J-Alves5eafd222023-10-26 14:19:21 +0100519In `[1]`_ , the section "Boot information protocol" defines a method for passing
520data to the SPs at boot time. It specifies the format for the boot information
521descriptor and boot information header structures, which describe the data to be
522exchanged between SPMC and SP.
523The specification also defines the types of data that can be passed.
524The aggregate of both the boot info structures and the data itself is designated
525the boot information blob, and is passed to a Partition as a contiguous memory
526region.
Olivier Deprezcbf7d5b2023-05-22 12:12:24 +0200527
J-Alves5eafd222023-10-26 14:19:21 +0100528Currently, the SPM implementation supports the FDT type which is used to pass the
529partition's DTB manifest.
Olivier Deprezcbf7d5b2023-05-22 12:12:24 +0200530
J-Alves5eafd222023-10-26 14:19:21 +0100531The region for the boot information blob is allocated through the SP package.
Olivier Deprezcbf7d5b2023-05-22 12:12:24 +0200532
J-Alves5eafd222023-10-26 14:19:21 +0100533.. image:: ../resources/diagrams/partition-package.png
Olivier Deprezcbf7d5b2023-05-22 12:12:24 +0200534
J-Alves5eafd222023-10-26 14:19:21 +0100535To adjust the space allocated for the boot information blob, the json description
536of the SP (see section `Secure Partitions Layout File`_) shall be updated to contain
537the manifest offset. If no offset is provided the manifest offset defaults to 0x1000,
538which is the page size in the Hafnium SPMC.
Olivier Deprezcbf7d5b2023-05-22 12:12:24 +0200539
J-Alves5eafd222023-10-26 14:19:21 +0100540The configuration of the boot protocol is done in the SPs manifest. As defined by
541the specification, the manifest field 'gp-register-num' configures the GP register
542which shall be used to pass the address to the partitions boot information blob when
543booting the partition.
544In addition, the Hafnium SPMC implementation requires the boot information arguments
545to be listed in a designated DT node:
546
547.. code:: shell
548
549 boot-info {
550 compatible = "arm,ffa-manifest-boot-info";
551 ffa_manifest;
552 };
553
554The whole secure partition package image (see `Secure Partition packages`_) is
555mapped to the SP secure EL1&0 Stage-2 translation regime. As such, the SP can
556retrieve the address for the boot information blob in the designated GP register,
557process the boot information header and descriptors, access its own manifest
558DTB blob and extract its partition manifest properties.
559
560SPMC Runtime
561============
562
563Parsing SP partition manifests
564------------------------------
565
566Hafnium consumes SP manifests as defined in `[1]`_ and `SP manifests`_.
567Note the current implementation may not implement all optional fields.
568
569The SP manifest may contain memory and device regions nodes:
570
571- Memory regions are mapped in the SP EL1&0 Stage-2 translation regime at
572 load time (or EL1&0 Stage-1 for an S-EL1 SPMC). A memory region node can
573 specify RX/TX buffer regions in which case it is not necessary for an SP
574 to explicitly invoke the ``FFA_RXTX_MAP`` interface. The memory referred
575 shall be contained within the memory ranges defined in SPMC manifest. The
576 NS bit in the attributes field should be consistent with the security
577 state of the range that it relates to. I.e. non-secure memory shall be
578 part of a non-secure memory range, and secure memory shall be contained
579 in a secure memory range of a given platform.
580- Device regions are mapped in the SP EL1&0 Stage-2 translation regime (or
581 EL1&0 Stage-1 for an S-EL1 SPMC) as peripherals and possibly allocate
582 additional resources (e.g. interrupts).
583
584For the SPMC, base addresses for memory and device region nodes are IPAs provided
585the SPMC identity maps IPAs to PAs within SP EL1&0 Stage-2 translation regime.
586
Olivier Deprezb8bd7d72023-10-27 16:14:13 +0200587ote: in the current implementation both VTTBR_EL2 and VSTTBR_EL2 point to the
J-Alves5eafd222023-10-26 14:19:21 +0100588same set of page tables. It is still open whether two sets of page tables shall
589be provided per SP. The memory region node as defined in the specification
590provides a memory security attribute hinting to map either to the secure or
591non-secure EL1&0 Stage-2 table if it exists.
592
593Secure partitions scheduling
594----------------------------
595
Olivier Deprez8c4cb2d2023-10-27 16:07:11 +0200596The FF-A specification `[1]`_ provides two ways to allocate CPU cycles to
J-Alves5eafd222023-10-26 14:19:21 +0100597secure partitions. For this a VM (Hypervisor or OS kernel), or SP invokes one of:
598
Kathleen Capella6e3abcf2024-02-05 16:17:35 -0500599- the FFA_MSG_SEND_DIRECT_REQ (or FFA_MSG_SEND_DIRECT_REQ2) interface.
J-Alves5eafd222023-10-26 14:19:21 +0100600- the FFA_RUN interface.
601
602Additionally a secure interrupt can pre-empt the normal world execution and give
603CPU cycles by transitioning to EL3 and S-EL2.
Olivier Deprezcbf7d5b2023-05-22 12:12:24 +0200604
605Mandatory interfaces
606--------------------
607
608The following interfaces are exposed to SPs:
609
610- ``FFA_VERSION``
611- ``FFA_FEATURES``
612- ``FFA_RX_RELEASE``
613- ``FFA_RXTX_MAP``
614- ``FFA_RXTX_UNMAP``
615- ``FFA_PARTITION_INFO_GET``
616- ``FFA_ID_GET``
617- ``FFA_MSG_WAIT``
618- ``FFA_MSG_SEND_DIRECT_REQ``
619- ``FFA_MSG_SEND_DIRECT_RESP``
620- ``FFA_MEM_DONATE``
621- ``FFA_MEM_LEND``
622- ``FFA_MEM_SHARE``
623- ``FFA_MEM_RETRIEVE_REQ``
624- ``FFA_MEM_RETRIEVE_RESP``
625- ``FFA_MEM_RELINQUISH``
626- ``FFA_MEM_FRAG_RX``
627- ``FFA_MEM_FRAG_TX``
628- ``FFA_MEM_RECLAIM``
629- ``FFA_RUN``
630
631As part of the FF-A v1.1 support, the following interfaces were added:
632
633 - ``FFA_NOTIFICATION_BITMAP_CREATE``
634 - ``FFA_NOTIFICATION_BITMAP_DESTROY``
635 - ``FFA_NOTIFICATION_BIND``
636 - ``FFA_NOTIFICATION_UNBIND``
637 - ``FFA_NOTIFICATION_SET``
638 - ``FFA_NOTIFICATION_GET``
639 - ``FFA_NOTIFICATION_INFO_GET``
640 - ``FFA_SPM_ID_GET``
641 - ``FFA_SECONDARY_EP_REGISTER``
642 - ``FFA_MEM_PERM_GET``
643 - ``FFA_MEM_PERM_SET``
644 - ``FFA_MSG_SEND2``
645 - ``FFA_RX_ACQUIRE``
646
Raghu Krishnamurthy4a793e92023-08-09 10:10:23 -0700647As part of the FF-A v1.2 support, the following interfaces were added:
Kathleen Capella6e3abcf2024-02-05 16:17:35 -0500648
Raghu Krishnamurthy4a793e92023-08-09 10:10:23 -0700649- ``FFA_PARTITION_INFO_GET_REGS``
Kathleen Capella6e3abcf2024-02-05 16:17:35 -0500650- ``FFA_MSG_SEND_DIRECT_REQ2``
651- ``FFA_MSG_SEND_DIRECT_RESP2``
Raghu Krishnamurthy4a793e92023-08-09 10:10:23 -0700652
Olivier Deprezcbf7d5b2023-05-22 12:12:24 +0200653FFA_VERSION
654~~~~~~~~~~~
655
656``FFA_VERSION`` requires a *requested_version* parameter from the caller.
657The returned value depends on the caller:
658
659- Hypervisor or OS kernel in NS-EL1/EL2: the SPMD returns the SPMC version
660 specified in the SPMC manifest.
661- SP: the SPMC returns its own implemented version.
662- SPMC at S-EL1/S-EL2: the SPMD returns its own implemented version.
663
664FFA_FEATURES
665~~~~~~~~~~~~
666
667FF-A features supported by the SPMC may be discovered by secure partitions at
668boot (that is prior to NWd is booted) or run-time.
669
670The SPMC calling FFA_FEATURES at secure physical FF-A instance always get
671FFA_SUCCESS from the SPMD.
672
673The request made by an Hypervisor or OS kernel is forwarded to the SPMC and
674the response relayed back to the NWd.
675
676FFA_RXTX_MAP/FFA_RXTX_UNMAP
677~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
678
679When invoked from a secure partition FFA_RXTX_MAP maps the provided send and
680receive buffers described by their IPAs to the SP EL1&0 Stage-2 translation
681regime as secure buffers in the MMU descriptors.
682
683When invoked from the Hypervisor or OS kernel, the buffers are mapped into the
684SPMC EL2 Stage-1 translation regime and marked as NS buffers in the MMU
685descriptors. The provided addresses may be owned by a VM in the normal world,
686which is expected to receive messages from the secure world. The SPMC will in
687this case allocate internal state structures to facilitate RX buffer access
688synchronization (through FFA_RX_ACQUIRE interface), and to permit SPs to send
Karl Meakinb1dbca92024-01-24 16:51:22 +0000689messages. The addresses used must be contained in the SPMC manifest NS memory
690node (see `SPMC manifest`_).
Olivier Deprezcbf7d5b2023-05-22 12:12:24 +0200691
692The FFA_RXTX_UNMAP unmaps the RX/TX pair from the translation regime of the
693caller, either it being the Hypervisor or OS kernel, as well as a secure
Karl Meakinb1dbca92024-01-24 16:51:22 +0000694partition, and restores them in the VM's translation regime so that they can be
695used for memory sharing operations from the normal world again.
Olivier Deprezcbf7d5b2023-05-22 12:12:24 +0200696
697FFA_PARTITION_INFO_GET
698~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
699
700Partition info get call can originate:
701
702- from SP to SPMC
703- from Hypervisor or OS kernel to SPMC. The request is relayed by the SPMD.
704
Raghu Krishnamurthy4a793e92023-08-09 10:10:23 -0700705FFA_PARTITION_INFO_GET_REGS
706~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
707
708This call can originate:
709
710- from SP to SPMC
711- from SPMC to SPMD
712- from Hypervsior or OS kernel to SPMC. The request is relayed by the SPMD.
713
714The primary use of this ABI is to return partition information via registers
715as opposed to via RX/TX buffers and is useful in cases where sharing memory is
716difficult.
717
Olivier Deprezcbf7d5b2023-05-22 12:12:24 +0200718FFA_ID_GET
719~~~~~~~~~~
720
721The FF-A id space is split into a non-secure space and secure space:
722
723- FF-A ID with bit 15 clear relates to VMs.
724- FF-A ID with bit 15 set related to SPs.
725- FF-A IDs 0, 0xffff, 0x8000 are assigned respectively to the Hypervisor, SPMD
726 and SPMC.
727
728The SPMD returns:
729
730- The default zero value on invocation from the Hypervisor.
731- The ``spmc_id`` value specified in the SPMC manifest on invocation from
732 the SPMC (see `SPMC manifest`_)
733
734This convention helps the SPMC to determine the origin and destination worlds in
735an FF-A ABI invocation. In particular the SPMC shall filter unauthorized
736transactions in its world switch routine. It must not be permitted for a VM to
737use a secure FF-A ID as origin world by spoofing:
738
739- A VM-to-SP direct request/response shall set the origin world to be non-secure
740 (FF-A ID bit 15 clear) and destination world to be secure (FF-A ID bit 15
741 set).
742- Similarly, an SP-to-SP direct request/response shall set the FF-A ID bit 15
743 for both origin and destination IDs.
744
745An incoming direct message request arriving at SPMD from NWd is forwarded to
746SPMC without a specific check. The SPMC is resumed through eret and "knows" the
747message is coming from normal world in this specific code path. Thus the origin
748endpoint ID must be checked by SPMC for being a normal world ID.
749
750An SP sending a direct message request must have bit 15 set in its origin
751endpoint ID and this can be checked by the SPMC when the SP invokes the ABI.
752
753The SPMC shall reject the direct message if the claimed world in origin endpoint
754ID is not consistent:
755
756- It is either forwarded by SPMD and thus origin endpoint ID must be a "normal
757 world ID",
758- or initiated by an SP and thus origin endpoint ID must be a "secure world ID".
759
760
761FFA_MSG_SEND_DIRECT_REQ/FFA_MSG_SEND_DIRECT_RESP
762~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
763
764This is a mandatory interface for secure partitions consisting in direct request
765and responses with the following rules:
766
767- An SP can send a direct request to another SP.
768- An SP can receive a direct request from another SP.
769- An SP can send a direct response to another SP.
770- An SP cannot send a direct request to an Hypervisor or OS kernel.
771- An Hypervisor or OS kernel can send a direct request to an SP.
772- An SP can send a direct response to an Hypervisor or OS kernel.
773
Kathleen Capella6e3abcf2024-02-05 16:17:35 -0500774FFA_MSG_SEND_DIRECT_REQ2/FFA_MSG_SEND_DIRECT_RESP2
775~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
776
777The primary usage of these ABIs is to send a direct request to a specified
778UUID within an SP that has multiple UUIDs declared in its manifest.
779
780Secondarily, it can be used to send a direct request with an extended
781set of message payload arguments.
782
Olivier Deprezcbf7d5b2023-05-22 12:12:24 +0200783FFA_NOTIFICATION_BITMAP_CREATE/FFA_NOTIFICATION_BITMAP_DESTROY
784~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
785
786The secure partitions notifications bitmap are statically allocated by the SPMC.
787Hence, this interface is not to be issued by secure partitions.
788
789At initialization, the SPMC is not aware of VMs/partitions deployed in the
790normal world. Hence, the Hypervisor or OS kernel must use both ABIs for SPMC
791to be prepared to handle notifications for the provided VM ID.
792
793FFA_NOTIFICATION_BIND/FFA_NOTIFICATION_UNBIND
794~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
795
796Pair of interfaces to manage permissions to signal notifications. Prior to
797handling notifications, an FF-A endpoint must allow a given sender to signal a
798bitmap of notifications.
799
800If the receiver doesn't have notification support enabled in its FF-A manifest,
801it won't be able to bind notifications, hence forbidding it to receive any
802notifications.
803
804FFA_NOTIFICATION_SET/FFA_NOTIFICATION_GET
805~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
806
807FFA_NOTIFICATION_GET retrieves all pending global notifications and
808per-vCPU notifications targeted to the current vCPU.
809
810Hafnium maintains a global count of pending notifications which gets incremented
811and decremented when handling FFA_NOTIFICATION_SET and FFA_NOTIFICATION_GET
812respectively. A delayed SRI is triggered if the counter is non-zero when the
813SPMC returns to normal world.
814
815FFA_NOTIFICATION_INFO_GET
816~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
817
818Hafnium maintains a global count of pending notifications whose information
819has been retrieved by this interface. The count is incremented and decremented
820when handling FFA_NOTIFICATION_INFO_GET and FFA_NOTIFICATION_GET respectively.
821It also tracks notifications whose information has been retrieved individually,
822such that it avoids duplicating returned information for subsequent calls to
823FFA_NOTIFICATION_INFO_GET. For each notification, this state information is
824reset when receiver called FFA_NOTIFICATION_GET to retrieve them.
825
826FFA_SPM_ID_GET
827~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
828
829Returns the FF-A ID allocated to an SPM component which can be one of SPMD
830or SPMC.
831
832At initialization, the SPMC queries the SPMD for the SPMC ID, using the
833FFA_ID_GET interface, and records it. The SPMC can also query the SPMD ID using
834the FFA_SPM_ID_GET interface at the secure physical FF-A instance.
835
836Secure partitions call this interface at the virtual FF-A instance, to which
837the SPMC returns the priorly retrieved SPMC ID.
838
839The Hypervisor or OS kernel can issue the FFA_SPM_ID_GET call handled by the
840SPMD, which returns the SPMC ID.
841
842FFA_SECONDARY_EP_REGISTER
843~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
844
845When the SPMC boots, all secure partitions are initialized on their primary
846Execution Context.
847
848The FFA_SECONDARY_EP_REGISTER interface is to be used by a secure partition
849from its first execution context, to provide the entry point address for
850secondary execution contexts.
851
852A secondary EC is first resumed either upon invocation of PSCI_CPU_ON from
853the NWd or by invocation of FFA_RUN.
854
855FFA_RX_ACQUIRE/FFA_RX_RELEASE
856~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
857
858The RX buffers can be used to pass information to an FF-A endpoint in the
859following scenarios:
860
861 - When it was targetted by a FFA_MSG_SEND2 invokation from another endpoint.
862 - Return the result of calling ``FFA_PARTITION_INFO_GET``.
863 - In a memory share operation, as part of the ``FFA_MEM_RETRIEVE_RESP``,
864 with the memory descriptor of the shared memory.
865
866If a normal world VM is expected to exchange messages with secure world,
867its RX/TX buffer addresses are forwarded to the SPMC via FFA_RXTX_MAP ABI,
868and are from this moment owned by the SPMC.
869The hypervisor must call the FFA_RX_ACQUIRE interface before attempting
870to use the RX buffer, in any of the aforementioned scenarios. A successful
871call to FFA_RX_ACQUIRE transfers ownership of RX buffer to hypervisor, such
872that it can be safely used.
873
874The FFA_RX_RELEASE interface is used after the FF-A endpoint is done with
875processing the data received in its RX buffer. If the RX buffer has been
876acquired by the hypervisor, the FFA_RX_RELEASE call must be forwarded to
877the SPMC to reestablish SPMC's RX ownership.
878
879An attempt from an SP to send a message to a normal world VM whose RX buffer
880was acquired by the hypervisor fails with error code FFA_BUSY, to preserve
881the RX buffer integrity.
882The operation could then be conducted after FFA_RX_RELEASE.
883
884FFA_MSG_SEND2
885~~~~~~~~~~~~~
886
887Hafnium copies a message from the sender TX buffer into receiver's RX buffer.
888For messages from SPs to VMs, operation is only possible if the SPMC owns
889the receiver's RX buffer.
890
891Both receiver and sender need to enable support for indirect messaging,
892in their respective partition manifest. The discovery of support
893of such feature can be done via FFA_PARTITION_INFO_GET.
894
895On a successful message send, Hafnium pends an RX buffer full framework
896notification for the receiver, to inform it about a message in the RX buffer.
897
898The handling of framework notifications is similar to that of
899global notifications. Binding of these is not necessary, as these are
900reserved to be used by the hypervisor or SPMC.
901
Madhukar Pappireddy0b2304b2023-08-15 18:05:21 -0500902Paravirtualized interfaces
903--------------------------
904
905Hafnium SPMC implements the following implementation-defined interface(s):
906
907HF_INTERRUPT_ENABLE
908~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
909
910Enables or disables the given virtual interrupt for the calling execution
911context. Returns 0 on success, or -1 if the interrupt id is invalid.
912
913HF_INTERRUPT_GET
914~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
915
916Returns the ID of the next pending virtual interrupt for the calling execution
917context, and acknowledges it (i.e. marks it as no longer pending). Returns
918HF_INVALID_INTID if there are no pending interrupts.
919
920HF_INTERRUPT_DEACTIVATE
921~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
922
923Drops the current interrupt priority and deactivates the given virtual and
924physical interrupt ID for the calling execution context. Returns 0 on success,
925or -1 otherwise.
926
927HF_INTERRUPT_RECONFIGURE
928~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
929
930An SP specifies the list of interrupts it owns through its partition manifest.
931This paravirtualized interface allows an SP to reconfigure a physical interrupt
932in runtime. It accepts three arguments, namely, interrupt ID, command and value.
933The command & value pair signify what change is being requested by the current
934Secure Partition for the given interrupt.
935
936SPMC returns 0 to indicate that the command was processed successfully or -1 if
937it failed to do so. At present, this interface only supports the following
938commands:
939
940 - ``INT_RECONFIGURE_TARGET_PE``
941 - Change the target CPU of the interrupt.
942 - Value represents linear CPU index in the range 0 to (MAX_CPUS - 1).
943
944 - ``INT_RECONFIGURE_SEC_STATE``
945 - Change the security state of the interrupt.
946 - Value must be either 0 (Non-secure) or 1 (Secure).
947
948 - ``INT_RECONFIGURE_ENABLE``
949 - Enable or disable the physical interrupt.
950 - Value must be either 0 (Disable) or 1 (Enable).
951
Olivier Deprezcbf7d5b2023-05-22 12:12:24 +0200952SPMC-SPMD direct requests/responses
953-----------------------------------
954
955Implementation-defined FF-A IDs are allocated to the SPMC and SPMD.
956Using those IDs in source/destination fields of a direct request/response
957permits SPMD to SPMC communication and either way.
958
959- SPMC to SPMD direct request/response uses SMC conduit.
960- SPMD to SPMC direct request/response uses ERET conduit.
961
962This is used in particular to convey power management messages.
963
J-Alves5eafd222023-10-26 14:19:21 +0100964Notifications
965-------------
966
967The FF-A v1.1 specification `[1]`_ defines notifications as an asynchronous
968communication mechanism with non-blocking semantics. It allows for one FF-A
969endpoint to signal another for service provision, without hindering its current
970progress.
971
972Hafnium currently supports 64 notifications. The IDs of each notification define
973a position in a 64-bit bitmap.
974
975The signaling of notifications can interchangeably happen between NWd and SWd
976FF-A endpoints.
977
978The SPMC is in charge of managing notifications from SPs to SPs, from SPs to
979VMs, and from VMs to SPs. An hypervisor component would only manage
980notifications from VMs to VMs. Given the SPMC has no visibility of the endpoints
981deployed in NWd, the Hypervisor or OS kernel must invoke the interface
982FFA_NOTIFICATION_BITMAP_CREATE to allocate the notifications bitmap per FF-A
983endpoint in the NWd that supports it.
984
985A sender can signal notifications once the receiver has provided it with
986permissions. Permissions are provided by invoking the interface
987FFA_NOTIFICATION_BIND.
988
989Notifications are signaled by invoking FFA_NOTIFICATION_SET. Henceforth
990they are considered to be in a pending sate. The receiver can retrieve its
991pending notifications invoking FFA_NOTIFICATION_GET, which, from that moment,
992are considered to be handled.
993
994Per the FF-A v1.1 spec, each FF-A endpoint must be associated with a scheduler
995that is in charge of donating CPU cycles for notifications handling. The
996FF-A driver calls FFA_NOTIFICATION_INFO_GET to retrieve the information about
997which FF-A endpoints have pending notifications. The receiver scheduler is
998called and informed by the FF-A driver, and it should allocate CPU cycles to the
999receiver.
1000
1001There are two types of notifications supported:
1002
Olivier Deprezb8bd7d72023-10-27 16:14:13 +02001003- Global, which are targeted to an FF-A endpoint and can be handled within any
1004 of its execution contexts, as determined by the scheduler of the system.
J-Alves5eafd222023-10-26 14:19:21 +01001005- Per-vCPU, which are targeted to a FF-A endpoint and to be handled within a
1006 a specific execution context, as determined by the sender.
1007
1008The type of a notification is set when invoking FFA_NOTIFICATION_BIND to give
1009permissions to the sender.
1010
1011Notification signaling resorts to two interrupts:
1012
1013- Schedule Receiver Interrupt: non-secure physical interrupt to be handled by
1014 the FF-A driver within the receiver scheduler. At initialization the SPMC
1015 donates an SGI ID chosen from the secure SGI IDs range and configures it as
1016 non-secure. The SPMC triggers this SGI on the currently running core when
1017 there are pending notifications, and the respective receivers need CPU cycles
1018 to handle them.
1019- Notifications Pending Interrupt: virtual interrupt to be handled by the
1020 receiver of the notification. Set when there are pending notifications for the
1021 given secure partition. The NPI is pended when the NWd relinquishes CPU cycles
1022 to an SP.
1023
1024The notifications receipt support is enabled in the partition FF-A manifest.
1025
Olivier Deprezcbf7d5b2023-05-22 12:12:24 +02001026Memory Sharing
1027--------------
1028
Daniel Boulbyd5041122024-01-31 14:24:54 +00001029Hafnium implements the following memory sharing interfaces as described in
1030Chapter 11 of the FF-A 1.2 ALP0 specification:
Olivier Deprezcbf7d5b2023-05-22 12:12:24 +02001031
1032 - ``FFA_MEM_SHARE`` - for shared access between lender and borrower.
1033 - ``FFA_MEM_LEND`` - borrower to obtain exclusive access, though lender
1034 retains ownership of the memory.
1035 - ``FFA_MEM_DONATE`` - lender permanently relinquishes ownership of memory
1036 to the borrower.
1037
1038The ``FFA_MEM_RETRIEVE_REQ`` interface is for the borrower to request the
1039memory to be mapped into its address space: for S-EL1 partitions the SPM updates
1040their stage 2 translation regime; for S-EL0 partitions the SPM updates their
1041stage 1 translation regime. On a successful call, the SPMC responds back with
1042``FFA_MEM_RETRIEVE_RESP``.
1043
1044The ``FFA_MEM_RELINQUISH`` interface is for when the borrower is done with using
1045a memory region.
1046
1047The ``FFA_MEM_RECLAIM`` interface is for the owner of the memory to reestablish
1048its ownership and exclusive access to the memory shared.
1049
1050The memory transaction descriptors are transmitted via RX/TX buffers. In
1051situations where the size of the memory transaction descriptor exceeds the
1052size of the RX/TX buffers, Hafnium provides support for fragmented transmission
1053of the full transaction descriptor. The ``FFA_MEM_FRAG_RX`` and ``FFA_MEM_FRAG_TX``
1054interfaces are for receiving and transmitting the next fragment, respectively.
1055
1056If lender and borrower(s) are SPs, all memory sharing operations are supported.
1057
1058Hafnium also supports memory sharing operations between the normal world and the
1059secure world. If there is an SP involved, the SPMC allocates data to track the
1060state of the operation.
1061
1062The SPMC is also the designated allocator for the memory handle. The hypervisor
1063or OS kernel has the possibility to rely on the SPMC to maintain the state
1064of the operation, thus saving memory.
J-Alvesda82a1a2023-10-17 11:45:49 +01001065An SP can not share, lend or donate memory to the NWd.
Olivier Deprezcbf7d5b2023-05-22 12:12:24 +02001066
1067The SPMC supports the hypervisor retrieve request, as defined by the FF-A
1068v1.1 EAC0 specification, in section 16.4.3. The intent is to aid with operations
1069that the hypervisor must do for a VM retriever. For example, when handling
1070an FFA_MEM_RECLAIM, if the hypervisor relies on SPMC to keep the state
1071of the operation, the hypervisor retrieve request can be used to obtain
1072that state information, do the necessary validations, and update stage 2
1073memory translation.
1074
1075Hafnium also supports memory lend and share targetting multiple borrowers.
1076This is the case for a lender SP to multiple SPs, and for a lender VM to
1077multiple endpoints (from both secure world and normal world). If there is
1078at least one borrower VM, the hypervisor is in charge of managing its
1079stage 2 translation on a successful memory retrieve.
1080The semantics of ``FFA_MEM_DONATE`` implies ownership transmission,
1081which should target only one partition.
1082
1083The memory share interfaces are backwards compatible with memory transaction
Daniel Boulbyd5041122024-01-31 14:24:54 +00001084descriptors from FF-A v1.0. Starting from FF-A v1.1, with the introduction
1085of the `Endpoint memory access descriptor size` and
1086`Endpoint memory access descriptor access offset` fields (from Table 11.20 of the
1087FF-A v1.2 ALP0 specification), memory transaction descriptors are forward
1088compatible, so can be used internally by Hafnium as they are sent.
1089These fields must be valid for a memory access descriptor defined for a compatible
1090FF-A version to the SPMC FF-A version. For a transaction from an FF-A v1.0 endpoint
1091the memory transaction descriptor will be translated to an FF-A v1.1 descriptor for
Olivier Deprezcbf7d5b2023-05-22 12:12:24 +02001092Hafnium's internal processing of the operation. If the FF-A version of a
1093borrower is v1.0, Hafnium provides FF-A v1.0 compliant memory transaction
1094descriptors on memory retrieve response.
1095
J-Alvesffc82062023-11-07 14:19:00 +00001096In the section :ref:`SPMC Configuration` there is a mention of non-secure memory
1097range, that limit the memory region nodes the SP can define. Whatever is left of
1098the memory region node carve-outs, the SPMC utilizes the memory to create a set of
1099page tables it associates with the NWd. The memory sharing operations incoming from
1100the NWd should refer to addresses belonging to these page tables. The intent
1101is for SPs not to be able to get access to regions they are not intended to access.
1102This requires special care from the system integrator to configure the memory ranges
1103correctly, such that any SP can't be given access and interfere with execution of
1104other components. More information in the :ref:`Threat Model`.
1105
Daniel Boulbydfc312e2024-05-14 17:10:01 +01001106Hafnium SPMC supports memory management transactions for device memory regions.
1107Currently this is limited to only the ``FFA_MEM_LEND`` interface and
1108to a single borrower. The device memory region used in the transaction must have
1109been decalared in the SPMC manifest as described above. Memory defined in a device
1110region node is given the attributes Device-nGnRnE, since this is the most restrictive
1111memory type the memory must be lent with these attrbutes as well.
1112
Olivier Deprezcbf7d5b2023-05-22 12:12:24 +02001113PE MMU configuration
1114--------------------
1115
1116With secure virtualization enabled (``HCR_EL2.VM = 1``) and for S-EL1
1117partitions, two IPA spaces (secure and non-secure) are output from the
1118secure EL1&0 Stage-1 translation.
1119The EL1&0 Stage-2 translation hardware is fed by:
1120
1121- A secure IPA when the SP EL1&0 Stage-1 MMU is disabled.
1122- One of secure or non-secure IPA when the secure EL1&0 Stage-1 MMU is enabled.
1123
1124``VTCR_EL2`` and ``VSTCR_EL2`` provide configuration bits for controlling the
1125NS/S IPA translations. The following controls are set up:
1126``VSTCR_EL2.SW = 0`` , ``VSTCR_EL2.SA = 0``, ``VTCR_EL2.NSW = 0``,
1127``VTCR_EL2.NSA = 1``:
1128
1129- Stage-2 translations for the NS IPA space access the NS PA space.
1130- Stage-2 translation table walks for the NS IPA space are to the secure PA space.
1131
1132Secure and non-secure IPA regions (rooted to by ``VTTBR_EL2`` and ``VSTTBR_EL2``)
1133use the same set of Stage-2 page tables within a SP.
1134
1135The ``VTCR_EL2/VSTCR_EL2/VTTBR_EL2/VSTTBR_EL2`` virtual address space
1136configuration is made part of a vCPU context.
1137
1138For S-EL0 partitions with VHE enabled, a single secure EL2&0 Stage-1 translation
1139regime is used for both Hafnium and the partition.
1140
1141Schedule modes and SP Call chains
1142---------------------------------
1143
1144An SP execution context is said to be in SPMC scheduled mode if CPU cycles are
1145allocated to it by SPMC. Correspondingly, an SP execution context is said to be
1146in Normal world scheduled mode if CPU cycles are allocated by the normal world.
1147
1148A call chain represents all SPs in a sequence of invocations of a direct message
1149request. When execution on a PE is in the secure state, only a single call chain
1150that runs in the Normal World scheduled mode can exist. FF-A v1.1 spec allows
1151any number of call chains to run in the SPMC scheduled mode but the Hafnium
1152SPMC restricts the number of call chains in SPMC scheduled mode to only one for
1153keeping the implementation simple.
1154
1155Partition runtime models
1156------------------------
1157
1158The runtime model of an endpoint describes the transitions permitted for an
1159execution context between various states. These are the four partition runtime
1160models supported (refer to `[1]`_ section 7):
1161
1162 - RTM_FFA_RUN: runtime model presented to an execution context that is
1163 allocated CPU cycles through FFA_RUN interface.
1164 - RTM_FFA_DIR_REQ: runtime model presented to an execution context that is
Kathleen Capella6e3abcf2024-02-05 16:17:35 -05001165 allocated CPU cycles through FFA_MSG_SEND_DIRECT_REQ or FFA_MSG_SEND_DIRECT_REQ2
1166 interface.
Olivier Deprezcbf7d5b2023-05-22 12:12:24 +02001167 - RTM_SEC_INTERRUPT: runtime model presented to an execution context that is
1168 allocated CPU cycles by SPMC to handle a secure interrupt.
1169 - RTM_SP_INIT: runtime model presented to an execution context that is
1170 allocated CPU cycles by SPMC to initialize its state.
1171
1172If an endpoint execution context attempts to make an invalid transition or a
1173valid transition that could lead to a loop in the call chain, SPMC denies the
1174transition with the help of above runtime models.
1175
1176Interrupt management
1177--------------------
1178
1179GIC ownership
1180~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1181
1182The SPMC owns the GIC configuration. Secure and non-secure interrupts are
1183trapped at S-EL2. The SPMC manages interrupt resources and allocates interrupt
1184IDs based on SP manifests. The SPMC acknowledges physical interrupts and injects
1185virtual interrupts by setting the use of vIRQ/vFIQ bits before resuming a SP.
1186
1187Abbreviations:
1188
1189 - NS-Int: A non-secure physical interrupt. It requires a switch to the normal
1190 world to be handled if it triggers while execution is in secure world.
1191 - Other S-Int: A secure physical interrupt targeted to an SP different from
1192 the one that is currently running.
1193 - Self S-Int: A secure physical interrupt targeted to the SP that is currently
1194 running.
1195
1196Non-secure interrupt handling
1197~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1198
1199This section documents the actions supported in SPMC in response to a non-secure
1200interrupt as per the guidance provided by FF-A v1.1 EAC0 specification.
1201An SP specifies one of the following actions in its partition manifest:
1202
1203 - Non-secure interrupt is signaled.
1204 - Non-secure interrupt is signaled after a managed exit.
1205 - Non-secure interrupt is queued.
1206
1207An SP execution context in a call chain could specify a less permissive action
1208than subsequent SP execution contexts in the same call chain. The less
1209permissive action takes precedence over the more permissive actions specified
1210by the subsequent execution contexts. Please refer to FF-A v1.1 EAC0 section
12118.3.1 for further explanation.
1212
1213Secure interrupt handling
1214~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1215
1216This section documents the support implemented for secure interrupt handling in
1217SPMC as per the guidance provided by FF-A v1.1 EAC0 specification.
1218The following assumptions are made about the system configuration:
1219
1220 - In the current implementation, S-EL1 SPs are expected to use the para
1221 virtualized ABIs for interrupt management rather than accessing the virtual
1222 GIC interface.
1223 - Unless explicitly stated otherwise, this support is applicable only for
1224 S-EL1 SPs managed by SPMC.
1225 - Secure interrupts are configured as G1S or G0 interrupts.
1226 - All physical interrupts are routed to SPMC when running a secure partition
1227 execution context.
1228 - All endpoints with multiple execution contexts have their contexts pinned
1229 to corresponding CPUs. Hence, a secure virtual interrupt cannot be signaled
1230 to a target vCPU that is currently running or blocked on a different
1231 physical CPU.
1232
1233A physical secure interrupt could trigger while CPU is executing in normal world
1234or secure world.
1235The action of SPMC for a secure interrupt depends on: the state of the target
1236execution context of the SP that is responsible for handling the interrupt;
1237whether the interrupt triggered while execution was in normal world or secure
1238world.
1239
1240Secure interrupt signaling mechanisms
1241~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1242
1243Signaling refers to the mechanisms used by SPMC to indicate to the SP execution
1244context that it has a pending virtual interrupt and to further run the SP
1245execution context, such that it can handle the virtual interrupt. SPMC uses
1246either the FFA_INTERRUPT interface with ERET conduit or vIRQ signal for signaling
1247to S-EL1 SPs. When normal world execution is preempted by a secure interrupt,
1248the SPMD uses the FFA_INTERRUPT ABI with ERET conduit to signal interrupt to SPMC
1249running in S-EL2.
1250
1251+-----------+---------+---------------+---------------------------------------+
1252| SP State | Conduit | Interface and | Description |
1253| | | parameters | |
1254+-----------+---------+---------------+---------------------------------------+
1255| WAITING | ERET, | FFA_INTERRUPT,| SPMC signals to SP the ID of pending |
1256| | vIRQ | Interrupt ID | interrupt. It pends vIRQ signal and |
1257| | | | resumes execution context of SP |
1258| | | | through ERET. |
1259+-----------+---------+---------------+---------------------------------------+
1260| BLOCKED | ERET, | FFA_INTERRUPT | SPMC signals to SP that an interrupt |
1261| | vIRQ | | is pending. It pends vIRQ signal and |
1262| | | | resumes execution context of SP |
1263| | | | through ERET. |
1264+-----------+---------+---------------+---------------------------------------+
1265| PREEMPTED | vIRQ | NA | SPMC pends the vIRQ signal but does |
1266| | | | not resume execution context of SP. |
1267+-----------+---------+---------------+---------------------------------------+
1268| RUNNING | ERET, | NA | SPMC pends the vIRQ signal and resumes|
1269| | vIRQ | | execution context of SP through ERET. |
1270+-----------+---------+---------------+---------------------------------------+
1271
1272Secure interrupt completion mechanisms
1273~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1274
1275A SP signals secure interrupt handling completion to the SPMC through the
1276following mechanisms:
1277
1278 - ``FFA_MSG_WAIT`` ABI if it was in WAITING state.
1279 - ``FFA_RUN`` ABI if its was in BLOCKED state.
1280
1281This is a remnant of SPMC implementation based on the FF-A v1.0 specification.
1282In the current implementation, S-EL1 SPs use the para-virtualized HVC interface
1283implemented by SPMC to perform priority drop and interrupt deactivation (SPMC
1284configures EOImode = 0, i.e. priority drop and deactivation are done together).
1285The SPMC performs checks to deny the state transition upon invocation of
1286either FFA_MSG_WAIT or FFA_RUN interface if the SP didn't perform the
1287deactivation of the secure virtual interrupt.
1288
1289If the current SP execution context was preempted by a secure interrupt to be
1290handled by execution context of target SP, SPMC resumes current SP after signal
1291completion by target SP execution context.
1292
1293Actions for a secure interrupt triggered while execution is in normal world
1294~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1295
1296+-------------------+----------+-----------------------------------------------+
1297| State of target | Action | Description |
1298| execution context | | |
1299+-------------------+----------+-----------------------------------------------+
1300| WAITING | Signaled | This starts a new call chain in SPMC scheduled|
1301| | | mode. |
1302+-------------------+----------+-----------------------------------------------+
1303| PREEMPTED | Queued | The target execution must have been preempted |
1304| | | by a non-secure interrupt. SPMC queues the |
1305| | | secure virtual interrupt now. It is signaled |
1306| | | when the target execution context next enters |
1307| | | the RUNNING state. |
1308+-------------------+----------+-----------------------------------------------+
1309| BLOCKED, RUNNING | NA | The target execution context is blocked or |
1310| | | running on a different CPU. This is not |
1311| | | supported by current SPMC implementation and |
1312| | | execution hits panic. |
1313+-------------------+----------+-----------------------------------------------+
1314
1315If normal world execution was preempted by a secure interrupt, SPMC uses
1316FFA_NORMAL_WORLD_RESUME ABI to indicate completion of secure interrupt handling
1317and further returns execution to normal world.
1318
1319The following figure describes interrupt handling flow when a secure interrupt
1320triggers while execution is in normal world:
1321
1322.. image:: ../resources/diagrams/ffa-secure-interrupt-handling-nwd.png
1323
1324A brief description of the events:
1325
1326 - 1) Secure interrupt triggers while normal world is running.
1327 - 2) FIQ gets trapped to EL3.
1328 - 3) SPMD signals secure interrupt to SPMC at S-EL2 using FFA_INTERRUPT ABI.
1329 - 4) SPMC identifies target vCPU of SP and injects virtual interrupt (pends
1330 vIRQ).
1331 - 5) Assuming SP1 vCPU is in WAITING state, SPMC signals virtual interrupt
1332 using FFA_INTERRUPT with interrupt id as an argument and resumes the SP1
1333 vCPU using ERET in SPMC scheduled mode.
1334 - 6) Execution traps to vIRQ handler in SP1 provided that the virtual
1335 interrupt is not masked i.e., PSTATE.I = 0
1336 - 7) SP1 queries for the pending virtual interrupt id using a paravirtualized
1337 HVC call. SPMC clears the pending virtual interrupt state management
1338 and returns the pending virtual interrupt id.
1339 - 8) SP1 services the virtual interrupt and invokes the paravirtualized
1340 de-activation HVC call. SPMC de-activates the physical interrupt,
1341 clears the fields tracking the secure interrupt and resumes SP1 vCPU.
1342 - 9) SP1 performs secure interrupt completion through FFA_MSG_WAIT ABI.
1343 - 10) SPMC returns control to EL3 using FFA_NORMAL_WORLD_RESUME.
1344 - 11) EL3 resumes normal world execution.
1345
1346Actions for a secure interrupt triggered while execution is in secure world
1347~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1348
1349+-------------------+----------+------------------------------------------------+
1350| State of target | Action | Description |
1351| execution context | | |
1352+-------------------+----------+------------------------------------------------+
1353| WAITING | Signaled | This starts a new call chain in SPMC scheduled |
1354| | | mode. |
1355+-------------------+----------+------------------------------------------------+
1356| PREEMPTED by Self | Signaled | The target execution context reenters the |
1357| S-Int | | RUNNING state to handle the secure virtual |
1358| | | interrupt. |
1359+-------------------+----------+------------------------------------------------+
1360| PREEMPTED by | Queued | SPMC queues the secure virtual interrupt now. |
1361| NS-Int | | It is signaled when the target execution |
1362| | | context next enters the RUNNING state. |
1363+-------------------+----------+------------------------------------------------+
1364| BLOCKED | Signaled | Both preempted and target execution contexts |
1365| | | must have been part of the Normal world |
1366| | | scheduled call chain. Refer scenario 1 of |
1367| | | Table 8.4 in the FF-A v1.1 EAC0 spec. |
1368+-------------------+----------+------------------------------------------------+
1369| RUNNING | NA | The target execution context is running on a |
1370| | | different CPU. This scenario is not supported |
1371| | | by current SPMC implementation and execution |
1372| | | hits panic. |
1373+-------------------+----------+------------------------------------------------+
1374
1375The following figure describes interrupt handling flow when a secure interrupt
1376triggers while execution is in secure world. We assume OS kernel sends a direct
1377request message to SP1. Further, SP1 sends a direct request message to SP2. SP1
1378enters BLOCKED state and SPMC resumes SP2.
1379
1380.. image:: ../resources/diagrams/ffa-secure-interrupt-handling-swd.png
1381
1382A brief description of the events:
1383
1384 - 1) Secure interrupt triggers while SP2 is running.
1385 - 2) SP2 gets preempted and execution traps to SPMC as IRQ.
1386 - 3) SPMC finds the target vCPU of secure partition responsible for handling
1387 this secure interrupt. In this scenario, it is SP1.
1388 - 4) SPMC pends vIRQ for SP1 and signals through FFA_INTERRUPT interface.
1389 SPMC further resumes SP1 through ERET conduit. Note that SP1 remains in
1390 Normal world schedule mode.
1391 - 6) Execution traps to vIRQ handler in SP1 provided that the virtual
1392 interrupt is not masked i.e., PSTATE.I = 0
1393 - 7) SP1 queries for the pending virtual interrupt id using a paravirtualized
1394 HVC call. SPMC clears the pending virtual interrupt state management
1395 and returns the pending virtual interrupt id.
1396 - 8) SP1 services the virtual interrupt and invokes the paravirtualized
1397 de-activation HVC call. SPMC de-activates the physical interrupt and
1398 clears the fields tracking the secure interrupt and resumes SP1 vCPU.
1399 - 9) Since SP1 direct request completed with FFA_INTERRUPT, it resumes the
1400 direct request to SP2 by invoking FFA_RUN.
1401 - 9) SPMC resumes the pre-empted vCPU of SP2.
1402
1403EL3 interrupt handling
1404~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1405
1406In GICv3 based systems, EL3 interrupts are configured as Group0 secure
1407interrupts. Execution traps to SPMC when a Group0 interrupt triggers while an
1408SP is running. Further, SPMC running at S-EL2 uses FFA_EL3_INTR_HANDLE ABI to
1409request EL3 platform firmware to handle a pending Group0 interrupt.
1410Similarly, SPMD registers a handler with interrupt management framework to
1411delegate handling of Group0 interrupt to the platform if the interrupt triggers
1412in normal world.
1413
1414 - Platform hook
1415
1416 - plat_spmd_handle_group0_interrupt
1417
1418 SPMD provides platform hook to handle Group0 secure interrupts. In the
1419 current design, SPMD expects the platform not to delegate handling to the
1420 NWd (such as through SDEI) while processing Group0 interrupts.
1421
1422Power management
1423----------------
1424
1425In platforms with or without secure virtualization:
1426
1427- The NWd owns the platform PM policy.
1428- The Hypervisor or OS kernel is the component initiating PSCI service calls.
1429- The EL3 PSCI library is in charge of the PM coordination and control
1430 (eventually writing to platform registers).
1431- While coordinating PM events, the PSCI library calls backs into the Secure
1432 Payload Dispatcher for events the latter has statically registered to.
1433
1434When using the SPMD as a Secure Payload Dispatcher:
1435
1436- A power management event is relayed through the SPD hook to the SPMC.
1437- In the current implementation only cpu on (svc_on_finish) and cpu off
1438 (svc_off) hooks are registered.
1439- The behavior for the cpu on event is described in `Secondary cores boot-up`_.
1440 The SPMC is entered through its secondary physical core entry point.
1441- The cpu off event occurs when the NWd calls PSCI_CPU_OFF. The PM event is
1442 signaled to the SPMC through a power management framework message.
1443 It consists in a SPMD-to-SPMC direct request/response (`SPMC-SPMD direct
1444 requests/responses`_) conveying the event details and SPMC response.
1445 The SPMD performs a synchronous entry into the SPMC. The SPMC is entered and
1446 updates its internal state to reflect the physical core is being turned off.
1447 In the current implementation no SP is resumed as a consequence. This behavior
1448 ensures a minimal support for CPU hotplug e.g. when initiated by the NWd linux
1449 userspace.
1450
1451Arm architecture extensions for security hardening
J-Alves5eafd222023-10-26 14:19:21 +01001452--------------------------------------------------
Olivier Deprezcbf7d5b2023-05-22 12:12:24 +02001453
1454Hafnium supports the following architecture extensions for security hardening:
1455
1456- Pointer authentication (FEAT_PAuth): the extension permits detection of forged
1457 pointers used by ROP type of attacks through the signing of the pointer
1458 value. Hafnium is built with the compiler branch protection option to permit
1459 generation of a pointer authentication code for return addresses (pointer
1460 authentication for instructions). The APIA key is used while Hafnium runs.
1461 A random key is generated at boot time and restored upon entry into Hafnium
1462 at run-time. APIA and other keys (APIB, APDA, APDB, APGA) are saved/restored
1463 in vCPU contexts permitting to enable pointer authentication in VMs/SPs.
1464- Branch Target Identification (FEAT_BTI): the extension permits detection of
1465 unexpected indirect branches used by JOP type of attacks. Hafnium is built
1466 with the compiler branch protection option, inserting land pads at function
1467 prologues that are reached by indirect branch instructions (BR/BLR).
1468 Hafnium code pages are marked as guarded in the EL2 Stage-1 MMU descriptors
1469 such that an indirect branch must always target a landpad. A fault is
1470 triggered otherwise. VMs/SPs can (independently) mark their code pages as
1471 guarded in the EL1&0 Stage-1 translation regime.
1472- Memory Tagging Extension (FEAT_MTE): the option permits detection of out of
1473 bound memory array accesses or re-use of an already freed memory region.
1474 Hafnium enables the compiler option permitting to leverage MTE stack tagging
1475 applied to core stacks. Core stacks are marked as normal tagged memory in the
1476 EL2 Stage-1 translation regime. A synchronous data abort is generated upon tag
1477 check failure on load/stores. A random seed is generated at boot time and
1478 restored upon entry into Hafnium. MTE system registers are saved/restored in
1479 vCPU contexts permitting MTE usage from VMs/SPs.
1480
1481SMMUv3 support in Hafnium
J-Alves5eafd222023-10-26 14:19:21 +01001482-------------------------
Olivier Deprezcbf7d5b2023-05-22 12:12:24 +02001483
1484An SMMU is analogous to an MMU in a CPU. It performs address translations for
1485Direct Memory Access (DMA) requests from system I/O devices.
1486The responsibilities of an SMMU include:
1487
1488- Translation: Incoming DMA requests are translated from bus address space to
1489 system physical address space using translation tables compliant to
1490 Armv8/Armv7 VMSA descriptor format.
1491- Protection: An I/O device can be prohibited from read, write access to a
1492 memory region or allowed.
1493- Isolation: Traffic from each individial device can be independently managed.
1494 The devices are differentiated from each other using unique translation
1495 tables.
1496
1497The following diagram illustrates a typical SMMU IP integrated in a SoC with
1498several I/O devices along with Interconnect and Memory system.
1499
1500.. image:: ../resources/diagrams/MMU-600.png
1501
1502SMMU has several versions including SMMUv1, SMMUv2 and SMMUv3. Hafnium provides
1503support for SMMUv3 driver in both normal and secure world. A brief introduction
1504of SMMUv3 functionality and the corresponding software support in Hafnium is
1505provided here.
1506
1507SMMUv3 features
J-Alves5eafd222023-10-26 14:19:21 +01001508~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Olivier Deprezcbf7d5b2023-05-22 12:12:24 +02001509
1510- SMMUv3 provides Stage1, Stage2 translation as well as nested (Stage1 + Stage2)
1511 translation support. It can either bypass or abort incoming translations as
1512 well.
1513- Traffic (memory transactions) from each upstream I/O peripheral device,
1514 referred to as Stream, can be independently managed using a combination of
1515 several memory based configuration structures. This allows the SMMUv3 to
1516 support a large number of streams with each stream assigned to a unique
1517 translation context.
1518- Support for Armv8.1 VMSA where the SMMU shares the translation tables with
1519 a Processing Element. AArch32(LPAE) and AArch64 translation table format
1520 are supported by SMMUv3.
1521- SMMUv3 offers non-secure stream support with secure stream support being
1522 optional. Logically, SMMUv3 behaves as if there is an indepdendent SMMU
1523 instance for secure and non-secure stream support.
1524- It also supports sub-streams to differentiate traffic from a virtualized
1525 peripheral associated with a VM/SP.
1526- Additionally, SMMUv3.2 provides support for PEs implementing Armv8.4-A
1527 extensions. Consequently, SPM depends on Secure EL2 support in SMMUv3.2
1528 for providing Secure Stage2 translation support to upstream peripheral
1529 devices.
1530
1531SMMUv3 Programming Interfaces
J-Alves5eafd222023-10-26 14:19:21 +01001532~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Olivier Deprezcbf7d5b2023-05-22 12:12:24 +02001533
1534SMMUv3 has three software interfaces that are used by the Hafnium driver to
1535configure the behaviour of SMMUv3 and manage the streams.
1536
1537- Memory based data strutures that provide unique translation context for
1538 each stream.
1539- Memory based circular buffers for command queue and event queue.
1540- A large number of SMMU configuration registers that are memory mapped during
1541 boot time by Hafnium driver. Except a few registers, all configuration
1542 registers have independent secure and non-secure versions to configure the
1543 behaviour of SMMUv3 for translation of secure and non-secure streams
1544 respectively.
1545
1546Peripheral device manifest
J-Alves5eafd222023-10-26 14:19:21 +01001547~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Olivier Deprezcbf7d5b2023-05-22 12:12:24 +02001548
1549Currently, SMMUv3 driver in Hafnium only supports dependent peripheral devices.
Madhukar Pappireddy555f8882023-10-16 13:45:29 -05001550These DMA devices are dependent on PE endpoint to initiate and receive memory
Olivier Deprezcbf7d5b2023-05-22 12:12:24 +02001551management transactions on their behalf. The acccess to the MMIO regions of
Madhukar Pappireddy555f8882023-10-16 13:45:29 -05001552any such device is assigned to the endpoint during boot.
1553The :ref:`device node<device_region_node>` of the corresponding partition
1554manifest must specify these additional properties for each peripheral device in
1555the system:
Olivier Deprezcbf7d5b2023-05-22 12:12:24 +02001556
1557- smmu-id: This field helps to identify the SMMU instance that this device is
1558 upstream of.
1559- stream-ids: List of stream IDs assigned to this device.
1560
1561.. code:: shell
1562
1563 smmuv3-testengine {
1564 base-address = <0x00000000 0x2bfe0000>;
1565 pages-count = <32>;
1566 attributes = <0x3>;
1567 smmu-id = <0>;
1568 stream-ids = <0x0 0x1>;
1569 interrupts = <0x2 0x3>, <0x4 0x5>;
1570 exclusive-access;
1571 };
1572
Madhukar Pappireddy555f8882023-10-16 13:45:29 -05001573DMA isolation
1574-------------
1575
1576Hafnium, with help of SMMUv3 driver, enables the support for static DMA
1577isolation. The DMA device is explicitly granted access to a specific
1578memory region only if the partition requests it by declaring the following
1579properties of the DMA device in the :ref:`memory region node<memory_region_node>`
1580of the partition manifest:
1581
1582- smmu-id
1583- stream-ids
1584- stream-ids-access-permissions
1585
1586SMMUv3 driver uses a unqiue set of stage 2 translations for the DMA device
1587rather than those used on behalf of the PE endpoint. This ensures that the DMA
1588device has a limited visibility of the physical address space.
1589
1590.. code:: shell
1591
1592 smmuv3-memcpy-src {
1593 description = "smmuv3-memcpy-source";
1594 pages-count = <4>;
1595 base-address = <0x00000000 0x7400000>;
1596 attributes = <0x3>; /* read-write */
1597 smmu-id = <0>;
1598 stream-ids = <0x0 0x1>;
1599 stream-ids-access-permissions = <0x3 0x3>;
1600 };
1601
Olivier Deprezcbf7d5b2023-05-22 12:12:24 +02001602SMMUv3 driver limitations
J-Alves5eafd222023-10-26 14:19:21 +01001603~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Olivier Deprezcbf7d5b2023-05-22 12:12:24 +02001604
1605The primary design goal for the Hafnium SMMU driver is to support secure
1606streams.
1607
1608- Currently, the driver only supports Stage2 translations. No support for
1609 Stage1 or nested translations.
1610- Supports only AArch64 translation format.
1611- No support for features such as PCI Express (PASIDs, ATS, PRI), MSI, RAS,
1612 Fault handling, Performance Monitor Extensions, Event Handling, MPAM.
1613- No support for independent peripheral devices.
1614
1615S-EL0 Partition support
J-Alves5eafd222023-10-26 14:19:21 +01001616-----------------------
Olivier Deprezcbf7d5b2023-05-22 12:12:24 +02001617The SPMC (Hafnium) has limited capability to run S-EL0 FF-A partitions using
1618FEAT_VHE (mandatory with ARMv8.1 in non-secure state, and in secure world
1619with ARMv8.4 and FEAT_SEL2).
1620
1621S-EL0 partitions are useful for simple partitions that don't require full
1622Trusted OS functionality. It is also useful to reduce jitter and cycle
1623stealing from normal world since they are more lightweight than VMs.
1624
1625S-EL0 partitions are presented, loaded and initialized the same as S-EL1 VMs by
1626the SPMC. They are differentiated primarily by the 'exception-level' property
1627and the 'execution-ctx-count' property in the SP manifest. They are host apps
1628under the single EL2&0 Stage-1 translation regime controlled by the SPMC and
1629call into the SPMC through SVCs as opposed to HVCs and SMCs. These partitions
1630can use FF-A defined services (FFA_MEM_PERM_*) to update or change permissions
1631for memory regions.
1632
1633S-EL0 partitions are required by the FF-A specification to be UP endpoints,
1634capable of migrating, and the SPMC enforces this requirement. The SPMC allows
1635a S-EL0 partition to accept a direct message from secure world and normal world,
1636and generate direct responses to them.
1637All S-EL0 partitions must use AArch64. AArch32 S-EL0 partitions are not supported.
1638
Olivier Deprezb8bd7d72023-10-27 16:14:13 +02001639Interrupt handling, Memory sharing, indirect messaging, and notifications features
1640in context of S-EL0 partitions are supported.
Olivier Deprezcbf7d5b2023-05-22 12:12:24 +02001641
1642References
1643==========
1644
J-Alves5eafd222023-10-26 14:19:21 +01001645.. _TF-A project: https://trustedfirmware-a.readthedocs.io/en/latest/
1646
Olivier Deprezcbf7d5b2023-05-22 12:12:24 +02001647.. _[1]:
1648
1649[1] `Arm Firmware Framework for Arm A-profile <https://developer.arm.com/docs/den0077/latest>`__
1650
1651.. _[2]:
1652
1653[2] `Secure Partition Manager using MM interface <https://trustedfirmware-a.readthedocs.io/en/latest/components/secure-partition-manager-mm.html>`__
1654
1655.. _[3]:
1656
1657[3] `Trusted Boot Board Requirements
1658Client <https://developer.arm.com/documentation/den0006/d/>`__
1659
1660.. _[4]:
1661
1662[4] https://git.trustedfirmware.org/TF-A/trusted-firmware-a.git/tree/lib/el3_runtime/aarch64/context.S#n45
1663
1664.. _[5]:
1665
1666[5] https://git.trustedfirmware.org/TF-A/tf-a-tests.git/tree/spm/cactus/plat/arm/fvp/fdts/cactus.dts
1667
1668.. _[6]:
1669
1670[6] https://trustedfirmware-a.readthedocs.io/en/latest/components/ffa-manifest-binding.html
1671
1672.. _[7]:
1673
1674[7] https://git.trustedfirmware.org/TF-A/trusted-firmware-a.git/tree/plat/arm/board/fvp/fdts/fvp_spmc_manifest.dts
1675
1676.. _[8]:
1677
1678[8] https://lists.trustedfirmware.org/archives/list/tf-a@lists.trustedfirmware.org/thread/CFQFGU6H2D5GZYMUYGTGUSXIU3OYZP6U/
1679
1680.. _[9]:
1681
1682[9] https://trustedfirmware-a.readthedocs.io/en/latest/design/firmware-design.html#dynamic-configuration-during-cold-boot
1683
J-Alvesd8094162023-10-26 12:44:33 +01001684.. _[10]:
1685
1686[10] https://trustedfirmware-a.readthedocs.io/en/latest/getting_started/build-options.html#
1687
Olivier Deprezcbf7d5b2023-05-22 12:12:24 +02001688--------------
1689
1690*Copyright (c) 2020-2023, Arm Limited and Contributors. All rights reserved.*