| Secure Partition Manager |
| ************************ |
| |
| Background |
| ========== |
| |
| In some market segments that primarily deal with client-side devices like mobile |
| phones, tablets, STBs and embedded devices, a Trusted OS instantiates trusted |
| applications to provide security services like DRM, secure payment and |
| authentication. The Global Platform TEE Client API specification defines the API |
| used by Non-secure world applications to access these services. A Trusted OS |
| fulfils the requirements of a security service as described above. |
| |
| Management services are typically implemented at the highest level of privilege |
| in the system, i.e. EL3 in Trusted Firmware-A (TF-A). The service requirements are |
| fulfilled by the execution environment provided by TF-A. |
| |
| The following diagram illustrates the corresponding software stack: |
| |
| |Image 1| |
| |
| In other market segments that primarily deal with server-side devices (e.g. data |
| centres and enterprise servers) the secure software stack typically does not |
| include a Global Platform Trusted OS. Security functions are accessed through |
| other interfaces (e.g. ACPI TCG TPM interface, UEFI runtime variable service). |
| |
| Placement of management and security functions with diverse requirements in a |
| privileged Exception Level (i.e. EL3 or S-EL1) makes security auditing of |
| firmware more difficult and does not allow isolation of unrelated services from |
| each other either. |
| |
| Introduction |
| ============ |
| |
| A **Secure Partition** is a software execution environment instantiated in |
| S-EL0 that can be used to implement simple management and security services. |
| Since S-EL0 is an unprivileged Exception Level, a Secure Partition relies on |
| privileged firmware (i.e. TF-A) to be granted access to system and processor |
| resources. Essentially, it is a software sandbox in the Secure world that runs |
| under the control of privileged software, provides one or more services and |
| accesses the following system resources: |
| |
| - Memory and device regions in the system address map. |
| |
| - PE system registers. |
| |
| - A range of synchronous exceptions (e.g. SMC function identifiers). |
| |
| Note that currently TF-A only supports handling one Secure Partition. |
| |
| A Secure Partition enables TF-A to implement only the essential secure |
| services in EL3 and instantiate the rest in a partition in S-EL0. |
| Furthermore, multiple Secure Partitions can be used to isolate unrelated |
| services from each other. |
| |
| The following diagram illustrates the place of a Secure Partition in a typical |
| Armv8-A software stack. A single or multiple Secure Partitions provide secure |
| services to software components in the Non-secure world and other Secure |
| Partitions. |
| |
| |Image 2| |
| |
| The TF-A build system is responsible for including the Secure Partition image |
| in the FIP. During boot, BL2 includes support to authenticate and load the |
| Secure Partition image. A BL31 component called **Secure Partition Manager |
| (SPM)** is responsible for managing the partition. This is semantically |
| similar to a hypervisor managing a virtual machine. |
| |
| The SPM is responsible for the following actions during boot: |
| |
| - Allocate resources requested by the Secure Partition. |
| |
| - Perform architectural and system setup required by the Secure Partition to |
| fulfil a service request. |
| |
| - Implement a standard interface that is used for initialising a Secure |
| Partition. |
| |
| The SPM is responsible for the following actions during runtime: |
| |
| - Implement a standard interface that is used by a Secure Partition to fulfil |
| service requests. |
| |
| - Implement a standard interface that is used by the Non-secure world for |
| accessing the services exported by a Secure Partition. A service can be |
| invoked through a SMC. |
| |
| Alternatively, a partition can be viewed as a thread of execution running under |
| the control of the SPM. Hence common programming concepts described below are |
| applicable to a partition. |
| |
| Description |
| =========== |
| |
| The previous section introduced some general aspects of the software |
| architecture of a Secure Partition. This section describes the specific choices |
| made in the current implementation of this software architecture. Subsequent |
| revisions of the implementation will include a richer set of features that |
| enable a more flexible architecture. |
| |
| Building TF-A with Secure Partition support |
| ------------------------------------------- |
| |
| SPM is supported on the Arm FVP exclusively at the moment. The current |
| implementation supports inclusion of only a single Secure Partition in which a |
| service always runs to completion (e.g. the requested services cannot be |
| preempted to give control back to the Normal world). |
| |
| It is not currently possible for BL31 to integrate SPM support and a Secure |
| Payload Dispatcher (SPD) at the same time; they are mutually exclusive. In the |
| SPM bootflow, a Secure Partition image executing at S-EL0 replaces the Secure |
| Payload image executing at S-EL1 (e.g. a Trusted OS). Both are referred to as |
| BL32. |
| |
| A working prototype of a SP has been implemented by re-purposing the EDK2 code |
| and tools, leveraging the concept of the *Standalone Management Mode (MM)* in |
| the UEFI specification (see the PI v1.6 Volume 4: Management Mode Core |
| Interface). This will be referred to as the *Standalone MM Secure Partition* in |
| the rest of this document. |
| |
| To enable SPM support in TF-A, the source code must be compiled with the build |
| flag ``ENABLE_SPM=1``, along with ``EL3_EXCEPTION_HANDLING=1``. On Arm |
| platforms the build option ``ARM_BL31_IN_DRAM`` must be set to 1. Also, the |
| location of the binary that contains the BL32 image |
| (``BL32=path/to/image.bin``) must be specified. |
| |
| First, build the Standalone MM Secure Partition. To build it, refer to the |
| `instructions in the EDK2 repository`_. |
| |
| Then build TF-A with SPM support and include the Standalone MM Secure Partition |
| image in the FIP: |
| |
| :: |
| |
| BL32=path/to/standalone/mm/sp BL33=path/to/bl33.bin \ |
| make PLAT=fvp ENABLE_SPM=1 ARM_BL31_IN_DRAM=1 fip all |
| |
| Describing Secure Partition resources |
| ------------------------------------- |
| |
| TF-A exports a porting interface that enables a platform to specify the system |
| resources required by the Secure Partition. Some instructions are given below. |
| However, this interface is under development and it may change as new features |
| are implemented. |
| |
| - A Secure Partition is considered a BL32 image, so the same defines that apply |
| to BL32 images apply to a Secure Partition: ``BL32_BASE`` and ``BL32_LIMIT``. |
| |
| - The following defines are needed to allocate space for the translation tables |
| used by the Secure Partition: ``PLAT_SP_IMAGE_MMAP_REGIONS`` and |
| ``PLAT_SP_IMAGE_MAX_XLAT_TABLES``. |
| |
| - The functions ``plat_get_secure_partition_mmap()`` and |
| ``plat_get_secure_partition_boot_info()`` have to be implemented. The file |
| ``plat/arm/board/fvp/fvp_common.c`` can be used as an example. It uses the |
| defines in ``include/plat/arm/common/arm_spm_def.h``. |
| |
| - ``plat_get_secure_partition_mmap()`` returns an array of mmap regions that |
| describe the memory regions that the SPM needs to allocate for a Secure |
| Partition. |
| |
| - ``plat_get_secure_partition_boot_info()`` returns a |
| ``secure_partition_boot_info_t`` struct that is populated by the platform |
| with information about the memory map of the Secure Partition. |
| |
| For an example of all the changes in context, you may refer to commit |
| ``e29efeb1b4``, in which the port for FVP was introduced. |
| |
| Accessing Secure Partition services |
| ----------------------------------- |
| |
| The `SMC Calling Convention`_ (*Arm DEN 0028B*) describes SMCs as a conduit for |
| accessing services implemented in the Secure world. The ``MM_COMMUNICATE`` |
| interface defined in the `Management Mode Interface Specification`_ (*Arm DEN |
| 0060A*) is used to invoke a Secure Partition service as a Fast Call. |
| |
| The mechanism used to identify a service within the partition depends on the |
| service implementation. It is assumed that the caller of the service will be |
| able to discover this mechanism through standard platform discovery mechanisms |
| like ACPI and Device Trees. For example, *Volume 4: Platform Initialisation |
| Specification v1.6. Management Mode Core Interface* specifies that a GUID is |
| used to identify a management mode service. A client populates the GUID in the |
| ``EFI_MM_COMMUNICATE_HEADER``. The header is populated in the communication |
| buffer shared with the Secure Partition. |
| |
| A Fast Call appears to be atomic from the perspective of the caller and returns |
| when the requested operation has completed. A service invoked through the |
| ``MM_COMMUNICATE`` SMC will run to completion in the partition on a given CPU. |
| The SPM is responsible for guaranteeing this behaviour. This means that there |
| can only be a single outstanding Fast Call in a partition on a given CPU. |
| |
| Exchanging data with the Secure Partition |
| ----------------------------------------- |
| |
| The exchange of data between the Non-secure world and the partition takes place |
| through a shared memory region. The location of data in the shared memory area |
| is passed as a parameter to the ``MM_COMMUNICATE`` SMC. The shared memory area |
| is statically allocated by the SPM and is expected to be either implicitly known |
| to the Non-secure world or discovered through a platform discovery mechanism |
| e.g. ACPI table or device tree. It is possible for the Non-secure world to |
| exchange data with a partition only if it has been populated in this shared |
| memory area. The shared memory area is implemented as per the guidelines |
| specified in Section 3.2.3 of the `Management Mode Interface Specification`_ |
| (*Arm DEN 0060A*). |
| |
| The format of data structures used to encapsulate data in the shared memory is |
| agreed between the Non-secure world and the Secure Partition. For example, in |
| the `Management Mode Interface specification`_ (*Arm DEN 0060A*), Section 4 |
| describes that the communication buffer shared between the Non-secure world and |
| the Management Mode (MM) in the Secure world must be of the type |
| ``EFI_MM_COMMUNICATE_HEADER``. This data structure is defined in *Volume 4: |
| Platform Initialisation Specification v1.6. Management Mode Core Interface*. |
| Any caller of a MM service will have to use the ``EFI_MM_COMMUNICATE_HEADER`` |
| data structure. |
| |
| Runtime model of the Secure Partition |
| ===================================== |
| |
| This section describes how the Secure Partition interfaces with the SPM. |
| |
| Interface with SPM |
| ------------------ |
| |
| In order to instantiate one or more secure services in the Secure Partition in |
| S-EL0, the SPM should define the following types of interfaces: |
| |
| - Interfaces that enable access to privileged operations from S-EL0. These |
| operations typically require access to system resources that are either shared |
| amongst multiple software components in the Secure world or cannot be directly |
| accessed from an unprivileged Exception Level. |
| |
| - Interfaces that establish the control path between the SPM and the Secure |
| Partition. |
| |
| This section describes the APIs currently exported by the SPM that enable a |
| Secure Partition to initialise itself and export its services in S-EL0. These |
| interfaces are not accessible from the Non-secure world. |
| |
| Conduit |
| ^^^^^^^ |
| |
| The `SMC Calling Convention`_ (*Arm DEN 0028B*) specification describes the SMC |
| and HVC conduits for accessing firmware services and their availability |
| depending on the implemented Exception levels. In S-EL0, the Supervisor Call |
| exception (SVC) is the only architectural mechanism available for unprivileged |
| software to make a request for an operation implemented in privileged software. |
| Hence, the SVC conduit must be used by the Secure Partition to access interfaces |
| implemented by the SPM. |
| |
| A SVC causes an exception to be taken to S-EL1. TF-A assumes ownership of S-EL1 |
| and installs a simple exception vector table in S-EL1 that relays a SVC request |
| from a Secure Partition as a SMC request to the SPM in EL3. Upon servicing the |
| SMC request, Arm Trusted Firmware returns control directly to S-EL0 through an |
| ERET instruction. |
| |
| Calling conventions |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| The `SMC Calling Convention`_ (*Arm DEN 0028B*) specification describes the |
| 32-bit and 64-bit calling conventions for the SMC and HVC conduits. The SVC |
| conduit introduces the concept of SVC32 and SVC64 calling conventions. The SVC32 |
| and SVC64 calling conventions are equivalent to the 32-bit (SMC32) and the |
| 64-bit (SMC64) calling conventions respectively. |
| |
| Communication initiated by SPM |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| A service request is initiated from the SPM through an exception return |
| instruction (ERET) to S-EL0. Later, the Secure Partition issues an SVC |
| instruction to signal completion of the request. Some example use cases are |
| given below: |
| |
| - A request to initialise the Secure Partition during system boot. |
| |
| - A request to handle a runtime service request. |
| |
| Communication initiated by Secure Partition |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| A request is initiated from the Secure Partition by executing a SVC instruction. |
| An ERET instruction is used by TF-A to return to S-EL0 with the result of the |
| request. |
| |
| For instance, a request to perform privileged operations on behalf of a |
| partition (e.g. management of memory attributes in the translation tables for |
| the Secure EL1&0 translation regime). |
| |
| Interfaces |
| ^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| The current implementation reserves function IDs for Fast Calls in the Standard |
| Secure Service calls range (see `SMC Calling Convention`_ (*Arm DEN 0028B*) |
| specification) for each API exported by the SPM. This section defines the |
| function prototypes for each function ID. The function IDs specify whether one |
| or both of the SVC32 and SVC64 calling conventions can be used to invoke the |
| corresponding interface. |
| |
| Secure Partition Event Management |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| The Secure Partition provides an Event Management interface that is used by the |
| SPM to delegate service requests to the Secure Partition. The interface also |
| allows the Secure Partition to: |
| |
| - Register with the SPM a service that it provides. |
| - Indicate completion of a service request delegated by the SPM |
| |
| Miscellaneous interfaces |
| ------------------------ |
| |
| ``SPM_VERSION_AARCH32`` |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| - Description |
| |
| Returns the version of the interface exported by SPM. |
| |
| - Parameters |
| |
| - **uint32** - Function ID |
| |
| - SVC32 Version: **0x84000060** |
| |
| - Return parameters |
| |
| - **int32** - Status |
| |
| On success, the format of the value is as follows: |
| |
| - Bit [31]: Must be 0 |
| - Bits [30:16]: Major Version. Must be 0 for this revision of the SPM |
| interface. |
| - Bits [15:0]: Minor Version. Must be 1 for this revision of the SPM |
| interface. |
| |
| On error, the format of the value is as follows: |
| |
| - ``NOT_SUPPORTED``: SPM interface is not supported or not available for the |
| client. |
| |
| - Usage |
| |
| This function returns the version of the Secure Partition Manager |
| implementation. The major version is 0 and the minor version is 1. The version |
| number is a 31-bit unsigned integer, with the upper 15 bits denoting the major |
| revision, and the lower 16 bits denoting the minor revision. The following |
| rules apply to the version numbering: |
| |
| - Different major revision values indicate possibly incompatible functions. |
| |
| - For two revisions, A and B, for which the major revision values are |
| identical, if the minor revision value of revision B is greater than the |
| minor revision value of revision A, then every function in revision A must |
| work in a compatible way with revision B. However, it is possible for |
| revision B to have a higher function count than revision A. |
| |
| - Implementation responsibilities |
| |
| If this function returns a valid version number, all the functions that are |
| described subsequently must be implemented, unless it is explicitly stated |
| that a function is optional. |
| |
| See `Error Codes`_ for integer values that are associated with each return |
| code. |
| |
| Secure Partition Initialisation |
| ------------------------------- |
| |
| The SPM is responsible for initialising the architectural execution context to |
| enable initialisation of a service in S-EL0. The responsibilities of the SPM are |
| listed below. At the end of initialisation, the partition issues a |
| ``SP_EVENT_COMPLETE_AARCH64`` call (described later) to signal readiness for |
| handling requests for services implemented by the Secure Partition. The |
| initialisation event is executed as a Fast Call. |
| |
| Entry point invocation |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| The entry point for service requests that should be handled as Fast Calls is |
| used as the target of the ERET instruction to start initialisation of the Secure |
| Partition. |
| |
| Architectural Setup |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| At cold boot, system registers accessible from S-EL0 will be in their reset |
| state unless otherwise specified. The SPM will perform the following |
| architectural setup to enable execution in S-EL0 |
| |
| MMU setup |
| ^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| The platform port of a Secure Partition specifies to the SPM a list of regions |
| that it needs access to and their attributes. The SPM validates this resource |
| description and initialises the Secure EL1&0 translation regime as follows. |
| |
| 1. Device regions are mapped with nGnRE attributes and Execute Never |
| instruction access permissions. |
| |
| 2. Code memory regions are mapped with RO data and Executable instruction access |
| permissions. |
| |
| 3. Read Only data memory regions are mapped with RO data and Execute Never |
| instruction access permissions. |
| |
| 4. Read Write data memory regions are mapped with RW data and Execute Never |
| instruction access permissions. |
| |
| 5. If the resource description does not explicitly describe the type of memory |
| regions then all memory regions will be marked with Code memory region |
| attributes. |
| |
| 6. The ``UXN`` and ``PXN`` bits are set for regions that are not executable by |
| S-EL0 or S-EL1. |
| |
| System Register Setup |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| System registers that influence software execution in S-EL0 are setup by the SPM |
| as follows: |
| |
| 1. ``SCTLR_EL1`` |
| |
| - ``UCI=1`` |
| - ``EOE=0`` |
| - ``WXN=1`` |
| - ``nTWE=1`` |
| - ``nTWI=1`` |
| - ``UCT=1`` |
| - ``DZE=1`` |
| - ``I=1`` |
| - ``UMA=0`` |
| - ``SA0=1`` |
| - ``C=1`` |
| - ``A=1`` |
| - ``M=1`` |
| |
| 2. ``CPACR_EL1`` |
| |
| - ``FPEN=b'11`` |
| |
| 3. ``PSTATE`` |
| |
| - ``D,A,I,F=1`` |
| - ``CurrentEL=0`` (EL0) |
| - ``SpSel=0`` (Thread mode) |
| - ``NRW=0`` (AArch64) |
| |
| General Purpose Register Setup |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| SPM will invoke the entry point of a service by executing an ERET instruction. |
| This transition into S-EL0 is special since it is not in response to a previous |
| request through a SVC instruction. This is the first entry into S-EL0. The |
| general purpose register usage at the time of entry will be as specified in the |
| "Return State" column of Table 3-1 in Section 3.1 "Register use in AArch64 SMC |
| calls" of the `SMC Calling Convention`_ (*Arm DEN 0028B*) specification. In |
| addition, certain other restrictions will be applied as described below. |
| |
| 1. ``SP_EL0`` |
| |
| A non-zero value will indicate that the SPM has initialised the stack pointer |
| for the current CPU. |
| |
| The value will be 0 otherwise. |
| |
| 2. ``X4-X30`` |
| |
| The values of these registers will be 0. |
| |
| 3. ``X0-X3`` |
| |
| Parameters passed by the SPM. |
| |
| - ``X0``: Virtual address of a buffer shared between EL3 and S-EL0. The |
| buffer will be mapped in the Secure EL1&0 translation regime with read-only |
| memory attributes described earlier. |
| |
| - ``X1``: Size of the buffer in bytes. |
| |
| - ``X2``: Cookie value (*IMPLEMENTATION DEFINED*). |
| |
| - ``X3``: Cookie value (*IMPLEMENTATION DEFINED*). |
| |
| Runtime Event Delegation |
| ------------------------ |
| |
| The SPM receives requests for Secure Partition services through a synchronous |
| invocation (i.e. a SMC from the Non-secure world). These requests are delegated |
| to the partition by programming a return from the last |
| ``SP_EVENT_COMPLETE_AARCH64`` call received from the partition. The last call |
| was made to signal either completion of Secure Partition initialisation or |
| completion of a partition service request. |
| |
| ``SP_EVENT_COMPLETE_AARCH64`` |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| - Description |
| |
| Signal completion of the last SP service request. |
| |
| - Parameters |
| |
| - **uint32** - Function ID |
| |
| - SVC64 Version: **0xC4000061** |
| |
| - **int32** - Event Status Code |
| |
| Zero or a positive value indicates that the event was handled successfully. |
| The values depend upon the original event that was delegated to the Secure |
| partition. They are described as follows. |
| |
| - ``SUCCESS`` : Used to indicate that the Secure Partition was initialised |
| or a runtime request was handled successfully. |
| |
| - Any other value greater than 0 is used to pass a specific Event Status |
| code in response to a runtime event. |
| |
| A negative value indicates an error. The values of Event Status code depend |
| on the original event. |
| |
| - Return parameters |
| |
| - **int32** - Event ID/Return Code |
| |
| Zero or a positive value specifies the unique ID of the event being |
| delegated to the partition by the SPM. |
| |
| In the current implementation, this parameter contains the function ID of |
| the ``MM_COMMUNICATE`` SMC. This value indicates to the partition that an |
| event has been delegated to it in response to an ``MM_COMMUNICATE`` request |
| from the Non-secure world. |
| |
| A negative value indicates an error. The format of the value is as follows: |
| |
| - ``NOT_SUPPORTED``: Function was called from the Non-secure world. |
| |
| See `Error Codes`_ for integer values that are associated with each return |
| code. |
| |
| - **uint32** - Event Context Address |
| |
| Address of a buffer shared between the SPM and Secure Partition to pass |
| event specific information. The format of the data populated in the buffer |
| is implementation defined. |
| |
| The buffer is mapped in the Secure EL1&0 translation regime with read-only |
| memory attributes described earlier. |
| |
| For the SVC64 version, this parameter is a 64-bit Virtual Address (VA). |
| |
| For the SVC32 version, this parameter is a 32-bit Virtual Address (VA). |
| |
| - **uint32** - Event context size |
| |
| Size of the memory starting at Event Address. |
| |
| - **uint32/uint64** - Event Cookie |
| |
| This is an optional parameter. If unused its value is SBZ. |
| |
| - Usage |
| |
| This function signals to the SPM that the handling of the last event delegated |
| to a partition has completed. The partition is ready to handle its next event. |
| A return from this function is in response to the next event that will be |
| delegated to the partition. The return parameters describe the next event. |
| |
| - Caller responsibilities |
| |
| A Secure Partition must only call ``SP_EVENT_COMPLETE_AARCH64`` to signal |
| completion of a request that was delegated to it by the SPM. |
| |
| - Callee responsibilities |
| |
| When the SPM receives this call from a Secure Partition, the corresponding |
| syndrome information can be used to return control through an ERET |
| instruction, to the instruction immediately after the call in the Secure |
| Partition context. This syndrome information comprises of general purpose and |
| system register values when the call was made. |
| |
| The SPM must save this syndrome information and use it to delegate the next |
| event to the Secure Partition. The return parameters of this interface must |
| specify the properties of the event and be populated in ``X0-X3/W0-W3`` |
| registers. |
| |
| Secure Partition Memory Management |
| ---------------------------------- |
| |
| A Secure Partition executes at S-EL0, which is an unprivileged Exception Level. |
| The SPM is responsible for enabling access to regions of memory in the system |
| address map from a Secure Partition. This is done by mapping these regions in |
| the Secure EL1&0 Translation regime with appropriate memory attributes. |
| Attributes refer to memory type, permission, cacheability and shareability |
| attributes used in the Translation tables. The definitions of these attributes |
| and their usage can be found in the `Armv8-A ARM`_ (*Arm DDI 0487*). |
| |
| All memory required by the Secure Partition is allocated upfront in the SPM, |
| even before handing over to the Secure Partition for the first time. The initial |
| access permissions of the memory regions are statically provided by the platform |
| port and should allow the Secure Partition to run its initialisation code. |
| |
| However, they might not suit the final needs of the Secure Partition because its |
| final memory layout might not be known until the Secure Partition initialises |
| itself. As the Secure Partition initialises its runtime environment it might, |
| for example, load dynamically some modules. For instance, a Secure Partition |
| could implement a loader for a standard executable file format (e.g. an PE-COFF |
| loader for loading executable files at runtime). These executable files will be |
| a part of the Secure Partition image. The location of various sections in an |
| executable file and their permission attributes (e.g. read-write data, read-only |
| data and code) will be known only when the file is loaded into memory. |
| |
| In this case, the Secure Partition needs a way to change the access permissions |
| of its memory regions. The SPM provides this feature through the |
| ``SP_MEMORY_ATTRIBUTES_SET_AARCH64`` SVC interface. This interface is available |
| to the Secure Partition during a specific time window: from the first entry into |
| the Secure Partition up to the first ``SP_EVENT_COMPLETE`` call that signals the |
| Secure Partition has finished its initialisation. Once the initialisation is |
| complete, the SPM does not allow changes to the memory attributes. |
| |
| This section describes the standard SVC interface that is implemented by the SPM |
| to determine and change permission attributes of memory regions that belong to a |
| Secure Partition. |
| |
| ``SP_MEMORY_ATTRIBUTES_GET_AARCH64`` |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| - Description |
| |
| Request the permission attributes of a memory region from S-EL0. |
| |
| - Parameters |
| |
| - **uint32** Function ID |
| |
| - SVC64 Version: **0xC4000064** |
| |
| - **uint64** Base Address |
| |
| This parameter is a 64-bit Virtual Address (VA). |
| |
| There are no alignment restrictions on the Base Address. The permission |
| attributes of the translation granule it lies in are returned. |
| |
| - Return parameters |
| |
| - **int32** - Memory Attributes/Return Code |
| |
| On success the format of the Return Code is as follows: |
| |
| - Bits[1:0] : Data access permission |
| |
| - b'00 : No access |
| - b'01 : Read-Write access |
| - b'10 : Reserved |
| - b'11 : Read-only access |
| |
| - Bit[2]: Instruction access permission |
| |
| - b'0 : Executable |
| - b'1 : Non-executable |
| |
| - Bit[30:3] : Reserved. SBZ. |
| |
| - Bit[31] : Must be 0 |
| |
| On failure the following error codes are returned: |
| |
| - ``INVALID_PARAMETERS``: The Secure Partition is not allowed to access the |
| memory region the Base Address lies in. |
| |
| - ``NOT_SUPPORTED`` : The SPM does not support retrieval of attributes of |
| any memory page that is accessible by the Secure Partition, or the |
| function was called from the Non-secure world. Also returned if it is |
| used after ``SP_EVENT_COMPLETE_AARCH64``. |
| |
| See `Error Codes`_ for integer values that are associated with each return |
| code. |
| |
| - Usage |
| |
| This function is used to request the permission attributes for S-EL0 on a |
| memory region accessible from a Secure Partition. The size of the memory |
| region is equal to the Translation Granule size used in the Secure EL1&0 |
| translation regime. Requests to retrieve other memory region attributes are |
| not currently supported. |
| |
| - Caller responsibilities |
| |
| The caller must obtain the Translation Granule Size of the Secure EL1&0 |
| translation regime from the SPM through an implementation defined method. |
| |
| - Callee responsibilities |
| |
| The SPM must not return the memory access controls for a page of memory that |
| is not accessible from a Secure Partition. |
| |
| ``SP_MEMORY_ATTRIBUTES_SET_AARCH64`` |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| - Description |
| |
| Set the permission attributes of a memory region from S-EL0. |
| |
| - Parameters |
| |
| - **uint32** - Function ID |
| |
| - SVC64 Version: **0xC4000065** |
| |
| - **uint64** - Base Address |
| |
| This parameter is a 64-bit Virtual Address (VA). |
| |
| The alignment of the Base Address must be greater than or equal to the size |
| of the Translation Granule Size used in the Secure EL1&0 translation |
| regime. |
| |
| - **uint32** - Page count |
| |
| Number of pages starting from the Base Address whose memory attributes |
| should be changed. The page size is equal to the Translation Granule Size. |
| |
| - **uint32** - Memory Access Controls |
| |
| - Bits[1:0] : Data access permission |
| |
| - b'00 : No access |
| - b'01 : Read-Write access |
| - b'10 : Reserved |
| - b'11 : Read-only access |
| |
| - Bit[2] : Instruction access permission |
| |
| - b'0 : Executable |
| - b'1 : Non-executable |
| |
| - Bits[31:3] : Reserved. SBZ. |
| |
| A combination of attributes that mark the region with RW and Executable |
| permissions is prohibited. A request to mark a device memory region with |
| Executable permissions is prohibited. |
| |
| - Return parameters |
| |
| - **int32** - Return Code |
| |
| - ``SUCCESS``: The Memory Access Controls were changed successfully. |
| |
| - ``DENIED``: The SPM is servicing a request to change the attributes of a |
| memory region that overlaps with the region specified in this request. |
| |
| - ``INVALID_PARAMETER``: An invalid combination of Memory Access Controls |
| has been specified. The Base Address is not correctly aligned. The Secure |
| Partition is not allowed to access part or all of the memory region |
| specified in the call. |
| |
| - ``NO_MEMORY``: The SPM does not have memory resources to change the |
| attributes of the memory region in the translation tables. |
| |
| - ``NOT_SUPPORTED``: The SPM does not permit change of attributes of any |
| memory region that is accessible by the Secure Partition. Function was |
| called from the Non-secure world. Also returned if it is used after |
| ``SP_EVENT_COMPLETE_AARCH64``. |
| |
| See `Error Codes`_ for integer values that are associated with each return |
| code. |
| |
| - Usage |
| |
| This function is used to change the permission attributes for S-EL0 on a |
| memory region accessible from a Secure Partition. The size of the memory |
| region is equal to the Translation Granule size used in the Secure EL1&0 |
| translation regime. Requests to change other memory region attributes are not |
| currently supported. |
| |
| This function is only available at boot time. This interface is revoked after |
| the Secure Partition sends the first ``SP_EVENT_COMPLETE_AARCH64`` to signal |
| that it is initialised and ready to receive run-time requests. |
| |
| - Caller responsibilities |
| |
| The caller must obtain the Translation Granule Size of the Secure EL1&0 |
| translation regime from the SPM through an implementation defined method. |
| |
| - Callee responsibilities |
| |
| The SPM must preserve the original memory access controls of the region of |
| memory in case of an unsuccessful call. The SPM must preserve the consistency |
| of the S-EL1 translation regime if this function is called on different PEs |
| concurrently and the memory regions specified overlap. |
| |
| Error Codes |
| ----------- |
| |
| .. csv-table:: |
| :header: "Name", "Value" |
| |
| ``SUCCESS``,0 |
| ``NOT_SUPPORTED``,-1 |
| ``INVALID_PARAMETER``,-2 |
| ``DENIED``,-3 |
| ``NO_MEMORY``,-5 |
| ``NOT_PRESENT``,-7 |
| |
| -------------- |
| |
| *Copyright (c) 2017-2018, Arm Limited and Contributors. All rights reserved.* |
| |
| .. _Armv8-A ARM: https://developer.arm.com/docs/ddi0487/latest/arm-architecture-reference-manual-armv8-for-armv8-a-architecture-profile |
| .. _instructions in the EDK2 repository: https://github.com/tianocore/edk2-staging/blob/AArch64StandaloneMm/HowtoBuild.MD |
| .. _Management Mode Interface Specification: http://infocenter.arm.com/help/topic/com.arm.doc.den0060a/DEN0060A_ARM_MM_Interface_Specification.pdf |
| .. _SDEI Specification: http://infocenter.arm.com/help/topic/com.arm.doc.den0054a/ARM_DEN0054A_Software_Delegated_Exception_Interface.pdf |
| .. _SMC Calling Convention: http://infocenter.arm.com/help/topic/com.arm.doc.den0028b/ARM_DEN0028B_SMC_Calling_Convention.pdf |
| |
| .. |Image 1| image:: ../diagrams/secure_sw_stack_tos.png |
| .. |Image 2| image:: ../diagrams/secure_sw_stack_sp.png |