| Booting AArch64 Linux |
| ===================== |
| |
| Author: Will Deacon <will.deacon@arm.com> |
| Date : 07 September 2012 |
| |
| This document is based on the ARM booting document by Russell King and |
| is relevant to all public releases of the AArch64 Linux kernel. |
| |
| The AArch64 exception model is made up of a number of exception levels |
| (EL0 - EL3), with EL0 and EL1 having a secure and a non-secure |
| counterpart. EL2 is the hypervisor level and exists only in non-secure |
| mode. EL3 is the highest priority level and exists only in secure mode. |
| |
| For the purposes of this document, we will use the term `boot loader' |
| simply to define all software that executes on the CPU(s) before control |
| is passed to the Linux kernel. This may include secure monitor and |
| hypervisor code, or it may just be a handful of instructions for |
| preparing a minimal boot environment. |
| |
| Essentially, the boot loader should provide (as a minimum) the |
| following: |
| |
| 1. Setup and initialise the RAM |
| 2. Setup the device tree |
| 3. Decompress the kernel image |
| 4. Call the kernel image |
| |
| |
| 1. Setup and initialise RAM |
| --------------------------- |
| |
| Requirement: MANDATORY |
| |
| The boot loader is expected to find and initialise all RAM that the |
| kernel will use for volatile data storage in the system. It performs |
| this in a machine dependent manner. (It may use internal algorithms |
| to automatically locate and size all RAM, or it may use knowledge of |
| the RAM in the machine, or any other method the boot loader designer |
| sees fit.) |
| |
| |
| 2. Setup the device tree |
| ------------------------- |
| |
| Requirement: MANDATORY |
| |
| The device tree blob (dtb) must be placed on an 8-byte boundary and must |
| not exceed 2 megabytes in size. Since the dtb will be mapped cacheable |
| using blocks of up to 2 megabytes in size, it must not be placed within |
| any 2M region which must be mapped with any specific attributes. |
| |
| NOTE: versions prior to v4.2 also require that the DTB be placed within |
| the 512 MB region starting at text_offset bytes below the kernel Image. |
| |
| 3. Decompress the kernel image |
| ------------------------------ |
| |
| Requirement: OPTIONAL |
| |
| The AArch64 kernel does not currently provide a decompressor and |
| therefore requires decompression (gzip etc.) to be performed by the boot |
| loader if a compressed Image target (e.g. Image.gz) is used. For |
| bootloaders that do not implement this requirement, the uncompressed |
| Image target is available instead. |
| |
| |
| 4. Call the kernel image |
| ------------------------ |
| |
| Requirement: MANDATORY |
| |
| The decompressed kernel image contains a 64-byte header as follows: |
| |
| u32 code0; /* Executable code */ |
| u32 code1; /* Executable code */ |
| u64 text_offset; /* Image load offset, little endian */ |
| u64 image_size; /* Effective Image size, little endian */ |
| u64 flags; /* kernel flags, little endian */ |
| u64 res2 = 0; /* reserved */ |
| u64 res3 = 0; /* reserved */ |
| u64 res4 = 0; /* reserved */ |
| u32 magic = 0x644d5241; /* Magic number, little endian, "ARM\x64" */ |
| u32 res5; /* reserved (used for PE COFF offset) */ |
| |
| |
| Header notes: |
| |
| - As of v3.17, all fields are little endian unless stated otherwise. |
| |
| - code0/code1 are responsible for branching to stext. |
| |
| - when booting through EFI, code0/code1 are initially skipped. |
| res5 is an offset to the PE header and the PE header has the EFI |
| entry point (efi_stub_entry). When the stub has done its work, it |
| jumps to code0 to resume the normal boot process. |
| |
| - Prior to v3.17, the endianness of text_offset was not specified. In |
| these cases image_size is zero and text_offset is 0x80000 in the |
| endianness of the kernel. Where image_size is non-zero image_size is |
| little-endian and must be respected. Where image_size is zero, |
| text_offset can be assumed to be 0x80000. |
| |
| - The flags field (introduced in v3.17) is a little-endian 64-bit field |
| composed as follows: |
| Bit 0: Kernel endianness. 1 if BE, 0 if LE. |
| Bit 1-2: Kernel Page size. |
| 0 - Unspecified. |
| 1 - 4K |
| 2 - 16K |
| 3 - 64K |
| Bit 3: Kernel physical placement |
| 0 - 2MB aligned base should be as close as possible |
| to the base of DRAM, since memory below it is not |
| accessible via the linear mapping |
| 1 - 2MB aligned base may be anywhere in physical |
| memory |
| Bits 4-63: Reserved. |
| |
| - When image_size is zero, a bootloader should attempt to keep as much |
| memory as possible free for use by the kernel immediately after the |
| end of the kernel image. The amount of space required will vary |
| depending on selected features, and is effectively unbound. |
| |
| The Image must be placed text_offset bytes from a 2MB aligned base |
| address anywhere in usable system RAM and called there. The region |
| between the 2 MB aligned base address and the start of the image has no |
| special significance to the kernel, and may be used for other purposes. |
| At least image_size bytes from the start of the image must be free for |
| use by the kernel. |
| NOTE: versions prior to v4.6 cannot make use of memory below the |
| physical offset of the Image so it is recommended that the Image be |
| placed as close as possible to the start of system RAM. |
| |
| If an initrd/initramfs is passed to the kernel at boot, it must reside |
| entirely within a 1 GB aligned physical memory window of up to 32 GB in |
| size that fully covers the kernel Image as well. |
| |
| Any memory described to the kernel (even that below the start of the |
| image) which is not marked as reserved from the kernel (e.g., with a |
| memreserve region in the device tree) will be considered as available to |
| the kernel. |
| |
| Before jumping into the kernel, the following conditions must be met: |
| |
| - Quiesce all DMA capable devices so that memory does not get |
| corrupted by bogus network packets or disk data. This will save |
| you many hours of debug. |
| |
| - Primary CPU general-purpose register settings |
| x0 = physical address of device tree blob (dtb) in system RAM. |
| x1 = 0 (reserved for future use) |
| x2 = 0 (reserved for future use) |
| x3 = 0 (reserved for future use) |
| |
| - CPU mode |
| All forms of interrupts must be masked in PSTATE.DAIF (Debug, SError, |
| IRQ and FIQ). |
| The CPU must be in either EL2 (RECOMMENDED in order to have access to |
| the virtualisation extensions) or non-secure EL1. |
| |
| - Caches, MMUs |
| The MMU must be off. |
| Instruction cache may be on or off. |
| The address range corresponding to the loaded kernel image must be |
| cleaned to the PoC. In the presence of a system cache or other |
| coherent masters with caches enabled, this will typically require |
| cache maintenance by VA rather than set/way operations. |
| System caches which respect the architected cache maintenance by VA |
| operations must be configured and may be enabled. |
| System caches which do not respect architected cache maintenance by VA |
| operations (not recommended) must be configured and disabled. |
| |
| - Architected timers |
| CNTFRQ must be programmed with the timer frequency and CNTVOFF must |
| be programmed with a consistent value on all CPUs. If entering the |
| kernel at EL1, CNTHCTL_EL2 must have EL1PCTEN (bit 0) set where |
| available. |
| |
| - Coherency |
| All CPUs to be booted by the kernel must be part of the same coherency |
| domain on entry to the kernel. This may require IMPLEMENTATION DEFINED |
| initialisation to enable the receiving of maintenance operations on |
| each CPU. |
| |
| - System registers |
| All writable architected system registers at the exception level where |
| the kernel image will be entered must be initialised by software at a |
| higher exception level to prevent execution in an UNKNOWN state. |
| |
| - SCR_EL3.FIQ must have the same value across all CPUs the kernel is |
| executing on. |
| - The value of SCR_EL3.FIQ must be the same as the one present at boot |
| time whenever the kernel is executing. |
| |
| For systems with a GICv3 interrupt controller to be used in v3 mode: |
| - If EL3 is present: |
| ICC_SRE_EL3.Enable (bit 3) must be initialiased to 0b1. |
| ICC_SRE_EL3.SRE (bit 0) must be initialised to 0b1. |
| - If the kernel is entered at EL1: |
| ICC.SRE_EL2.Enable (bit 3) must be initialised to 0b1 |
| ICC_SRE_EL2.SRE (bit 0) must be initialised to 0b1. |
| - The DT or ACPI tables must describe a GICv3 interrupt controller. |
| |
| For systems with a GICv3 interrupt controller to be used in |
| compatibility (v2) mode: |
| - If EL3 is present: |
| ICC_SRE_EL3.SRE (bit 0) must be initialised to 0b0. |
| - If the kernel is entered at EL1: |
| ICC_SRE_EL2.SRE (bit 0) must be initialised to 0b0. |
| - The DT or ACPI tables must describe a GICv2 interrupt controller. |
| |
| For CPUs with pointer authentication functionality: |
| - If EL3 is present: |
| SCR_EL3.APK (bit 16) must be initialised to 0b1 |
| SCR_EL3.API (bit 17) must be initialised to 0b1 |
| - If the kernel is entered at EL1: |
| HCR_EL2.APK (bit 40) must be initialised to 0b1 |
| HCR_EL2.API (bit 41) must be initialised to 0b1 |
| |
| The requirements described above for CPU mode, caches, MMUs, architected |
| timers, coherency and system registers apply to all CPUs. All CPUs must |
| enter the kernel in the same exception level. |
| |
| The boot loader is expected to enter the kernel on each CPU in the |
| following manner: |
| |
| - The primary CPU must jump directly to the first instruction of the |
| kernel image. The device tree blob passed by this CPU must contain |
| an 'enable-method' property for each cpu node. The supported |
| enable-methods are described below. |
| |
| It is expected that the bootloader will generate these device tree |
| properties and insert them into the blob prior to kernel entry. |
| |
| - CPUs with a "spin-table" enable-method must have a 'cpu-release-addr' |
| property in their cpu node. This property identifies a |
| naturally-aligned 64-bit zero-initalised memory location. |
| |
| These CPUs should spin outside of the kernel in a reserved area of |
| memory (communicated to the kernel by a /memreserve/ region in the |
| device tree) polling their cpu-release-addr location, which must be |
| contained in the reserved region. A wfe instruction may be inserted |
| to reduce the overhead of the busy-loop and a sev will be issued by |
| the primary CPU. When a read of the location pointed to by the |
| cpu-release-addr returns a non-zero value, the CPU must jump to this |
| value. The value will be written as a single 64-bit little-endian |
| value, so CPUs must convert the read value to their native endianness |
| before jumping to it. |
| |
| - CPUs with a "psci" enable method should remain outside of |
| the kernel (i.e. outside of the regions of memory described to the |
| kernel in the memory node, or in a reserved area of memory described |
| to the kernel by a /memreserve/ region in the device tree). The |
| kernel will issue CPU_ON calls as described in ARM document number ARM |
| DEN 0022A ("Power State Coordination Interface System Software on ARM |
| processors") to bring CPUs into the kernel. |
| |
| The device tree should contain a 'psci' node, as described in |
| Documentation/devicetree/bindings/arm/psci.txt. |
| |
| - Secondary CPU general-purpose register settings |
| x0 = 0 (reserved for future use) |
| x1 = 0 (reserved for future use) |
| x2 = 0 (reserved for future use) |
| x3 = 0 (reserved for future use) |