
Hi François,
On Tue, 2 Nov 2021 at 10:03, François Ozog francois.ozog@linaro.org wrote:
Hi Simon,
On Tue, 2 Nov 2021 at 15:59, Simon Glass sjg@chromium.org wrote:
Hi François,
On Mon, 1 Nov 2021 at 02:53, François Ozog francois.ozog@linaro.org wrote:
Hi Simon,
this seems a great endeavor. I'd like to better understand the scope of it.
Is it to be used as part of what could become a U-Boot entry ABI scheme? By that I mean giving some fixed aspects to U-Boot entry while letting boards to have flexibility (say for instance that the first 5 architecture ABI parameter registers are reserved for U-Boot), and the Passage is about specifying either those reserved registers or one of them?
The goal is to provide a standard entry scheme for all firmware binaries. Whether it achieves that (or can with some mods) is up for discussion.
If you say a) define a U-Boot entry ABI and providing a firmware-to-firmware information passing facility which would be part of all firmware ABIs (as the projects decide to define their own ABI) it looks good. but If you say
It is an ABI to be adopted by U-Boot but also other firmware. For example, if TF-A calls U-Boot it should use standard passage. If U-Boot calls TF-A or Optee it should use standard passage.
b) define a standard entry scheme (register map, processor state, MMU state, SMMU state, GIC state...) that does not look realistic.
No I don't mean that. This data structure could be used in any state, so long as the two registers are set correctly.
I think you mean a) but just want to be sure.
Yes I think so.
Re the registers, do you think we need 5?
I don't :-)
Thinking entry ABI, here is what I observed on Arm:
Linux has two entry ABIs:
- plain: x0 = dtb; command line = dtb:/chosen/bootargs; initrd = dtb:/chosen/linux,initrd-*
- EFI: x0=handle, x1=systemtable, x30=return address; dtb = EFI_UUID config table; initrd = efi:<loadfile2(INITRD vendor media UUID); command line = efi: image_protocol::load_options
U-Boot (proper) has plenty of schemes:
- dtb is passed as either x0, x1, fixed memory area (Qemu which is bad in itself), or other registers
- additional information passing: board specific register scheme, SMC calls
- U-Boot for RPI boards implement a Linux shaped entry ABI to be launched by Videocore firmware
Based on all the above, I would tend to think that RPI scheme is a good idea but also shall not prevent additional schemes for the boards.
I was not actually considering Linux since I believe/assume its entry scheme is fixed and not up for discussion.
I also did not think about the EFI case. As I understand it we cannot touch it as it is used by UEFI today. Maybe it is even in the standard?
It is in the spec and we are making it evolve, or its understanding evolve (jurisprudence) for instance on initrd standard handling.
Well perhaps we could merge it with standard passage. But EFI is not going to want to use a bloblist, it will want to use a HOB.
Really I am hoping we can start afresh...?
What about a U-Boot Arm entry ABI like:
- plain: x0=dtb, x1=<Passage defined>, x2-x5 = <reserved>, other registers are per platform, SMC calls allowed too
Hmm we don't actually need the dtb as it is available in the bloblist.
If you don't have x0=dtb, then you will not be able to use U-Boot on RPI4. Unless you want to redo everything the RPI firmware is doing.
That's right, RPI cannot support standard passage. It is not open-source firmware so it isn't really relevant to this discussion. It will just do what it does and have limited functionality, with work-arounds to deal with the pain, as one might expect.
But I added an offset to it as a convenience.
- EFI: x0=handle, x1=systemtable, x30=return address; (when U-Boot is launched as an EFI app) dtb = EFI_UUID config table, + Passage = Passage UUID config table
I don't understand the last line. Where is the passage info / bloblist? Do you mean it goes in the HOB list with a UUID? I suppose that is the most EFI-compatible way.
The Passage config table could just contain the "head" of the bloblist/Passage information.
If UEFI wants to deal with standard passage, that is...
What do you think about the idea of using an offset into the bloblist for the dtb?
It is possible but as I said, failing to mimic Linux entry ABI would miss the opportunity to just boot without changes on RPI4.
See above. Broadcom could look at open-sourcing their bootloader if they wish.
Also, can we make the standard passage ABI a build-time option, so it is deterministic?
Looks good. I would look into stating that for SystemReady we would advise to use that option and make it standard for Trusted Substrate (Linaro recipes that we upstreaming to make SystemReady compliance easy and consistent across platforms).
OK. I mean that if the option is enabled, then standard passage must be provided / emitted or things won't work. If the option is disabled, then standard passage is not used. In other words, we are looking for magic values in registers, etc, just enabling/disabling it at build-time.
We could further leverage Passage to pass Operating Systems parameters that could be removed from device tree (migration of /chosen to Passage). Memory inventory would still be in DT but allocations for CMA or GPUs would be in Passage. This idea is to reach a point where device tree is a "pristine" hardware description.
I'm worried about this becoming a substitute for devicetree. Really my intent is to provide a way to pass simple info, whereas what you talk about there seems like something that should be DT, just that it might need suitable bindings.
I see your point and I agree It should not be a substitute. here is an expanded version of what I had in mind when I wrote those lines. cma, initrd and other Linux kernel parameters can be conveyed either through command line or DT. When using the non UEFI Linux entry ABI, you need to use the DT to pass those parameters. When using the UEFI Linux entry ABI, you *can* (not must) use the command line to pass all information, leaving the DT passed to the OS without any /chosen. When introducing Passage, I was wondering if we could pass command line to Linux and, same as UEFI, leave the DT free from /chosen. I am not sure it is a good goal though. I may be too pushing for a DT free from parameters.
We could. Are there benefits to that?
I doubt we would pass the standard passage to Linux as a bloblist. I imagine something like this. The bloblist sits in memory with some things in it, including a devicetree, perhaps an SMBIOS table and a TPM log. But when U-Boot calls Linux it puts the address/size of those individual things in the devicetree. They don't move and are still contiguous in memory, but the bloblist around them is forgotten. Linux doesn't know that the three separate things it is picking up are actually part of a bloblist structure, since it doesn't care about that. Even a console log could work the same way. That way we don't end up trying to teach Linux about bloblist when it already has a perfectly good means to accept these items.
For ACPI I see things a similar way. The ACPI tables can point to things that *happen* to be in a bloblist, but without any knowledge of that needed in Linux, grub, etc.
As you know I have more expansive views about what should be in DT.
I think both of us are huge supporters of DT format and self describing capabilities. I am inclined to put rules into what fits into what lands in the DT that is passed to the OS. I am a fan of having DT used more in ad-hoc files.
Me too.
Cheers
PS: as Ilias mentions, this patch set contains bug fixes, non immediately related additional functions (DM stats). It would be great to carve those out to fast path them and keep this one with the very core of your idea.
The DM stats is used in 'passage: Report the devicetree source'. I know it is sideways but I think it is better to make the output line more useful than just reporting the devicetree source.
I believe the DM stats has merits in its own. You could upstream this independently and then Passage would be yet another "customer" of the feature.
I could, but it would just be a debug feature so people might not think it worth the code space. With the devicetree source it is more compelling.
The first patch is indeed unrelated. I will pick it up so we can drop it for the next rev.
[..]
Regards, Simon