M7350/kernel/Documentation/arm/msm/pil.txt
2024-09-09 08:52:07 +00:00

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Introduction
============
The PIL (Peripheral Image Loader) driver loads peripheral images into memory
and interfaces with the Peripheral Authentication Service (PAS) to
authenticate and reset peripherals embedded in the SoC.
The PAS could either be running under secure mode in the application
processor (secure boot support) or be running as a non-secure kernel driver
(non-secure boot support).
The PIL driver also does housekeeping to handle cases where more than one
client driver is using the same peripheral.
Some examples of peripherals are modem, DSP and sensors.
Hardware description
====================
The memory used by the peripherals for code and data storage will be
accessible as normal memory to the application processor.
The non-secure code (Linux kernel) will have read/write permissions to the
peripheral memory by default.
The PAS will have access to a MPU (memory protection unit) that can lock away
the pages of memory from the Linux kernel. It will also have access to
registers that can reset each peripheral.
Software description
====================
The PAS provides the following three APIs:
* Init image - Takes as input the peripheral id and firmware metadata and
returns a status indicating the authenticity of the firmware metadata. The
firmware metadata consists of a standard ELF32 header followed by a program
header table and an optional blob of data used to authenticate the metadata
and the rest of the firmware.
* Verify segment - Takes as input the firmware segment id and the length of
the segment. Authenticates whatever amount (specified by the "length"
parameter) of the firmware segment that has been loaded and removes
non-secure mode read/write permissions for the pages belonging to the
firmware segment. Allows multiple calls for the same firmware segment to
allow partial loading and authentication.
* Auth and Reset - Verifies all the necessary firmware segments have been
loaded and authenticated and then resets the peripheral.
The user space is expected to provide the firmware metadata and firmware
segments as separate files on persistent storage. See "Interface" section for
further details.
The PIL driver will use the request_firmware API provided by the Linux kernel
to read the firmware and firmware metadata from persistent storage.
When a client driver requests for a peripheral to be enabled, the PIL driver
increments the reference count for that peripheral, loads the firmware
metadata and calls the PAS Init Image API that initializes the authentication
state machine using the firmware metadata.
If the initialization succeeds, the PIL driver loads the appropriate firmware
segments into their respective memory locations and call the PAS Verify
segment API on each of the loaded segments to authenticate and lock it.
After all the firmware segments have been successfully loaded and
authenticated, the PAS Auth and Reset API is called to reset the peripheral
and initiate its boot sequence.
A peripheral enable request to the PIL driver will block until it succeeds
(or fails) to initiate the peripheral boot sequence but will NOT block until
the peripheral is ready. It is not possible to block until a peripheral is
ready since the semantics of "ready" is subjective to the caller.
The PIL driver will maintain a reference count for each of the peripherals.
So, if a peripheral is already under use and another client driver requests
for the peripheral to be enabled, the PIL driver will immediately return a
value to indicate success.
When all the client drivers of a particular peripheral no longer need the
peripheral and the reference count reaches zero, the PIL driver can cleanly
shut down the peripheral. Since a lot of drivers in their current state can't
handle a peripheral restart, the PIL driver will never let the reference
count go back to zero.
All information about a peripheral, like firmware filenames, peripheral ID
passed to PAS, etc, will be hard coded in the PIL driver.
All the PIL APIs will execute in the context of the caller. This includes
calls from the PIL driver to the PAS driver. The PAS driver might decide to
switch into secure mode from a separate workqueue or in the same context as
the caller, but that shouldn't have any implications for the PIL API callers
since all the PIL APIs are blocking calls.
Dependencies:
-------------
* Firmware class (CONFIG_FW_LOADER) for using the request_firmware API to
load firmware from persistent storage.
* PAS to authenticate firmware and bring a peripheral out of reset.
Error cases:
------------
The PIL driver could fail to enable a peripheral for several reasons like not
having enough memory to load firmware and metadata, being unable to
communicate with the PAS, the PAS returning with an error, etc. For all
possible error cases, the PIL driver does not perform any retries and returns
an appropriate error code. The client drivers should always check for success
before trying to access the peripheral.
Design
======
Design goals:
-------------
* The PIL driver must be agnostic to the actual format and method used to
authenticate the firmware.
* Allow for future expansion to support demand loading of parts of firmware
for each peripheral.
* Move most of the work into the preprocessing/building stage of the firmware.
* Provide an API to the client drivers that absolves them from having to know
the structure or names of the firmware in persistent storage.
* Handle multiple client drivers wanting to enable the same peripheral.
Design reasons:
---------------
The user space is expected to provide the firmware metadata and segments as
separate files for the following reasons:
* Don't need to load the whole ELF file if the authentication info is
invalid.
* Works better during low memory conditions since the amount of memory used
at any given instant when loading one segment at a time is smaller than
loading the whole ELF file.
* Since an ELF segment in memory can be much bigger than on file, having a
flat binary would waste a lot of space due to zero-fills.
* Allows for future enhancements to the loading procedure.
Design tradeoffs:
-----------------
* With appropriate changes to the request_firmware API, the firmware blobs
could be directly loaded into the right memory location. But due to the
additional work and community approval that would be needed for modifying
the request_firmware API, we load the firmware blobs into kernel memory and
then copy them into the appropriate locations.
Alternate designs:
------------------
One of the alternate designs that were considered required the firmware to be
a flat binary. Although this design would simplify the PIL driver, it would
result in the waste of a lot of persistent storage space (due to large
zero-fills), prevent demand loading of segments in the future and use a lot
more memory while loading the firmware.
Software layering:
------------------
The peripheral authentication, reset and shutdown implementation is factored
away into a Peripheral Authentication Service driver to allow the PIL driver
to be agnostic of secure vs. non-secure boot and the mechanisms needed for
communicating with any code that might be running in secure mode.
Power Management
================
Some of the peripherals might support being turned off when not in use.
Support for this might be disabled in the initial implementation of the PIL
driver since many of the existing drivers can not handle peripheral restart.
SMP/multi-core
==============
Will use mutexes to protected data that might be shared (reference count,
etc).
Security
========
The PIL driver must validate the physical memory addresses specified in the
ELF and program header table before loading firmware segments to make sure
it's not overwriting any memory used by the kernel and possibly PMEM regions
(if it can be done without being an ugly hack). The PIL driver might need to
maintain a white list or black list of physical memory address ranges to
perform the address validation.
Performance
===========
As mentioned in the design section, the loading of firmware segments is not
optimal and has room for improvement.
Interface
=========
In kernel APIs:
void * pil_get(char *peripheral_name)
- Enables (if not already enabled) a peripheral and returns a handle
that can be used to disable the peripheral at a later time. If
peripheral can't be enabled successfully, then returns an error
(use IS_ERR) indicating the reason.
void pil_put(void *peripheral_handle)
- Inform PIL that this client no longer needs the peripheral to be
active. Does not necessarily mean that the peripheral would be
disabled or powered off.
User space APIs:
All firmware must be located in the path that is expected by the hotplug (or
compatible) daemon. A hotplug (or compatible) daemon should be running and be
able to handle events from the kernel requesting for a firmware file.
The basename of the firmware files will depend on the peripheral. For a given
peripheral, the metadata filename should end with a ".mdt" and the firmware
segment files should end with ".bXX" where XX denotes the index of the
firmware segment starting from 0.
Android hotplug compatible daemon expects the firmware files to be under
/etc/firmware.
Driver parameters
=================
No module or kernel command line parameters supported.
Config options
==============
This driver is enabled using the MSM_PIL kernel config option and will
depend on the CONFIG_FW_LOADER being available.
Dependencies
============
Depends on firmware class module for the request_firmware API.
Interacts with the PAS to authenticate the firmware and to initiate the boot
sequence of a peripheral.
Doesn't communicate with other processors since the secure code, if any, will
be running on the application processor cores.
User space utilities
====================
None.
Other
=====
The firmware_class driver might be changed in the future to directly load the
firmware into memory locations provided by the caller of request_firmware().
Known issues
============
Since support for cleanly shutting down peripherals is yet to be added, the
reference count of peripherals will never be allowed to go to zero once it
becomes non-zero.
To do
=====
* Add support for turning off peripherals when they are not in use.
* Modify request_firmware() to directly copy firmware blobs into the
appropriate memory locations.
* Add support for demand loading of firmware segments.
* Add support for forced peripheral restarts.