Merge changes from topic "jts/docs" into integration
[project/bcm63xx/atf.git] / docs / getting_started / user-guide.rst
1 User Guide
2 ==========
3
4 This document describes how to build Trusted Firmware-A (TF-A) and run it with a
5 tested set of other software components using defined configurations on the Juno
6 Arm development platform and Arm Fixed Virtual Platform (FVP) models. It is
7 possible to use other software components, configurations and platforms but that
8 is outside the scope of this document.
9
10 This document assumes that the reader has previous experience running a fully
11 bootable Linux software stack on Juno or FVP using the prebuilt binaries and
12 filesystems provided by `Linaro`_. Further information may be found in the
13 `Linaro instructions`_. It also assumes that the user understands the role of
14 the different software components required to boot a Linux system:
15
16 - Specific firmware images required by the platform (e.g. SCP firmware on Juno)
17 - Normal world bootloader (e.g. UEFI or U-Boot)
18 - Device tree
19 - Linux kernel image
20 - Root filesystem
21
22 This document also assumes that the user is familiar with the `FVP models`_ and
23 the different command line options available to launch the model.
24
25 This document should be used in conjunction with the `Firmware Design`_.
26
27 Host machine requirements
28 -------------------------
29
30 The minimum recommended machine specification for building the software and
31 running the FVP models is a dual-core processor running at 2GHz with 12GB of
32 RAM. For best performance, use a machine with a quad-core processor running at
33 2.6GHz with 16GB of RAM.
34
35 The software has been tested on Ubuntu 16.04 LTS (64-bit). Packages used for
36 building the software were installed from that distribution unless otherwise
37 specified.
38
39 The software has also been built on Windows 7 Enterprise SP1, using CMD.EXE,
40 Cygwin, and Msys (MinGW) shells, using version 5.3.1 of the GNU toolchain.
41
42 Tools
43 -----
44
45 Install the required packages to build TF-A with the following command:
46
47 .. code:: shell
48
49 sudo apt-get install device-tree-compiler build-essential gcc make git libssl-dev
50
51 TF-A has been tested with Linaro Release 18.04.
52
53 Download and install the AArch32 or AArch64 little-endian GCC cross compiler. If
54 you would like to use the latest features available, download GCC 8.2-2019.01
55 compiler from `arm Developer page`_. Otherwise, the `Linaro Release Notes`_
56 documents which version of the compiler to use for a given Linaro Release. Also,
57 these `Linaro instructions`_ provide further guidance and a script, which can be
58 used to download Linaro deliverables automatically.
59
60 Optionally, TF-A can be built using clang version 4.0 or newer or Arm
61 Compiler 6. See instructions below on how to switch the default compiler.
62
63 In addition, the following optional packages and tools may be needed:
64
65 - ``device-tree-compiler`` (dtc) package if you need to rebuild the Flattened Device
66 Tree (FDT) source files (``.dts`` files) provided with this software. The
67 version of dtc must be 1.4.6 or above.
68
69 - For debugging, Arm `Development Studio 5 (DS-5)`_.
70
71 - To create and modify the diagram files included in the documentation, `Dia`_.
72 This tool can be found in most Linux distributions. Inkscape is needed to
73 generate the actual \*.png files.
74
75 Getting the TF-A source code
76 ----------------------------
77
78 Clone the repository from the Gerrit server. The project details may be found
79 on the `arm-trusted-firmware-a project page`_. We recommend the "`Clone with
80 commit-msg hook`" clone method, which will setup the git commit hook that
81 automatically generates and inserts appropriate `Change-Id:` lines in your
82 commit messages.
83
84 Checking source code style
85 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
86
87 Trusted Firmware follows the `Linux Coding Style`_ . When making changes to the
88 source, for submission to the project, the source must be in compliance with
89 this style guide.
90
91 Additional, project-specific guidelines are defined in the `Trusted Firmware-A
92 Coding Guidelines`_ document.
93
94 To assist with coding style compliance, the project Makefile contains two
95 targets which both utilise the `checkpatch.pl` script that ships with the Linux
96 source tree. The project also defines certain *checkpatch* options in the
97 ``.checkpatch.conf`` file in the top-level directory.
98
99 .. note::
100 Checkpatch errors will gate upstream merging of pull requests.
101 Checkpatch warnings will not gate merging but should be reviewed and fixed if
102 possible.
103
104 To check the entire source tree, you must first download copies of
105 ``checkpatch.pl``, ``spelling.txt`` and ``const_structs.checkpatch`` available
106 in the `Linux master tree`_ *scripts* directory, then set the ``CHECKPATCH``
107 environment variable to point to ``checkpatch.pl`` (with the other 2 files in
108 the same directory) and build the `checkcodebase` target:
109
110 .. code:: shell
111
112 make CHECKPATCH=<path-to-linux>/linux/scripts/checkpatch.pl checkcodebase
113
114 To just check the style on the files that differ between your local branch and
115 the remote master, use:
116
117 .. code:: shell
118
119 make CHECKPATCH=<path-to-linux>/linux/scripts/checkpatch.pl checkpatch
120
121 If you wish to check your patch against something other than the remote master,
122 set the ``BASE_COMMIT`` variable to your desired branch. By default, ``BASE_COMMIT``
123 is set to ``origin/master``.
124
125 Building TF-A
126 -------------
127
128 - Before building TF-A, the environment variable ``CROSS_COMPILE`` must point
129 to the Linaro cross compiler.
130
131 For AArch64:
132
133 .. code:: shell
134
135 export CROSS_COMPILE=<path-to-aarch64-gcc>/bin/aarch64-linux-gnu-
136
137 For AArch32:
138
139 .. code:: shell
140
141 export CROSS_COMPILE=<path-to-aarch32-gcc>/bin/arm-linux-gnueabihf-
142
143 It is possible to build TF-A using Clang or Arm Compiler 6. To do so
144 ``CC`` needs to point to the clang or armclang binary, which will
145 also select the clang or armclang assembler. Be aware that the
146 GNU linker is used by default. In case of being needed the linker
147 can be overridden using the ``LD`` variable. Clang linker version 6 is
148 known to work with TF-A.
149
150 In both cases ``CROSS_COMPILE`` should be set as described above.
151
152 Arm Compiler 6 will be selected when the base name of the path assigned
153 to ``CC`` matches the string 'armclang'.
154
155 For AArch64 using Arm Compiler 6:
156
157 .. code:: shell
158
159 export CROSS_COMPILE=<path-to-aarch64-gcc>/bin/aarch64-linux-gnu-
160 make CC=<path-to-armclang>/bin/armclang PLAT=<platform> all
161
162 Clang will be selected when the base name of the path assigned to ``CC``
163 contains the string 'clang'. This is to allow both clang and clang-X.Y
164 to work.
165
166 For AArch64 using clang:
167
168 .. code:: shell
169
170 export CROSS_COMPILE=<path-to-aarch64-gcc>/bin/aarch64-linux-gnu-
171 make CC=<path-to-clang>/bin/clang PLAT=<platform> all
172
173 - Change to the root directory of the TF-A source tree and build.
174
175 For AArch64:
176
177 .. code:: shell
178
179 make PLAT=<platform> all
180
181 For AArch32:
182
183 .. code:: shell
184
185 make PLAT=<platform> ARCH=aarch32 AARCH32_SP=sp_min all
186
187 Notes:
188
189 - If ``PLAT`` is not specified, ``fvp`` is assumed by default. See the
190 `Summary of build options`_ for more information on available build
191 options.
192
193 - (AArch32 only) Currently only ``PLAT=fvp`` is supported.
194
195 - (AArch32 only) ``AARCH32_SP`` is the AArch32 EL3 Runtime Software and it
196 corresponds to the BL32 image. A minimal ``AARCH32_SP``, sp_min, is
197 provided by TF-A to demonstrate how PSCI Library can be integrated with
198 an AArch32 EL3 Runtime Software. Some AArch32 EL3 Runtime Software may
199 include other runtime services, for example Trusted OS services. A guide
200 to integrate PSCI library with AArch32 EL3 Runtime Software can be found
201 `here`_.
202
203 - (AArch64 only) The TSP (Test Secure Payload), corresponding to the BL32
204 image, is not compiled in by default. Refer to the
205 `Building the Test Secure Payload`_ section below.
206
207 - By default this produces a release version of the build. To produce a
208 debug version instead, refer to the "Debugging options" section below.
209
210 - The build process creates products in a ``build`` directory tree, building
211 the objects and binaries for each boot loader stage in separate
212 sub-directories. The following boot loader binary files are created
213 from the corresponding ELF files:
214
215 - ``build/<platform>/<build-type>/bl1.bin``
216 - ``build/<platform>/<build-type>/bl2.bin``
217 - ``build/<platform>/<build-type>/bl31.bin`` (AArch64 only)
218 - ``build/<platform>/<build-type>/bl32.bin`` (mandatory for AArch32)
219
220 where ``<platform>`` is the name of the chosen platform and ``<build-type>``
221 is either ``debug`` or ``release``. The actual number of images might differ
222 depending on the platform.
223
224 - Build products for a specific build variant can be removed using:
225
226 .. code:: shell
227
228 make DEBUG=<D> PLAT=<platform> clean
229
230 ... where ``<D>`` is ``0`` or ``1``, as specified when building.
231
232 The build tree can be removed completely using:
233
234 .. code:: shell
235
236 make realclean
237
238 Summary of build options
239 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
240
241 The TF-A build system supports the following build options. Unless mentioned
242 otherwise, these options are expected to be specified at the build command
243 line and are not to be modified in any component makefiles. Note that the
244 build system doesn't track dependency for build options. Therefore, if any of
245 the build options are changed from a previous build, a clean build must be
246 performed.
247
248 Common build options
249 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
250
251 - ``AARCH32_INSTRUCTION_SET``: Choose the AArch32 instruction set that the
252 compiler should use. Valid values are T32 and A32. It defaults to T32 due to
253 code having a smaller resulting size.
254
255 - ``AARCH32_SP`` : Choose the AArch32 Secure Payload component to be built as
256 as the BL32 image when ``ARCH=aarch32``. The value should be the path to the
257 directory containing the SP source, relative to the ``bl32/``; the directory
258 is expected to contain a makefile called ``<aarch32_sp-value>.mk``.
259
260 - ``ARCH`` : Choose the target build architecture for TF-A. It can take either
261 ``aarch64`` or ``aarch32`` as values. By default, it is defined to
262 ``aarch64``.
263
264 - ``ARM_ARCH_MAJOR``: The major version of Arm Architecture to target when
265 compiling TF-A. Its value must be numeric, and defaults to 8 . See also,
266 *Armv8 Architecture Extensions* and *Armv7 Architecture Extensions* in
267 `Firmware Design`_.
268
269 - ``ARM_ARCH_MINOR``: The minor version of Arm Architecture to target when
270 compiling TF-A. Its value must be a numeric, and defaults to 0. See also,
271 *Armv8 Architecture Extensions* in `Firmware Design`_.
272
273 - ``BL2``: This is an optional build option which specifies the path to BL2
274 image for the ``fip`` target. In this case, the BL2 in the TF-A will not be
275 built.
276
277 - ``BL2U``: This is an optional build option which specifies the path to
278 BL2U image. In this case, the BL2U in TF-A will not be built.
279
280 - ``BL2_AT_EL3``: This is an optional build option that enables the use of
281 BL2 at EL3 execution level.
282
283 - ``BL2_IN_XIP_MEM``: In some use-cases BL2 will be stored in eXecute In Place
284 (XIP) memory, like BL1. In these use-cases, it is necessary to initialize
285 the RW sections in RAM, while leaving the RO sections in place. This option
286 enable this use-case. For now, this option is only supported when BL2_AT_EL3
287 is set to '1'.
288
289 - ``BL31``: This is an optional build option which specifies the path to
290 BL31 image for the ``fip`` target. In this case, the BL31 in TF-A will not
291 be built.
292
293 - ``BL31_KEY``: This option is used when ``GENERATE_COT=1``. It specifies the
294 file that contains the BL31 private key in PEM format. If ``SAVE_KEYS=1``,
295 this file name will be used to save the key.
296
297 - ``BL32``: This is an optional build option which specifies the path to
298 BL32 image for the ``fip`` target. In this case, the BL32 in TF-A will not
299 be built.
300
301 - ``BL32_EXTRA1``: This is an optional build option which specifies the path to
302 Trusted OS Extra1 image for the ``fip`` target.
303
304 - ``BL32_EXTRA2``: This is an optional build option which specifies the path to
305 Trusted OS Extra2 image for the ``fip`` target.
306
307 - ``BL32_KEY``: This option is used when ``GENERATE_COT=1``. It specifies the
308 file that contains the BL32 private key in PEM format. If ``SAVE_KEYS=1``,
309 this file name will be used to save the key.
310
311 - ``BL33``: Path to BL33 image in the host file system. This is mandatory for
312 ``fip`` target in case TF-A BL2 is used.
313
314 - ``BL33_KEY``: This option is used when ``GENERATE_COT=1``. It specifies the
315 file that contains the BL33 private key in PEM format. If ``SAVE_KEYS=1``,
316 this file name will be used to save the key.
317
318 - ``BRANCH_PROTECTION``: Numeric value to enable ARMv8.3 Pointer Authentication
319 and ARMv8.5 Branch Target Identification support for TF-A BL images themselves.
320 If enabled, it is needed to use a compiler that supports the option
321 ``-mbranch-protection``. Selects the branch protection features to use:
322 - 0: Default value turns off all types of branch protection
323 - 1: Enables all types of branch protection features
324 - 2: Return address signing to its standard level
325 - 3: Extend the signing to include leaf functions
326
327 The table below summarizes ``BRANCH_PROTECTION`` values, GCC compilation options
328 and resulting PAuth/BTI features.
329
330 +-------+--------------+-------+-----+
331 | Value | GCC option | PAuth | BTI |
332 +=======+==============+=======+=====+
333 | 0 | none | N | N |
334 +-------+--------------+-------+-----+
335 | 1 | standard | Y | Y |
336 +-------+--------------+-------+-----+
337 | 2 | pac-ret | Y | N |
338 +-------+--------------+-------+-----+
339 | 3 | pac-ret+leaf | Y | N |
340 +-------+--------------+-------+-----+
341
342 This option defaults to 0 and this is an experimental feature.
343 Note that Pointer Authentication is enabled for Non-secure world
344 irrespective of the value of this option if the CPU supports it.
345
346 - ``BUILD_MESSAGE_TIMESTAMP``: String used to identify the time and date of the
347 compilation of each build. It must be set to a C string (including quotes
348 where applicable). Defaults to a string that contains the time and date of
349 the compilation.
350
351 - ``BUILD_STRING``: Input string for VERSION_STRING, which allows the TF-A
352 build to be uniquely identified. Defaults to the current git commit id.
353
354 - ``CFLAGS``: Extra user options appended on the compiler's command line in
355 addition to the options set by the build system.
356
357 - ``COLD_BOOT_SINGLE_CPU``: This option indicates whether the platform may
358 release several CPUs out of reset. It can take either 0 (several CPUs may be
359 brought up) or 1 (only one CPU will ever be brought up during cold reset).
360 Default is 0. If the platform always brings up a single CPU, there is no
361 need to distinguish between primary and secondary CPUs and the boot path can
362 be optimised. The ``plat_is_my_cpu_primary()`` and
363 ``plat_secondary_cold_boot_setup()`` platform porting interfaces do not need
364 to be implemented in this case.
365
366 - ``CRASH_REPORTING``: A non-zero value enables a console dump of processor
367 register state when an unexpected exception occurs during execution of
368 BL31. This option defaults to the value of ``DEBUG`` - i.e. by default
369 this is only enabled for a debug build of the firmware.
370
371 - ``CREATE_KEYS``: This option is used when ``GENERATE_COT=1``. It tells the
372 certificate generation tool to create new keys in case no valid keys are
373 present or specified. Allowed options are '0' or '1'. Default is '1'.
374
375 - ``CTX_INCLUDE_AARCH32_REGS`` : Boolean option that, when set to 1, will cause
376 the AArch32 system registers to be included when saving and restoring the
377 CPU context. The option must be set to 0 for AArch64-only platforms (that
378 is on hardware that does not implement AArch32, or at least not at EL1 and
379 higher ELs). Default value is 1.
380
381 - ``CTX_INCLUDE_FPREGS``: Boolean option that, when set to 1, will cause the FP
382 registers to be included when saving and restoring the CPU context. Default
383 is 0.
384
385 - ``CTX_INCLUDE_PAUTH_REGS``: Boolean option that, when set to 1, enables
386 Pointer Authentication for Secure world. This will cause the ARMv8.3-PAuth
387 registers to be included when saving and restoring the CPU context as
388 part of world switch. Default value is 0 and this is an experimental feature.
389 Note that Pointer Authentication is enabled for Non-secure world irrespective
390 of the value of this flag if the CPU supports it.
391
392 - ``DEBUG``: Chooses between a debug and release build. It can take either 0
393 (release) or 1 (debug) as values. 0 is the default.
394
395 - ``DISABLE_BIN_GENERATION``: Boolean option to disable the generation
396 of the binary image. If set to 1, then only the ELF image is built.
397 0 is the default.
398
399 - ``DYN_DISABLE_AUTH``: Provides the capability to dynamically disable Trusted
400 Board Boot authentication at runtime. This option is meant to be enabled only
401 for development platforms. ``TRUSTED_BOARD_BOOT`` flag must be set if this
402 flag has to be enabled. 0 is the default.
403
404 - ``EL3_PAYLOAD_BASE``: This option enables booting an EL3 payload instead of
405 the normal boot flow. It must specify the entry point address of the EL3
406 payload. Please refer to the "Booting an EL3 payload" section for more
407 details.
408
409 - ``ENABLE_AMU``: Boolean option to enable Activity Monitor Unit extensions.
410 This is an optional architectural feature available on v8.4 onwards. Some
411 v8.2 implementations also implement an AMU and this option can be used to
412 enable this feature on those systems as well. Default is 0.
413
414 - ``ENABLE_ASSERTIONS``: This option controls whether or not calls to ``assert()``
415 are compiled out. For debug builds, this option defaults to 1, and calls to
416 ``assert()`` are left in place. For release builds, this option defaults to 0
417 and calls to ``assert()`` function are compiled out. This option can be set
418 independently of ``DEBUG``. It can also be used to hide any auxiliary code
419 that is only required for the assertion and does not fit in the assertion
420 itself.
421
422 - ``ENABLE_BACKTRACE``: This option controls whether to enables backtrace
423 dumps or not. It is supported in both AArch64 and AArch32. However, in
424 AArch32 the format of the frame records are not defined in the AAPCS and they
425 are defined by the implementation. This implementation of backtrace only
426 supports the format used by GCC when T32 interworking is disabled. For this
427 reason enabling this option in AArch32 will force the compiler to only
428 generate A32 code. This option is enabled by default only in AArch64 debug
429 builds, but this behaviour can be overridden in each platform's Makefile or
430 in the build command line.
431
432 - ``ENABLE_MPAM_FOR_LOWER_ELS``: Boolean option to enable lower ELs to use MPAM
433 feature. MPAM is an optional Armv8.4 extension that enables various memory
434 system components and resources to define partitions; software running at
435 various ELs can assign themselves to desired partition to control their
436 performance aspects.
437
438 When this option is set to ``1``, EL3 allows lower ELs to access their own
439 MPAM registers without trapping into EL3. This option doesn't make use of
440 partitioning in EL3, however. Platform initialisation code should configure
441 and use partitions in EL3 as required. This option defaults to ``0``.
442
443 - ``ENABLE_PIE``: Boolean option to enable Position Independent Executable(PIE)
444 support within generic code in TF-A. This option is currently only supported
445 in BL31. Default is 0.
446
447 - ``ENABLE_PMF``: Boolean option to enable support for optional Performance
448 Measurement Framework(PMF). Default is 0.
449
450 - ``ENABLE_PSCI_STAT``: Boolean option to enable support for optional PSCI
451 functions ``PSCI_STAT_RESIDENCY`` and ``PSCI_STAT_COUNT``. Default is 0.
452 In the absence of an alternate stat collection backend, ``ENABLE_PMF`` must
453 be enabled. If ``ENABLE_PMF`` is set, the residency statistics are tracked in
454 software.
455
456 - ``ENABLE_RUNTIME_INSTRUMENTATION``: Boolean option to enable runtime
457 instrumentation which injects timestamp collection points into TF-A to
458 allow runtime performance to be measured. Currently, only PSCI is
459 instrumented. Enabling this option enables the ``ENABLE_PMF`` build option
460 as well. Default is 0.
461
462 - ``ENABLE_SPE_FOR_LOWER_ELS`` : Boolean option to enable Statistical Profiling
463 extensions. This is an optional architectural feature for AArch64.
464 The default is 1 but is automatically disabled when the target architecture
465 is AArch32.
466
467 - ``ENABLE_SPM`` : Boolean option to enable the Secure Partition Manager (SPM).
468 Refer to the `Secure Partition Manager Design guide`_ for more details about
469 this feature. Default is 0.
470
471 - ``ENABLE_SVE_FOR_NS``: Boolean option to enable Scalable Vector Extension
472 (SVE) for the Non-secure world only. SVE is an optional architectural feature
473 for AArch64. Note that when SVE is enabled for the Non-secure world, access
474 to SIMD and floating-point functionality from the Secure world is disabled.
475 This is to avoid corruption of the Non-secure world data in the Z-registers
476 which are aliased by the SIMD and FP registers. The build option is not
477 compatible with the ``CTX_INCLUDE_FPREGS`` build option, and will raise an
478 assert on platforms where SVE is implemented and ``ENABLE_SVE_FOR_NS`` set to
479 1. The default is 1 but is automatically disabled when the target
480 architecture is AArch32.
481
482 - ``ENABLE_STACK_PROTECTOR``: String option to enable the stack protection
483 checks in GCC. Allowed values are "all", "strong", "default" and "none". The
484 default value is set to "none". "strong" is the recommended stack protection
485 level if this feature is desired. "none" disables the stack protection. For
486 all values other than "none", the ``plat_get_stack_protector_canary()``
487 platform hook needs to be implemented. The value is passed as the last
488 component of the option ``-fstack-protector-$ENABLE_STACK_PROTECTOR``.
489
490 - ``ERROR_DEPRECATED``: This option decides whether to treat the usage of
491 deprecated platform APIs, helper functions or drivers within Trusted
492 Firmware as error. It can take the value 1 (flag the use of deprecated
493 APIs as error) or 0. The default is 0.
494
495 - ``EL3_EXCEPTION_HANDLING``: When set to ``1``, enable handling of exceptions
496 targeted at EL3. When set ``0`` (default), no exceptions are expected or
497 handled at EL3, and a panic will result. This is supported only for AArch64
498 builds.
499
500 - ``FAULT_INJECTION_SUPPORT``: ARMv8.4 extensions introduced support for fault
501 injection from lower ELs, and this build option enables lower ELs to use
502 Error Records accessed via System Registers to inject faults. This is
503 applicable only to AArch64 builds.
504
505 This feature is intended for testing purposes only, and is advisable to keep
506 disabled for production images.
507
508 - ``FIP_NAME``: This is an optional build option which specifies the FIP
509 filename for the ``fip`` target. Default is ``fip.bin``.
510
511 - ``FWU_FIP_NAME``: This is an optional build option which specifies the FWU
512 FIP filename for the ``fwu_fip`` target. Default is ``fwu_fip.bin``.
513
514 - ``GENERATE_COT``: Boolean flag used to build and execute the ``cert_create``
515 tool to create certificates as per the Chain of Trust described in
516 `Trusted Board Boot`_. The build system then calls ``fiptool`` to
517 include the certificates in the FIP and FWU_FIP. Default value is '0'.
518
519 Specify both ``TRUSTED_BOARD_BOOT=1`` and ``GENERATE_COT=1`` to include support
520 for the Trusted Board Boot feature in the BL1 and BL2 images, to generate
521 the corresponding certificates, and to include those certificates in the
522 FIP and FWU_FIP.
523
524 Note that if ``TRUSTED_BOARD_BOOT=0`` and ``GENERATE_COT=1``, the BL1 and BL2
525 images will not include support for Trusted Board Boot. The FIP will still
526 include the corresponding certificates. This FIP can be used to verify the
527 Chain of Trust on the host machine through other mechanisms.
528
529 Note that if ``TRUSTED_BOARD_BOOT=1`` and ``GENERATE_COT=0``, the BL1 and BL2
530 images will include support for Trusted Board Boot, but the FIP and FWU_FIP
531 will not include the corresponding certificates, causing a boot failure.
532
533 - ``GICV2_G0_FOR_EL3``: Unlike GICv3, the GICv2 architecture doesn't have
534 inherent support for specific EL3 type interrupts. Setting this build option
535 to ``1`` assumes GICv2 *Group 0* interrupts are expected to target EL3, both
536 by `platform abstraction layer`__ and `Interrupt Management Framework`__.
537 This allows GICv2 platforms to enable features requiring EL3 interrupt type.
538 This also means that all GICv2 Group 0 interrupts are delivered to EL3, and
539 the Secure Payload interrupts needs to be synchronously handed over to Secure
540 EL1 for handling. The default value of this option is ``0``, which means the
541 Group 0 interrupts are assumed to be handled by Secure EL1.
542
543 .. __: `platform-interrupt-controller-API.rst`
544 .. __: `interrupt-framework-design.rst`
545
546 - ``HANDLE_EA_EL3_FIRST``: When set to ``1``, External Aborts and SError
547 Interrupts will be always trapped in EL3 i.e. in BL31 at runtime. When set to
548 ``0`` (default), these exceptions will be trapped in the current exception
549 level (or in EL1 if the current exception level is EL0).
550
551 - ``HW_ASSISTED_COHERENCY``: On most Arm systems to-date, platform-specific
552 software operations are required for CPUs to enter and exit coherency.
553 However, newer systems exist where CPUs' entry to and exit from coherency
554 is managed in hardware. Such systems require software to only initiate these
555 operations, and the rest is managed in hardware, minimizing active software
556 management. In such systems, this boolean option enables TF-A to carry out
557 build and run-time optimizations during boot and power management operations.
558 This option defaults to 0 and if it is enabled, then it implies
559 ``WARMBOOT_ENABLE_DCACHE_EARLY`` is also enabled.
560
561 If this flag is disabled while the platform which TF-A is compiled for
562 includes cores that manage coherency in hardware, then a compilation error is
563 generated. This is based on the fact that a system cannot have, at the same
564 time, cores that manage coherency in hardware and cores that don't. In other
565 words, a platform cannot have, at the same time, cores that require
566 ``HW_ASSISTED_COHERENCY=1`` and cores that require
567 ``HW_ASSISTED_COHERENCY=0``.
568
569 Note that, when ``HW_ASSISTED_COHERENCY`` is enabled, version 2 of
570 translation library (xlat tables v2) must be used; version 1 of translation
571 library is not supported.
572
573 - ``JUNO_AARCH32_EL3_RUNTIME``: This build flag enables you to execute EL3
574 runtime software in AArch32 mode, which is required to run AArch32 on Juno.
575 By default this flag is set to '0'. Enabling this flag builds BL1 and BL2 in
576 AArch64 and facilitates the loading of ``SP_MIN`` and BL33 as AArch32 executable
577 images.
578
579 - ``KEY_ALG``: This build flag enables the user to select the algorithm to be
580 used for generating the PKCS keys and subsequent signing of the certificate.
581 It accepts 3 values: ``rsa``, ``rsa_1_5`` and ``ecdsa``. The option
582 ``rsa_1_5`` is the legacy PKCS#1 RSA 1.5 algorithm which is not TBBR
583 compliant and is retained only for compatibility. The default value of this
584 flag is ``rsa`` which is the TBBR compliant PKCS#1 RSA 2.1 scheme.
585
586 - ``HASH_ALG``: This build flag enables the user to select the secure hash
587 algorithm. It accepts 3 values: ``sha256``, ``sha384`` and ``sha512``.
588 The default value of this flag is ``sha256``.
589
590 - ``LDFLAGS``: Extra user options appended to the linkers' command line in
591 addition to the one set by the build system.
592
593 - ``LOG_LEVEL``: Chooses the log level, which controls the amount of console log
594 output compiled into the build. This should be one of the following:
595
596 ::
597
598 0 (LOG_LEVEL_NONE)
599 10 (LOG_LEVEL_ERROR)
600 20 (LOG_LEVEL_NOTICE)
601 30 (LOG_LEVEL_WARNING)
602 40 (LOG_LEVEL_INFO)
603 50 (LOG_LEVEL_VERBOSE)
604
605 All log output up to and including the selected log level is compiled into
606 the build. The default value is 40 in debug builds and 20 in release builds.
607
608 - ``NON_TRUSTED_WORLD_KEY``: This option is used when ``GENERATE_COT=1``. It
609 specifies the file that contains the Non-Trusted World private key in PEM
610 format. If ``SAVE_KEYS=1``, this file name will be used to save the key.
611
612 - ``NS_BL2U``: Path to NS_BL2U image in the host file system. This image is
613 optional. It is only needed if the platform makefile specifies that it
614 is required in order to build the ``fwu_fip`` target.
615
616 - ``NS_TIMER_SWITCH``: Enable save and restore for non-secure timer register
617 contents upon world switch. It can take either 0 (don't save and restore) or
618 1 (do save and restore). 0 is the default. An SPD may set this to 1 if it
619 wants the timer registers to be saved and restored.
620
621 - ``OVERRIDE_LIBC``: This option allows platforms to override the default libc
622 for the BL image. It can be either 0 (include) or 1 (remove). The default
623 value is 0.
624
625 - ``PL011_GENERIC_UART``: Boolean option to indicate the PL011 driver that
626 the underlying hardware is not a full PL011 UART but a minimally compliant
627 generic UART, which is a subset of the PL011. The driver will not access
628 any register that is not part of the SBSA generic UART specification.
629 Default value is 0 (a full PL011 compliant UART is present).
630
631 - ``PLAT``: Choose a platform to build TF-A for. The chosen platform name
632 must be subdirectory of any depth under ``plat/``, and must contain a
633 platform makefile named ``platform.mk``. For example, to build TF-A for the
634 Arm Juno board, select PLAT=juno.
635
636 - ``PRELOADED_BL33_BASE``: This option enables booting a preloaded BL33 image
637 instead of the normal boot flow. When defined, it must specify the entry
638 point address for the preloaded BL33 image. This option is incompatible with
639 ``EL3_PAYLOAD_BASE``. If both are defined, ``EL3_PAYLOAD_BASE`` has priority
640 over ``PRELOADED_BL33_BASE``.
641
642 - ``PROGRAMMABLE_RESET_ADDRESS``: This option indicates whether the reset
643 vector address can be programmed or is fixed on the platform. It can take
644 either 0 (fixed) or 1 (programmable). Default is 0. If the platform has a
645 programmable reset address, it is expected that a CPU will start executing
646 code directly at the right address, both on a cold and warm reset. In this
647 case, there is no need to identify the entrypoint on boot and the boot path
648 can be optimised. The ``plat_get_my_entrypoint()`` platform porting interface
649 does not need to be implemented in this case.
650
651 - ``PSCI_EXTENDED_STATE_ID``: As per PSCI1.0 Specification, there are 2 formats
652 possible for the PSCI power-state parameter: original and extended State-ID
653 formats. This flag if set to 1, configures the generic PSCI layer to use the
654 extended format. The default value of this flag is 0, which means by default
655 the original power-state format is used by the PSCI implementation. This flag
656 should be specified by the platform makefile and it governs the return value
657 of PSCI_FEATURES API for CPU_SUSPEND smc function id. When this option is
658 enabled on Arm platforms, the option ``ARM_RECOM_STATE_ID_ENC`` needs to be
659 set to 1 as well.
660
661 - ``RAS_EXTENSION``: When set to ``1``, enable Armv8.2 RAS features. RAS features
662 are an optional extension for pre-Armv8.2 CPUs, but are mandatory for Armv8.2
663 or later CPUs.
664
665 When ``RAS_EXTENSION`` is set to ``1``, ``HANDLE_EA_EL3_FIRST`` must also be
666 set to ``1``.
667
668 This option is disabled by default.
669
670 - ``RESET_TO_BL31``: Enable BL31 entrypoint as the CPU reset vector instead
671 of the BL1 entrypoint. It can take the value 0 (CPU reset to BL1
672 entrypoint) or 1 (CPU reset to BL31 entrypoint).
673 The default value is 0.
674
675 - ``RESET_TO_SP_MIN``: SP_MIN is the minimal AArch32 Secure Payload provided
676 in TF-A. This flag configures SP_MIN entrypoint as the CPU reset vector
677 instead of the BL1 entrypoint. It can take the value 0 (CPU reset to BL1
678 entrypoint) or 1 (CPU reset to SP_MIN entrypoint). The default value is 0.
679
680 - ``ROT_KEY``: This option is used when ``GENERATE_COT=1``. It specifies the
681 file that contains the ROT private key in PEM format. If ``SAVE_KEYS=1``, this
682 file name will be used to save the key.
683
684 - ``SAVE_KEYS``: This option is used when ``GENERATE_COT=1``. It tells the
685 certificate generation tool to save the keys used to establish the Chain of
686 Trust. Allowed options are '0' or '1'. Default is '0' (do not save).
687
688 - ``SCP_BL2``: Path to SCP_BL2 image in the host file system. This image is optional.
689 If a SCP_BL2 image is present then this option must be passed for the ``fip``
690 target.
691
692 - ``SCP_BL2_KEY``: This option is used when ``GENERATE_COT=1``. It specifies the
693 file that contains the SCP_BL2 private key in PEM format. If ``SAVE_KEYS=1``,
694 this file name will be used to save the key.
695
696 - ``SCP_BL2U``: Path to SCP_BL2U image in the host file system. This image is
697 optional. It is only needed if the platform makefile specifies that it
698 is required in order to build the ``fwu_fip`` target.
699
700 - ``SDEI_SUPPORT``: Setting this to ``1`` enables support for Software
701 Delegated Exception Interface to BL31 image. This defaults to ``0``.
702
703 When set to ``1``, the build option ``EL3_EXCEPTION_HANDLING`` must also be
704 set to ``1``.
705
706 - ``SEPARATE_CODE_AND_RODATA``: Whether code and read-only data should be
707 isolated on separate memory pages. This is a trade-off between security and
708 memory usage. See "Isolating code and read-only data on separate memory
709 pages" section in `Firmware Design`_. This flag is disabled by default and
710 affects all BL images.
711
712 - ``SPD``: Choose a Secure Payload Dispatcher component to be built into TF-A.
713 This build option is only valid if ``ARCH=aarch64``. The value should be
714 the path to the directory containing the SPD source, relative to
715 ``services/spd/``; the directory is expected to contain a makefile called
716 ``<spd-value>.mk``.
717
718 - ``SPIN_ON_BL1_EXIT``: This option introduces an infinite loop in BL1. It can
719 take either 0 (no loop) or 1 (add a loop). 0 is the default. This loop stops
720 execution in BL1 just before handing over to BL31. At this point, all
721 firmware images have been loaded in memory, and the MMU and caches are
722 turned off. Refer to the "Debugging options" section for more details.
723
724 - ``SP_MIN_WITH_SECURE_FIQ``: Boolean flag to indicate the SP_MIN handles
725 secure interrupts (caught through the FIQ line). Platforms can enable
726 this directive if they need to handle such interruption. When enabled,
727 the FIQ are handled in monitor mode and non secure world is not allowed
728 to mask these events. Platforms that enable FIQ handling in SP_MIN shall
729 implement the api ``sp_min_plat_fiq_handler()``. The default value is 0.
730
731 - ``TRUSTED_BOARD_BOOT``: Boolean flag to include support for the Trusted Board
732 Boot feature. When set to '1', BL1 and BL2 images include support to load
733 and verify the certificates and images in a FIP, and BL1 includes support
734 for the Firmware Update. The default value is '0'. Generation and inclusion
735 of certificates in the FIP and FWU_FIP depends upon the value of the
736 ``GENERATE_COT`` option.
737
738 .. warning::
739 This option depends on ``CREATE_KEYS`` to be enabled. If the keys
740 already exist in disk, they will be overwritten without further notice.
741
742 - ``TRUSTED_WORLD_KEY``: This option is used when ``GENERATE_COT=1``. It
743 specifies the file that contains the Trusted World private key in PEM
744 format. If ``SAVE_KEYS=1``, this file name will be used to save the key.
745
746 - ``TSP_INIT_ASYNC``: Choose BL32 initialization method as asynchronous or
747 synchronous, (see "Initializing a BL32 Image" section in
748 `Firmware Design`_). It can take the value 0 (BL32 is initialized using
749 synchronous method) or 1 (BL32 is initialized using asynchronous method).
750 Default is 0.
751
752 - ``TSP_NS_INTR_ASYNC_PREEMPT``: A non zero value enables the interrupt
753 routing model which routes non-secure interrupts asynchronously from TSP
754 to EL3 causing immediate preemption of TSP. The EL3 is responsible
755 for saving and restoring the TSP context in this routing model. The
756 default routing model (when the value is 0) is to route non-secure
757 interrupts to TSP allowing it to save its context and hand over
758 synchronously to EL3 via an SMC.
759
760 .. note::
761 When ``EL3_EXCEPTION_HANDLING`` is ``1``, ``TSP_NS_INTR_ASYNC_PREEMPT``
762 must also be set to ``1``.
763
764 - ``USE_ARM_LINK``: This flag determines whether to enable support for ARM
765 linker. When the ``LINKER`` build variable points to the armlink linker,
766 this flag is enabled automatically. To enable support for armlink, platforms
767 will have to provide a scatter file for the BL image. Currently, Tegra
768 platforms use the armlink support to compile BL3-1 images.
769
770 - ``USE_COHERENT_MEM``: This flag determines whether to include the coherent
771 memory region in the BL memory map or not (see "Use of Coherent memory in
772 TF-A" section in `Firmware Design`_). It can take the value 1
773 (Coherent memory region is included) or 0 (Coherent memory region is
774 excluded). Default is 1.
775
776 - ``USE_ROMLIB``: This flag determines whether library at ROM will be used.
777 This feature creates a library of functions to be placed in ROM and thus
778 reduces SRAM usage. Refer to `Library at ROM`_ for further details. Default
779 is 0.
780
781 - ``V``: Verbose build. If assigned anything other than 0, the build commands
782 are printed. Default is 0.
783
784 - ``VERSION_STRING``: String used in the log output for each TF-A image.
785 Defaults to a string formed by concatenating the version number, build type
786 and build string.
787
788 - ``WARMBOOT_ENABLE_DCACHE_EARLY`` : Boolean option to enable D-cache early on
789 the CPU after warm boot. This is applicable for platforms which do not
790 require interconnect programming to enable cache coherency (eg: single
791 cluster platforms). If this option is enabled, then warm boot path
792 enables D-caches immediately after enabling MMU. This option defaults to 0.
793
794 Arm development platform specific build options
795 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
796
797 - ``ARM_BL31_IN_DRAM``: Boolean option to select loading of BL31 in TZC secured
798 DRAM. By default, BL31 is in the secure SRAM. Set this flag to 1 to load
799 BL31 in TZC secured DRAM. If TSP is present, then setting this option also
800 sets the TSP location to DRAM and ignores the ``ARM_TSP_RAM_LOCATION`` build
801 flag.
802
803 - ``ARM_CONFIG_CNTACR``: boolean option to unlock access to the ``CNTBase<N>``
804 frame registers by setting the ``CNTCTLBase.CNTACR<N>`` register bits. The
805 frame number ``<N>`` is defined by ``PLAT_ARM_NSTIMER_FRAME_ID``, which should
806 match the frame used by the Non-Secure image (normally the Linux kernel).
807 Default is true (access to the frame is allowed).
808
809 - ``ARM_DISABLE_TRUSTED_WDOG``: boolean option to disable the Trusted Watchdog.
810 By default, Arm platforms use a watchdog to trigger a system reset in case
811 an error is encountered during the boot process (for example, when an image
812 could not be loaded or authenticated). The watchdog is enabled in the early
813 platform setup hook at BL1 and disabled in the BL1 prepare exit hook. The
814 Trusted Watchdog may be disabled at build time for testing or development
815 purposes.
816
817 - ``ARM_LINUX_KERNEL_AS_BL33``: The Linux kernel expects registers x0-x3 to
818 have specific values at boot. This boolean option allows the Trusted Firmware
819 to have a Linux kernel image as BL33 by preparing the registers to these
820 values before jumping to BL33. This option defaults to 0 (disabled). For
821 AArch64 ``RESET_TO_BL31`` and for AArch32 ``RESET_TO_SP_MIN`` must be 1 when
822 using it. If this option is set to 1, ``ARM_PRELOADED_DTB_BASE`` must be set
823 to the location of a device tree blob (DTB) already loaded in memory. The
824 Linux Image address must be specified using the ``PRELOADED_BL33_BASE``
825 option.
826
827 - ``ARM_PLAT_MT``: This flag determines whether the Arm platform layer has to
828 cater for the multi-threading ``MT`` bit when accessing MPIDR. When this flag
829 is set, the functions which deal with MPIDR assume that the ``MT`` bit in
830 MPIDR is set and access the bit-fields in MPIDR accordingly. Default value of
831 this flag is 0. Note that this option is not used on FVP platforms.
832
833 - ``ARM_RECOM_STATE_ID_ENC``: The PSCI1.0 specification recommends an encoding
834 for the construction of composite state-ID in the power-state parameter.
835 The existing PSCI clients currently do not support this encoding of
836 State-ID yet. Hence this flag is used to configure whether to use the
837 recommended State-ID encoding or not. The default value of this flag is 0,
838 in which case the platform is configured to expect NULL in the State-ID
839 field of power-state parameter.
840
841 - ``ARM_ROTPK_LOCATION``: used when ``TRUSTED_BOARD_BOOT=1``. It specifies the
842 location of the ROTPK hash returned by the function ``plat_get_rotpk_info()``
843 for Arm platforms. Depending on the selected option, the proper private key
844 must be specified using the ``ROT_KEY`` option when building the Trusted
845 Firmware. This private key will be used by the certificate generation tool
846 to sign the BL2 and Trusted Key certificates. Available options for
847 ``ARM_ROTPK_LOCATION`` are:
848
849 - ``regs`` : return the ROTPK hash stored in the Trusted root-key storage
850 registers. The private key corresponding to this ROTPK hash is not
851 currently available.
852 - ``devel_rsa`` : return a development public key hash embedded in the BL1
853 and BL2 binaries. This hash has been obtained from the RSA public key
854 ``arm_rotpk_rsa.der``, located in ``plat/arm/board/common/rotpk``. To use
855 this option, ``arm_rotprivk_rsa.pem`` must be specified as ``ROT_KEY`` when
856 creating the certificates.
857 - ``devel_ecdsa`` : return a development public key hash embedded in the BL1
858 and BL2 binaries. This hash has been obtained from the ECDSA public key
859 ``arm_rotpk_ecdsa.der``, located in ``plat/arm/board/common/rotpk``. To use
860 this option, ``arm_rotprivk_ecdsa.pem`` must be specified as ``ROT_KEY``
861 when creating the certificates.
862
863 - ``ARM_TSP_RAM_LOCATION``: location of the TSP binary. Options:
864
865 - ``tsram`` : Trusted SRAM (default option when TBB is not enabled)
866 - ``tdram`` : Trusted DRAM (if available)
867 - ``dram`` : Secure region in DRAM (default option when TBB is enabled,
868 configured by the TrustZone controller)
869
870 - ``ARM_XLAT_TABLES_LIB_V1``: boolean option to compile TF-A with version 1
871 of the translation tables library instead of version 2. It is set to 0 by
872 default, which selects version 2.
873
874 - ``ARM_CRYPTOCELL_INTEG`` : bool option to enable TF-A to invoke Arm®
875 TrustZone® CryptoCell functionality for Trusted Board Boot on capable Arm
876 platforms. If this option is specified, then the path to the CryptoCell
877 SBROM library must be specified via ``CCSBROM_LIB_PATH`` flag.
878
879 For a better understanding of these options, the Arm development platform memory
880 map is explained in the `Firmware Design`_.
881
882 Arm CSS platform specific build options
883 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
884
885 - ``CSS_DETECT_PRE_1_7_0_SCP``: Boolean flag to detect SCP version
886 incompatibility. Version 1.7.0 of the SCP firmware made a non-backwards
887 compatible change to the MTL protocol, used for AP/SCP communication.
888 TF-A no longer supports earlier SCP versions. If this option is set to 1
889 then TF-A will detect if an earlier version is in use. Default is 1.
890
891 - ``CSS_LOAD_SCP_IMAGES``: Boolean flag, which when set, adds SCP_BL2 and
892 SCP_BL2U to the FIP and FWU_FIP respectively, and enables them to be loaded
893 during boot. Default is 1.
894
895 - ``CSS_USE_SCMI_SDS_DRIVER``: Boolean flag which selects SCMI/SDS drivers
896 instead of SCPI/BOM driver for communicating with the SCP during power
897 management operations and for SCP RAM Firmware transfer. If this option
898 is set to 1, then SCMI/SDS drivers will be used. Default is 0.
899
900 Arm FVP platform specific build options
901 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
902
903 - ``FVP_CLUSTER_COUNT`` : Configures the cluster count to be used to
904 build the topology tree within TF-A. By default TF-A is configured for dual
905 cluster topology and this option can be used to override the default value.
906
907 - ``FVP_INTERCONNECT_DRIVER``: Selects the interconnect driver to be built. The
908 default interconnect driver depends on the value of ``FVP_CLUSTER_COUNT`` as
909 explained in the options below:
910
911 - ``FVP_CCI`` : The CCI driver is selected. This is the default
912 if 0 < ``FVP_CLUSTER_COUNT`` <= 2.
913 - ``FVP_CCN`` : The CCN driver is selected. This is the default
914 if ``FVP_CLUSTER_COUNT`` > 2.
915
916 - ``FVP_MAX_CPUS_PER_CLUSTER``: Sets the maximum number of CPUs implemented in
917 a single cluster. This option defaults to 4.
918
919 - ``FVP_MAX_PE_PER_CPU``: Sets the maximum number of PEs implemented on any CPU
920 in the system. This option defaults to 1. Note that the build option
921 ``ARM_PLAT_MT`` doesn't have any effect on FVP platforms.
922
923 - ``FVP_USE_GIC_DRIVER`` : Selects the GIC driver to be built. Options:
924
925 - ``FVP_GIC600`` : The GIC600 implementation of GICv3 is selected
926 - ``FVP_GICV2`` : The GICv2 only driver is selected
927 - ``FVP_GICV3`` : The GICv3 only driver is selected (default option)
928
929 - ``FVP_USE_SP804_TIMER`` : Use the SP804 timer instead of the Generic Timer
930 for functions that wait for an arbitrary time length (udelay and mdelay).
931 The default value is 0.
932
933 - ``FVP_HW_CONFIG_DTS`` : Specify the path to the DTS file to be compiled
934 to DTB and packaged in FIP as the HW_CONFIG. See `Firmware Design`_ for
935 details on HW_CONFIG. By default, this is initialized to a sensible DTS
936 file in ``fdts/`` folder depending on other build options. But some cases,
937 like shifted affinity format for MPIDR, cannot be detected at build time
938 and this option is needed to specify the appropriate DTS file.
939
940 - ``FVP_HW_CONFIG`` : Specify the path to the HW_CONFIG blob to be packaged in
941 FIP. See `Firmware Design`_ for details on HW_CONFIG. This option is
942 similar to the ``FVP_HW_CONFIG_DTS`` option, but it directly specifies the
943 HW_CONFIG blob instead of the DTS file. This option is useful to override
944 the default HW_CONFIG selected by the build system.
945
946 ARM JUNO platform specific build options
947 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
948
949 - ``JUNO_TZMP1`` : Boolean option to configure Juno to be used for TrustZone
950 Media Protection (TZ-MP1). Default value of this flag is 0.
951
952 Debugging options
953 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
954
955 To compile a debug version and make the build more verbose use
956
957 .. code:: shell
958
959 make PLAT=<platform> DEBUG=1 V=1 all
960
961 AArch64 GCC uses DWARF version 4 debugging symbols by default. Some tools (for
962 example DS-5) might not support this and may need an older version of DWARF
963 symbols to be emitted by GCC. This can be achieved by using the
964 ``-gdwarf-<version>`` flag, with the version being set to 2 or 3. Setting the
965 version to 2 is recommended for DS-5 versions older than 5.16.
966
967 When debugging logic problems it might also be useful to disable all compiler
968 optimizations by using ``-O0``.
969
970 .. warning::
971 Using ``-O0`` could cause output images to be larger and base addresses
972 might need to be recalculated (see the **Memory layout on Arm development
973 platforms** section in the `Firmware Design`_).
974
975 Extra debug options can be passed to the build system by setting ``CFLAGS`` or
976 ``LDFLAGS``:
977
978 .. code:: shell
979
980 CFLAGS='-O0 -gdwarf-2' \
981 make PLAT=<platform> DEBUG=1 V=1 all
982
983 Note that using ``-Wl,`` style compilation driver options in ``CFLAGS`` will be
984 ignored as the linker is called directly.
985
986 It is also possible to introduce an infinite loop to help in debugging the
987 post-BL2 phase of TF-A. This can be done by rebuilding BL1 with the
988 ``SPIN_ON_BL1_EXIT=1`` build flag. Refer to the `Summary of build options`_
989 section. In this case, the developer may take control of the target using a
990 debugger when indicated by the console output. When using DS-5, the following
991 commands can be used:
992
993 ::
994
995 # Stop target execution
996 interrupt
997
998 #
999 # Prepare your debugging environment, e.g. set breakpoints
1000 #
1001
1002 # Jump over the debug loop
1003 set var $AARCH64::$Core::$PC = $AARCH64::$Core::$PC + 4
1004
1005 # Resume execution
1006 continue
1007
1008 Building the Test Secure Payload
1009 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1010
1011 The TSP is coupled with a companion runtime service in the BL31 firmware,
1012 called the TSPD. Therefore, if you intend to use the TSP, the BL31 image
1013 must be recompiled as well. For more information on SPs and SPDs, see the
1014 `Secure-EL1 Payloads and Dispatchers`_ section in the `Firmware Design`_.
1015
1016 First clean the TF-A build directory to get rid of any previous BL31 binary.
1017 Then to build the TSP image use:
1018
1019 .. code:: shell
1020
1021 make PLAT=<platform> SPD=tspd all
1022
1023 An additional boot loader binary file is created in the ``build`` directory:
1024
1025 ::
1026
1027 build/<platform>/<build-type>/bl32.bin
1028
1029
1030 Building and using the FIP tool
1031 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1032
1033 Firmware Image Package (FIP) is a packaging format used by TF-A to package
1034 firmware images in a single binary. The number and type of images that should
1035 be packed in a FIP is platform specific and may include TF-A images and other
1036 firmware images required by the platform. For example, most platforms require
1037 a BL33 image which corresponds to the normal world bootloader (e.g. UEFI or
1038 U-Boot).
1039
1040 The TF-A build system provides the make target ``fip`` to create a FIP file
1041 for the specified platform using the FIP creation tool included in the TF-A
1042 project. Examples below show how to build a FIP file for FVP, packaging TF-A
1043 and BL33 images.
1044
1045 For AArch64:
1046
1047 .. code:: shell
1048
1049 make PLAT=fvp BL33=<path-to>/bl33.bin fip
1050
1051 For AArch32:
1052
1053 .. code:: shell
1054
1055 make PLAT=fvp ARCH=aarch32 AARCH32_SP=sp_min BL33=<path-to>/bl33.bin fip
1056
1057 The resulting FIP may be found in:
1058
1059 ::
1060
1061 build/fvp/<build-type>/fip.bin
1062
1063 For advanced operations on FIP files, it is also possible to independently build
1064 the tool and create or modify FIPs using this tool. To do this, follow these
1065 steps:
1066
1067 It is recommended to remove old artifacts before building the tool:
1068
1069 .. code:: shell
1070
1071 make -C tools/fiptool clean
1072
1073 Build the tool:
1074
1075 .. code:: shell
1076
1077 make [DEBUG=1] [V=1] fiptool
1078
1079 The tool binary can be located in:
1080
1081 ::
1082
1083 ./tools/fiptool/fiptool
1084
1085 Invoking the tool with ``help`` will print a help message with all available
1086 options.
1087
1088 Example 1: create a new Firmware package ``fip.bin`` that contains BL2 and BL31:
1089
1090 .. code:: shell
1091
1092 ./tools/fiptool/fiptool create \
1093 --tb-fw build/<platform>/<build-type>/bl2.bin \
1094 --soc-fw build/<platform>/<build-type>/bl31.bin \
1095 fip.bin
1096
1097 Example 2: view the contents of an existing Firmware package:
1098
1099 .. code:: shell
1100
1101 ./tools/fiptool/fiptool info <path-to>/fip.bin
1102
1103 Example 3: update the entries of an existing Firmware package:
1104
1105 .. code:: shell
1106
1107 # Change the BL2 from Debug to Release version
1108 ./tools/fiptool/fiptool update \
1109 --tb-fw build/<platform>/release/bl2.bin \
1110 build/<platform>/debug/fip.bin
1111
1112 Example 4: unpack all entries from an existing Firmware package:
1113
1114 .. code:: shell
1115
1116 # Images will be unpacked to the working directory
1117 ./tools/fiptool/fiptool unpack <path-to>/fip.bin
1118
1119 Example 5: remove an entry from an existing Firmware package:
1120
1121 .. code:: shell
1122
1123 ./tools/fiptool/fiptool remove \
1124 --tb-fw build/<platform>/debug/fip.bin
1125
1126 Note that if the destination FIP file exists, the create, update and
1127 remove operations will automatically overwrite it.
1128
1129 The unpack operation will fail if the images already exist at the
1130 destination. In that case, use -f or --force to continue.
1131
1132 More information about FIP can be found in the `Firmware Design`_ document.
1133
1134 Building FIP images with support for Trusted Board Boot
1135 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1136
1137 Trusted Board Boot primarily consists of the following two features:
1138
1139 - Image Authentication, described in `Trusted Board Boot`_, and
1140 - Firmware Update, described in `Firmware Update`_
1141
1142 The following steps should be followed to build FIP and (optionally) FWU_FIP
1143 images with support for these features:
1144
1145 #. Fulfill the dependencies of the ``mbedtls`` cryptographic and image parser
1146 modules by checking out a recent version of the `mbed TLS Repository`_. It
1147 is important to use a version that is compatible with TF-A and fixes any
1148 known security vulnerabilities. See `mbed TLS Security Center`_ for more
1149 information. The latest version of TF-A is tested with tag
1150 ``mbedtls-2.16.0``.
1151
1152 The ``drivers/auth/mbedtls/mbedtls_*.mk`` files contain the list of mbed TLS
1153 source files the modules depend upon.
1154 ``include/drivers/auth/mbedtls/mbedtls_config.h`` contains the configuration
1155 options required to build the mbed TLS sources.
1156
1157 Note that the mbed TLS library is licensed under the Apache version 2.0
1158 license. Using mbed TLS source code will affect the licensing of TF-A
1159 binaries that are built using this library.
1160
1161 #. To build the FIP image, ensure the following command line variables are set
1162 while invoking ``make`` to build TF-A:
1163
1164 - ``MBEDTLS_DIR=<path of the directory containing mbed TLS sources>``
1165 - ``TRUSTED_BOARD_BOOT=1``
1166 - ``GENERATE_COT=1``
1167
1168 In the case of Arm platforms, the location of the ROTPK hash must also be
1169 specified at build time. Two locations are currently supported (see
1170 ``ARM_ROTPK_LOCATION`` build option):
1171
1172 - ``ARM_ROTPK_LOCATION=regs``: the ROTPK hash is obtained from the Trusted
1173 root-key storage registers present in the platform. On Juno, this
1174 registers are read-only. On FVP Base and Cortex models, the registers
1175 are read-only, but the value can be specified using the command line
1176 option ``bp.trusted_key_storage.public_key`` when launching the model.
1177 On both Juno and FVP models, the default value corresponds to an
1178 ECDSA-SECP256R1 public key hash, whose private part is not currently
1179 available.
1180
1181 - ``ARM_ROTPK_LOCATION=devel_rsa``: use the ROTPK hash that is hardcoded
1182 in the Arm platform port. The private/public RSA key pair may be
1183 found in ``plat/arm/board/common/rotpk``.
1184
1185 - ``ARM_ROTPK_LOCATION=devel_ecdsa``: use the ROTPK hash that is hardcoded
1186 in the Arm platform port. The private/public ECDSA key pair may be
1187 found in ``plat/arm/board/common/rotpk``.
1188
1189 Example of command line using RSA development keys:
1190
1191 .. code:: shell
1192
1193 MBEDTLS_DIR=<path of the directory containing mbed TLS sources> \
1194 make PLAT=<platform> TRUSTED_BOARD_BOOT=1 GENERATE_COT=1 \
1195 ARM_ROTPK_LOCATION=devel_rsa \
1196 ROT_KEY=plat/arm/board/common/rotpk/arm_rotprivk_rsa.pem \
1197 BL33=<path-to>/<bl33_image> \
1198 all fip
1199
1200 The result of this build will be the bl1.bin and the fip.bin binaries. This
1201 FIP will include the certificates corresponding to the Chain of Trust
1202 described in the TBBR-client document. These certificates can also be found
1203 in the output build directory.
1204
1205 #. The optional FWU_FIP contains any additional images to be loaded from
1206 Non-Volatile storage during the `Firmware Update`_ process. To build the
1207 FWU_FIP, any FWU images required by the platform must be specified on the
1208 command line. On Arm development platforms like Juno, these are:
1209
1210 - NS_BL2U. The AP non-secure Firmware Updater image.
1211 - SCP_BL2U. The SCP Firmware Update Configuration image.
1212
1213 Example of Juno command line for generating both ``fwu`` and ``fwu_fip``
1214 targets using RSA development:
1215
1216 ::
1217
1218 MBEDTLS_DIR=<path of the directory containing mbed TLS sources> \
1219 make PLAT=juno TRUSTED_BOARD_BOOT=1 GENERATE_COT=1 \
1220 ARM_ROTPK_LOCATION=devel_rsa \
1221 ROT_KEY=plat/arm/board/common/rotpk/arm_rotprivk_rsa.pem \
1222 BL33=<path-to>/<bl33_image> \
1223 SCP_BL2=<path-to>/<scp_bl2_image> \
1224 SCP_BL2U=<path-to>/<scp_bl2u_image> \
1225 NS_BL2U=<path-to>/<ns_bl2u_image> \
1226 all fip fwu_fip
1227
1228 .. note::
1229 The BL2U image will be built by default and added to the FWU_FIP.
1230 The user may override this by adding ``BL2U=<path-to>/<bl2u_image>``
1231 to the command line above.
1232
1233 .. note::
1234 Building and installing the non-secure and SCP FWU images (NS_BL1U,
1235 NS_BL2U and SCP_BL2U) is outside the scope of this document.
1236
1237 The result of this build will be bl1.bin, fip.bin and fwu_fip.bin binaries.
1238 Both the FIP and FWU_FIP will include the certificates corresponding to the
1239 Chain of Trust described in the TBBR-client document. These certificates
1240 can also be found in the output build directory.
1241
1242 Building the Certificate Generation Tool
1243 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1244
1245 The ``cert_create`` tool is built as part of the TF-A build process when the
1246 ``fip`` make target is specified and TBB is enabled (as described in the
1247 previous section), but it can also be built separately with the following
1248 command:
1249
1250 .. code:: shell
1251
1252 make PLAT=<platform> [DEBUG=1] [V=1] certtool
1253
1254 For platforms that require their own IDs in certificate files, the generic
1255 'cert_create' tool can be built with the following command. Note that the target
1256 platform must define its IDs within a ``platform_oid.h`` header file for the
1257 build to succeed.
1258
1259 .. code:: shell
1260
1261 make PLAT=<platform> USE_TBBR_DEFS=0 [DEBUG=1] [V=1] certtool
1262
1263 ``DEBUG=1`` builds the tool in debug mode. ``V=1`` makes the build process more
1264 verbose. The following command should be used to obtain help about the tool:
1265
1266 .. code:: shell
1267
1268 ./tools/cert_create/cert_create -h
1269
1270 Building a FIP for Juno and FVP
1271 -------------------------------
1272
1273 This section provides Juno and FVP specific instructions to build Trusted
1274 Firmware, obtain the additional required firmware, and pack it all together in
1275 a single FIP binary. It assumes that a `Linaro Release`_ has been installed.
1276
1277 .. note::
1278 Pre-built binaries for AArch32 are available from Linaro Release 16.12
1279 onwards. Before that release, pre-built binaries are only available for
1280 AArch64.
1281
1282 .. warning::
1283 Follow the full instructions for one platform before switching to a
1284 different one. Mixing instructions for different platforms may result in
1285 corrupted binaries.
1286
1287 .. warning::
1288 The uboot image downloaded by the Linaro workspace script does not always
1289 match the uboot image packaged as BL33 in the corresponding fip file. It is
1290 recommended to use the version that is packaged in the fip file using the
1291 instructions below.
1292
1293 .. note::
1294 For the FVP, the kernel FDT is packaged in FIP during build and loaded
1295 by the firmware at runtime. See `Obtaining the Flattened Device Trees`_
1296 section for more info on selecting the right FDT to use.
1297
1298 #. Clean the working directory
1299
1300 .. code:: shell
1301
1302 make realclean
1303
1304 #. Obtain SCP_BL2 (Juno) and BL33 (all platforms)
1305
1306 Use the fiptool to extract the SCP_BL2 and BL33 images from the FIP
1307 package included in the Linaro release:
1308
1309 .. code:: shell
1310
1311 # Build the fiptool
1312 make [DEBUG=1] [V=1] fiptool
1313
1314 # Unpack firmware images from Linaro FIP
1315 ./tools/fiptool/fiptool unpack <path-to-linaro-release>/fip.bin
1316
1317 The unpack operation will result in a set of binary images extracted to the
1318 current working directory. The SCP_BL2 image corresponds to
1319 ``scp-fw.bin`` and BL33 corresponds to ``nt-fw.bin``.
1320
1321 .. note::
1322 The fiptool will complain if the images to be unpacked already
1323 exist in the current directory. If that is the case, either delete those
1324 files or use the ``--force`` option to overwrite.
1325
1326 .. note::
1327 For AArch32, the instructions below assume that nt-fw.bin is a
1328 normal world boot loader that supports AArch32.
1329
1330 #. Build TF-A images and create a new FIP for FVP
1331
1332 .. code:: shell
1333
1334 # AArch64
1335 make PLAT=fvp BL33=nt-fw.bin all fip
1336
1337 # AArch32
1338 make PLAT=fvp ARCH=aarch32 AARCH32_SP=sp_min BL33=nt-fw.bin all fip
1339
1340 #. Build TF-A images and create a new FIP for Juno
1341
1342 For AArch64:
1343
1344 Building for AArch64 on Juno simply requires the addition of ``SCP_BL2``
1345 as a build parameter.
1346
1347 .. code:: shell
1348
1349 make PLAT=juno BL33=nt-fw.bin SCP_BL2=scp-fw.bin all fip
1350
1351 For AArch32:
1352
1353 Hardware restrictions on Juno prevent cold reset into AArch32 execution mode,
1354 therefore BL1 and BL2 must be compiled for AArch64, and BL32 is compiled
1355 separately for AArch32.
1356
1357 - Before building BL32, the environment variable ``CROSS_COMPILE`` must point
1358 to the AArch32 Linaro cross compiler.
1359
1360 .. code:: shell
1361
1362 export CROSS_COMPILE=<path-to-aarch32-gcc>/bin/arm-linux-gnueabihf-
1363
1364 - Build BL32 in AArch32.
1365
1366 .. code:: shell
1367
1368 make ARCH=aarch32 PLAT=juno AARCH32_SP=sp_min \
1369 RESET_TO_SP_MIN=1 JUNO_AARCH32_EL3_RUNTIME=1 bl32
1370
1371 - Save ``bl32.bin`` to a temporary location and clean the build products.
1372
1373 ::
1374
1375 cp <path-to-build>/bl32.bin <path-to-temporary>
1376 make realclean
1377
1378 - Before building BL1 and BL2, the environment variable ``CROSS_COMPILE``
1379 must point to the AArch64 Linaro cross compiler.
1380
1381 .. code:: shell
1382
1383 export CROSS_COMPILE=<path-to-aarch64-gcc>/bin/aarch64-linux-gnu-
1384
1385 - The following parameters should be used to build BL1 and BL2 in AArch64
1386 and point to the BL32 file.
1387
1388 .. code:: shell
1389
1390 make ARCH=aarch64 PLAT=juno JUNO_AARCH32_EL3_RUNTIME=1 \
1391 BL33=nt-fw.bin SCP_BL2=scp-fw.bin \
1392 BL32=<path-to-temporary>/bl32.bin all fip
1393
1394 The resulting BL1 and FIP images may be found in:
1395
1396 ::
1397
1398 # Juno
1399 ./build/juno/release/bl1.bin
1400 ./build/juno/release/fip.bin
1401
1402 # FVP
1403 ./build/fvp/release/bl1.bin
1404 ./build/fvp/release/fip.bin
1405
1406
1407 Booting Firmware Update images
1408 -------------------------------------
1409
1410 When Firmware Update (FWU) is enabled there are at least 2 new images
1411 that have to be loaded, the Non-Secure FWU ROM (NS-BL1U), and the
1412 FWU FIP.
1413
1414 Juno
1415 ~~~~
1416
1417 The new images must be programmed in flash memory by adding
1418 an entry in the ``SITE1/HBI0262x/images.txt`` configuration file
1419 on the Juno SD card (where ``x`` depends on the revision of the Juno board).
1420 Refer to the `Juno Getting Started Guide`_, section 2.3 "Flash memory
1421 programming" for more information. User should ensure these do not
1422 overlap with any other entries in the file.
1423
1424 ::
1425
1426 NOR10UPDATE: AUTO ;Image Update:NONE/AUTO/FORCE
1427 NOR10ADDRESS: 0x00400000 ;Image Flash Address [ns_bl2u_base_address]
1428 NOR10FILE: \SOFTWARE\fwu_fip.bin ;Image File Name
1429 NOR10LOAD: 00000000 ;Image Load Address
1430 NOR10ENTRY: 00000000 ;Image Entry Point
1431
1432 NOR11UPDATE: AUTO ;Image Update:NONE/AUTO/FORCE
1433 NOR11ADDRESS: 0x03EB8000 ;Image Flash Address [ns_bl1u_base_address]
1434 NOR11FILE: \SOFTWARE\ns_bl1u.bin ;Image File Name
1435 NOR11LOAD: 00000000 ;Image Load Address
1436
1437 The address ns_bl1u_base_address is the value of NS_BL1U_BASE - 0x8000000.
1438 In the same way, the address ns_bl2u_base_address is the value of
1439 NS_BL2U_BASE - 0x8000000.
1440
1441 FVP
1442 ~~~
1443
1444 The additional fip images must be loaded with:
1445
1446 ::
1447
1448 --data cluster0.cpu0="<path_to>/ns_bl1u.bin"@0x0beb8000 [ns_bl1u_base_address]
1449 --data cluster0.cpu0="<path_to>/fwu_fip.bin"@0x08400000 [ns_bl2u_base_address]
1450
1451 The address ns_bl1u_base_address is the value of NS_BL1U_BASE.
1452 In the same way, the address ns_bl2u_base_address is the value of
1453 NS_BL2U_BASE.
1454
1455
1456 EL3 payloads alternative boot flow
1457 ----------------------------------
1458
1459 On a pre-production system, the ability to execute arbitrary, bare-metal code at
1460 the highest exception level is required. It allows full, direct access to the
1461 hardware, for example to run silicon soak tests.
1462
1463 Although it is possible to implement some baremetal secure firmware from
1464 scratch, this is a complex task on some platforms, depending on the level of
1465 configuration required to put the system in the expected state.
1466
1467 Rather than booting a baremetal application, a possible compromise is to boot
1468 ``EL3 payloads`` through TF-A instead. This is implemented as an alternative
1469 boot flow, where a modified BL2 boots an EL3 payload, instead of loading the
1470 other BL images and passing control to BL31. It reduces the complexity of
1471 developing EL3 baremetal code by:
1472
1473 - putting the system into a known architectural state;
1474 - taking care of platform secure world initialization;
1475 - loading the SCP_BL2 image if required by the platform.
1476
1477 When booting an EL3 payload on Arm standard platforms, the configuration of the
1478 TrustZone controller is simplified such that only region 0 is enabled and is
1479 configured to permit secure access only. This gives full access to the whole
1480 DRAM to the EL3 payload.
1481
1482 The system is left in the same state as when entering BL31 in the default boot
1483 flow. In particular:
1484
1485 - Running in EL3;
1486 - Current state is AArch64;
1487 - Little-endian data access;
1488 - All exceptions disabled;
1489 - MMU disabled;
1490 - Caches disabled.
1491
1492 Booting an EL3 payload
1493 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1494
1495 The EL3 payload image is a standalone image and is not part of the FIP. It is
1496 not loaded by TF-A. Therefore, there are 2 possible scenarios:
1497
1498 - The EL3 payload may reside in non-volatile memory (NVM) and execute in
1499 place. In this case, booting it is just a matter of specifying the right
1500 address in NVM through ``EL3_PAYLOAD_BASE`` when building TF-A.
1501
1502 - The EL3 payload needs to be loaded in volatile memory (e.g. DRAM) at
1503 run-time.
1504
1505 To help in the latter scenario, the ``SPIN_ON_BL1_EXIT=1`` build option can be
1506 used. The infinite loop that it introduces in BL1 stops execution at the right
1507 moment for a debugger to take control of the target and load the payload (for
1508 example, over JTAG).
1509
1510 It is expected that this loading method will work in most cases, as a debugger
1511 connection is usually available in a pre-production system. The user is free to
1512 use any other platform-specific mechanism to load the EL3 payload, though.
1513
1514 Booting an EL3 payload on FVP
1515 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1516
1517 The EL3 payloads boot flow requires the CPU's mailbox to be cleared at reset for
1518 the secondary CPUs holding pen to work properly. Unfortunately, its reset value
1519 is undefined on the FVP platform and the FVP platform code doesn't clear it.
1520 Therefore, one must modify the way the model is normally invoked in order to
1521 clear the mailbox at start-up.
1522
1523 One way to do that is to create an 8-byte file containing all zero bytes using
1524 the following command:
1525
1526 .. code:: shell
1527
1528 dd if=/dev/zero of=mailbox.dat bs=1 count=8
1529
1530 and pre-load it into the FVP memory at the mailbox address (i.e. ``0x04000000``)
1531 using the following model parameters:
1532
1533 ::
1534
1535 --data cluster0.cpu0=mailbox.dat@0x04000000 [Base FVPs]
1536 --data=mailbox.dat@0x04000000 [Foundation FVP]
1537
1538 To provide the model with the EL3 payload image, the following methods may be
1539 used:
1540
1541 #. If the EL3 payload is able to execute in place, it may be programmed into
1542 flash memory. On Base Cortex and AEM FVPs, the following model parameter
1543 loads it at the base address of the NOR FLASH1 (the NOR FLASH0 is already
1544 used for the FIP):
1545
1546 ::
1547
1548 -C bp.flashloader1.fname="<path-to>/<el3-payload>"
1549
1550 On Foundation FVP, there is no flash loader component and the EL3 payload
1551 may be programmed anywhere in flash using method 3 below.
1552
1553 #. When using the ``SPIN_ON_BL1_EXIT=1`` loading method, the following DS-5
1554 command may be used to load the EL3 payload ELF image over JTAG:
1555
1556 ::
1557
1558 load <path-to>/el3-payload.elf
1559
1560 #. The EL3 payload may be pre-loaded in volatile memory using the following
1561 model parameters:
1562
1563 ::
1564
1565 --data cluster0.cpu0="<path-to>/el3-payload>"@address [Base FVPs]
1566 --data="<path-to>/<el3-payload>"@address [Foundation FVP]
1567
1568 The address provided to the FVP must match the ``EL3_PAYLOAD_BASE`` address
1569 used when building TF-A.
1570
1571 Booting an EL3 payload on Juno
1572 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1573
1574 If the EL3 payload is able to execute in place, it may be programmed in flash
1575 memory by adding an entry in the ``SITE1/HBI0262x/images.txt`` configuration file
1576 on the Juno SD card (where ``x`` depends on the revision of the Juno board).
1577 Refer to the `Juno Getting Started Guide`_, section 2.3 "Flash memory
1578 programming" for more information.
1579
1580 Alternatively, the same DS-5 command mentioned in the FVP section above can
1581 be used to load the EL3 payload's ELF file over JTAG on Juno.
1582
1583 Preloaded BL33 alternative boot flow
1584 ------------------------------------
1585
1586 Some platforms have the ability to preload BL33 into memory instead of relying
1587 on TF-A to load it. This may simplify packaging of the normal world code and
1588 improve performance in a development environment. When secure world cold boot
1589 is complete, TF-A simply jumps to a BL33 base address provided at build time.
1590
1591 For this option to be used, the ``PRELOADED_BL33_BASE`` build option has to be
1592 used when compiling TF-A. For example, the following command will create a FIP
1593 without a BL33 and prepare to jump to a BL33 image loaded at address
1594 0x80000000:
1595
1596 .. code:: shell
1597
1598 make PRELOADED_BL33_BASE=0x80000000 PLAT=fvp all fip
1599
1600 Boot of a preloaded kernel image on Base FVP
1601 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1602
1603 The following example uses a simplified boot flow by directly jumping from the
1604 TF-A to the Linux kernel, which will use a ramdisk as filesystem. This can be
1605 useful if both the kernel and the device tree blob (DTB) are already present in
1606 memory (like in FVP).
1607
1608 For example, if the kernel is loaded at ``0x80080000`` and the DTB is loaded at
1609 address ``0x82000000``, the firmware can be built like this:
1610
1611 .. code:: shell
1612
1613 CROSS_COMPILE=aarch64-linux-gnu- \
1614 make PLAT=fvp DEBUG=1 \
1615 RESET_TO_BL31=1 \
1616 ARM_LINUX_KERNEL_AS_BL33=1 \
1617 PRELOADED_BL33_BASE=0x80080000 \
1618 ARM_PRELOADED_DTB_BASE=0x82000000 \
1619 all fip
1620
1621 Now, it is needed to modify the DTB so that the kernel knows the address of the
1622 ramdisk. The following script generates a patched DTB from the provided one,
1623 assuming that the ramdisk is loaded at address ``0x84000000``. Note that this
1624 script assumes that the user is using a ramdisk image prepared for U-Boot, like
1625 the ones provided by Linaro. If using a ramdisk without this header,the ``0x40``
1626 offset in ``INITRD_START`` has to be removed.
1627
1628 .. code:: bash
1629
1630 #!/bin/bash
1631
1632 # Path to the input DTB
1633 KERNEL_DTB=<path-to>/<fdt>
1634 # Path to the output DTB
1635 PATCHED_KERNEL_DTB=<path-to>/<patched-fdt>
1636 # Base address of the ramdisk
1637 INITRD_BASE=0x84000000
1638 # Path to the ramdisk
1639 INITRD=<path-to>/<ramdisk.img>
1640
1641 # Skip uboot header (64 bytes)
1642 INITRD_START=$(printf "0x%x" $((${INITRD_BASE} + 0x40)) )
1643 INITRD_SIZE=$(stat -Lc %s ${INITRD})
1644 INITRD_END=$(printf "0x%x" $((${INITRD_BASE} + ${INITRD_SIZE})) )
1645
1646 CHOSEN_NODE=$(echo \
1647 "/ { \
1648 chosen { \
1649 linux,initrd-start = <${INITRD_START}>; \
1650 linux,initrd-end = <${INITRD_END}>; \
1651 }; \
1652 };")
1653
1654 echo $(dtc -O dts -I dtb ${KERNEL_DTB}) ${CHOSEN_NODE} | \
1655 dtc -O dtb -o ${PATCHED_KERNEL_DTB} -
1656
1657 And the FVP binary can be run with the following command:
1658
1659 .. code:: shell
1660
1661 <path-to>/FVP_Base_AEMv8A-AEMv8A \
1662 -C pctl.startup=0.0.0.0 \
1663 -C bp.secure_memory=1 \
1664 -C cluster0.NUM_CORES=4 \
1665 -C cluster1.NUM_CORES=4 \
1666 -C cache_state_modelled=1 \
1667 -C cluster0.cpu0.RVBAR=0x04020000 \
1668 -C cluster0.cpu1.RVBAR=0x04020000 \
1669 -C cluster0.cpu2.RVBAR=0x04020000 \
1670 -C cluster0.cpu3.RVBAR=0x04020000 \
1671 -C cluster1.cpu0.RVBAR=0x04020000 \
1672 -C cluster1.cpu1.RVBAR=0x04020000 \
1673 -C cluster1.cpu2.RVBAR=0x04020000 \
1674 -C cluster1.cpu3.RVBAR=0x04020000 \
1675 --data cluster0.cpu0="<path-to>/bl31.bin"@0x04020000 \
1676 --data cluster0.cpu0="<path-to>/<patched-fdt>"@0x82000000 \
1677 --data cluster0.cpu0="<path-to>/<kernel-binary>"@0x80080000 \
1678 --data cluster0.cpu0="<path-to>/<ramdisk.img>"@0x84000000
1679
1680 Boot of a preloaded kernel image on Juno
1681 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1682
1683 The Trusted Firmware must be compiled in a similar way as for FVP explained
1684 above. The process to load binaries to memory is the one explained in
1685 `Booting an EL3 payload on Juno`_.
1686
1687 Running the software on FVP
1688 ---------------------------
1689
1690 The latest version of the AArch64 build of TF-A has been tested on the following
1691 Arm FVPs without shifted affinities, and that do not support threaded CPU cores
1692 (64-bit host machine only).
1693
1694 .. note::
1695 The FVP models used are Version 11.6 Build 45, unless otherwise stated.
1696
1697 - ``FVP_Base_AEMv8A-AEMv8A``
1698 - ``FVP_Base_AEMv8A-AEMv8A-AEMv8A-AEMv8A-CCN502``
1699 - ``FVP_Base_RevC-2xAEMv8A``
1700 - ``FVP_Base_Cortex-A32x4``
1701 - ``FVP_Base_Cortex-A35x4``
1702 - ``FVP_Base_Cortex-A53x4``
1703 - ``FVP_Base_Cortex-A55x4+Cortex-A75x4``
1704 - ``FVP_Base_Cortex-A55x4``
1705 - ``FVP_Base_Cortex-A57x1-A53x1``
1706 - ``FVP_Base_Cortex-A57x2-A53x4``
1707 - ``FVP_Base_Cortex-A57x4-A53x4``
1708 - ``FVP_Base_Cortex-A57x4``
1709 - ``FVP_Base_Cortex-A72x4-A53x4``
1710 - ``FVP_Base_Cortex-A72x4``
1711 - ``FVP_Base_Cortex-A73x4-A53x4``
1712 - ``FVP_Base_Cortex-A73x4``
1713 - ``FVP_Base_Cortex-A75x4``
1714 - ``FVP_Base_Cortex-A76x4``
1715 - ``FVP_Base_Cortex-A76AEx4``
1716 - ``FVP_Base_Cortex-A76AEx8``
1717 - ``FVP_Base_Neoverse-N1x4``
1718 - ``FVP_Base_Deimos``
1719 - ``FVP_CSS_SGI-575`` (Version 11.3 build 42)
1720 - ``FVP_CSS_SGM-775`` (Version 11.3 build 42)
1721 - ``FVP_RD_E1Edge`` (Version 11.3 build 42)
1722 - ``FVP_RD_N1Edge``
1723 - ``Foundation_Platform``
1724
1725 The latest version of the AArch32 build of TF-A has been tested on the following
1726 Arm FVPs without shifted affinities, and that do not support threaded CPU cores
1727 (64-bit host machine only).
1728
1729 - ``FVP_Base_AEMv8A-AEMv8A``
1730 - ``FVP_Base_Cortex-A32x4``
1731
1732 .. note::
1733 The ``FVP_Base_RevC-2xAEMv8A`` FVP only supports shifted affinities, which
1734 is not compatible with legacy GIC configurations. Therefore this FVP does not
1735 support these legacy GIC configurations.
1736
1737 .. note::
1738 The build numbers quoted above are those reported by launching the FVP
1739 with the ``--version`` parameter.
1740
1741 .. note::
1742 Linaro provides a ramdisk image in prebuilt FVP configurations and full
1743 file systems that can be downloaded separately. To run an FVP with a virtio
1744 file system image an additional FVP configuration option
1745 ``-C bp.virtioblockdevice.image_path="<path-to>/<file-system-image>`` can be
1746 used.
1747
1748 .. note::
1749 The software will not work on Version 1.0 of the Foundation FVP.
1750 The commands below would report an ``unhandled argument`` error in this case.
1751
1752 .. note::
1753 FVPs can be launched with ``--cadi-server`` option such that a
1754 CADI-compliant debugger (for example, Arm DS-5) can connect to and control
1755 its execution.
1756
1757 .. warning::
1758 Since FVP model Version 11.0 Build 11.0.34 and Version 8.5 Build 0.8.5202
1759 the internal synchronisation timings changed compared to older versions of
1760 the models. The models can be launched with ``-Q 100`` option if they are
1761 required to match the run time characteristics of the older versions.
1762
1763 The Foundation FVP is a cut down version of the AArch64 Base FVP. It can be
1764 downloaded for free from `Arm's website`_.
1765
1766 The Cortex-A models listed above are also available to download from
1767 `Arm's website`_.
1768
1769 Please refer to the FVP documentation for a detailed description of the model
1770 parameter options. A brief description of the important ones that affect TF-A
1771 and normal world software behavior is provided below.
1772
1773 Obtaining the Flattened Device Trees
1774 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1775
1776 Depending on the FVP configuration and Linux configuration used, different
1777 FDT files are required. FDT source files for the Foundation and Base FVPs can
1778 be found in the TF-A source directory under ``fdts/``. The Foundation FVP has
1779 a subset of the Base FVP components. For example, the Foundation FVP lacks
1780 CLCD and MMC support, and has only one CPU cluster.
1781
1782 .. note::
1783 It is not recommended to use the FDTs built along the kernel because not
1784 all FDTs are available from there.
1785
1786 The dynamic configuration capability is enabled in the firmware for FVPs.
1787 This means that the firmware can authenticate and load the FDT if present in
1788 FIP. A default FDT is packaged into FIP during the build based on
1789 the build configuration. This can be overridden by using the ``FVP_HW_CONFIG``
1790 or ``FVP_HW_CONFIG_DTS`` build options (refer to the
1791 `Arm FVP platform specific build options`_ section for detail on the options).
1792
1793 - ``fvp-base-gicv2-psci.dts``
1794
1795 For use with models such as the Cortex-A57-A53 Base FVPs without shifted
1796 affinities and with Base memory map configuration.
1797
1798 - ``fvp-base-gicv2-psci-aarch32.dts``
1799
1800 For use with models such as the Cortex-A32 Base FVPs without shifted
1801 affinities and running Linux in AArch32 state with Base memory map
1802 configuration.
1803
1804 - ``fvp-base-gicv3-psci.dts``
1805
1806 For use with models such as the Cortex-A57-A53 Base FVPs without shifted
1807 affinities and with Base memory map configuration and Linux GICv3 support.
1808
1809 - ``fvp-base-gicv3-psci-1t.dts``
1810
1811 For use with models such as the AEMv8-RevC Base FVP with shifted affinities,
1812 single threaded CPUs, Base memory map configuration and Linux GICv3 support.
1813
1814 - ``fvp-base-gicv3-psci-dynamiq.dts``
1815
1816 For use with models as the Cortex-A55-A75 Base FVPs with shifted affinities,
1817 single cluster, single threaded CPUs, Base memory map configuration and Linux
1818 GICv3 support.
1819
1820 - ``fvp-base-gicv3-psci-aarch32.dts``
1821
1822 For use with models such as the Cortex-A32 Base FVPs without shifted
1823 affinities and running Linux in AArch32 state with Base memory map
1824 configuration and Linux GICv3 support.
1825
1826 - ``fvp-foundation-gicv2-psci.dts``
1827
1828 For use with Foundation FVP with Base memory map configuration.
1829
1830 - ``fvp-foundation-gicv3-psci.dts``
1831
1832 (Default) For use with Foundation FVP with Base memory map configuration
1833 and Linux GICv3 support.
1834
1835 Running on the Foundation FVP with reset to BL1 entrypoint
1836 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1837
1838 The following ``Foundation_Platform`` parameters should be used to boot Linux with
1839 4 CPUs using the AArch64 build of TF-A.
1840
1841 .. code:: shell
1842
1843 <path-to>/Foundation_Platform \
1844 --cores=4 \
1845 --arm-v8.0 \
1846 --secure-memory \
1847 --visualization \
1848 --gicv3 \
1849 --data="<path-to>/<bl1-binary>"@0x0 \
1850 --data="<path-to>/<FIP-binary>"@0x08000000 \
1851 --data="<path-to>/<kernel-binary>"@0x80080000 \
1852 --data="<path-to>/<ramdisk-binary>"@0x84000000
1853
1854 Notes:
1855
1856 - BL1 is loaded at the start of the Trusted ROM.
1857 - The Firmware Image Package is loaded at the start of NOR FLASH0.
1858 - The firmware loads the FDT packaged in FIP to the DRAM. The FDT load address
1859 is specified via the ``hw_config_addr`` property in `TB_FW_CONFIG for FVP`_.
1860 - The default use-case for the Foundation FVP is to use the ``--gicv3`` option
1861 and enable the GICv3 device in the model. Note that without this option,
1862 the Foundation FVP defaults to legacy (Versatile Express) memory map which
1863 is not supported by TF-A.
1864 - In order for TF-A to run correctly on the Foundation FVP, the architecture
1865 versions must match. The Foundation FVP defaults to the highest v8.x
1866 version it supports but the default build for TF-A is for v8.0. To avoid
1867 issues either start the Foundation FVP to use v8.0 architecture using the
1868 ``--arm-v8.0`` option, or build TF-A with an appropriate value for
1869 ``ARM_ARCH_MINOR``.
1870
1871 Running on the AEMv8 Base FVP with reset to BL1 entrypoint
1872 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1873
1874 The following ``FVP_Base_RevC-2xAEMv8A`` parameters should be used to boot Linux
1875 with 8 CPUs using the AArch64 build of TF-A.
1876
1877 .. code:: shell
1878
1879 <path-to>/FVP_Base_RevC-2xAEMv8A \
1880 -C pctl.startup=0.0.0.0 \
1881 -C bp.secure_memory=1 \
1882 -C bp.tzc_400.diagnostics=1 \
1883 -C cluster0.NUM_CORES=4 \
1884 -C cluster1.NUM_CORES=4 \
1885 -C cache_state_modelled=1 \
1886 -C bp.secureflashloader.fname="<path-to>/<bl1-binary>" \
1887 -C bp.flashloader0.fname="<path-to>/<FIP-binary>" \
1888 --data cluster0.cpu0="<path-to>/<kernel-binary>"@0x80080000 \
1889 --data cluster0.cpu0="<path-to>/<ramdisk>"@0x84000000
1890
1891 .. note::
1892 The ``FVP_Base_RevC-2xAEMv8A`` has shifted affinities and requires
1893 a specific DTS for all the CPUs to be loaded.
1894
1895 Running on the AEMv8 Base FVP (AArch32) with reset to BL1 entrypoint
1896 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1897
1898 The following ``FVP_Base_AEMv8A-AEMv8A`` parameters should be used to boot Linux
1899 with 8 CPUs using the AArch32 build of TF-A.
1900
1901 .. code:: shell
1902
1903 <path-to>/FVP_Base_AEMv8A-AEMv8A \
1904 -C pctl.startup=0.0.0.0 \
1905 -C bp.secure_memory=1 \
1906 -C bp.tzc_400.diagnostics=1 \
1907 -C cluster0.NUM_CORES=4 \
1908 -C cluster1.NUM_CORES=4 \
1909 -C cache_state_modelled=1 \
1910 -C cluster0.cpu0.CONFIG64=0 \
1911 -C cluster0.cpu1.CONFIG64=0 \
1912 -C cluster0.cpu2.CONFIG64=0 \
1913 -C cluster0.cpu3.CONFIG64=0 \
1914 -C cluster1.cpu0.CONFIG64=0 \
1915 -C cluster1.cpu1.CONFIG64=0 \
1916 -C cluster1.cpu2.CONFIG64=0 \
1917 -C cluster1.cpu3.CONFIG64=0 \
1918 -C bp.secureflashloader.fname="<path-to>/<bl1-binary>" \
1919 -C bp.flashloader0.fname="<path-to>/<FIP-binary>" \
1920 --data cluster0.cpu0="<path-to>/<kernel-binary>"@0x80080000 \
1921 --data cluster0.cpu0="<path-to>/<ramdisk>"@0x84000000
1922
1923 Running on the Cortex-A57-A53 Base FVP with reset to BL1 entrypoint
1924 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1925
1926 The following ``FVP_Base_Cortex-A57x4-A53x4`` model parameters should be used to
1927 boot Linux with 8 CPUs using the AArch64 build of TF-A.
1928
1929 .. code:: shell
1930
1931 <path-to>/FVP_Base_Cortex-A57x4-A53x4 \
1932 -C pctl.startup=0.0.0.0 \
1933 -C bp.secure_memory=1 \
1934 -C bp.tzc_400.diagnostics=1 \
1935 -C cache_state_modelled=1 \
1936 -C bp.secureflashloader.fname="<path-to>/<bl1-binary>" \
1937 -C bp.flashloader0.fname="<path-to>/<FIP-binary>" \
1938 --data cluster0.cpu0="<path-to>/<kernel-binary>"@0x80080000 \
1939 --data cluster0.cpu0="<path-to>/<ramdisk>"@0x84000000
1940
1941 Running on the Cortex-A32 Base FVP (AArch32) with reset to BL1 entrypoint
1942 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1943
1944 The following ``FVP_Base_Cortex-A32x4`` model parameters should be used to
1945 boot Linux with 4 CPUs using the AArch32 build of TF-A.
1946
1947 .. code:: shell
1948
1949 <path-to>/FVP_Base_Cortex-A32x4 \
1950 -C pctl.startup=0.0.0.0 \
1951 -C bp.secure_memory=1 \
1952 -C bp.tzc_400.diagnostics=1 \
1953 -C cache_state_modelled=1 \
1954 -C bp.secureflashloader.fname="<path-to>/<bl1-binary>" \
1955 -C bp.flashloader0.fname="<path-to>/<FIP-binary>" \
1956 --data cluster0.cpu0="<path-to>/<kernel-binary>"@0x80080000 \
1957 --data cluster0.cpu0="<path-to>/<ramdisk>"@0x84000000
1958
1959 Running on the AEMv8 Base FVP with reset to BL31 entrypoint
1960 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1961
1962 The following ``FVP_Base_RevC-2xAEMv8A`` parameters should be used to boot Linux
1963 with 8 CPUs using the AArch64 build of TF-A.
1964
1965 .. code:: shell
1966
1967 <path-to>/FVP_Base_RevC-2xAEMv8A \
1968 -C pctl.startup=0.0.0.0 \
1969 -C bp.secure_memory=1 \
1970 -C bp.tzc_400.diagnostics=1 \
1971 -C cluster0.NUM_CORES=4 \
1972 -C cluster1.NUM_CORES=4 \
1973 -C cache_state_modelled=1 \
1974 -C cluster0.cpu0.RVBAR=0x04010000 \
1975 -C cluster0.cpu1.RVBAR=0x04010000 \
1976 -C cluster0.cpu2.RVBAR=0x04010000 \
1977 -C cluster0.cpu3.RVBAR=0x04010000 \
1978 -C cluster1.cpu0.RVBAR=0x04010000 \
1979 -C cluster1.cpu1.RVBAR=0x04010000 \
1980 -C cluster1.cpu2.RVBAR=0x04010000 \
1981 -C cluster1.cpu3.RVBAR=0x04010000 \
1982 --data cluster0.cpu0="<path-to>/<bl31-binary>"@0x04010000 \
1983 --data cluster0.cpu0="<path-to>/<bl32-binary>"@0xff000000 \
1984 --data cluster0.cpu0="<path-to>/<bl33-binary>"@0x88000000 \
1985 --data cluster0.cpu0="<path-to>/<fdt>"@0x82000000 \
1986 --data cluster0.cpu0="<path-to>/<kernel-binary>"@0x80080000 \
1987 --data cluster0.cpu0="<path-to>/<ramdisk>"@0x84000000
1988
1989 Notes:
1990
1991 - If Position Independent Executable (PIE) support is enabled for BL31
1992 in this config, it can be loaded at any valid address for execution.
1993
1994 - Since a FIP is not loaded when using BL31 as reset entrypoint, the
1995 ``--data="<path-to><bl31|bl32|bl33-binary>"@<base-address-of-binary>``
1996 parameter is needed to load the individual bootloader images in memory.
1997 BL32 image is only needed if BL31 has been built to expect a Secure-EL1
1998 Payload. For the same reason, the FDT needs to be compiled from the DT source
1999 and loaded via the ``--data cluster0.cpu0="<path-to>/<fdt>"@0x82000000``
2000 parameter.
2001
2002 - The ``FVP_Base_RevC-2xAEMv8A`` has shifted affinities and requires a
2003 specific DTS for all the CPUs to be loaded.
2004
2005 - The ``-C cluster<X>.cpu<Y>.RVBAR=@<base-address-of-bl31>`` parameter, where
2006 X and Y are the cluster and CPU numbers respectively, is used to set the
2007 reset vector for each core.
2008
2009 - Changing the default value of ``ARM_TSP_RAM_LOCATION`` will also require
2010 changing the value of
2011 ``--data="<path-to><bl32-binary>"@<base-address-of-bl32>`` to the new value of
2012 ``BL32_BASE``.
2013
2014 Running on the AEMv8 Base FVP (AArch32) with reset to SP_MIN entrypoint
2015 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2016
2017 The following ``FVP_Base_AEMv8A-AEMv8A`` parameters should be used to boot Linux
2018 with 8 CPUs using the AArch32 build of TF-A.
2019
2020 .. code:: shell
2021
2022 <path-to>/FVP_Base_AEMv8A-AEMv8A \
2023 -C pctl.startup=0.0.0.0 \
2024 -C bp.secure_memory=1 \
2025 -C bp.tzc_400.diagnostics=1 \
2026 -C cluster0.NUM_CORES=4 \
2027 -C cluster1.NUM_CORES=4 \
2028 -C cache_state_modelled=1 \
2029 -C cluster0.cpu0.CONFIG64=0 \
2030 -C cluster0.cpu1.CONFIG64=0 \
2031 -C cluster0.cpu2.CONFIG64=0 \
2032 -C cluster0.cpu3.CONFIG64=0 \
2033 -C cluster1.cpu0.CONFIG64=0 \
2034 -C cluster1.cpu1.CONFIG64=0 \
2035 -C cluster1.cpu2.CONFIG64=0 \
2036 -C cluster1.cpu3.CONFIG64=0 \
2037 -C cluster0.cpu0.RVBAR=0x04002000 \
2038 -C cluster0.cpu1.RVBAR=0x04002000 \
2039 -C cluster0.cpu2.RVBAR=0x04002000 \
2040 -C cluster0.cpu3.RVBAR=0x04002000 \
2041 -C cluster1.cpu0.RVBAR=0x04002000 \
2042 -C cluster1.cpu1.RVBAR=0x04002000 \
2043 -C cluster1.cpu2.RVBAR=0x04002000 \
2044 -C cluster1.cpu3.RVBAR=0x04002000 \
2045 --data cluster0.cpu0="<path-to>/<bl32-binary>"@0x04002000 \
2046 --data cluster0.cpu0="<path-to>/<bl33-binary>"@0x88000000 \
2047 --data cluster0.cpu0="<path-to>/<fdt>"@0x82000000 \
2048 --data cluster0.cpu0="<path-to>/<kernel-binary>"@0x80080000 \
2049 --data cluster0.cpu0="<path-to>/<ramdisk>"@0x84000000
2050
2051 .. note::
2052 The load address of ``<bl32-binary>`` depends on the value ``BL32_BASE``.
2053 It should match the address programmed into the RVBAR register as well.
2054
2055 Running on the Cortex-A57-A53 Base FVP with reset to BL31 entrypoint
2056 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2057
2058 The following ``FVP_Base_Cortex-A57x4-A53x4`` model parameters should be used to
2059 boot Linux with 8 CPUs using the AArch64 build of TF-A.
2060
2061 .. code:: shell
2062
2063 <path-to>/FVP_Base_Cortex-A57x4-A53x4 \
2064 -C pctl.startup=0.0.0.0 \
2065 -C bp.secure_memory=1 \
2066 -C bp.tzc_400.diagnostics=1 \
2067 -C cache_state_modelled=1 \
2068 -C cluster0.cpu0.RVBARADDR=0x04010000 \
2069 -C cluster0.cpu1.RVBARADDR=0x04010000 \
2070 -C cluster0.cpu2.RVBARADDR=0x04010000 \
2071 -C cluster0.cpu3.RVBARADDR=0x04010000 \
2072 -C cluster1.cpu0.RVBARADDR=0x04010000 \
2073 -C cluster1.cpu1.RVBARADDR=0x04010000 \
2074 -C cluster1.cpu2.RVBARADDR=0x04010000 \
2075 -C cluster1.cpu3.RVBARADDR=0x04010000 \
2076 --data cluster0.cpu0="<path-to>/<bl31-binary>"@0x04010000 \
2077 --data cluster0.cpu0="<path-to>/<bl32-binary>"@0xff000000 \
2078 --data cluster0.cpu0="<path-to>/<bl33-binary>"@0x88000000 \
2079 --data cluster0.cpu0="<path-to>/<fdt>"@0x82000000 \
2080 --data cluster0.cpu0="<path-to>/<kernel-binary>"@0x80080000 \
2081 --data cluster0.cpu0="<path-to>/<ramdisk>"@0x84000000
2082
2083 Running on the Cortex-A32 Base FVP (AArch32) with reset to SP_MIN entrypoint
2084 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2085
2086 The following ``FVP_Base_Cortex-A32x4`` model parameters should be used to
2087 boot Linux with 4 CPUs using the AArch32 build of TF-A.
2088
2089 .. code:: shell
2090
2091 <path-to>/FVP_Base_Cortex-A32x4 \
2092 -C pctl.startup=0.0.0.0 \
2093 -C bp.secure_memory=1 \
2094 -C bp.tzc_400.diagnostics=1 \
2095 -C cache_state_modelled=1 \
2096 -C cluster0.cpu0.RVBARADDR=0x04002000 \
2097 -C cluster0.cpu1.RVBARADDR=0x04002000 \
2098 -C cluster0.cpu2.RVBARADDR=0x04002000 \
2099 -C cluster0.cpu3.RVBARADDR=0x04002000 \
2100 --data cluster0.cpu0="<path-to>/<bl32-binary>"@0x04002000 \
2101 --data cluster0.cpu0="<path-to>/<bl33-binary>"@0x88000000 \
2102 --data cluster0.cpu0="<path-to>/<fdt>"@0x82000000 \
2103 --data cluster0.cpu0="<path-to>/<kernel-binary>"@0x80080000 \
2104 --data cluster0.cpu0="<path-to>/<ramdisk>"@0x84000000
2105
2106 Running the software on Juno
2107 ----------------------------
2108
2109 This version of TF-A has been tested on variants r0, r1 and r2 of Juno.
2110
2111 To execute the software stack on Juno, the version of the Juno board recovery
2112 image indicated in the `Linaro Release Notes`_ must be installed. If you have an
2113 earlier version installed or are unsure which version is installed, please
2114 re-install the recovery image by following the
2115 `Instructions for using Linaro's deliverables on Juno`_.
2116
2117 Preparing TF-A images
2118 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2119
2120 After building TF-A, the files ``bl1.bin`` and ``fip.bin`` need copying to the
2121 ``SOFTWARE/`` directory of the Juno SD card.
2122
2123 Other Juno software information
2124 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2125
2126 Please visit the `Arm Platforms Portal`_ to get support and obtain any other Juno
2127 software information. Please also refer to the `Juno Getting Started Guide`_ to
2128 get more detailed information about the Juno Arm development platform and how to
2129 configure it.
2130
2131 Testing SYSTEM SUSPEND on Juno
2132 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2133
2134 The SYSTEM SUSPEND is a PSCI API which can be used to implement system suspend
2135 to RAM. For more details refer to section 5.16 of `PSCI`_. To test system suspend
2136 on Juno, at the linux shell prompt, issue the following command:
2137
2138 .. code:: shell
2139
2140 echo +10 > /sys/class/rtc/rtc0/wakealarm
2141 echo -n mem > /sys/power/state
2142
2143 The Juno board should suspend to RAM and then wakeup after 10 seconds due to
2144 wakeup interrupt from RTC.
2145
2146 --------------
2147
2148 *Copyright (c) 2013-2019, Arm Limited and Contributors. All rights reserved.*
2149
2150 .. _arm Developer page: https://developer.arm.com/open-source/gnu-toolchain/gnu-a/downloads
2151 .. _Linaro: `Linaro Release Notes`_
2152 .. _Linaro Release: `Linaro Release Notes`_
2153 .. _Linaro Release Notes: https://community.arm.com/dev-platforms/w/docs/226/old-release-notes
2154 .. _Linaro instructions: https://community.arm.com/dev-platforms/w/docs/304/arm-reference-platforms-deliverables
2155 .. _Instructions for using Linaro's deliverables on Juno: https://community.arm.com/dev-platforms/w/docs/303/juno
2156 .. _Arm Platforms Portal: https://community.arm.com/dev-platforms/
2157 .. _Development Studio 5 (DS-5): https://developer.arm.com/products/software-development-tools/ds-5-development-studio
2158 .. _arm-trusted-firmware-a project page: https://review.trustedfirmware.org/admin/projects/TF-A/trusted-firmware-a
2159 .. _`Linux Coding Style`: https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/latest/process/coding-style.html
2160 .. _Linux master tree: https://github.com/torvalds/linux/tree/master/
2161 .. _Dia: https://wiki.gnome.org/Apps/Dia/Download
2162 .. _here: psci-lib-integration-guide.rst
2163 .. _Trusted Board Boot: ../design/trusted-board-boot.rst
2164 .. _TB_FW_CONFIG for FVP: ../../plat/arm/board/fvp/fdts/fvp_tb_fw_config.dts
2165 .. _Secure-EL1 Payloads and Dispatchers: ../design/firmware-design.rst#user-content-secure-el1-payloads-and-dispatchers
2166 .. _Firmware Update: ../components/firmware-update.rst
2167 .. _Firmware Design: ../design/firmware-design.rst
2168 .. _mbed TLS Repository: https://github.com/ARMmbed/mbedtls.git
2169 .. _mbed TLS Security Center: https://tls.mbed.org/security
2170 .. _Arm's website: `FVP models`_
2171 .. _FVP models: https://developer.arm.com/products/system-design/fixed-virtual-platforms
2172 .. _Juno Getting Started Guide: http://infocenter.arm.com/help/topic/com.arm.doc.dui0928e/DUI0928E_juno_arm_development_platform_gsg.pdf
2173 .. _PSCI: http://infocenter.arm.com/help/topic/com.arm.doc.den0022d/Power_State_Coordination_Interface_PDD_v1_1_DEN0022D.pdf
2174 .. _Secure Partition Manager Design guide: ../components/secure-partition-manager-design.rst
2175 .. _`Trusted Firmware-A Coding Guidelines`: ../process/coding-guidelines.rst
2176 .. _Library at ROM: ../components/romlib-design.rst