qemu-e2k/target/arm/helper.c

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/*
* ARM generic helpers.
*
* This code is licensed under the GNU GPL v2 or later.
*
* SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0-or-later
*/
#include "qemu/osdep.h"
#include "qemu/units.h"
#include "qemu/log.h"
#include "target/arm/idau.h"
#include "trace.h"
#include "cpu.h"
#include "internals.h"
#include "exec/helper-proto.h"
#include "qemu/host-utils.h"
#include "qemu/main-loop.h"
#include "qemu/timer.h"
#include "qemu/bitops.h"
#include "qemu/crc32c.h"
#include "qemu/qemu-print.h"
#include "exec/exec-all.h"
#include <zlib.h> /* For crc32 */
#include "hw/irq.h"
#include "semihosting/semihost.h"
#include "sysemu/cpus.h"
#include "sysemu/cpu-timers.h"
#include "sysemu/kvm.h"
#include "qemu/range.h"
#include "qapi/qapi-commands-machine-target.h"
#include "qapi/error.h"
#include "qemu/guest-random.h"
#ifdef CONFIG_TCG
#include "arm_ldst.h"
#include "exec/cpu_ldst.h"
#include "semihosting/common-semi.h"
#endif
#include "cpregs.h"
#define ARM_CPU_FREQ 1000000000 /* FIXME: 1 GHz, should be configurable */
#ifndef CONFIG_USER_ONLY
static bool get_phys_addr_lpae(CPUARMState *env, uint64_t address,
MMUAccessType access_type, ARMMMUIdx mmu_idx,
bool s1_is_el0,
hwaddr *phys_ptr, MemTxAttrs *txattrs, int *prot,
target_ulong *page_size_ptr,
ARMMMUFaultInfo *fi, ARMCacheAttrs *cacheattrs)
__attribute__((nonnull));
#endif
static void switch_mode(CPUARMState *env, int mode);
static int aa64_va_parameter_tbi(uint64_t tcr, ARMMMUIdx mmu_idx);
static uint64_t raw_read(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri)
{
assert(ri->fieldoffset);
if (cpreg_field_is_64bit(ri)) {
return CPREG_FIELD64(env, ri);
} else {
return CPREG_FIELD32(env, ri);
}
}
static void raw_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
assert(ri->fieldoffset);
if (cpreg_field_is_64bit(ri)) {
CPREG_FIELD64(env, ri) = value;
} else {
CPREG_FIELD32(env, ri) = value;
}
}
static void *raw_ptr(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri)
{
return (char *)env + ri->fieldoffset;
}
uint64_t read_raw_cp_reg(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri)
{
/* Raw read of a coprocessor register (as needed for migration, etc). */
if (ri->type & ARM_CP_CONST) {
return ri->resetvalue;
} else if (ri->raw_readfn) {
return ri->raw_readfn(env, ri);
} else if (ri->readfn) {
return ri->readfn(env, ri);
} else {
return raw_read(env, ri);
}
}
static void write_raw_cp_reg(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t v)
{
/* Raw write of a coprocessor register (as needed for migration, etc).
* Note that constant registers are treated as write-ignored; the
* caller should check for success by whether a readback gives the
* value written.
*/
if (ri->type & ARM_CP_CONST) {
return;
} else if (ri->raw_writefn) {
ri->raw_writefn(env, ri, v);
} else if (ri->writefn) {
ri->writefn(env, ri, v);
} else {
raw_write(env, ri, v);
}
}
static bool raw_accessors_invalid(const ARMCPRegInfo *ri)
{
/* Return true if the regdef would cause an assertion if you called
* read_raw_cp_reg() or write_raw_cp_reg() on it (ie if it is a
* program bug for it not to have the NO_RAW flag).
* NB that returning false here doesn't necessarily mean that calling
* read/write_raw_cp_reg() is safe, because we can't distinguish "has
* read/write access functions which are safe for raw use" from "has
* read/write access functions which have side effects but has forgotten
* to provide raw access functions".
* The tests here line up with the conditions in read/write_raw_cp_reg()
* and assertions in raw_read()/raw_write().
*/
if ((ri->type & ARM_CP_CONST) ||
ri->fieldoffset ||
((ri->raw_writefn || ri->writefn) && (ri->raw_readfn || ri->readfn))) {
return false;
}
return true;
}
arm: Allow system registers for KVM guests to be changed by QEMU code At the moment the Arm implementations of kvm_arch_{get,put}_registers() don't support having QEMU change the values of system registers (aka coprocessor registers for AArch32). This is because although kvm_arch_get_registers() calls write_list_to_cpustate() to update the CPU state struct fields (so QEMU code can read the values in the usual way), kvm_arch_put_registers() does not call write_cpustate_to_list(), meaning that any changes to the CPU state struct fields will not be passed back to KVM. The rationale for this design is documented in a comment in the AArch32 kvm_arch_put_registers() -- writing the values in the cpregs list into the CPU state struct is "lossy" because the write of a register might not succeed, and so if we blindly copy the CPU state values back again we will incorrectly change register values for the guest. The assumption was that no QEMU code would need to write to the registers. However, when we implemented debug support for KVM guests, we broke that assumption: the code to handle "set the guest up to take a breakpoint exception" does so by updating various guest registers including ESR_EL1. Support this by making kvm_arch_put_registers() synchronize CPU state back into the list. We sync only those registers where the initial write succeeds, which should be sufficient. This commit is the same as commit 823e1b3818f9b10b824ddc which we had to revert in commit 942f99c825fc94c8b1a4, except that the bug which was preventing EDK2 guest firmware running has been fixed: kvm_arm_reset_vcpu() now calls write_list_to_cpustate(). Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org> Tested-by: Eric Auger <eric.auger@redhat.com>
2019-05-07 13:55:02 +02:00
bool write_cpustate_to_list(ARMCPU *cpu, bool kvm_sync)
{
/* Write the coprocessor state from cpu->env to the (index,value) list. */
int i;
bool ok = true;
for (i = 0; i < cpu->cpreg_array_len; i++) {
uint32_t regidx = kvm_to_cpreg_id(cpu->cpreg_indexes[i]);
const ARMCPRegInfo *ri;
arm: Allow system registers for KVM guests to be changed by QEMU code At the moment the Arm implementations of kvm_arch_{get,put}_registers() don't support having QEMU change the values of system registers (aka coprocessor registers for AArch32). This is because although kvm_arch_get_registers() calls write_list_to_cpustate() to update the CPU state struct fields (so QEMU code can read the values in the usual way), kvm_arch_put_registers() does not call write_cpustate_to_list(), meaning that any changes to the CPU state struct fields will not be passed back to KVM. The rationale for this design is documented in a comment in the AArch32 kvm_arch_put_registers() -- writing the values in the cpregs list into the CPU state struct is "lossy" because the write of a register might not succeed, and so if we blindly copy the CPU state values back again we will incorrectly change register values for the guest. The assumption was that no QEMU code would need to write to the registers. However, when we implemented debug support for KVM guests, we broke that assumption: the code to handle "set the guest up to take a breakpoint exception" does so by updating various guest registers including ESR_EL1. Support this by making kvm_arch_put_registers() synchronize CPU state back into the list. We sync only those registers where the initial write succeeds, which should be sufficient. This commit is the same as commit 823e1b3818f9b10b824ddc which we had to revert in commit 942f99c825fc94c8b1a4, except that the bug which was preventing EDK2 guest firmware running has been fixed: kvm_arm_reset_vcpu() now calls write_list_to_cpustate(). Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org> Tested-by: Eric Auger <eric.auger@redhat.com>
2019-05-07 13:55:02 +02:00
uint64_t newval;
ri = get_arm_cp_reginfo(cpu->cp_regs, regidx);
if (!ri) {
ok = false;
continue;
}
target-arm: Split NO_MIGRATE into ALIAS and NO_RAW We currently mark ARM coprocessor/system register definitions with the flag ARM_CP_NO_MIGRATE for two different reasons: 1) register is an alias on to state that's also visible via some other register, and that other register is the one responsible for migrating the state 2) register is not actually state at all (for instance the TLB or cache maintenance operation "registers") and it makes no sense to attempt to migrate it or otherwise access the raw state This works fine for identifying which registers should be ignored when performing migration, but we also use the same functions for synchronizing system register state between QEMU and the kernel when using KVM. In this case we don't want to try to sync state into registers in category 2, but we do want to sync into registers in category 1, because the kernel might have picked a different one of the aliases as its choice for which one to expose for migration. (In particular, on 32 bit hosts the kernel will expose the state in the AArch32 version of the register, but TCG's convention is to mark the AArch64 version as the version to migrate, even if the CPU being emulated happens to be 32 bit, so almost all system registers will hit this issue now that we've added AArch64 system emulation.) Fix this by splitting the NO_MIGRATE flag in two (ALIAS and NO_RAW) corresponding to the two different reasons we might not want to migrate a register. When setting up the TCG list of registers to migrate we honour both flags; when populating the list from KVM, only ignore registers which are NO_RAW. Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Greg Bellows <greg.bellows@linaro.org> Message-id: 1422282372-13735-2-git-send-email-peter.maydell@linaro.org [PMM: changed ARM_CP_NO_MIGRATE to ARM_CP_ALIAS on new SP_EL1 and SP_EL2 reginfo stanzas since there was a (semantic) merge conflict with the patchset that added those]
2015-02-05 14:37:22 +01:00
if (ri->type & ARM_CP_NO_RAW) {
continue;
}
arm: Allow system registers for KVM guests to be changed by QEMU code At the moment the Arm implementations of kvm_arch_{get,put}_registers() don't support having QEMU change the values of system registers (aka coprocessor registers for AArch32). This is because although kvm_arch_get_registers() calls write_list_to_cpustate() to update the CPU state struct fields (so QEMU code can read the values in the usual way), kvm_arch_put_registers() does not call write_cpustate_to_list(), meaning that any changes to the CPU state struct fields will not be passed back to KVM. The rationale for this design is documented in a comment in the AArch32 kvm_arch_put_registers() -- writing the values in the cpregs list into the CPU state struct is "lossy" because the write of a register might not succeed, and so if we blindly copy the CPU state values back again we will incorrectly change register values for the guest. The assumption was that no QEMU code would need to write to the registers. However, when we implemented debug support for KVM guests, we broke that assumption: the code to handle "set the guest up to take a breakpoint exception" does so by updating various guest registers including ESR_EL1. Support this by making kvm_arch_put_registers() synchronize CPU state back into the list. We sync only those registers where the initial write succeeds, which should be sufficient. This commit is the same as commit 823e1b3818f9b10b824ddc which we had to revert in commit 942f99c825fc94c8b1a4, except that the bug which was preventing EDK2 guest firmware running has been fixed: kvm_arm_reset_vcpu() now calls write_list_to_cpustate(). Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org> Tested-by: Eric Auger <eric.auger@redhat.com>
2019-05-07 13:55:02 +02:00
newval = read_raw_cp_reg(&cpu->env, ri);
if (kvm_sync) {
/*
* Only sync if the previous list->cpustate sync succeeded.
* Rather than tracking the success/failure state for every
* item in the list, we just recheck "does the raw write we must
* have made in write_list_to_cpustate() read back OK" here.
*/
uint64_t oldval = cpu->cpreg_values[i];
if (oldval == newval) {
continue;
}
write_raw_cp_reg(&cpu->env, ri, oldval);
if (read_raw_cp_reg(&cpu->env, ri) != oldval) {
continue;
}
write_raw_cp_reg(&cpu->env, ri, newval);
}
cpu->cpreg_values[i] = newval;
}
return ok;
}
bool write_list_to_cpustate(ARMCPU *cpu)
{
int i;
bool ok = true;
for (i = 0; i < cpu->cpreg_array_len; i++) {
uint32_t regidx = kvm_to_cpreg_id(cpu->cpreg_indexes[i]);
uint64_t v = cpu->cpreg_values[i];
const ARMCPRegInfo *ri;
ri = get_arm_cp_reginfo(cpu->cp_regs, regidx);
if (!ri) {
ok = false;
continue;
}
target-arm: Split NO_MIGRATE into ALIAS and NO_RAW We currently mark ARM coprocessor/system register definitions with the flag ARM_CP_NO_MIGRATE for two different reasons: 1) register is an alias on to state that's also visible via some other register, and that other register is the one responsible for migrating the state 2) register is not actually state at all (for instance the TLB or cache maintenance operation "registers") and it makes no sense to attempt to migrate it or otherwise access the raw state This works fine for identifying which registers should be ignored when performing migration, but we also use the same functions for synchronizing system register state between QEMU and the kernel when using KVM. In this case we don't want to try to sync state into registers in category 2, but we do want to sync into registers in category 1, because the kernel might have picked a different one of the aliases as its choice for which one to expose for migration. (In particular, on 32 bit hosts the kernel will expose the state in the AArch32 version of the register, but TCG's convention is to mark the AArch64 version as the version to migrate, even if the CPU being emulated happens to be 32 bit, so almost all system registers will hit this issue now that we've added AArch64 system emulation.) Fix this by splitting the NO_MIGRATE flag in two (ALIAS and NO_RAW) corresponding to the two different reasons we might not want to migrate a register. When setting up the TCG list of registers to migrate we honour both flags; when populating the list from KVM, only ignore registers which are NO_RAW. Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Greg Bellows <greg.bellows@linaro.org> Message-id: 1422282372-13735-2-git-send-email-peter.maydell@linaro.org [PMM: changed ARM_CP_NO_MIGRATE to ARM_CP_ALIAS on new SP_EL1 and SP_EL2 reginfo stanzas since there was a (semantic) merge conflict with the patchset that added those]
2015-02-05 14:37:22 +01:00
if (ri->type & ARM_CP_NO_RAW) {
continue;
}
/* Write value and confirm it reads back as written
* (to catch read-only registers and partially read-only
* registers where the incoming migration value doesn't match)
*/
write_raw_cp_reg(&cpu->env, ri, v);
if (read_raw_cp_reg(&cpu->env, ri) != v) {
ok = false;
}
}
return ok;
}
static void add_cpreg_to_list(gpointer key, gpointer opaque)
{
ARMCPU *cpu = opaque;
uint32_t regidx = (uintptr_t)key;
const ARMCPRegInfo *ri = get_arm_cp_reginfo(cpu->cp_regs, regidx);
target-arm: Split NO_MIGRATE into ALIAS and NO_RAW We currently mark ARM coprocessor/system register definitions with the flag ARM_CP_NO_MIGRATE for two different reasons: 1) register is an alias on to state that's also visible via some other register, and that other register is the one responsible for migrating the state 2) register is not actually state at all (for instance the TLB or cache maintenance operation "registers") and it makes no sense to attempt to migrate it or otherwise access the raw state This works fine for identifying which registers should be ignored when performing migration, but we also use the same functions for synchronizing system register state between QEMU and the kernel when using KVM. In this case we don't want to try to sync state into registers in category 2, but we do want to sync into registers in category 1, because the kernel might have picked a different one of the aliases as its choice for which one to expose for migration. (In particular, on 32 bit hosts the kernel will expose the state in the AArch32 version of the register, but TCG's convention is to mark the AArch64 version as the version to migrate, even if the CPU being emulated happens to be 32 bit, so almost all system registers will hit this issue now that we've added AArch64 system emulation.) Fix this by splitting the NO_MIGRATE flag in two (ALIAS and NO_RAW) corresponding to the two different reasons we might not want to migrate a register. When setting up the TCG list of registers to migrate we honour both flags; when populating the list from KVM, only ignore registers which are NO_RAW. Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Greg Bellows <greg.bellows@linaro.org> Message-id: 1422282372-13735-2-git-send-email-peter.maydell@linaro.org [PMM: changed ARM_CP_NO_MIGRATE to ARM_CP_ALIAS on new SP_EL1 and SP_EL2 reginfo stanzas since there was a (semantic) merge conflict with the patchset that added those]
2015-02-05 14:37:22 +01:00
if (!(ri->type & (ARM_CP_NO_RAW|ARM_CP_ALIAS))) {
cpu->cpreg_indexes[cpu->cpreg_array_len] = cpreg_to_kvm_id(regidx);
/* The value array need not be initialized at this point */
cpu->cpreg_array_len++;
}
}
static void count_cpreg(gpointer key, gpointer opaque)
{
ARMCPU *cpu = opaque;
const ARMCPRegInfo *ri;
ri = g_hash_table_lookup(cpu->cp_regs, key);
target-arm: Split NO_MIGRATE into ALIAS and NO_RAW We currently mark ARM coprocessor/system register definitions with the flag ARM_CP_NO_MIGRATE for two different reasons: 1) register is an alias on to state that's also visible via some other register, and that other register is the one responsible for migrating the state 2) register is not actually state at all (for instance the TLB or cache maintenance operation "registers") and it makes no sense to attempt to migrate it or otherwise access the raw state This works fine for identifying which registers should be ignored when performing migration, but we also use the same functions for synchronizing system register state between QEMU and the kernel when using KVM. In this case we don't want to try to sync state into registers in category 2, but we do want to sync into registers in category 1, because the kernel might have picked a different one of the aliases as its choice for which one to expose for migration. (In particular, on 32 bit hosts the kernel will expose the state in the AArch32 version of the register, but TCG's convention is to mark the AArch64 version as the version to migrate, even if the CPU being emulated happens to be 32 bit, so almost all system registers will hit this issue now that we've added AArch64 system emulation.) Fix this by splitting the NO_MIGRATE flag in two (ALIAS and NO_RAW) corresponding to the two different reasons we might not want to migrate a register. When setting up the TCG list of registers to migrate we honour both flags; when populating the list from KVM, only ignore registers which are NO_RAW. Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Greg Bellows <greg.bellows@linaro.org> Message-id: 1422282372-13735-2-git-send-email-peter.maydell@linaro.org [PMM: changed ARM_CP_NO_MIGRATE to ARM_CP_ALIAS on new SP_EL1 and SP_EL2 reginfo stanzas since there was a (semantic) merge conflict with the patchset that added those]
2015-02-05 14:37:22 +01:00
if (!(ri->type & (ARM_CP_NO_RAW|ARM_CP_ALIAS))) {
cpu->cpreg_array_len++;
}
}
static gint cpreg_key_compare(gconstpointer a, gconstpointer b)
{
uint64_t aidx = cpreg_to_kvm_id((uintptr_t)a);
uint64_t bidx = cpreg_to_kvm_id((uintptr_t)b);
if (aidx > bidx) {
return 1;
}
if (aidx < bidx) {
return -1;
}
return 0;
}
void init_cpreg_list(ARMCPU *cpu)
{
/* Initialise the cpreg_tuples[] array based on the cp_regs hash.
* Note that we require cpreg_tuples[] to be sorted by key ID.
*/
GList *keys;
int arraylen;
keys = g_hash_table_get_keys(cpu->cp_regs);
keys = g_list_sort(keys, cpreg_key_compare);
cpu->cpreg_array_len = 0;
g_list_foreach(keys, count_cpreg, cpu);
arraylen = cpu->cpreg_array_len;
cpu->cpreg_indexes = g_new(uint64_t, arraylen);
cpu->cpreg_values = g_new(uint64_t, arraylen);
cpu->cpreg_vmstate_indexes = g_new(uint64_t, arraylen);
cpu->cpreg_vmstate_values = g_new(uint64_t, arraylen);
cpu->cpreg_vmstate_array_len = cpu->cpreg_array_len;
cpu->cpreg_array_len = 0;
g_list_foreach(keys, add_cpreg_to_list, cpu);
assert(cpu->cpreg_array_len == arraylen);
g_list_free(keys);
}
/*
* Some registers are not accessible from AArch32 EL3 if SCR.NS == 0.
*/
static CPAccessResult access_el3_aa32ns(CPUARMState *env,
const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
bool isread)
{
if (!is_a64(env) && arm_current_el(env) == 3 &&
arm_is_secure_below_el3(env)) {
return CP_ACCESS_TRAP_UNCATEGORIZED;
}
return CP_ACCESS_OK;
}
/* Some secure-only AArch32 registers trap to EL3 if used from
* Secure EL1 (but are just ordinary UNDEF in other non-EL3 contexts).
* Note that an access from Secure EL1 can only happen if EL3 is AArch64.
* We assume that the .access field is set to PL1_RW.
*/
static CPAccessResult access_trap_aa32s_el1(CPUARMState *env,
const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
bool isread)
{
if (arm_current_el(env) == 3) {
return CP_ACCESS_OK;
}
if (arm_is_secure_below_el3(env)) {
if (env->cp15.scr_el3 & SCR_EEL2) {
return CP_ACCESS_TRAP_EL2;
}
return CP_ACCESS_TRAP_EL3;
}
/* This will be EL1 NS and EL2 NS, which just UNDEF */
return CP_ACCESS_TRAP_UNCATEGORIZED;
}
static uint64_t arm_mdcr_el2_eff(CPUARMState *env)
{
return arm_is_el2_enabled(env) ? env->cp15.mdcr_el2 : 0;
}
/* Check for traps to "powerdown debug" registers, which are controlled
* by MDCR.TDOSA
*/
static CPAccessResult access_tdosa(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
bool isread)
{
int el = arm_current_el(env);
uint64_t mdcr_el2 = arm_mdcr_el2_eff(env);
bool mdcr_el2_tdosa = (mdcr_el2 & MDCR_TDOSA) || (mdcr_el2 & MDCR_TDE) ||
(arm_hcr_el2_eff(env) & HCR_TGE);
if (el < 2 && mdcr_el2_tdosa) {
return CP_ACCESS_TRAP_EL2;
}
if (el < 3 && (env->cp15.mdcr_el3 & MDCR_TDOSA)) {
return CP_ACCESS_TRAP_EL3;
}
return CP_ACCESS_OK;
}
/* Check for traps to "debug ROM" registers, which are controlled
* by MDCR_EL2.TDRA for EL2 but by the more general MDCR_EL3.TDA for EL3.
*/
static CPAccessResult access_tdra(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
bool isread)
{
int el = arm_current_el(env);
uint64_t mdcr_el2 = arm_mdcr_el2_eff(env);
bool mdcr_el2_tdra = (mdcr_el2 & MDCR_TDRA) || (mdcr_el2 & MDCR_TDE) ||
(arm_hcr_el2_eff(env) & HCR_TGE);
if (el < 2 && mdcr_el2_tdra) {
return CP_ACCESS_TRAP_EL2;
}
if (el < 3 && (env->cp15.mdcr_el3 & MDCR_TDA)) {
return CP_ACCESS_TRAP_EL3;
}
return CP_ACCESS_OK;
}
/* Check for traps to general debug registers, which are controlled
* by MDCR_EL2.TDA for EL2 and MDCR_EL3.TDA for EL3.
*/
static CPAccessResult access_tda(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
bool isread)
{
int el = arm_current_el(env);
uint64_t mdcr_el2 = arm_mdcr_el2_eff(env);
bool mdcr_el2_tda = (mdcr_el2 & MDCR_TDA) || (mdcr_el2 & MDCR_TDE) ||
(arm_hcr_el2_eff(env) & HCR_TGE);
if (el < 2 && mdcr_el2_tda) {
return CP_ACCESS_TRAP_EL2;
}
if (el < 3 && (env->cp15.mdcr_el3 & MDCR_TDA)) {
return CP_ACCESS_TRAP_EL3;
}
return CP_ACCESS_OK;
}
/* Check for traps to performance monitor registers, which are controlled
* by MDCR_EL2.TPM for EL2 and MDCR_EL3.TPM for EL3.
*/
static CPAccessResult access_tpm(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
bool isread)
{
int el = arm_current_el(env);
uint64_t mdcr_el2 = arm_mdcr_el2_eff(env);
if (el < 2 && (mdcr_el2 & MDCR_TPM)) {
return CP_ACCESS_TRAP_EL2;
}
if (el < 3 && (env->cp15.mdcr_el3 & MDCR_TPM)) {
return CP_ACCESS_TRAP_EL3;
}
return CP_ACCESS_OK;
}
/* Check for traps from EL1 due to HCR_EL2.TVM and HCR_EL2.TRVM. */
static CPAccessResult access_tvm_trvm(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
bool isread)
{
if (arm_current_el(env) == 1) {
uint64_t trap = isread ? HCR_TRVM : HCR_TVM;
if (arm_hcr_el2_eff(env) & trap) {
return CP_ACCESS_TRAP_EL2;
}
}
return CP_ACCESS_OK;
}
/* Check for traps from EL1 due to HCR_EL2.TSW. */
static CPAccessResult access_tsw(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
bool isread)
{
if (arm_current_el(env) == 1 && (arm_hcr_el2_eff(env) & HCR_TSW)) {
return CP_ACCESS_TRAP_EL2;
}
return CP_ACCESS_OK;
}
/* Check for traps from EL1 due to HCR_EL2.TACR. */
static CPAccessResult access_tacr(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
bool isread)
{
if (arm_current_el(env) == 1 && (arm_hcr_el2_eff(env) & HCR_TACR)) {
return CP_ACCESS_TRAP_EL2;
}
return CP_ACCESS_OK;
}
/* Check for traps from EL1 due to HCR_EL2.TTLB. */
static CPAccessResult access_ttlb(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
bool isread)
{
if (arm_current_el(env) == 1 && (arm_hcr_el2_eff(env) & HCR_TTLB)) {
return CP_ACCESS_TRAP_EL2;
}
return CP_ACCESS_OK;
}
static void dacr_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri, uint64_t value)
{
ARMCPU *cpu = env_archcpu(env);
raw_write(env, ri, value);
tlb_flush(CPU(cpu)); /* Flush TLB as domain not tracked in TLB */
}
static void fcse_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri, uint64_t value)
{
ARMCPU *cpu = env_archcpu(env);
if (raw_read(env, ri) != value) {
/* Unlike real hardware the qemu TLB uses virtual addresses,
* not modified virtual addresses, so this causes a TLB flush.
*/
tlb_flush(CPU(cpu));
raw_write(env, ri, value);
}
}
static void contextidr_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
ARMCPU *cpu = env_archcpu(env);
if (raw_read(env, ri) != value && !arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_PMSA)
&& !extended_addresses_enabled(env)) {
/* For VMSA (when not using the LPAE long descriptor page table
* format) this register includes the ASID, so do a TLB flush.
* For PMSA it is purely a process ID and no action is needed.
*/
tlb_flush(CPU(cpu));
}
raw_write(env, ri, value);
}
/* IS variants of TLB operations must affect all cores */
static void tlbiall_is_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
CPUState *cs = env_cpu(env);
tlb_flush_all_cpus_synced(cs);
}
static void tlbiasid_is_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
CPUState *cs = env_cpu(env);
tlb_flush_all_cpus_synced(cs);
}
static void tlbimva_is_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
CPUState *cs = env_cpu(env);
tlb_flush_page_all_cpus_synced(cs, value & TARGET_PAGE_MASK);
}
static void tlbimvaa_is_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
CPUState *cs = env_cpu(env);
tlb_flush_page_all_cpus_synced(cs, value & TARGET_PAGE_MASK);
}
/*
* Non-IS variants of TLB operations are upgraded to
* IS versions if we are at EL1 and HCR_EL2.FB is effectively set to
* force broadcast of these operations.
*/
static bool tlb_force_broadcast(CPUARMState *env)
{
return arm_current_el(env) == 1 && (arm_hcr_el2_eff(env) & HCR_FB);
}
static void tlbiall_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
/* Invalidate all (TLBIALL) */
CPUState *cs = env_cpu(env);
if (tlb_force_broadcast(env)) {
tlb_flush_all_cpus_synced(cs);
} else {
tlb_flush(cs);
}
}
static void tlbimva_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
/* Invalidate single TLB entry by MVA and ASID (TLBIMVA) */
CPUState *cs = env_cpu(env);
value &= TARGET_PAGE_MASK;
if (tlb_force_broadcast(env)) {
tlb_flush_page_all_cpus_synced(cs, value);
} else {
tlb_flush_page(cs, value);
}
}
static void tlbiasid_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
/* Invalidate by ASID (TLBIASID) */
CPUState *cs = env_cpu(env);
if (tlb_force_broadcast(env)) {
tlb_flush_all_cpus_synced(cs);
} else {
tlb_flush(cs);
}
}
static void tlbimvaa_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
/* Invalidate single entry by MVA, all ASIDs (TLBIMVAA) */
CPUState *cs = env_cpu(env);
value &= TARGET_PAGE_MASK;
if (tlb_force_broadcast(env)) {
tlb_flush_page_all_cpus_synced(cs, value);
} else {
tlb_flush_page(cs, value);
}
}
static void tlbiall_nsnh_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
CPUState *cs = env_cpu(env);
tlb_flush_by_mmuidx(cs,
ARMMMUIdxBit_E10_1 |
ARMMMUIdxBit_E10_1_PAN |
ARMMMUIdxBit_E10_0);
}
static void tlbiall_nsnh_is_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
CPUState *cs = env_cpu(env);
tlb_flush_by_mmuidx_all_cpus_synced(cs,
ARMMMUIdxBit_E10_1 |
ARMMMUIdxBit_E10_1_PAN |
ARMMMUIdxBit_E10_0);
}
static void tlbiall_hyp_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
CPUState *cs = env_cpu(env);
tlb_flush_by_mmuidx(cs, ARMMMUIdxBit_E2);
}
static void tlbiall_hyp_is_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
CPUState *cs = env_cpu(env);
tlb_flush_by_mmuidx_all_cpus_synced(cs, ARMMMUIdxBit_E2);
}
static void tlbimva_hyp_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
CPUState *cs = env_cpu(env);
uint64_t pageaddr = value & ~MAKE_64BIT_MASK(0, 12);
tlb_flush_page_by_mmuidx(cs, pageaddr, ARMMMUIdxBit_E2);
}
static void tlbimva_hyp_is_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
CPUState *cs = env_cpu(env);
uint64_t pageaddr = value & ~MAKE_64BIT_MASK(0, 12);
tlb_flush_page_by_mmuidx_all_cpus_synced(cs, pageaddr,
ARMMMUIdxBit_E2);
}
static const ARMCPRegInfo cp_reginfo[] = {
/* Define the secure and non-secure FCSE identifier CP registers
* separately because there is no secure bank in V8 (no _EL3). This allows
* the secure register to be properly reset and migrated. There is also no
* v8 EL1 version of the register so the non-secure instance stands alone.
*/
{ .name = "FCSEIDR",
.cp = 15, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 13, .crm = 0, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL1_RW, .secure = ARM_CP_SECSTATE_NS,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.fcseidr_ns),
.resetvalue = 0, .writefn = fcse_write, .raw_writefn = raw_write, },
{ .name = "FCSEIDR_S",
.cp = 15, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 13, .crm = 0, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL1_RW, .secure = ARM_CP_SECSTATE_S,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.fcseidr_s),
.resetvalue = 0, .writefn = fcse_write, .raw_writefn = raw_write, },
/* Define the secure and non-secure context identifier CP registers
* separately because there is no secure bank in V8 (no _EL3). This allows
* the secure register to be properly reset and migrated. In the
* non-secure case, the 32-bit register will have reset and migration
* disabled during registration as it is handled by the 64-bit instance.
*/
{ .name = "CONTEXTIDR_EL1", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_BOTH,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 13, .crm = 0, .opc2 = 1,
.access = PL1_RW, .accessfn = access_tvm_trvm,
.secure = ARM_CP_SECSTATE_NS,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.contextidr_el[1]),
.resetvalue = 0, .writefn = contextidr_write, .raw_writefn = raw_write, },
{ .name = "CONTEXTIDR_S", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA32,
.cp = 15, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 13, .crm = 0, .opc2 = 1,
.access = PL1_RW, .accessfn = access_tvm_trvm,
.secure = ARM_CP_SECSTATE_S,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.contextidr_s),
.resetvalue = 0, .writefn = contextidr_write, .raw_writefn = raw_write, },
};
static const ARMCPRegInfo not_v8_cp_reginfo[] = {
/* NB: Some of these registers exist in v8 but with more precise
* definitions that don't use CP_ANY wildcards (mostly in v8_cp_reginfo[]).
*/
/* MMU Domain access control / MPU write buffer control */
{ .name = "DACR",
.cp = 15, .opc1 = CP_ANY, .crn = 3, .crm = CP_ANY, .opc2 = CP_ANY,
.access = PL1_RW, .accessfn = access_tvm_trvm, .resetvalue = 0,
.writefn = dacr_write, .raw_writefn = raw_write,
.bank_fieldoffsets = { offsetoflow32(CPUARMState, cp15.dacr_s),
offsetoflow32(CPUARMState, cp15.dacr_ns) } },
/* ARMv7 allocates a range of implementation defined TLB LOCKDOWN regs.
* For v6 and v5, these mappings are overly broad.
*/
{ .name = "TLB_LOCKDOWN", .cp = 15, .crn = 10, .crm = 0,
.opc1 = CP_ANY, .opc2 = CP_ANY, .access = PL1_RW, .type = ARM_CP_NOP },
{ .name = "TLB_LOCKDOWN", .cp = 15, .crn = 10, .crm = 1,
.opc1 = CP_ANY, .opc2 = CP_ANY, .access = PL1_RW, .type = ARM_CP_NOP },
{ .name = "TLB_LOCKDOWN", .cp = 15, .crn = 10, .crm = 4,
.opc1 = CP_ANY, .opc2 = CP_ANY, .access = PL1_RW, .type = ARM_CP_NOP },
{ .name = "TLB_LOCKDOWN", .cp = 15, .crn = 10, .crm = 8,
.opc1 = CP_ANY, .opc2 = CP_ANY, .access = PL1_RW, .type = ARM_CP_NOP },
/* Cache maintenance ops; some of this space may be overridden later. */
{ .name = "CACHEMAINT", .cp = 15, .crn = 7, .crm = CP_ANY,
.opc1 = 0, .opc2 = CP_ANY, .access = PL1_W,
.type = ARM_CP_NOP | ARM_CP_OVERRIDE },
};
static const ARMCPRegInfo not_v6_cp_reginfo[] = {
/* Not all pre-v6 cores implemented this WFI, so this is slightly
* over-broad.
*/
{ .name = "WFI_v5", .cp = 15, .crn = 7, .crm = 8, .opc1 = 0, .opc2 = 2,
.access = PL1_W, .type = ARM_CP_WFI },
};
static const ARMCPRegInfo not_v7_cp_reginfo[] = {
/* Standard v6 WFI (also used in some pre-v6 cores); not in v7 (which
* is UNPREDICTABLE; we choose to NOP as most implementations do).
*/
{ .name = "WFI_v6", .cp = 15, .crn = 7, .crm = 0, .opc1 = 0, .opc2 = 4,
.access = PL1_W, .type = ARM_CP_WFI },
/* L1 cache lockdown. Not architectural in v6 and earlier but in practice
* implemented in 926, 946, 1026, 1136, 1176 and 11MPCore. StrongARM and
* OMAPCP will override this space.
*/
{ .name = "DLOCKDOWN", .cp = 15, .crn = 9, .crm = 0, .opc1 = 0, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL1_RW, .fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.c9_data),
.resetvalue = 0 },
{ .name = "ILOCKDOWN", .cp = 15, .crn = 9, .crm = 0, .opc1 = 0, .opc2 = 1,
.access = PL1_RW, .fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.c9_insn),
.resetvalue = 0 },
/* v6 doesn't have the cache ID registers but Linux reads them anyway */
{ .name = "DUMMY", .cp = 15, .crn = 0, .crm = 0, .opc1 = 1, .opc2 = CP_ANY,
target-arm: Split NO_MIGRATE into ALIAS and NO_RAW We currently mark ARM coprocessor/system register definitions with the flag ARM_CP_NO_MIGRATE for two different reasons: 1) register is an alias on to state that's also visible via some other register, and that other register is the one responsible for migrating the state 2) register is not actually state at all (for instance the TLB or cache maintenance operation "registers") and it makes no sense to attempt to migrate it or otherwise access the raw state This works fine for identifying which registers should be ignored when performing migration, but we also use the same functions for synchronizing system register state between QEMU and the kernel when using KVM. In this case we don't want to try to sync state into registers in category 2, but we do want to sync into registers in category 1, because the kernel might have picked a different one of the aliases as its choice for which one to expose for migration. (In particular, on 32 bit hosts the kernel will expose the state in the AArch32 version of the register, but TCG's convention is to mark the AArch64 version as the version to migrate, even if the CPU being emulated happens to be 32 bit, so almost all system registers will hit this issue now that we've added AArch64 system emulation.) Fix this by splitting the NO_MIGRATE flag in two (ALIAS and NO_RAW) corresponding to the two different reasons we might not want to migrate a register. When setting up the TCG list of registers to migrate we honour both flags; when populating the list from KVM, only ignore registers which are NO_RAW. Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Greg Bellows <greg.bellows@linaro.org> Message-id: 1422282372-13735-2-git-send-email-peter.maydell@linaro.org [PMM: changed ARM_CP_NO_MIGRATE to ARM_CP_ALIAS on new SP_EL1 and SP_EL2 reginfo stanzas since there was a (semantic) merge conflict with the patchset that added those]
2015-02-05 14:37:22 +01:00
.access = PL1_R, .type = ARM_CP_CONST | ARM_CP_NO_RAW,
.resetvalue = 0 },
/* We don't implement pre-v7 debug but most CPUs had at least a DBGDIDR;
* implementing it as RAZ means the "debug architecture version" bits
* will read as a reserved value, which should cause Linux to not try
* to use the debug hardware.
*/
{ .name = "DBGDIDR", .cp = 14, .crn = 0, .crm = 0, .opc1 = 0, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL0_R, .type = ARM_CP_CONST, .resetvalue = 0 },
/* MMU TLB control. Note that the wildcarding means we cover not just
* the unified TLB ops but also the dside/iside/inner-shareable variants.
*/
{ .name = "TLBIALL", .cp = 15, .crn = 8, .crm = CP_ANY,
.opc1 = CP_ANY, .opc2 = 0, .access = PL1_W, .writefn = tlbiall_write,
target-arm: Split NO_MIGRATE into ALIAS and NO_RAW We currently mark ARM coprocessor/system register definitions with the flag ARM_CP_NO_MIGRATE for two different reasons: 1) register is an alias on to state that's also visible via some other register, and that other register is the one responsible for migrating the state 2) register is not actually state at all (for instance the TLB or cache maintenance operation "registers") and it makes no sense to attempt to migrate it or otherwise access the raw state This works fine for identifying which registers should be ignored when performing migration, but we also use the same functions for synchronizing system register state between QEMU and the kernel when using KVM. In this case we don't want to try to sync state into registers in category 2, but we do want to sync into registers in category 1, because the kernel might have picked a different one of the aliases as its choice for which one to expose for migration. (In particular, on 32 bit hosts the kernel will expose the state in the AArch32 version of the register, but TCG's convention is to mark the AArch64 version as the version to migrate, even if the CPU being emulated happens to be 32 bit, so almost all system registers will hit this issue now that we've added AArch64 system emulation.) Fix this by splitting the NO_MIGRATE flag in two (ALIAS and NO_RAW) corresponding to the two different reasons we might not want to migrate a register. When setting up the TCG list of registers to migrate we honour both flags; when populating the list from KVM, only ignore registers which are NO_RAW. Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Greg Bellows <greg.bellows@linaro.org> Message-id: 1422282372-13735-2-git-send-email-peter.maydell@linaro.org [PMM: changed ARM_CP_NO_MIGRATE to ARM_CP_ALIAS on new SP_EL1 and SP_EL2 reginfo stanzas since there was a (semantic) merge conflict with the patchset that added those]
2015-02-05 14:37:22 +01:00
.type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW },
{ .name = "TLBIMVA", .cp = 15, .crn = 8, .crm = CP_ANY,
.opc1 = CP_ANY, .opc2 = 1, .access = PL1_W, .writefn = tlbimva_write,
target-arm: Split NO_MIGRATE into ALIAS and NO_RAW We currently mark ARM coprocessor/system register definitions with the flag ARM_CP_NO_MIGRATE for two different reasons: 1) register is an alias on to state that's also visible via some other register, and that other register is the one responsible for migrating the state 2) register is not actually state at all (for instance the TLB or cache maintenance operation "registers") and it makes no sense to attempt to migrate it or otherwise access the raw state This works fine for identifying which registers should be ignored when performing migration, but we also use the same functions for synchronizing system register state between QEMU and the kernel when using KVM. In this case we don't want to try to sync state into registers in category 2, but we do want to sync into registers in category 1, because the kernel might have picked a different one of the aliases as its choice for which one to expose for migration. (In particular, on 32 bit hosts the kernel will expose the state in the AArch32 version of the register, but TCG's convention is to mark the AArch64 version as the version to migrate, even if the CPU being emulated happens to be 32 bit, so almost all system registers will hit this issue now that we've added AArch64 system emulation.) Fix this by splitting the NO_MIGRATE flag in two (ALIAS and NO_RAW) corresponding to the two different reasons we might not want to migrate a register. When setting up the TCG list of registers to migrate we honour both flags; when populating the list from KVM, only ignore registers which are NO_RAW. Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Greg Bellows <greg.bellows@linaro.org> Message-id: 1422282372-13735-2-git-send-email-peter.maydell@linaro.org [PMM: changed ARM_CP_NO_MIGRATE to ARM_CP_ALIAS on new SP_EL1 and SP_EL2 reginfo stanzas since there was a (semantic) merge conflict with the patchset that added those]
2015-02-05 14:37:22 +01:00
.type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW },
{ .name = "TLBIASID", .cp = 15, .crn = 8, .crm = CP_ANY,
.opc1 = CP_ANY, .opc2 = 2, .access = PL1_W, .writefn = tlbiasid_write,
target-arm: Split NO_MIGRATE into ALIAS and NO_RAW We currently mark ARM coprocessor/system register definitions with the flag ARM_CP_NO_MIGRATE for two different reasons: 1) register is an alias on to state that's also visible via some other register, and that other register is the one responsible for migrating the state 2) register is not actually state at all (for instance the TLB or cache maintenance operation "registers") and it makes no sense to attempt to migrate it or otherwise access the raw state This works fine for identifying which registers should be ignored when performing migration, but we also use the same functions for synchronizing system register state between QEMU and the kernel when using KVM. In this case we don't want to try to sync state into registers in category 2, but we do want to sync into registers in category 1, because the kernel might have picked a different one of the aliases as its choice for which one to expose for migration. (In particular, on 32 bit hosts the kernel will expose the state in the AArch32 version of the register, but TCG's convention is to mark the AArch64 version as the version to migrate, even if the CPU being emulated happens to be 32 bit, so almost all system registers will hit this issue now that we've added AArch64 system emulation.) Fix this by splitting the NO_MIGRATE flag in two (ALIAS and NO_RAW) corresponding to the two different reasons we might not want to migrate a register. When setting up the TCG list of registers to migrate we honour both flags; when populating the list from KVM, only ignore registers which are NO_RAW. Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Greg Bellows <greg.bellows@linaro.org> Message-id: 1422282372-13735-2-git-send-email-peter.maydell@linaro.org [PMM: changed ARM_CP_NO_MIGRATE to ARM_CP_ALIAS on new SP_EL1 and SP_EL2 reginfo stanzas since there was a (semantic) merge conflict with the patchset that added those]
2015-02-05 14:37:22 +01:00
.type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW },
{ .name = "TLBIMVAA", .cp = 15, .crn = 8, .crm = CP_ANY,
.opc1 = CP_ANY, .opc2 = 3, .access = PL1_W, .writefn = tlbimvaa_write,
target-arm: Split NO_MIGRATE into ALIAS and NO_RAW We currently mark ARM coprocessor/system register definitions with the flag ARM_CP_NO_MIGRATE for two different reasons: 1) register is an alias on to state that's also visible via some other register, and that other register is the one responsible for migrating the state 2) register is not actually state at all (for instance the TLB or cache maintenance operation "registers") and it makes no sense to attempt to migrate it or otherwise access the raw state This works fine for identifying which registers should be ignored when performing migration, but we also use the same functions for synchronizing system register state between QEMU and the kernel when using KVM. In this case we don't want to try to sync state into registers in category 2, but we do want to sync into registers in category 1, because the kernel might have picked a different one of the aliases as its choice for which one to expose for migration. (In particular, on 32 bit hosts the kernel will expose the state in the AArch32 version of the register, but TCG's convention is to mark the AArch64 version as the version to migrate, even if the CPU being emulated happens to be 32 bit, so almost all system registers will hit this issue now that we've added AArch64 system emulation.) Fix this by splitting the NO_MIGRATE flag in two (ALIAS and NO_RAW) corresponding to the two different reasons we might not want to migrate a register. When setting up the TCG list of registers to migrate we honour both flags; when populating the list from KVM, only ignore registers which are NO_RAW. Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Greg Bellows <greg.bellows@linaro.org> Message-id: 1422282372-13735-2-git-send-email-peter.maydell@linaro.org [PMM: changed ARM_CP_NO_MIGRATE to ARM_CP_ALIAS on new SP_EL1 and SP_EL2 reginfo stanzas since there was a (semantic) merge conflict with the patchset that added those]
2015-02-05 14:37:22 +01:00
.type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW },
{ .name = "PRRR", .cp = 15, .crn = 10, .crm = 2,
.opc1 = 0, .opc2 = 0, .access = PL1_RW, .type = ARM_CP_NOP },
{ .name = "NMRR", .cp = 15, .crn = 10, .crm = 2,
.opc1 = 0, .opc2 = 1, .access = PL1_RW, .type = ARM_CP_NOP },
};
static void cpacr_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
uint32_t mask = 0;
/* In ARMv8 most bits of CPACR_EL1 are RES0. */
if (!arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_V8)) {
/* ARMv7 defines bits for unimplemented coprocessors as RAZ/WI.
* ASEDIS [31] and D32DIS [30] are both UNK/SBZP without VFP.
* TRCDIS [28] is RAZ/WI since we do not implement a trace macrocell.
*/
if (cpu_isar_feature(aa32_vfp_simd, env_archcpu(env))) {
/* VFP coprocessor: cp10 & cp11 [23:20] */
mask |= R_CPACR_ASEDIS_MASK |
R_CPACR_D32DIS_MASK |
R_CPACR_CP11_MASK |
R_CPACR_CP10_MASK;
if (!arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_NEON)) {
/* ASEDIS [31] bit is RAO/WI */
value |= R_CPACR_ASEDIS_MASK;
}
/* VFPv3 and upwards with NEON implement 32 double precision
* registers (D0-D31).
*/
if (!cpu_isar_feature(aa32_simd_r32, env_archcpu(env))) {
/* D32DIS [30] is RAO/WI if D16-31 are not implemented. */
value |= R_CPACR_D32DIS_MASK;
}
}
value &= mask;
}
/*
* For A-profile AArch32 EL3 (but not M-profile secure mode), if NSACR.CP10
* is 0 then CPACR.{CP11,CP10} ignore writes and read as 0b00.
*/
if (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_EL3) && !arm_el_is_aa64(env, 3) &&
!arm_is_secure(env) && !extract32(env->cp15.nsacr, 10, 1)) {
mask = R_CPACR_CP11_MASK | R_CPACR_CP10_MASK;
value = (value & ~mask) | (env->cp15.cpacr_el1 & mask);
}
env->cp15.cpacr_el1 = value;
}
static uint64_t cpacr_read(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri)
{
/*
* For A-profile AArch32 EL3 (but not M-profile secure mode), if NSACR.CP10
* is 0 then CPACR.{CP11,CP10} ignore writes and read as 0b00.
*/
uint64_t value = env->cp15.cpacr_el1;
if (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_EL3) && !arm_el_is_aa64(env, 3) &&
!arm_is_secure(env) && !extract32(env->cp15.nsacr, 10, 1)) {
value = ~(R_CPACR_CP11_MASK | R_CPACR_CP10_MASK);
}
return value;
}
static void cpacr_reset(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri)
{
/* Call cpacr_write() so that we reset with the correct RAO bits set
* for our CPU features.
*/
cpacr_write(env, ri, 0);
}
static CPAccessResult cpacr_access(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
bool isread)
{
if (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_V8)) {
/* Check if CPACR accesses are to be trapped to EL2 */
if (arm_current_el(env) == 1 && arm_is_el2_enabled(env) &&
FIELD_EX64(env->cp15.cptr_el[2], CPTR_EL2, TCPAC)) {
return CP_ACCESS_TRAP_EL2;
/* Check if CPACR accesses are to be trapped to EL3 */
} else if (arm_current_el(env) < 3 &&
FIELD_EX64(env->cp15.cptr_el[3], CPTR_EL3, TCPAC)) {
return CP_ACCESS_TRAP_EL3;
}
}
return CP_ACCESS_OK;
}
static CPAccessResult cptr_access(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
bool isread)
{
/* Check if CPTR accesses are set to trap to EL3 */
if (arm_current_el(env) == 2 &&
FIELD_EX64(env->cp15.cptr_el[3], CPTR_EL3, TCPAC)) {
return CP_ACCESS_TRAP_EL3;
}
return CP_ACCESS_OK;
}
static const ARMCPRegInfo v6_cp_reginfo[] = {
/* prefetch by MVA in v6, NOP in v7 */
{ .name = "MVA_prefetch",
.cp = 15, .crn = 7, .crm = 13, .opc1 = 0, .opc2 = 1,
.access = PL1_W, .type = ARM_CP_NOP },
/* We need to break the TB after ISB to execute self-modifying code
* correctly and also to take any pending interrupts immediately.
* So use arm_cp_write_ignore() function instead of ARM_CP_NOP flag.
*/
{ .name = "ISB", .cp = 15, .crn = 7, .crm = 5, .opc1 = 0, .opc2 = 4,
.access = PL0_W, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW, .writefn = arm_cp_write_ignore },
{ .name = "DSB", .cp = 15, .crn = 7, .crm = 10, .opc1 = 0, .opc2 = 4,
.access = PL0_W, .type = ARM_CP_NOP },
{ .name = "DMB", .cp = 15, .crn = 7, .crm = 10, .opc1 = 0, .opc2 = 5,
.access = PL0_W, .type = ARM_CP_NOP },
{ .name = "IFAR", .cp = 15, .crn = 6, .crm = 0, .opc1 = 0, .opc2 = 2,
.access = PL1_RW, .accessfn = access_tvm_trvm,
.bank_fieldoffsets = { offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.ifar_s),
offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.ifar_ns) },
.resetvalue = 0, },
/* Watchpoint Fault Address Register : should actually only be present
* for 1136, 1176, 11MPCore.
*/
{ .name = "WFAR", .cp = 15, .crn = 6, .crm = 0, .opc1 = 0, .opc2 = 1,
.access = PL1_RW, .type = ARM_CP_CONST, .resetvalue = 0, },
{ .name = "CPACR", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_BOTH, .opc0 = 3,
.crn = 1, .crm = 0, .opc1 = 0, .opc2 = 2, .accessfn = cpacr_access,
.access = PL1_RW, .fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.cpacr_el1),
.resetfn = cpacr_reset, .writefn = cpacr_write, .readfn = cpacr_read },
};
typedef struct pm_event {
uint16_t number; /* PMEVTYPER.evtCount is 16 bits wide */
/* If the event is supported on this CPU (used to generate PMCEID[01]) */
bool (*supported)(CPUARMState *);
/*
* Retrieve the current count of the underlying event. The programmed
* counters hold a difference from the return value from this function
*/
uint64_t (*get_count)(CPUARMState *);
/*
* Return how many nanoseconds it will take (at a minimum) for count events
* to occur. A negative value indicates the counter will never overflow, or
* that the counter has otherwise arranged for the overflow bit to be set
* and the PMU interrupt to be raised on overflow.
*/
int64_t (*ns_per_count)(uint64_t);
} pm_event;
static bool event_always_supported(CPUARMState *env)
{
return true;
}
static uint64_t swinc_get_count(CPUARMState *env)
{
/*
* SW_INCR events are written directly to the pmevcntr's by writes to
* PMSWINC, so there is no underlying count maintained by the PMU itself
*/
return 0;
}
static int64_t swinc_ns_per(uint64_t ignored)
{
return -1;
}
/*
* Return the underlying cycle count for the PMU cycle counters. If we're in
* usermode, simply return 0.
*/
static uint64_t cycles_get_count(CPUARMState *env)
{
#ifndef CONFIG_USER_ONLY
return muldiv64(qemu_clock_get_ns(QEMU_CLOCK_VIRTUAL),
ARM_CPU_FREQ, NANOSECONDS_PER_SECOND);
#else
return cpu_get_host_ticks();
#endif
}
#ifndef CONFIG_USER_ONLY
static int64_t cycles_ns_per(uint64_t cycles)
{
return (ARM_CPU_FREQ / NANOSECONDS_PER_SECOND) * cycles;
}
static bool instructions_supported(CPUARMState *env)
{
return icount_enabled() == 1; /* Precise instruction counting */
}
static uint64_t instructions_get_count(CPUARMState *env)
{
return (uint64_t)icount_get_raw();
}
static int64_t instructions_ns_per(uint64_t icount)
{
return icount_to_ns((int64_t)icount);
}
#endif
static bool pmu_8_1_events_supported(CPUARMState *env)
{
/* For events which are supported in any v8.1 PMU */
return cpu_isar_feature(any_pmu_8_1, env_archcpu(env));
}
static bool pmu_8_4_events_supported(CPUARMState *env)
{
/* For events which are supported in any v8.1 PMU */
return cpu_isar_feature(any_pmu_8_4, env_archcpu(env));
}
static uint64_t zero_event_get_count(CPUARMState *env)
{
/* For events which on QEMU never fire, so their count is always zero */
return 0;
}
static int64_t zero_event_ns_per(uint64_t cycles)
{
/* An event which never fires can never overflow */
return -1;
}
static const pm_event pm_events[] = {
{ .number = 0x000, /* SW_INCR */
.supported = event_always_supported,
.get_count = swinc_get_count,
.ns_per_count = swinc_ns_per,
},
#ifndef CONFIG_USER_ONLY
{ .number = 0x008, /* INST_RETIRED, Instruction architecturally executed */
.supported = instructions_supported,
.get_count = instructions_get_count,
.ns_per_count = instructions_ns_per,
},
{ .number = 0x011, /* CPU_CYCLES, Cycle */
.supported = event_always_supported,
.get_count = cycles_get_count,
.ns_per_count = cycles_ns_per,
},
#endif
{ .number = 0x023, /* STALL_FRONTEND */
.supported = pmu_8_1_events_supported,
.get_count = zero_event_get_count,
.ns_per_count = zero_event_ns_per,
},
{ .number = 0x024, /* STALL_BACKEND */
.supported = pmu_8_1_events_supported,
.get_count = zero_event_get_count,
.ns_per_count = zero_event_ns_per,
},
{ .number = 0x03c, /* STALL */
.supported = pmu_8_4_events_supported,
.get_count = zero_event_get_count,
.ns_per_count = zero_event_ns_per,
},
};
/*
* Note: Before increasing MAX_EVENT_ID beyond 0x3f into the 0x40xx range of
* events (i.e. the statistical profiling extension), this implementation
* should first be updated to something sparse instead of the current
* supported_event_map[] array.
*/
#define MAX_EVENT_ID 0x3c
#define UNSUPPORTED_EVENT UINT16_MAX
static uint16_t supported_event_map[MAX_EVENT_ID + 1];
/*
* Called upon CPU initialization to initialize PMCEID[01]_EL0 and build a map
* of ARM event numbers to indices in our pm_events array.
*
* Note: Events in the 0x40XX range are not currently supported.
*/
void pmu_init(ARMCPU *cpu)
{
unsigned int i;
/*
* Empty supported_event_map and cpu->pmceid[01] before adding supported
* events to them
*/
for (i = 0; i < ARRAY_SIZE(supported_event_map); i++) {
supported_event_map[i] = UNSUPPORTED_EVENT;
}
cpu->pmceid0 = 0;
cpu->pmceid1 = 0;
for (i = 0; i < ARRAY_SIZE(pm_events); i++) {
const pm_event *cnt = &pm_events[i];
assert(cnt->number <= MAX_EVENT_ID);
/* We do not currently support events in the 0x40xx range */
assert(cnt->number <= 0x3f);
if (cnt->supported(&cpu->env)) {
supported_event_map[cnt->number] = i;
uint64_t event_mask = 1ULL << (cnt->number & 0x1f);
if (cnt->number & 0x20) {
cpu->pmceid1 |= event_mask;
} else {
cpu->pmceid0 |= event_mask;
}
}
}
}
/*
* Check at runtime whether a PMU event is supported for the current machine
*/
static bool event_supported(uint16_t number)
{
if (number > MAX_EVENT_ID) {
return false;
}
return supported_event_map[number] != UNSUPPORTED_EVENT;
}
static CPAccessResult pmreg_access(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
bool isread)
{
/* Performance monitor registers user accessibility is controlled
* by PMUSERENR. MDCR_EL2.TPM and MDCR_EL3.TPM allow configurable
* trapping to EL2 or EL3 for other accesses.
*/
int el = arm_current_el(env);
uint64_t mdcr_el2 = arm_mdcr_el2_eff(env);
if (el == 0 && !(env->cp15.c9_pmuserenr & 1)) {
return CP_ACCESS_TRAP;
}
if (el < 2 && (mdcr_el2 & MDCR_TPM)) {
return CP_ACCESS_TRAP_EL2;
}
if (el < 3 && (env->cp15.mdcr_el3 & MDCR_TPM)) {
return CP_ACCESS_TRAP_EL3;
}
return CP_ACCESS_OK;
}
static CPAccessResult pmreg_access_xevcntr(CPUARMState *env,
const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
bool isread)
{
/* ER: event counter read trap control */
if (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_V8)
&& arm_current_el(env) == 0
&& (env->cp15.c9_pmuserenr & (1 << 3)) != 0
&& isread) {
return CP_ACCESS_OK;
}
return pmreg_access(env, ri, isread);
}
static CPAccessResult pmreg_access_swinc(CPUARMState *env,
const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
bool isread)
{
/* SW: software increment write trap control */
if (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_V8)
&& arm_current_el(env) == 0
&& (env->cp15.c9_pmuserenr & (1 << 1)) != 0
&& !isread) {
return CP_ACCESS_OK;
}
return pmreg_access(env, ri, isread);
}
static CPAccessResult pmreg_access_selr(CPUARMState *env,
const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
bool isread)
{
/* ER: event counter read trap control */
if (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_V8)
&& arm_current_el(env) == 0
&& (env->cp15.c9_pmuserenr & (1 << 3)) != 0) {
return CP_ACCESS_OK;
}
return pmreg_access(env, ri, isread);
}
static CPAccessResult pmreg_access_ccntr(CPUARMState *env,
const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
bool isread)
{
/* CR: cycle counter read trap control */
if (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_V8)
&& arm_current_el(env) == 0
&& (env->cp15.c9_pmuserenr & (1 << 2)) != 0
&& isread) {
return CP_ACCESS_OK;
}
return pmreg_access(env, ri, isread);
}
/* Returns true if the counter (pass 31 for PMCCNTR) should count events using
* the current EL, security state, and register configuration.
*/
static bool pmu_counter_enabled(CPUARMState *env, uint8_t counter)
{
uint64_t filter;
bool e, p, u, nsk, nsu, nsh, m;
bool enabled, prohibited, filtered;
bool secure = arm_is_secure(env);
int el = arm_current_el(env);
uint64_t mdcr_el2 = arm_mdcr_el2_eff(env);
uint8_t hpmn = mdcr_el2 & MDCR_HPMN;
if (!arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_PMU)) {
return false;
}
if (!arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_EL2) ||
(counter < hpmn || counter == 31)) {
e = env->cp15.c9_pmcr & PMCRE;
} else {
e = mdcr_el2 & MDCR_HPME;
}
enabled = e && (env->cp15.c9_pmcnten & (1 << counter));
if (!secure) {
if (el == 2 && (counter < hpmn || counter == 31)) {
prohibited = mdcr_el2 & MDCR_HPMD;
} else {
prohibited = false;
}
} else {
prohibited = arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_EL3) &&
!(env->cp15.mdcr_el3 & MDCR_SPME);
}
if (prohibited && counter == 31) {
prohibited = env->cp15.c9_pmcr & PMCRDP;
}
if (counter == 31) {
filter = env->cp15.pmccfiltr_el0;
} else {
filter = env->cp15.c14_pmevtyper[counter];
}
p = filter & PMXEVTYPER_P;
u = filter & PMXEVTYPER_U;
nsk = arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_EL3) && (filter & PMXEVTYPER_NSK);
nsu = arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_EL3) && (filter & PMXEVTYPER_NSU);
nsh = arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_EL2) && (filter & PMXEVTYPER_NSH);
m = arm_el_is_aa64(env, 1) &&
arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_EL3) && (filter & PMXEVTYPER_M);
if (el == 0) {
filtered = secure ? u : u != nsu;
} else if (el == 1) {
filtered = secure ? p : p != nsk;
} else if (el == 2) {
filtered = !nsh;
} else { /* EL3 */
filtered = m != p;
}
if (counter != 31) {
/*
* If not checking PMCCNTR, ensure the counter is setup to an event we
* support
*/
uint16_t event = filter & PMXEVTYPER_EVTCOUNT;
if (!event_supported(event)) {
return false;
}
}
return enabled && !prohibited && !filtered;
}
static void pmu_update_irq(CPUARMState *env)
{
ARMCPU *cpu = env_archcpu(env);
qemu_set_irq(cpu->pmu_interrupt, (env->cp15.c9_pmcr & PMCRE) &&
(env->cp15.c9_pminten & env->cp15.c9_pmovsr));
}
/*
* Ensure c15_ccnt is the guest-visible count so that operations such as
* enabling/disabling the counter or filtering, modifying the count itself,
* etc. can be done logically. This is essentially a no-op if the counter is
* not enabled at the time of the call.
*/
static void pmccntr_op_start(CPUARMState *env)
{
uint64_t cycles = cycles_get_count(env);
if (pmu_counter_enabled(env, 31)) {
uint64_t eff_cycles = cycles;
if (env->cp15.c9_pmcr & PMCRD) {
/* Increment once every 64 processor clock cycles */
eff_cycles /= 64;
}
uint64_t new_pmccntr = eff_cycles - env->cp15.c15_ccnt_delta;
uint64_t overflow_mask = env->cp15.c9_pmcr & PMCRLC ? \
1ull << 63 : 1ull << 31;
if (env->cp15.c15_ccnt & ~new_pmccntr & overflow_mask) {
env->cp15.c9_pmovsr |= (1 << 31);
pmu_update_irq(env);
}
env->cp15.c15_ccnt = new_pmccntr;
}
env->cp15.c15_ccnt_delta = cycles;
}
/*
* If PMCCNTR is enabled, recalculate the delta between the clock and the
* guest-visible count. A call to pmccntr_op_finish should follow every call to
* pmccntr_op_start.
*/
static void pmccntr_op_finish(CPUARMState *env)
{
if (pmu_counter_enabled(env, 31)) {
#ifndef CONFIG_USER_ONLY
/* Calculate when the counter will next overflow */
uint64_t remaining_cycles = -env->cp15.c15_ccnt;
if (!(env->cp15.c9_pmcr & PMCRLC)) {
remaining_cycles = (uint32_t)remaining_cycles;
}
int64_t overflow_in = cycles_ns_per(remaining_cycles);
if (overflow_in > 0) {
int64_t overflow_at = qemu_clock_get_ns(QEMU_CLOCK_VIRTUAL) +
overflow_in;
ARMCPU *cpu = env_archcpu(env);
timer_mod_anticipate_ns(cpu->pmu_timer, overflow_at);
}
#endif
uint64_t prev_cycles = env->cp15.c15_ccnt_delta;
if (env->cp15.c9_pmcr & PMCRD) {
/* Increment once every 64 processor clock cycles */
prev_cycles /= 64;
}
env->cp15.c15_ccnt_delta = prev_cycles - env->cp15.c15_ccnt;
}
}
static void pmevcntr_op_start(CPUARMState *env, uint8_t counter)
{
uint16_t event = env->cp15.c14_pmevtyper[counter] & PMXEVTYPER_EVTCOUNT;
uint64_t count = 0;
if (event_supported(event)) {
uint16_t event_idx = supported_event_map[event];
count = pm_events[event_idx].get_count(env);
}
if (pmu_counter_enabled(env, counter)) {
uint32_t new_pmevcntr = count - env->cp15.c14_pmevcntr_delta[counter];
if (env->cp15.c14_pmevcntr[counter] & ~new_pmevcntr & INT32_MIN) {
env->cp15.c9_pmovsr |= (1 << counter);
pmu_update_irq(env);
}
env->cp15.c14_pmevcntr[counter] = new_pmevcntr;
}
env->cp15.c14_pmevcntr_delta[counter] = count;
}
static void pmevcntr_op_finish(CPUARMState *env, uint8_t counter)
{
if (pmu_counter_enabled(env, counter)) {
#ifndef CONFIG_USER_ONLY
uint16_t event = env->cp15.c14_pmevtyper[counter] & PMXEVTYPER_EVTCOUNT;
uint16_t event_idx = supported_event_map[event];
uint64_t delta = UINT32_MAX -
(uint32_t)env->cp15.c14_pmevcntr[counter] + 1;
int64_t overflow_in = pm_events[event_idx].ns_per_count(delta);
if (overflow_in > 0) {
int64_t overflow_at = qemu_clock_get_ns(QEMU_CLOCK_VIRTUAL) +
overflow_in;
ARMCPU *cpu = env_archcpu(env);
timer_mod_anticipate_ns(cpu->pmu_timer, overflow_at);
}
#endif
env->cp15.c14_pmevcntr_delta[counter] -=
env->cp15.c14_pmevcntr[counter];
}
}
void pmu_op_start(CPUARMState *env)
{
unsigned int i;
pmccntr_op_start(env);
for (i = 0; i < pmu_num_counters(env); i++) {
pmevcntr_op_start(env, i);
}
}
void pmu_op_finish(CPUARMState *env)
{
unsigned int i;
pmccntr_op_finish(env);
for (i = 0; i < pmu_num_counters(env); i++) {
pmevcntr_op_finish(env, i);
}
}
void pmu_pre_el_change(ARMCPU *cpu, void *ignored)
{
pmu_op_start(&cpu->env);
}
void pmu_post_el_change(ARMCPU *cpu, void *ignored)
{
pmu_op_finish(&cpu->env);
}
void arm_pmu_timer_cb(void *opaque)
{
ARMCPU *cpu = opaque;
/*
* Update all the counter values based on the current underlying counts,
* triggering interrupts to be raised, if necessary. pmu_op_finish() also
* has the effect of setting the cpu->pmu_timer to the next earliest time a
* counter may expire.
*/
pmu_op_start(&cpu->env);
pmu_op_finish(&cpu->env);
}
static void pmcr_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
pmu_op_start(env);
if (value & PMCRC) {
/* The counter has been reset */
env->cp15.c15_ccnt = 0;
}
if (value & PMCRP) {
unsigned int i;
for (i = 0; i < pmu_num_counters(env); i++) {
env->cp15.c14_pmevcntr[i] = 0;
}
}
env->cp15.c9_pmcr &= ~PMCR_WRITEABLE_MASK;
env->cp15.c9_pmcr |= (value & PMCR_WRITEABLE_MASK);
pmu_op_finish(env);
}
static void pmswinc_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
unsigned int i;
for (i = 0; i < pmu_num_counters(env); i++) {
/* Increment a counter's count iff: */
if ((value & (1 << i)) && /* counter's bit is set */
/* counter is enabled and not filtered */
pmu_counter_enabled(env, i) &&
/* counter is SW_INCR */
(env->cp15.c14_pmevtyper[i] & PMXEVTYPER_EVTCOUNT) == 0x0) {
pmevcntr_op_start(env, i);
/*
* Detect if this write causes an overflow since we can't predict
* PMSWINC overflows like we can for other events
*/
uint32_t new_pmswinc = env->cp15.c14_pmevcntr[i] + 1;
if (env->cp15.c14_pmevcntr[i] & ~new_pmswinc & INT32_MIN) {
env->cp15.c9_pmovsr |= (1 << i);
pmu_update_irq(env);
}
env->cp15.c14_pmevcntr[i] = new_pmswinc;
pmevcntr_op_finish(env, i);
}
}
}
static uint64_t pmccntr_read(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri)
{
uint64_t ret;
pmccntr_op_start(env);
ret = env->cp15.c15_ccnt;
pmccntr_op_finish(env);
return ret;
}
static void pmselr_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
/* The value of PMSELR.SEL affects the behavior of PMXEVTYPER and
* PMXEVCNTR. We allow [0..31] to be written to PMSELR here; in the
* meanwhile, we check PMSELR.SEL when PMXEVTYPER and PMXEVCNTR are
* accessed.
*/
env->cp15.c9_pmselr = value & 0x1f;
}
static void pmccntr_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
pmccntr_op_start(env);
env->cp15.c15_ccnt = value;
pmccntr_op_finish(env);
}
static void pmccntr_write32(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
uint64_t cur_val = pmccntr_read(env, NULL);
pmccntr_write(env, ri, deposit64(cur_val, 0, 32, value));
}
static void pmccfiltr_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
pmccntr_op_start(env);
env->cp15.pmccfiltr_el0 = value & PMCCFILTR_EL0;
pmccntr_op_finish(env);
}
static void pmccfiltr_write_a32(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
pmccntr_op_start(env);
/* M is not accessible from AArch32 */
env->cp15.pmccfiltr_el0 = (env->cp15.pmccfiltr_el0 & PMCCFILTR_M) |
(value & PMCCFILTR);
pmccntr_op_finish(env);
}
static uint64_t pmccfiltr_read_a32(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri)
{
/* M is not visible in AArch32 */
return env->cp15.pmccfiltr_el0 & PMCCFILTR;
}
static void pmcntenset_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
value &= pmu_counter_mask(env);
env->cp15.c9_pmcnten |= value;
}
static void pmcntenclr_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
value &= pmu_counter_mask(env);
env->cp15.c9_pmcnten &= ~value;
}
static void pmovsr_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
value &= pmu_counter_mask(env);
env->cp15.c9_pmovsr &= ~value;
pmu_update_irq(env);
}
static void pmovsset_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
value &= pmu_counter_mask(env);
env->cp15.c9_pmovsr |= value;
pmu_update_irq(env);
}
static void pmevtyper_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value, const uint8_t counter)
{
if (counter == 31) {
pmccfiltr_write(env, ri, value);
} else if (counter < pmu_num_counters(env)) {
pmevcntr_op_start(env, counter);
/*
* If this counter's event type is changing, store the current
* underlying count for the new type in c14_pmevcntr_delta[counter] so
* pmevcntr_op_finish has the correct baseline when it converts back to
* a delta.
*/
uint16_t old_event = env->cp15.c14_pmevtyper[counter] &
PMXEVTYPER_EVTCOUNT;
uint16_t new_event = value & PMXEVTYPER_EVTCOUNT;
if (old_event != new_event) {
uint64_t count = 0;
if (event_supported(new_event)) {
uint16_t event_idx = supported_event_map[new_event];
count = pm_events[event_idx].get_count(env);
}
env->cp15.c14_pmevcntr_delta[counter] = count;
}
env->cp15.c14_pmevtyper[counter] = value & PMXEVTYPER_MASK;
pmevcntr_op_finish(env, counter);
}
/* Attempts to access PMXEVTYPER are CONSTRAINED UNPREDICTABLE when
* PMSELR value is equal to or greater than the number of implemented
* counters, but not equal to 0x1f. We opt to behave as a RAZ/WI.
*/
}
static uint64_t pmevtyper_read(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
const uint8_t counter)
{
if (counter == 31) {
return env->cp15.pmccfiltr_el0;
} else if (counter < pmu_num_counters(env)) {
return env->cp15.c14_pmevtyper[counter];
} else {
/*
* We opt to behave as a RAZ/WI when attempts to access PMXEVTYPER
* are CONSTRAINED UNPREDICTABLE. See comments in pmevtyper_write().
*/
return 0;
}
}
static void pmevtyper_writefn(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
uint8_t counter = ((ri->crm & 3) << 3) | (ri->opc2 & 7);
pmevtyper_write(env, ri, value, counter);
}
static void pmevtyper_rawwrite(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
uint8_t counter = ((ri->crm & 3) << 3) | (ri->opc2 & 7);
env->cp15.c14_pmevtyper[counter] = value;
/*
* pmevtyper_rawwrite is called between a pair of pmu_op_start and
* pmu_op_finish calls when loading saved state for a migration. Because
* we're potentially updating the type of event here, the value written to
* c14_pmevcntr_delta by the preceeding pmu_op_start call may be for a
* different counter type. Therefore, we need to set this value to the
* current count for the counter type we're writing so that pmu_op_finish
* has the correct count for its calculation.
*/
uint16_t event = value & PMXEVTYPER_EVTCOUNT;
if (event_supported(event)) {
uint16_t event_idx = supported_event_map[event];
env->cp15.c14_pmevcntr_delta[counter] =
pm_events[event_idx].get_count(env);
}
}
static uint64_t pmevtyper_readfn(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri)
{
uint8_t counter = ((ri->crm & 3) << 3) | (ri->opc2 & 7);
return pmevtyper_read(env, ri, counter);
}
static void pmxevtyper_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
pmevtyper_write(env, ri, value, env->cp15.c9_pmselr & 31);
}
static uint64_t pmxevtyper_read(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri)
{
return pmevtyper_read(env, ri, env->cp15.c9_pmselr & 31);
}
static void pmevcntr_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value, uint8_t counter)
{
if (counter < pmu_num_counters(env)) {
pmevcntr_op_start(env, counter);
env->cp15.c14_pmevcntr[counter] = value;
pmevcntr_op_finish(env, counter);
}
/*
* We opt to behave as a RAZ/WI when attempts to access PM[X]EVCNTR
* are CONSTRAINED UNPREDICTABLE.
*/
}
static uint64_t pmevcntr_read(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint8_t counter)
{
if (counter < pmu_num_counters(env)) {
uint64_t ret;
pmevcntr_op_start(env, counter);
ret = env->cp15.c14_pmevcntr[counter];
pmevcntr_op_finish(env, counter);
return ret;
} else {
/* We opt to behave as a RAZ/WI when attempts to access PM[X]EVCNTR
* are CONSTRAINED UNPREDICTABLE. */
return 0;
}
}
static void pmevcntr_writefn(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
uint8_t counter = ((ri->crm & 3) << 3) | (ri->opc2 & 7);
pmevcntr_write(env, ri, value, counter);
}
static uint64_t pmevcntr_readfn(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri)
{
uint8_t counter = ((ri->crm & 3) << 3) | (ri->opc2 & 7);
return pmevcntr_read(env, ri, counter);
}
static void pmevcntr_rawwrite(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
uint8_t counter = ((ri->crm & 3) << 3) | (ri->opc2 & 7);
assert(counter < pmu_num_counters(env));
env->cp15.c14_pmevcntr[counter] = value;
pmevcntr_write(env, ri, value, counter);
}
static uint64_t pmevcntr_rawread(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri)
{
uint8_t counter = ((ri->crm & 3) << 3) | (ri->opc2 & 7);
assert(counter < pmu_num_counters(env));
return env->cp15.c14_pmevcntr[counter];
}
static void pmxevcntr_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
pmevcntr_write(env, ri, value, env->cp15.c9_pmselr & 31);
}
static uint64_t pmxevcntr_read(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri)
{
return pmevcntr_read(env, ri, env->cp15.c9_pmselr & 31);
}
static void pmuserenr_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
if (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_V8)) {
env->cp15.c9_pmuserenr = value & 0xf;
} else {
env->cp15.c9_pmuserenr = value & 1;
}
}
static void pmintenset_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
/* We have no event counters so only the C bit can be changed */
value &= pmu_counter_mask(env);
env->cp15.c9_pminten |= value;
pmu_update_irq(env);
}
static void pmintenclr_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
value &= pmu_counter_mask(env);
env->cp15.c9_pminten &= ~value;
pmu_update_irq(env);
}
static void vbar_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
/* Note that even though the AArch64 view of this register has bits
* [10:0] all RES0 we can only mask the bottom 5, to comply with the
* architectural requirements for bits which are RES0 only in some
* contexts. (ARMv8 would permit us to do no masking at all, but ARMv7
* requires the bottom five bits to be RAZ/WI because they're UNK/SBZP.)
*/
raw_write(env, ri, value & ~0x1FULL);
}
static void scr_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri, uint64_t value)
{
/* Begin with base v8.0 state. */
uint32_t valid_mask = 0x3fff;
ARMCPU *cpu = env_archcpu(env);
if (ri->state == ARM_CP_STATE_AA64) {
if (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_AARCH64) &&
!cpu_isar_feature(aa64_aa32_el1, cpu)) {
value |= SCR_FW | SCR_AW; /* these two bits are RES1. */
}
valid_mask &= ~SCR_NET;
if (cpu_isar_feature(aa64_ras, cpu)) {
valid_mask |= SCR_TERR;
}
if (cpu_isar_feature(aa64_lor, cpu)) {
valid_mask |= SCR_TLOR;
}
if (cpu_isar_feature(aa64_pauth, cpu)) {
valid_mask |= SCR_API | SCR_APK;
}
if (cpu_isar_feature(aa64_sel2, cpu)) {
valid_mask |= SCR_EEL2;
}
if (cpu_isar_feature(aa64_mte, cpu)) {
valid_mask |= SCR_ATA;
}
if (cpu_isar_feature(aa64_scxtnum, cpu)) {
valid_mask |= SCR_ENSCXT;
}
} else {
valid_mask &= ~(SCR_RW | SCR_ST);
if (cpu_isar_feature(aa32_ras, cpu)) {
valid_mask |= SCR_TERR;
}
}
if (!arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_EL2)) {
valid_mask &= ~SCR_HCE;
/* On ARMv7, SMD (or SCD as it is called in v7) is only
* supported if EL2 exists. The bit is UNK/SBZP when
* EL2 is unavailable. In QEMU ARMv7, we force it to always zero
* when EL2 is unavailable.
* On ARMv8, this bit is always available.
*/
if (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_V7) &&
!arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_V8)) {
valid_mask &= ~SCR_SMD;
}
}
/* Clear all-context RES0 bits. */
value &= valid_mask;
raw_write(env, ri, value);
}
static void scr_reset(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri)
{
/*
* scr_write will set the RES1 bits on an AArch64-only CPU.
* The reset value will be 0x30 on an AArch64-only CPU and 0 otherwise.
*/
scr_write(env, ri, 0);
}
static CPAccessResult access_aa64_tid2(CPUARMState *env,
const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
bool isread)
{
if (arm_current_el(env) == 1 && (arm_hcr_el2_eff(env) & HCR_TID2)) {
return CP_ACCESS_TRAP_EL2;
}
return CP_ACCESS_OK;
}
static uint64_t ccsidr_read(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri)
{
ARMCPU *cpu = env_archcpu(env);
/* Acquire the CSSELR index from the bank corresponding to the CCSIDR
* bank
*/
uint32_t index = A32_BANKED_REG_GET(env, csselr,
ri->secure & ARM_CP_SECSTATE_S);
return cpu->ccsidr[index];
}
static void csselr_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
raw_write(env, ri, value & 0xf);
}
static uint64_t isr_read(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri)
{
CPUState *cs = env_cpu(env);
bool el1 = arm_current_el(env) == 1;
uint64_t hcr_el2 = el1 ? arm_hcr_el2_eff(env) : 0;
uint64_t ret = 0;
if (hcr_el2 & HCR_IMO) {
if (cs->interrupt_request & CPU_INTERRUPT_VIRQ) {
ret |= CPSR_I;
}
} else {
if (cs->interrupt_request & CPU_INTERRUPT_HARD) {
ret |= CPSR_I;
}
}
if (hcr_el2 & HCR_FMO) {
if (cs->interrupt_request & CPU_INTERRUPT_VFIQ) {
ret |= CPSR_F;
}
} else {
if (cs->interrupt_request & CPU_INTERRUPT_FIQ) {
ret |= CPSR_F;
}
}
if (hcr_el2 & HCR_AMO) {
if (cs->interrupt_request & CPU_INTERRUPT_VSERR) {
ret |= CPSR_A;
}
}
return ret;
}
static CPAccessResult access_aa64_tid1(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
bool isread)
{
if (arm_current_el(env) == 1 && (arm_hcr_el2_eff(env) & HCR_TID1)) {
return CP_ACCESS_TRAP_EL2;
}
return CP_ACCESS_OK;
}
static CPAccessResult access_aa32_tid1(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
bool isread)
{
if (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_V8)) {
return access_aa64_tid1(env, ri, isread);
}
return CP_ACCESS_OK;
}
static const ARMCPRegInfo v7_cp_reginfo[] = {
/* the old v6 WFI, UNPREDICTABLE in v7 but we choose to NOP */
{ .name = "NOP", .cp = 15, .crn = 7, .crm = 0, .opc1 = 0, .opc2 = 4,
.access = PL1_W, .type = ARM_CP_NOP },
/* Performance monitors are implementation defined in v7,
* but with an ARM recommended set of registers, which we
* follow.
*
* Performance registers fall into three categories:
* (a) always UNDEF in PL0, RW in PL1 (PMINTENSET, PMINTENCLR)
* (b) RO in PL0 (ie UNDEF on write), RW in PL1 (PMUSERENR)
* (c) UNDEF in PL0 if PMUSERENR.EN==0, otherwise accessible (all others)
* For the cases controlled by PMUSERENR we must set .access to PL0_RW
* or PL0_RO as appropriate and then check PMUSERENR in the helper fn.
*/
{ .name = "PMCNTENSET", .cp = 15, .crn = 9, .crm = 12, .opc1 = 0, .opc2 = 1,
target-arm: Split NO_MIGRATE into ALIAS and NO_RAW We currently mark ARM coprocessor/system register definitions with the flag ARM_CP_NO_MIGRATE for two different reasons: 1) register is an alias on to state that's also visible via some other register, and that other register is the one responsible for migrating the state 2) register is not actually state at all (for instance the TLB or cache maintenance operation "registers") and it makes no sense to attempt to migrate it or otherwise access the raw state This works fine for identifying which registers should be ignored when performing migration, but we also use the same functions for synchronizing system register state between QEMU and the kernel when using KVM. In this case we don't want to try to sync state into registers in category 2, but we do want to sync into registers in category 1, because the kernel might have picked a different one of the aliases as its choice for which one to expose for migration. (In particular, on 32 bit hosts the kernel will expose the state in the AArch32 version of the register, but TCG's convention is to mark the AArch64 version as the version to migrate, even if the CPU being emulated happens to be 32 bit, so almost all system registers will hit this issue now that we've added AArch64 system emulation.) Fix this by splitting the NO_MIGRATE flag in two (ALIAS and NO_RAW) corresponding to the two different reasons we might not want to migrate a register. When setting up the TCG list of registers to migrate we honour both flags; when populating the list from KVM, only ignore registers which are NO_RAW. Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Greg Bellows <greg.bellows@linaro.org> Message-id: 1422282372-13735-2-git-send-email-peter.maydell@linaro.org [PMM: changed ARM_CP_NO_MIGRATE to ARM_CP_ALIAS on new SP_EL1 and SP_EL2 reginfo stanzas since there was a (semantic) merge conflict with the patchset that added those]
2015-02-05 14:37:22 +01:00
.access = PL0_RW, .type = ARM_CP_ALIAS,
.fieldoffset = offsetoflow32(CPUARMState, cp15.c9_pmcnten),
.writefn = pmcntenset_write,
.accessfn = pmreg_access,
.raw_writefn = raw_write },
{ .name = "PMCNTENSET_EL0", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 3, .crn = 9, .crm = 12, .opc2 = 1,
.access = PL0_RW, .accessfn = pmreg_access,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.c9_pmcnten), .resetvalue = 0,
.writefn = pmcntenset_write, .raw_writefn = raw_write },
{ .name = "PMCNTENCLR", .cp = 15, .crn = 9, .crm = 12, .opc1 = 0, .opc2 = 2,
.access = PL0_RW,
.fieldoffset = offsetoflow32(CPUARMState, cp15.c9_pmcnten),
.accessfn = pmreg_access,
.writefn = pmcntenclr_write,
target-arm: Split NO_MIGRATE into ALIAS and NO_RAW We currently mark ARM coprocessor/system register definitions with the flag ARM_CP_NO_MIGRATE for two different reasons: 1) register is an alias on to state that's also visible via some other register, and that other register is the one responsible for migrating the state 2) register is not actually state at all (for instance the TLB or cache maintenance operation "registers") and it makes no sense to attempt to migrate it or otherwise access the raw state This works fine for identifying which registers should be ignored when performing migration, but we also use the same functions for synchronizing system register state between QEMU and the kernel when using KVM. In this case we don't want to try to sync state into registers in category 2, but we do want to sync into registers in category 1, because the kernel might have picked a different one of the aliases as its choice for which one to expose for migration. (In particular, on 32 bit hosts the kernel will expose the state in the AArch32 version of the register, but TCG's convention is to mark the AArch64 version as the version to migrate, even if the CPU being emulated happens to be 32 bit, so almost all system registers will hit this issue now that we've added AArch64 system emulation.) Fix this by splitting the NO_MIGRATE flag in two (ALIAS and NO_RAW) corresponding to the two different reasons we might not want to migrate a register. When setting up the TCG list of registers to migrate we honour both flags; when populating the list from KVM, only ignore registers which are NO_RAW. Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Greg Bellows <greg.bellows@linaro.org> Message-id: 1422282372-13735-2-git-send-email-peter.maydell@linaro.org [PMM: changed ARM_CP_NO_MIGRATE to ARM_CP_ALIAS on new SP_EL1 and SP_EL2 reginfo stanzas since there was a (semantic) merge conflict with the patchset that added those]
2015-02-05 14:37:22 +01:00
.type = ARM_CP_ALIAS },
{ .name = "PMCNTENCLR_EL0", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 3, .crn = 9, .crm = 12, .opc2 = 2,
.access = PL0_RW, .accessfn = pmreg_access,
target-arm: Split NO_MIGRATE into ALIAS and NO_RAW We currently mark ARM coprocessor/system register definitions with the flag ARM_CP_NO_MIGRATE for two different reasons: 1) register is an alias on to state that's also visible via some other register, and that other register is the one responsible for migrating the state 2) register is not actually state at all (for instance the TLB or cache maintenance operation "registers") and it makes no sense to attempt to migrate it or otherwise access the raw state This works fine for identifying which registers should be ignored when performing migration, but we also use the same functions for synchronizing system register state between QEMU and the kernel when using KVM. In this case we don't want to try to sync state into registers in category 2, but we do want to sync into registers in category 1, because the kernel might have picked a different one of the aliases as its choice for which one to expose for migration. (In particular, on 32 bit hosts the kernel will expose the state in the AArch32 version of the register, but TCG's convention is to mark the AArch64 version as the version to migrate, even if the CPU being emulated happens to be 32 bit, so almost all system registers will hit this issue now that we've added AArch64 system emulation.) Fix this by splitting the NO_MIGRATE flag in two (ALIAS and NO_RAW) corresponding to the two different reasons we might not want to migrate a register. When setting up the TCG list of registers to migrate we honour both flags; when populating the list from KVM, only ignore registers which are NO_RAW. Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Greg Bellows <greg.bellows@linaro.org> Message-id: 1422282372-13735-2-git-send-email-peter.maydell@linaro.org [PMM: changed ARM_CP_NO_MIGRATE to ARM_CP_ALIAS on new SP_EL1 and SP_EL2 reginfo stanzas since there was a (semantic) merge conflict with the patchset that added those]
2015-02-05 14:37:22 +01:00
.type = ARM_CP_ALIAS,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.c9_pmcnten),
.writefn = pmcntenclr_write },
{ .name = "PMOVSR", .cp = 15, .crn = 9, .crm = 12, .opc1 = 0, .opc2 = 3,
.access = PL0_RW, .type = ARM_CP_IO,
.fieldoffset = offsetoflow32(CPUARMState, cp15.c9_pmovsr),
.accessfn = pmreg_access,
.writefn = pmovsr_write,
.raw_writefn = raw_write },
{ .name = "PMOVSCLR_EL0", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 3, .crn = 9, .crm = 12, .opc2 = 3,
.access = PL0_RW, .accessfn = pmreg_access,
.type = ARM_CP_ALIAS | ARM_CP_IO,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.c9_pmovsr),
.writefn = pmovsr_write,
.raw_writefn = raw_write },
{ .name = "PMSWINC", .cp = 15, .crn = 9, .crm = 12, .opc1 = 0, .opc2 = 4,
.access = PL0_W, .accessfn = pmreg_access_swinc,
.type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW | ARM_CP_IO,
.writefn = pmswinc_write },
{ .name = "PMSWINC_EL0", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 3, .crn = 9, .crm = 12, .opc2 = 4,
.access = PL0_W, .accessfn = pmreg_access_swinc,
.type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW | ARM_CP_IO,
.writefn = pmswinc_write },
{ .name = "PMSELR", .cp = 15, .crn = 9, .crm = 12, .opc1 = 0, .opc2 = 5,
.access = PL0_RW, .type = ARM_CP_ALIAS,
.fieldoffset = offsetoflow32(CPUARMState, cp15.c9_pmselr),
.accessfn = pmreg_access_selr, .writefn = pmselr_write,
.raw_writefn = raw_write},
{ .name = "PMSELR_EL0", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 3, .crn = 9, .crm = 12, .opc2 = 5,
.access = PL0_RW, .accessfn = pmreg_access_selr,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.c9_pmselr),
.writefn = pmselr_write, .raw_writefn = raw_write, },
{ .name = "PMCCNTR", .cp = 15, .crn = 9, .crm = 13, .opc1 = 0, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL0_RW, .resetvalue = 0, .type = ARM_CP_ALIAS | ARM_CP_IO,
.readfn = pmccntr_read, .writefn = pmccntr_write32,
.accessfn = pmreg_access_ccntr },
{ .name = "PMCCNTR_EL0", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 3, .crn = 9, .crm = 13, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL0_RW, .accessfn = pmreg_access_ccntr,
.type = ARM_CP_IO,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.c15_ccnt),
.readfn = pmccntr_read, .writefn = pmccntr_write,
.raw_readfn = raw_read, .raw_writefn = raw_write, },
{ .name = "PMCCFILTR", .cp = 15, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 14, .crm = 15, .opc2 = 7,
.writefn = pmccfiltr_write_a32, .readfn = pmccfiltr_read_a32,
.access = PL0_RW, .accessfn = pmreg_access,
.type = ARM_CP_ALIAS | ARM_CP_IO,
.resetvalue = 0, },
{ .name = "PMCCFILTR_EL0", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 3, .crn = 14, .crm = 15, .opc2 = 7,
.writefn = pmccfiltr_write, .raw_writefn = raw_write,
.access = PL0_RW, .accessfn = pmreg_access,
.type = ARM_CP_IO,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.pmccfiltr_el0),
.resetvalue = 0, },
{ .name = "PMXEVTYPER", .cp = 15, .crn = 9, .crm = 13, .opc1 = 0, .opc2 = 1,
.access = PL0_RW, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW | ARM_CP_IO,
.accessfn = pmreg_access,
.writefn = pmxevtyper_write, .readfn = pmxevtyper_read },
{ .name = "PMXEVTYPER_EL0", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 3, .crn = 9, .crm = 13, .opc2 = 1,
.access = PL0_RW, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW | ARM_CP_IO,
.accessfn = pmreg_access,
.writefn = pmxevtyper_write, .readfn = pmxevtyper_read },
{ .name = "PMXEVCNTR", .cp = 15, .crn = 9, .crm = 13, .opc1 = 0, .opc2 = 2,
.access = PL0_RW, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW | ARM_CP_IO,
.accessfn = pmreg_access_xevcntr,
.writefn = pmxevcntr_write, .readfn = pmxevcntr_read },
{ .name = "PMXEVCNTR_EL0", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 3, .crn = 9, .crm = 13, .opc2 = 2,
.access = PL0_RW, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW | ARM_CP_IO,
.accessfn = pmreg_access_xevcntr,
.writefn = pmxevcntr_write, .readfn = pmxevcntr_read },
{ .name = "PMUSERENR", .cp = 15, .crn = 9, .crm = 14, .opc1 = 0, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL0_R | PL1_RW, .accessfn = access_tpm,
.fieldoffset = offsetoflow32(CPUARMState, cp15.c9_pmuserenr),
.resetvalue = 0,
.writefn = pmuserenr_write, .raw_writefn = raw_write },
{ .name = "PMUSERENR_EL0", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 3, .crn = 9, .crm = 14, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL0_R | PL1_RW, .accessfn = access_tpm, .type = ARM_CP_ALIAS,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.c9_pmuserenr),
.resetvalue = 0,
.writefn = pmuserenr_write, .raw_writefn = raw_write },
{ .name = "PMINTENSET", .cp = 15, .crn = 9, .crm = 14, .opc1 = 0, .opc2 = 1,
.access = PL1_RW, .accessfn = access_tpm,
.type = ARM_CP_ALIAS | ARM_CP_IO,
.fieldoffset = offsetoflow32(CPUARMState, cp15.c9_pminten),
.resetvalue = 0,
.writefn = pmintenset_write, .raw_writefn = raw_write },
{ .name = "PMINTENSET_EL1", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 9, .crm = 14, .opc2 = 1,
.access = PL1_RW, .accessfn = access_tpm,
.type = ARM_CP_IO,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.c9_pminten),
.writefn = pmintenset_write, .raw_writefn = raw_write,
.resetvalue = 0x0 },
{ .name = "PMINTENCLR", .cp = 15, .crn = 9, .crm = 14, .opc1 = 0, .opc2 = 2,
.access = PL1_RW, .accessfn = access_tpm,
.type = ARM_CP_ALIAS | ARM_CP_IO | ARM_CP_NO_RAW,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.c9_pminten),
.writefn = pmintenclr_write, },
{ .name = "PMINTENCLR_EL1", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 9, .crm = 14, .opc2 = 2,
.access = PL1_RW, .accessfn = access_tpm,
.type = ARM_CP_ALIAS | ARM_CP_IO | ARM_CP_NO_RAW,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.c9_pminten),
.writefn = pmintenclr_write },
{ .name = "CCSIDR", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_BOTH,
.opc0 = 3, .crn = 0, .crm = 0, .opc1 = 1, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL1_R,
.accessfn = access_aa64_tid2,
.readfn = ccsidr_read, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW },
{ .name = "CSSELR", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_BOTH,
.opc0 = 3, .crn = 0, .crm = 0, .opc1 = 2, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL1_RW,
.accessfn = access_aa64_tid2,
.writefn = csselr_write, .resetvalue = 0,
.bank_fieldoffsets = { offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.csselr_s),
offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.csselr_ns) } },
/* Auxiliary ID register: this actually has an IMPDEF value but for now
* just RAZ for all cores:
*/
{ .name = "AIDR", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_BOTH,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 1, .crn = 0, .crm = 0, .opc2 = 7,
.access = PL1_R, .type = ARM_CP_CONST,
.accessfn = access_aa64_tid1,
.resetvalue = 0 },
/* Auxiliary fault status registers: these also are IMPDEF, and we
* choose to RAZ/WI for all cores.
*/
{ .name = "AFSR0_EL1", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_BOTH,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 5, .crm = 1, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL1_RW, .accessfn = access_tvm_trvm,
.type = ARM_CP_CONST, .resetvalue = 0 },
{ .name = "AFSR1_EL1", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_BOTH,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 5, .crm = 1, .opc2 = 1,
.access = PL1_RW, .accessfn = access_tvm_trvm,
.type = ARM_CP_CONST, .resetvalue = 0 },
/* MAIR can just read-as-written because we don't implement caches
* and so don't need to care about memory attributes.
*/
{ .name = "MAIR_EL1", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 10, .crm = 2, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL1_RW, .accessfn = access_tvm_trvm,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.mair_el[1]),
.resetvalue = 0 },
{ .name = "MAIR_EL3", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 6, .crn = 10, .crm = 2, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL3_RW, .fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.mair_el[3]),
.resetvalue = 0 },
/* For non-long-descriptor page tables these are PRRR and NMRR;
* regardless they still act as reads-as-written for QEMU.
*/
/* MAIR0/1 are defined separately from their 64-bit counterpart which
* allows them to assign the correct fieldoffset based on the endianness
* handled in the field definitions.
*/
{ .name = "MAIR0", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA32,
.cp = 15, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 10, .crm = 2, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL1_RW, .accessfn = access_tvm_trvm,
.bank_fieldoffsets = { offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.mair0_s),
offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.mair0_ns) },
.resetfn = arm_cp_reset_ignore },
{ .name = "MAIR1", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA32,
.cp = 15, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 10, .crm = 2, .opc2 = 1,
.access = PL1_RW, .accessfn = access_tvm_trvm,
.bank_fieldoffsets = { offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.mair1_s),
offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.mair1_ns) },
.resetfn = arm_cp_reset_ignore },
{ .name = "ISR_EL1", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_BOTH,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 12, .crm = 1, .opc2 = 0,
target-arm: Split NO_MIGRATE into ALIAS and NO_RAW We currently mark ARM coprocessor/system register definitions with the flag ARM_CP_NO_MIGRATE for two different reasons: 1) register is an alias on to state that's also visible via some other register, and that other register is the one responsible for migrating the state 2) register is not actually state at all (for instance the TLB or cache maintenance operation "registers") and it makes no sense to attempt to migrate it or otherwise access the raw state This works fine for identifying which registers should be ignored when performing migration, but we also use the same functions for synchronizing system register state between QEMU and the kernel when using KVM. In this case we don't want to try to sync state into registers in category 2, but we do want to sync into registers in category 1, because the kernel might have picked a different one of the aliases as its choice for which one to expose for migration. (In particular, on 32 bit hosts the kernel will expose the state in the AArch32 version of the register, but TCG's convention is to mark the AArch64 version as the version to migrate, even if the CPU being emulated happens to be 32 bit, so almost all system registers will hit this issue now that we've added AArch64 system emulation.) Fix this by splitting the NO_MIGRATE flag in two (ALIAS and NO_RAW) corresponding to the two different reasons we might not want to migrate a register. When setting up the TCG list of registers to migrate we honour both flags; when populating the list from KVM, only ignore registers which are NO_RAW. Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Greg Bellows <greg.bellows@linaro.org> Message-id: 1422282372-13735-2-git-send-email-peter.maydell@linaro.org [PMM: changed ARM_CP_NO_MIGRATE to ARM_CP_ALIAS on new SP_EL1 and SP_EL2 reginfo stanzas since there was a (semantic) merge conflict with the patchset that added those]
2015-02-05 14:37:22 +01:00
.type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW, .access = PL1_R, .readfn = isr_read },
/* 32 bit ITLB invalidates */
{ .name = "ITLBIALL", .cp = 15, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 8, .crm = 5, .opc2 = 0,
.type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW, .access = PL1_W, .accessfn = access_ttlb,
.writefn = tlbiall_write },
{ .name = "ITLBIMVA", .cp = 15, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 8, .crm = 5, .opc2 = 1,
.type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW, .access = PL1_W, .accessfn = access_ttlb,
.writefn = tlbimva_write },
{ .name = "ITLBIASID", .cp = 15, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 8, .crm = 5, .opc2 = 2,
.type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW, .access = PL1_W, .accessfn = access_ttlb,
.writefn = tlbiasid_write },
/* 32 bit DTLB invalidates */
{ .name = "DTLBIALL", .cp = 15, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 8, .crm = 6, .opc2 = 0,
.type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW, .access = PL1_W, .accessfn = access_ttlb,
.writefn = tlbiall_write },
{ .name = "DTLBIMVA", .cp = 15, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 8, .crm = 6, .opc2 = 1,
.type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW, .access = PL1_W, .accessfn = access_ttlb,
.writefn = tlbimva_write },
{ .name = "DTLBIASID", .cp = 15, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 8, .crm = 6, .opc2 = 2,
.type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW, .access = PL1_W, .accessfn = access_ttlb,
.writefn = tlbiasid_write },
/* 32 bit TLB invalidates */
{ .name = "TLBIALL", .cp = 15, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 8, .crm = 7, .opc2 = 0,
.type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW, .access = PL1_W, .accessfn = access_ttlb,
.writefn = tlbiall_write },
{ .name = "TLBIMVA", .cp = 15, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 8, .crm = 7, .opc2 = 1,
.type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW, .access = PL1_W, .accessfn = access_ttlb,
.writefn = tlbimva_write },
{ .name = "TLBIASID", .cp = 15, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 8, .crm = 7, .opc2 = 2,
.type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW, .access = PL1_W, .accessfn = access_ttlb,
.writefn = tlbiasid_write },
{ .name = "TLBIMVAA", .cp = 15, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 8, .crm = 7, .opc2 = 3,
.type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW, .access = PL1_W, .accessfn = access_ttlb,
.writefn = tlbimvaa_write },
};
static const ARMCPRegInfo v7mp_cp_reginfo[] = {
/* 32 bit TLB invalidates, Inner Shareable */
{ .name = "TLBIALLIS", .cp = 15, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 8, .crm = 3, .opc2 = 0,
.type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW, .access = PL1_W, .accessfn = access_ttlb,
.writefn = tlbiall_is_write },
{ .name = "TLBIMVAIS", .cp = 15, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 8, .crm = 3, .opc2 = 1,
.type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW, .access = PL1_W, .accessfn = access_ttlb,
.writefn = tlbimva_is_write },
{ .name = "TLBIASIDIS", .cp = 15, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 8, .crm = 3, .opc2 = 2,
.type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW, .access = PL1_W, .accessfn = access_ttlb,
.writefn = tlbiasid_is_write },
{ .name = "TLBIMVAAIS", .cp = 15, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 8, .crm = 3, .opc2 = 3,
.type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW, .access = PL1_W, .accessfn = access_ttlb,
.writefn = tlbimvaa_is_write },
};
static const ARMCPRegInfo pmovsset_cp_reginfo[] = {
/* PMOVSSET is not implemented in v7 before v7ve */
{ .name = "PMOVSSET", .cp = 15, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 9, .crm = 14, .opc2 = 3,
.access = PL0_RW, .accessfn = pmreg_access,
.type = ARM_CP_ALIAS | ARM_CP_IO,
.fieldoffset = offsetoflow32(CPUARMState, cp15.c9_pmovsr),
.writefn = pmovsset_write,
.raw_writefn = raw_write },
{ .name = "PMOVSSET_EL0", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 3, .crn = 9, .crm = 14, .opc2 = 3,
.access = PL0_RW, .accessfn = pmreg_access,
.type = ARM_CP_ALIAS | ARM_CP_IO,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.c9_pmovsr),
.writefn = pmovsset_write,
.raw_writefn = raw_write },
};
static void teecr_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
value &= 1;
env->teecr = value;
}
static CPAccessResult teecr_access(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
bool isread)
{
/*
* HSTR.TTEE only exists in v7A, not v8A, but v8A doesn't have T2EE
* at all, so we don't need to check whether we're v8A.
*/
if (arm_current_el(env) < 2 && !arm_is_secure_below_el3(env) &&
(env->cp15.hstr_el2 & HSTR_TTEE)) {
return CP_ACCESS_TRAP_EL2;
}
return CP_ACCESS_OK;
}
static CPAccessResult teehbr_access(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
bool isread)
{
if (arm_current_el(env) == 0 && (env->teecr & 1)) {
return CP_ACCESS_TRAP;
}
return teecr_access(env, ri, isread);
}
static const ARMCPRegInfo t2ee_cp_reginfo[] = {
{ .name = "TEECR", .cp = 14, .crn = 0, .crm = 0, .opc1 = 6, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL1_RW, .fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, teecr),
.resetvalue = 0,
.writefn = teecr_write, .accessfn = teecr_access },
{ .name = "TEEHBR", .cp = 14, .crn = 1, .crm = 0, .opc1 = 6, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL0_RW, .fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, teehbr),
.accessfn = teehbr_access, .resetvalue = 0 },
};
static const ARMCPRegInfo v6k_cp_reginfo[] = {
{ .name = "TPIDR_EL0", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 3, .opc2 = 2, .crn = 13, .crm = 0,
.access = PL0_RW,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.tpidr_el[0]), .resetvalue = 0 },
{ .name = "TPIDRURW", .cp = 15, .crn = 13, .crm = 0, .opc1 = 0, .opc2 = 2,
.access = PL0_RW,
.bank_fieldoffsets = { offsetoflow32(CPUARMState, cp15.tpidrurw_s),
offsetoflow32(CPUARMState, cp15.tpidrurw_ns) },
.resetfn = arm_cp_reset_ignore },
{ .name = "TPIDRRO_EL0", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 3, .opc2 = 3, .crn = 13, .crm = 0,
.access = PL0_R|PL1_W,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.tpidrro_el[0]),
.resetvalue = 0},
{ .name = "TPIDRURO", .cp = 15, .crn = 13, .crm = 0, .opc1 = 0, .opc2 = 3,
.access = PL0_R|PL1_W,
.bank_fieldoffsets = { offsetoflow32(CPUARMState, cp15.tpidruro_s),
offsetoflow32(CPUARMState, cp15.tpidruro_ns) },
.resetfn = arm_cp_reset_ignore },
{ .name = "TPIDR_EL1", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .opc2 = 4, .crn = 13, .crm = 0,
.access = PL1_RW,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.tpidr_el[1]), .resetvalue = 0 },
{ .name = "TPIDRPRW", .opc1 = 0, .cp = 15, .crn = 13, .crm = 0, .opc2 = 4,
.access = PL1_RW,
.bank_fieldoffsets = { offsetoflow32(CPUARMState, cp15.tpidrprw_s),
offsetoflow32(CPUARMState, cp15.tpidrprw_ns) },
.resetvalue = 0 },
};
#ifndef CONFIG_USER_ONLY
static CPAccessResult gt_cntfrq_access(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
bool isread)
{
/* CNTFRQ: not visible from PL0 if both PL0PCTEN and PL0VCTEN are zero.
* Writable only at the highest implemented exception level.
*/
int el = arm_current_el(env);
uint64_t hcr;
uint32_t cntkctl;
switch (el) {
case 0:
hcr = arm_hcr_el2_eff(env);
if ((hcr & (HCR_E2H | HCR_TGE)) == (HCR_E2H | HCR_TGE)) {
cntkctl = env->cp15.cnthctl_el2;
} else {
cntkctl = env->cp15.c14_cntkctl;
}
if (!extract32(cntkctl, 0, 2)) {
return CP_ACCESS_TRAP;
}
break;
case 1:
if (!isread && ri->state == ARM_CP_STATE_AA32 &&
arm_is_secure_below_el3(env)) {
/* Accesses from 32-bit Secure EL1 UNDEF (*not* trap to EL3!) */
return CP_ACCESS_TRAP_UNCATEGORIZED;
}
break;
case 2:
case 3:
break;
}
if (!isread && el < arm_highest_el(env)) {
return CP_ACCESS_TRAP_UNCATEGORIZED;
}
return CP_ACCESS_OK;
}
static CPAccessResult gt_counter_access(CPUARMState *env, int timeridx,
bool isread)
{
unsigned int cur_el = arm_current_el(env);
bool has_el2 = arm_is_el2_enabled(env);
uint64_t hcr = arm_hcr_el2_eff(env);
switch (cur_el) {
case 0:
/* If HCR_EL2.<E2H,TGE> == '11': check CNTHCTL_EL2.EL0[PV]CTEN. */
if ((hcr & (HCR_E2H | HCR_TGE)) == (HCR_E2H | HCR_TGE)) {
return (extract32(env->cp15.cnthctl_el2, timeridx, 1)
? CP_ACCESS_OK : CP_ACCESS_TRAP_EL2);
}
/* CNT[PV]CT: not visible from PL0 if EL0[PV]CTEN is zero */
if (!extract32(env->cp15.c14_cntkctl, timeridx, 1)) {
return CP_ACCESS_TRAP;
}
/* If HCR_EL2.<E2H,TGE> == '10': check CNTHCTL_EL2.EL1PCTEN. */
if (hcr & HCR_E2H) {
if (timeridx == GTIMER_PHYS &&
!extract32(env->cp15.cnthctl_el2, 10, 1)) {
return CP_ACCESS_TRAP_EL2;
}
} else {
/* If HCR_EL2.<E2H> == 0: check CNTHCTL_EL2.EL1PCEN. */
if (has_el2 && timeridx == GTIMER_PHYS &&
!extract32(env->cp15.cnthctl_el2, 1, 1)) {
return CP_ACCESS_TRAP_EL2;
}
}
break;
case 1:
/* Check CNTHCTL_EL2.EL1PCTEN, which changes location based on E2H. */
if (has_el2 && timeridx == GTIMER_PHYS &&
(hcr & HCR_E2H
? !extract32(env->cp15.cnthctl_el2, 10, 1)
: !extract32(env->cp15.cnthctl_el2, 0, 1))) {
return CP_ACCESS_TRAP_EL2;
}
break;
}
return CP_ACCESS_OK;
}
static CPAccessResult gt_timer_access(CPUARMState *env, int timeridx,
bool isread)
{
unsigned int cur_el = arm_current_el(env);
bool has_el2 = arm_is_el2_enabled(env);
uint64_t hcr = arm_hcr_el2_eff(env);
switch (cur_el) {
case 0:
if ((hcr & (HCR_E2H | HCR_TGE)) == (HCR_E2H | HCR_TGE)) {
/* If HCR_EL2.<E2H,TGE> == '11': check CNTHCTL_EL2.EL0[PV]TEN. */
return (extract32(env->cp15.cnthctl_el2, 9 - timeridx, 1)
? CP_ACCESS_OK : CP_ACCESS_TRAP_EL2);
}
/*
* CNT[PV]_CVAL, CNT[PV]_CTL, CNT[PV]_TVAL: not visible from
* EL0 if EL0[PV]TEN is zero.
*/
if (!extract32(env->cp15.c14_cntkctl, 9 - timeridx, 1)) {
return CP_ACCESS_TRAP;
}
/* fall through */
case 1:
if (has_el2 && timeridx == GTIMER_PHYS) {
if (hcr & HCR_E2H) {
/* If HCR_EL2.<E2H,TGE> == '10': check CNTHCTL_EL2.EL1PTEN. */
if (!extract32(env->cp15.cnthctl_el2, 11, 1)) {
return CP_ACCESS_TRAP_EL2;
}
} else {
/* If HCR_EL2.<E2H> == 0: check CNTHCTL_EL2.EL1PCEN. */
if (!extract32(env->cp15.cnthctl_el2, 1, 1)) {
return CP_ACCESS_TRAP_EL2;
}
}
}
break;
}
return CP_ACCESS_OK;
}
static CPAccessResult gt_pct_access(CPUARMState *env,
const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
bool isread)
{
return gt_counter_access(env, GTIMER_PHYS, isread);
}
static CPAccessResult gt_vct_access(CPUARMState *env,
const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
bool isread)
{
return gt_counter_access(env, GTIMER_VIRT, isread);
}
static CPAccessResult gt_ptimer_access(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
bool isread)
{
return gt_timer_access(env, GTIMER_PHYS, isread);
}
static CPAccessResult gt_vtimer_access(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
bool isread)
{
return gt_timer_access(env, GTIMER_VIRT, isread);
}
static CPAccessResult gt_stimer_access(CPUARMState *env,
const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
bool isread)
{
/* The AArch64 register view of the secure physical timer is
* always accessible from EL3, and configurably accessible from
* Secure EL1.
*/
switch (arm_current_el(env)) {
case 1:
if (!arm_is_secure(env)) {
return CP_ACCESS_TRAP;
}
if (!(env->cp15.scr_el3 & SCR_ST)) {
return CP_ACCESS_TRAP_EL3;
}
return CP_ACCESS_OK;
case 0:
case 2:
return CP_ACCESS_TRAP;
case 3:
return CP_ACCESS_OK;
default:
g_assert_not_reached();
}
}
static uint64_t gt_get_countervalue(CPUARMState *env)
{
ARMCPU *cpu = env_archcpu(env);
return qemu_clock_get_ns(QEMU_CLOCK_VIRTUAL) / gt_cntfrq_period_ns(cpu);
}
static void gt_recalc_timer(ARMCPU *cpu, int timeridx)
{
ARMGenericTimer *gt = &cpu->env.cp15.c14_timer[timeridx];
if (gt->ctl & 1) {
/* Timer enabled: calculate and set current ISTATUS, irq, and
* reset timer to when ISTATUS next has to change
*/
uint64_t offset = timeridx == GTIMER_VIRT ?
cpu->env.cp15.cntvoff_el2 : 0;
uint64_t count = gt_get_countervalue(&cpu->env);
/* Note that this must be unsigned 64 bit arithmetic: */
int istatus = count - offset >= gt->cval;
uint64_t nexttick;
int irqstate;
gt->ctl = deposit32(gt->ctl, 2, 1, istatus);
irqstate = (istatus && !(gt->ctl & 2));
qemu_set_irq(cpu->gt_timer_outputs[timeridx], irqstate);
if (istatus) {
/* Next transition is when count rolls back over to zero */
nexttick = UINT64_MAX;
} else {
/* Next transition is when we hit cval */
nexttick = gt->cval + offset;
}
/* Note that the desired next expiry time might be beyond the
* signed-64-bit range of a QEMUTimer -- in this case we just
* set the timer for as far in the future as possible. When the
* timer expires we will reset the timer for any remaining period.
*/
if (nexttick > INT64_MAX / gt_cntfrq_period_ns(cpu)) {
timer_mod_ns(cpu->gt_timer[timeridx], INT64_MAX);
} else {
timer_mod(cpu->gt_timer[timeridx], nexttick);
}
trace_arm_gt_recalc(timeridx, irqstate, nexttick);
} else {
/* Timer disabled: ISTATUS and timer output always clear */
gt->ctl &= ~4;
qemu_set_irq(cpu->gt_timer_outputs[timeridx], 0);
timer_del(cpu->gt_timer[timeridx]);
trace_arm_gt_recalc_disabled(timeridx);
}
}
static void gt_timer_reset(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
int timeridx)
{
ARMCPU *cpu = env_archcpu(env);
timer_del(cpu->gt_timer[timeridx]);
}
static uint64_t gt_cnt_read(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri)
{
return gt_get_countervalue(env);
}
static uint64_t gt_virt_cnt_offset(CPUARMState *env)
{
uint64_t hcr;
switch (arm_current_el(env)) {
case 2:
hcr = arm_hcr_el2_eff(env);
if (hcr & HCR_E2H) {
return 0;
}
break;
case 0:
hcr = arm_hcr_el2_eff(env);
if ((hcr & (HCR_E2H | HCR_TGE)) == (HCR_E2H | HCR_TGE)) {
return 0;
}
break;
}
return env->cp15.cntvoff_el2;
}
static uint64_t gt_virt_cnt_read(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri)
{
return gt_get_countervalue(env) - gt_virt_cnt_offset(env);
}
static void gt_cval_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
int timeridx,
uint64_t value)
{
trace_arm_gt_cval_write(timeridx, value);
env->cp15.c14_timer[timeridx].cval = value;
gt_recalc_timer(env_archcpu(env), timeridx);
}
static uint64_t gt_tval_read(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
int timeridx)
{
uint64_t offset = 0;
switch (timeridx) {
case GTIMER_VIRT:
case GTIMER_HYPVIRT:
offset = gt_virt_cnt_offset(env);
break;
}
return (uint32_t)(env->cp15.c14_timer[timeridx].cval -
(gt_get_countervalue(env) - offset));
}
static void gt_tval_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
int timeridx,
uint64_t value)
{
uint64_t offset = 0;
switch (timeridx) {
case GTIMER_VIRT:
case GTIMER_HYPVIRT:
offset = gt_virt_cnt_offset(env);
break;
}
trace_arm_gt_tval_write(timeridx, value);
env->cp15.c14_timer[timeridx].cval = gt_get_countervalue(env) - offset +
sextract64(value, 0, 32);
gt_recalc_timer(env_archcpu(env), timeridx);
}
static void gt_ctl_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
int timeridx,
uint64_t value)
{
ARMCPU *cpu = env_archcpu(env);
uint32_t oldval = env->cp15.c14_timer[timeridx].ctl;
trace_arm_gt_ctl_write(timeridx, value);
env->cp15.c14_timer[timeridx].ctl = deposit64(oldval, 0, 2, value);
if ((oldval ^ value) & 1) {
/* Enable toggled */
gt_recalc_timer(cpu, timeridx);
} else if ((oldval ^ value) & 2) {
/* IMASK toggled: don't need to recalculate,
* just set the interrupt line based on ISTATUS
*/
int irqstate = (oldval & 4) && !(value & 2);
trace_arm_gt_imask_toggle(timeridx, irqstate);
qemu_set_irq(cpu->gt_timer_outputs[timeridx], irqstate);
}
}
static void gt_phys_timer_reset(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri)
{
gt_timer_reset(env, ri, GTIMER_PHYS);
}
static void gt_phys_cval_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
gt_cval_write(env, ri, GTIMER_PHYS, value);
}
static uint64_t gt_phys_tval_read(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri)
{
return gt_tval_read(env, ri, GTIMER_PHYS);
}
static void gt_phys_tval_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
gt_tval_write(env, ri, GTIMER_PHYS, value);
}
static void gt_phys_ctl_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
gt_ctl_write(env, ri, GTIMER_PHYS, value);
}
static int gt_phys_redir_timeridx(CPUARMState *env)
{
switch (arm_mmu_idx(env)) {
case ARMMMUIdx_E20_0:
case ARMMMUIdx_E20_2:
case ARMMMUIdx_E20_2_PAN:
case ARMMMUIdx_SE20_0:
case ARMMMUIdx_SE20_2:
case ARMMMUIdx_SE20_2_PAN:
return GTIMER_HYP;
default:
return GTIMER_PHYS;
}
}
static int gt_virt_redir_timeridx(CPUARMState *env)
{
switch (arm_mmu_idx(env)) {
case ARMMMUIdx_E20_0:
case ARMMMUIdx_E20_2:
case ARMMMUIdx_E20_2_PAN:
case ARMMMUIdx_SE20_0:
case ARMMMUIdx_SE20_2:
case ARMMMUIdx_SE20_2_PAN:
return GTIMER_HYPVIRT;
default:
return GTIMER_VIRT;
}
}
static uint64_t gt_phys_redir_cval_read(CPUARMState *env,
const ARMCPRegInfo *ri)
{
int timeridx = gt_phys_redir_timeridx(env);
return env->cp15.c14_timer[timeridx].cval;
}
static void gt_phys_redir_cval_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
int timeridx = gt_phys_redir_timeridx(env);
gt_cval_write(env, ri, timeridx, value);
}
static uint64_t gt_phys_redir_tval_read(CPUARMState *env,
const ARMCPRegInfo *ri)
{
int timeridx = gt_phys_redir_timeridx(env);
return gt_tval_read(env, ri, timeridx);
}
static void gt_phys_redir_tval_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
int timeridx = gt_phys_redir_timeridx(env);
gt_tval_write(env, ri, timeridx, value);
}
static uint64_t gt_phys_redir_ctl_read(CPUARMState *env,
const ARMCPRegInfo *ri)
{
int timeridx = gt_phys_redir_timeridx(env);
return env->cp15.c14_timer[timeridx].ctl;
}
static void gt_phys_redir_ctl_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
int timeridx = gt_phys_redir_timeridx(env);
gt_ctl_write(env, ri, timeridx, value);
}
static void gt_virt_timer_reset(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri)
{
gt_timer_reset(env, ri, GTIMER_VIRT);
}
static void gt_virt_cval_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
gt_cval_write(env, ri, GTIMER_VIRT, value);
}
static uint64_t gt_virt_tval_read(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri)
{
return gt_tval_read(env, ri, GTIMER_VIRT);
}
static void gt_virt_tval_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
gt_tval_write(env, ri, GTIMER_VIRT, value);
}
static void gt_virt_ctl_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
gt_ctl_write(env, ri, GTIMER_VIRT, value);
}
static void gt_cntvoff_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
ARMCPU *cpu = env_archcpu(env);
trace_arm_gt_cntvoff_write(value);
raw_write(env, ri, value);
gt_recalc_timer(cpu, GTIMER_VIRT);
}
static uint64_t gt_virt_redir_cval_read(CPUARMState *env,
const ARMCPRegInfo *ri)
{
int timeridx = gt_virt_redir_timeridx(env);
return env->cp15.c14_timer[timeridx].cval;
}
static void gt_virt_redir_cval_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
int timeridx = gt_virt_redir_timeridx(env);
gt_cval_write(env, ri, timeridx, value);
}
static uint64_t gt_virt_redir_tval_read(CPUARMState *env,
const ARMCPRegInfo *ri)
{
int timeridx = gt_virt_redir_timeridx(env);
return gt_tval_read(env, ri, timeridx);
}
static void gt_virt_redir_tval_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
int timeridx = gt_virt_redir_timeridx(env);
gt_tval_write(env, ri, timeridx, value);
}
static uint64_t gt_virt_redir_ctl_read(CPUARMState *env,
const ARMCPRegInfo *ri)
{
int timeridx = gt_virt_redir_timeridx(env);
return env->cp15.c14_timer[timeridx].ctl;
}
static void gt_virt_redir_ctl_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
int timeridx = gt_virt_redir_timeridx(env);
gt_ctl_write(env, ri, timeridx, value);
}
static void gt_hyp_timer_reset(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri)
{
gt_timer_reset(env, ri, GTIMER_HYP);
}
static void gt_hyp_cval_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
gt_cval_write(env, ri, GTIMER_HYP, value);
}
static uint64_t gt_hyp_tval_read(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri)
{
return gt_tval_read(env, ri, GTIMER_HYP);
}
static void gt_hyp_tval_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
gt_tval_write(env, ri, GTIMER_HYP, value);
}
static void gt_hyp_ctl_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
gt_ctl_write(env, ri, GTIMER_HYP, value);
}
static void gt_sec_timer_reset(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri)
{
gt_timer_reset(env, ri, GTIMER_SEC);
}
static void gt_sec_cval_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
gt_cval_write(env, ri, GTIMER_SEC, value);
}
static uint64_t gt_sec_tval_read(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri)
{
return gt_tval_read(env, ri, GTIMER_SEC);
}
static void gt_sec_tval_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
gt_tval_write(env, ri, GTIMER_SEC, value);
}
static void gt_sec_ctl_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
gt_ctl_write(env, ri, GTIMER_SEC, value);
}
static void gt_hv_timer_reset(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri)
{
gt_timer_reset(env, ri, GTIMER_HYPVIRT);
}
static void gt_hv_cval_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
gt_cval_write(env, ri, GTIMER_HYPVIRT, value);
}
static uint64_t gt_hv_tval_read(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri)
{
return gt_tval_read(env, ri, GTIMER_HYPVIRT);
}
static void gt_hv_tval_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
gt_tval_write(env, ri, GTIMER_HYPVIRT, value);
}
static void gt_hv_ctl_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
gt_ctl_write(env, ri, GTIMER_HYPVIRT, value);
}
void arm_gt_ptimer_cb(void *opaque)
{
ARMCPU *cpu = opaque;
gt_recalc_timer(cpu, GTIMER_PHYS);
}
void arm_gt_vtimer_cb(void *opaque)
{
ARMCPU *cpu = opaque;
gt_recalc_timer(cpu, GTIMER_VIRT);
}
void arm_gt_htimer_cb(void *opaque)
{
ARMCPU *cpu = opaque;
gt_recalc_timer(cpu, GTIMER_HYP);
}
void arm_gt_stimer_cb(void *opaque)
{
ARMCPU *cpu = opaque;
gt_recalc_timer(cpu, GTIMER_SEC);
}
void arm_gt_hvtimer_cb(void *opaque)
{
ARMCPU *cpu = opaque;
gt_recalc_timer(cpu, GTIMER_HYPVIRT);
}
static void arm_gt_cntfrq_reset(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *opaque)
{
ARMCPU *cpu = env_archcpu(env);
cpu->env.cp15.c14_cntfrq = cpu->gt_cntfrq_hz;
}
static const ARMCPRegInfo generic_timer_cp_reginfo[] = {
/* Note that CNTFRQ is purely reads-as-written for the benefit
* of software; writing it doesn't actually change the timer frequency.
* Our reset value matches the fixed frequency we implement the timer at.
*/
{ .name = "CNTFRQ", .cp = 15, .crn = 14, .crm = 0, .opc1 = 0, .opc2 = 0,
target-arm: Split NO_MIGRATE into ALIAS and NO_RAW We currently mark ARM coprocessor/system register definitions with the flag ARM_CP_NO_MIGRATE for two different reasons: 1) register is an alias on to state that's also visible via some other register, and that other register is the one responsible for migrating the state 2) register is not actually state at all (for instance the TLB or cache maintenance operation "registers") and it makes no sense to attempt to migrate it or otherwise access the raw state This works fine for identifying which registers should be ignored when performing migration, but we also use the same functions for synchronizing system register state between QEMU and the kernel when using KVM. In this case we don't want to try to sync state into registers in category 2, but we do want to sync into registers in category 1, because the kernel might have picked a different one of the aliases as its choice for which one to expose for migration. (In particular, on 32 bit hosts the kernel will expose the state in the AArch32 version of the register, but TCG's convention is to mark the AArch64 version as the version to migrate, even if the CPU being emulated happens to be 32 bit, so almost all system registers will hit this issue now that we've added AArch64 system emulation.) Fix this by splitting the NO_MIGRATE flag in two (ALIAS and NO_RAW) corresponding to the two different reasons we might not want to migrate a register. When setting up the TCG list of registers to migrate we honour both flags; when populating the list from KVM, only ignore registers which are NO_RAW. Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Greg Bellows <greg.bellows@linaro.org> Message-id: 1422282372-13735-2-git-send-email-peter.maydell@linaro.org [PMM: changed ARM_CP_NO_MIGRATE to ARM_CP_ALIAS on new SP_EL1 and SP_EL2 reginfo stanzas since there was a (semantic) merge conflict with the patchset that added those]
2015-02-05 14:37:22 +01:00
.type = ARM_CP_ALIAS,
.access = PL1_RW | PL0_R, .accessfn = gt_cntfrq_access,
.fieldoffset = offsetoflow32(CPUARMState, cp15.c14_cntfrq),
},
{ .name = "CNTFRQ_EL0", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 3, .crn = 14, .crm = 0, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL1_RW | PL0_R, .accessfn = gt_cntfrq_access,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.c14_cntfrq),
.resetfn = arm_gt_cntfrq_reset,
},
/* overall control: mostly access permissions */
{ .name = "CNTKCTL", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_BOTH,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 14, .crm = 1, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL1_RW,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.c14_cntkctl),
.resetvalue = 0,
},
/* per-timer control */
{ .name = "CNTP_CTL", .cp = 15, .crn = 14, .crm = 2, .opc1 = 0, .opc2 = 1,
.secure = ARM_CP_SECSTATE_NS,
.type = ARM_CP_IO | ARM_CP_ALIAS, .access = PL0_RW,
.accessfn = gt_ptimer_access,
.fieldoffset = offsetoflow32(CPUARMState,
cp15.c14_timer[GTIMER_PHYS].ctl),
.readfn = gt_phys_redir_ctl_read, .raw_readfn = raw_read,
.writefn = gt_phys_redir_ctl_write, .raw_writefn = raw_write,
},
{ .name = "CNTP_CTL_S",
.cp = 15, .crn = 14, .crm = 2, .opc1 = 0, .opc2 = 1,
.secure = ARM_CP_SECSTATE_S,
.type = ARM_CP_IO | ARM_CP_ALIAS, .access = PL0_RW,
.accessfn = gt_ptimer_access,
.fieldoffset = offsetoflow32(CPUARMState,
cp15.c14_timer[GTIMER_SEC].ctl),
.writefn = gt_sec_ctl_write, .raw_writefn = raw_write,
},
{ .name = "CNTP_CTL_EL0", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 3, .crn = 14, .crm = 2, .opc2 = 1,
.type = ARM_CP_IO, .access = PL0_RW,
.accessfn = gt_ptimer_access,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.c14_timer[GTIMER_PHYS].ctl),
.resetvalue = 0,
.readfn = gt_phys_redir_ctl_read, .raw_readfn = raw_read,
.writefn = gt_phys_redir_ctl_write, .raw_writefn = raw_write,
},
{ .name = "CNTV_CTL", .cp = 15, .crn = 14, .crm = 3, .opc1 = 0, .opc2 = 1,
.type = ARM_CP_IO | ARM_CP_ALIAS, .access = PL0_RW,
.accessfn = gt_vtimer_access,
.fieldoffset = offsetoflow32(CPUARMState,
cp15.c14_timer[GTIMER_VIRT].ctl),
.readfn = gt_virt_redir_ctl_read, .raw_readfn = raw_read,
.writefn = gt_virt_redir_ctl_write, .raw_writefn = raw_write,
},
{ .name = "CNTV_CTL_EL0", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 3, .crn = 14, .crm = 3, .opc2 = 1,
.type = ARM_CP_IO, .access = PL0_RW,
.accessfn = gt_vtimer_access,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.c14_timer[GTIMER_VIRT].ctl),
.resetvalue = 0,
.readfn = gt_virt_redir_ctl_read, .raw_readfn = raw_read,
.writefn = gt_virt_redir_ctl_write, .raw_writefn = raw_write,
},
/* TimerValue views: a 32 bit downcounting view of the underlying state */
{ .name = "CNTP_TVAL", .cp = 15, .crn = 14, .crm = 2, .opc1 = 0, .opc2 = 0,
.secure = ARM_CP_SECSTATE_NS,
.type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW | ARM_CP_IO, .access = PL0_RW,
.accessfn = gt_ptimer_access,
.readfn = gt_phys_redir_tval_read, .writefn = gt_phys_redir_tval_write,
},
{ .name = "CNTP_TVAL_S",
.cp = 15, .crn = 14, .crm = 2, .opc1 = 0, .opc2 = 0,
.secure = ARM_CP_SECSTATE_S,
.type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW | ARM_CP_IO, .access = PL0_RW,
.accessfn = gt_ptimer_access,
.readfn = gt_sec_tval_read, .writefn = gt_sec_tval_write,
},
{ .name = "CNTP_TVAL_EL0", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 3, .crn = 14, .crm = 2, .opc2 = 0,
.type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW | ARM_CP_IO, .access = PL0_RW,
.accessfn = gt_ptimer_access, .resetfn = gt_phys_timer_reset,
.readfn = gt_phys_redir_tval_read, .writefn = gt_phys_redir_tval_write,
},
{ .name = "CNTV_TVAL", .cp = 15, .crn = 14, .crm = 3, .opc1 = 0, .opc2 = 0,
.type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW | ARM_CP_IO, .access = PL0_RW,
.accessfn = gt_vtimer_access,
.readfn = gt_virt_redir_tval_read, .writefn = gt_virt_redir_tval_write,
},
{ .name = "CNTV_TVAL_EL0", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 3, .crn = 14, .crm = 3, .opc2 = 0,
.type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW | ARM_CP_IO, .access = PL0_RW,
.accessfn = gt_vtimer_access, .resetfn = gt_virt_timer_reset,
.readfn = gt_virt_redir_tval_read, .writefn = gt_virt_redir_tval_write,
},
/* The counter itself */
{ .name = "CNTPCT", .cp = 15, .crm = 14, .opc1 = 0,
target-arm: Split NO_MIGRATE into ALIAS and NO_RAW We currently mark ARM coprocessor/system register definitions with the flag ARM_CP_NO_MIGRATE for two different reasons: 1) register is an alias on to state that's also visible via some other register, and that other register is the one responsible for migrating the state 2) register is not actually state at all (for instance the TLB or cache maintenance operation "registers") and it makes no sense to attempt to migrate it or otherwise access the raw state This works fine for identifying which registers should be ignored when performing migration, but we also use the same functions for synchronizing system register state between QEMU and the kernel when using KVM. In this case we don't want to try to sync state into registers in category 2, but we do want to sync into registers in category 1, because the kernel might have picked a different one of the aliases as its choice for which one to expose for migration. (In particular, on 32 bit hosts the kernel will expose the state in the AArch32 version of the register, but TCG's convention is to mark the AArch64 version as the version to migrate, even if the CPU being emulated happens to be 32 bit, so almost all system registers will hit this issue now that we've added AArch64 system emulation.) Fix this by splitting the NO_MIGRATE flag in two (ALIAS and NO_RAW) corresponding to the two different reasons we might not want to migrate a register. When setting up the TCG list of registers to migrate we honour both flags; when populating the list from KVM, only ignore registers which are NO_RAW. Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Greg Bellows <greg.bellows@linaro.org> Message-id: 1422282372-13735-2-git-send-email-peter.maydell@linaro.org [PMM: changed ARM_CP_NO_MIGRATE to ARM_CP_ALIAS on new SP_EL1 and SP_EL2 reginfo stanzas since there was a (semantic) merge conflict with the patchset that added those]
2015-02-05 14:37:22 +01:00
.access = PL0_R, .type = ARM_CP_64BIT | ARM_CP_NO_RAW | ARM_CP_IO,
.accessfn = gt_pct_access,
.readfn = gt_cnt_read, .resetfn = arm_cp_reset_ignore,
},
{ .name = "CNTPCT_EL0", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 3, .crn = 14, .crm = 0, .opc2 = 1,
target-arm: Split NO_MIGRATE into ALIAS and NO_RAW We currently mark ARM coprocessor/system register definitions with the flag ARM_CP_NO_MIGRATE for two different reasons: 1) register is an alias on to state that's also visible via some other register, and that other register is the one responsible for migrating the state 2) register is not actually state at all (for instance the TLB or cache maintenance operation "registers") and it makes no sense to attempt to migrate it or otherwise access the raw state This works fine for identifying which registers should be ignored when performing migration, but we also use the same functions for synchronizing system register state between QEMU and the kernel when using KVM. In this case we don't want to try to sync state into registers in category 2, but we do want to sync into registers in category 1, because the kernel might have picked a different one of the aliases as its choice for which one to expose for migration. (In particular, on 32 bit hosts the kernel will expose the state in the AArch32 version of the register, but TCG's convention is to mark the AArch64 version as the version to migrate, even if the CPU being emulated happens to be 32 bit, so almost all system registers will hit this issue now that we've added AArch64 system emulation.) Fix this by splitting the NO_MIGRATE flag in two (ALIAS and NO_RAW) corresponding to the two different reasons we might not want to migrate a register. When setting up the TCG list of registers to migrate we honour both flags; when populating the list from KVM, only ignore registers which are NO_RAW. Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Greg Bellows <greg.bellows@linaro.org> Message-id: 1422282372-13735-2-git-send-email-peter.maydell@linaro.org [PMM: changed ARM_CP_NO_MIGRATE to ARM_CP_ALIAS on new SP_EL1 and SP_EL2 reginfo stanzas since there was a (semantic) merge conflict with the patchset that added those]
2015-02-05 14:37:22 +01:00
.access = PL0_R, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW | ARM_CP_IO,
.accessfn = gt_pct_access, .readfn = gt_cnt_read,
},
{ .name = "CNTVCT", .cp = 15, .crm = 14, .opc1 = 1,
target-arm: Split NO_MIGRATE into ALIAS and NO_RAW We currently mark ARM coprocessor/system register definitions with the flag ARM_CP_NO_MIGRATE for two different reasons: 1) register is an alias on to state that's also visible via some other register, and that other register is the one responsible for migrating the state 2) register is not actually state at all (for instance the TLB or cache maintenance operation "registers") and it makes no sense to attempt to migrate it or otherwise access the raw state This works fine for identifying which registers should be ignored when performing migration, but we also use the same functions for synchronizing system register state between QEMU and the kernel when using KVM. In this case we don't want to try to sync state into registers in category 2, but we do want to sync into registers in category 1, because the kernel might have picked a different one of the aliases as its choice for which one to expose for migration. (In particular, on 32 bit hosts the kernel will expose the state in the AArch32 version of the register, but TCG's convention is to mark the AArch64 version as the version to migrate, even if the CPU being emulated happens to be 32 bit, so almost all system registers will hit this issue now that we've added AArch64 system emulation.) Fix this by splitting the NO_MIGRATE flag in two (ALIAS and NO_RAW) corresponding to the two different reasons we might not want to migrate a register. When setting up the TCG list of registers to migrate we honour both flags; when populating the list from KVM, only ignore registers which are NO_RAW. Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Greg Bellows <greg.bellows@linaro.org> Message-id: 1422282372-13735-2-git-send-email-peter.maydell@linaro.org [PMM: changed ARM_CP_NO_MIGRATE to ARM_CP_ALIAS on new SP_EL1 and SP_EL2 reginfo stanzas since there was a (semantic) merge conflict with the patchset that added those]
2015-02-05 14:37:22 +01:00
.access = PL0_R, .type = ARM_CP_64BIT | ARM_CP_NO_RAW | ARM_CP_IO,
.accessfn = gt_vct_access,
.readfn = gt_virt_cnt_read, .resetfn = arm_cp_reset_ignore,
},
{ .name = "CNTVCT_EL0", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 3, .crn = 14, .crm = 0, .opc2 = 2,
target-arm: Split NO_MIGRATE into ALIAS and NO_RAW We currently mark ARM coprocessor/system register definitions with the flag ARM_CP_NO_MIGRATE for two different reasons: 1) register is an alias on to state that's also visible via some other register, and that other register is the one responsible for migrating the state 2) register is not actually state at all (for instance the TLB or cache maintenance operation "registers") and it makes no sense to attempt to migrate it or otherwise access the raw state This works fine for identifying which registers should be ignored when performing migration, but we also use the same functions for synchronizing system register state between QEMU and the kernel when using KVM. In this case we don't want to try to sync state into registers in category 2, but we do want to sync into registers in category 1, because the kernel might have picked a different one of the aliases as its choice for which one to expose for migration. (In particular, on 32 bit hosts the kernel will expose the state in the AArch32 version of the register, but TCG's convention is to mark the AArch64 version as the version to migrate, even if the CPU being emulated happens to be 32 bit, so almost all system registers will hit this issue now that we've added AArch64 system emulation.) Fix this by splitting the NO_MIGRATE flag in two (ALIAS and NO_RAW) corresponding to the two different reasons we might not want to migrate a register. When setting up the TCG list of registers to migrate we honour both flags; when populating the list from KVM, only ignore registers which are NO_RAW. Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Greg Bellows <greg.bellows@linaro.org> Message-id: 1422282372-13735-2-git-send-email-peter.maydell@linaro.org [PMM: changed ARM_CP_NO_MIGRATE to ARM_CP_ALIAS on new SP_EL1 and SP_EL2 reginfo stanzas since there was a (semantic) merge conflict with the patchset that added those]
2015-02-05 14:37:22 +01:00
.access = PL0_R, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW | ARM_CP_IO,
.accessfn = gt_vct_access, .readfn = gt_virt_cnt_read,
},
/* Comparison value, indicating when the timer goes off */
{ .name = "CNTP_CVAL", .cp = 15, .crm = 14, .opc1 = 2,
.secure = ARM_CP_SECSTATE_NS,
.access = PL0_RW,
target-arm: Split NO_MIGRATE into ALIAS and NO_RAW We currently mark ARM coprocessor/system register definitions with the flag ARM_CP_NO_MIGRATE for two different reasons: 1) register is an alias on to state that's also visible via some other register, and that other register is the one responsible for migrating the state 2) register is not actually state at all (for instance the TLB or cache maintenance operation "registers") and it makes no sense to attempt to migrate it or otherwise access the raw state This works fine for identifying which registers should be ignored when performing migration, but we also use the same functions for synchronizing system register state between QEMU and the kernel when using KVM. In this case we don't want to try to sync state into registers in category 2, but we do want to sync into registers in category 1, because the kernel might have picked a different one of the aliases as its choice for which one to expose for migration. (In particular, on 32 bit hosts the kernel will expose the state in the AArch32 version of the register, but TCG's convention is to mark the AArch64 version as the version to migrate, even if the CPU being emulated happens to be 32 bit, so almost all system registers will hit this issue now that we've added AArch64 system emulation.) Fix this by splitting the NO_MIGRATE flag in two (ALIAS and NO_RAW) corresponding to the two different reasons we might not want to migrate a register. When setting up the TCG list of registers to migrate we honour both flags; when populating the list from KVM, only ignore registers which are NO_RAW. Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Greg Bellows <greg.bellows@linaro.org> Message-id: 1422282372-13735-2-git-send-email-peter.maydell@linaro.org [PMM: changed ARM_CP_NO_MIGRATE to ARM_CP_ALIAS on new SP_EL1 and SP_EL2 reginfo stanzas since there was a (semantic) merge conflict with the patchset that added those]
2015-02-05 14:37:22 +01:00
.type = ARM_CP_64BIT | ARM_CP_IO | ARM_CP_ALIAS,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.c14_timer[GTIMER_PHYS].cval),
.accessfn = gt_ptimer_access,
.readfn = gt_phys_redir_cval_read, .raw_readfn = raw_read,
.writefn = gt_phys_redir_cval_write, .raw_writefn = raw_write,
},
{ .name = "CNTP_CVAL_S", .cp = 15, .crm = 14, .opc1 = 2,
.secure = ARM_CP_SECSTATE_S,
.access = PL0_RW,
.type = ARM_CP_64BIT | ARM_CP_IO | ARM_CP_ALIAS,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.c14_timer[GTIMER_SEC].cval),
.accessfn = gt_ptimer_access,
.writefn = gt_sec_cval_write, .raw_writefn = raw_write,
},
{ .name = "CNTP_CVAL_EL0", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 3, .crn = 14, .crm = 2, .opc2 = 2,
.access = PL0_RW,
.type = ARM_CP_IO,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.c14_timer[GTIMER_PHYS].cval),
.resetvalue = 0, .accessfn = gt_ptimer_access,
.readfn = gt_phys_redir_cval_read, .raw_readfn = raw_read,
.writefn = gt_phys_redir_cval_write, .raw_writefn = raw_write,
},
{ .name = "CNTV_CVAL", .cp = 15, .crm = 14, .opc1 = 3,
.access = PL0_RW,
target-arm: Split NO_MIGRATE into ALIAS and NO_RAW We currently mark ARM coprocessor/system register definitions with the flag ARM_CP_NO_MIGRATE for two different reasons: 1) register is an alias on to state that's also visible via some other register, and that other register is the one responsible for migrating the state 2) register is not actually state at all (for instance the TLB or cache maintenance operation "registers") and it makes no sense to attempt to migrate it or otherwise access the raw state This works fine for identifying which registers should be ignored when performing migration, but we also use the same functions for synchronizing system register state between QEMU and the kernel when using KVM. In this case we don't want to try to sync state into registers in category 2, but we do want to sync into registers in category 1, because the kernel might have picked a different one of the aliases as its choice for which one to expose for migration. (In particular, on 32 bit hosts the kernel will expose the state in the AArch32 version of the register, but TCG's convention is to mark the AArch64 version as the version to migrate, even if the CPU being emulated happens to be 32 bit, so almost all system registers will hit this issue now that we've added AArch64 system emulation.) Fix this by splitting the NO_MIGRATE flag in two (ALIAS and NO_RAW) corresponding to the two different reasons we might not want to migrate a register. When setting up the TCG list of registers to migrate we honour both flags; when populating the list from KVM, only ignore registers which are NO_RAW. Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Greg Bellows <greg.bellows@linaro.org> Message-id: 1422282372-13735-2-git-send-email-peter.maydell@linaro.org [PMM: changed ARM_CP_NO_MIGRATE to ARM_CP_ALIAS on new SP_EL1 and SP_EL2 reginfo stanzas since there was a (semantic) merge conflict with the patchset that added those]
2015-02-05 14:37:22 +01:00
.type = ARM_CP_64BIT | ARM_CP_IO | ARM_CP_ALIAS,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.c14_timer[GTIMER_VIRT].cval),
.accessfn = gt_vtimer_access,
.readfn = gt_virt_redir_cval_read, .raw_readfn = raw_read,
.writefn = gt_virt_redir_cval_write, .raw_writefn = raw_write,
},
{ .name = "CNTV_CVAL_EL0", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 3, .crn = 14, .crm = 3, .opc2 = 2,
.access = PL0_RW,
.type = ARM_CP_IO,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.c14_timer[GTIMER_VIRT].cval),
.resetvalue = 0, .accessfn = gt_vtimer_access,
.readfn = gt_virt_redir_cval_read, .raw_readfn = raw_read,
.writefn = gt_virt_redir_cval_write, .raw_writefn = raw_write,
},
/* Secure timer -- this is actually restricted to only EL3
* and configurably Secure-EL1 via the accessfn.
*/
{ .name = "CNTPS_TVAL_EL1", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 7, .crn = 14, .crm = 2, .opc2 = 0,
.type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW | ARM_CP_IO, .access = PL1_RW,
.accessfn = gt_stimer_access,
.readfn = gt_sec_tval_read,
.writefn = gt_sec_tval_write,
.resetfn = gt_sec_timer_reset,
},
{ .name = "CNTPS_CTL_EL1", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 7, .crn = 14, .crm = 2, .opc2 = 1,
.type = ARM_CP_IO, .access = PL1_RW,
.accessfn = gt_stimer_access,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.c14_timer[GTIMER_SEC].ctl),
.resetvalue = 0,
.writefn = gt_sec_ctl_write, .raw_writefn = raw_write,
},
{ .name = "CNTPS_CVAL_EL1", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 7, .crn = 14, .crm = 2, .opc2 = 2,
.type = ARM_CP_IO, .access = PL1_RW,
.accessfn = gt_stimer_access,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.c14_timer[GTIMER_SEC].cval),
.writefn = gt_sec_cval_write, .raw_writefn = raw_write,
},
};
static CPAccessResult e2h_access(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
bool isread)
{
if (!(arm_hcr_el2_eff(env) & HCR_E2H)) {
return CP_ACCESS_TRAP;
}
return CP_ACCESS_OK;
}
#else
/* In user-mode most of the generic timer registers are inaccessible
* however modern kernels (4.12+) allow access to cntvct_el0
*/
static uint64_t gt_virt_cnt_read(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri)
{
ARMCPU *cpu = env_archcpu(env);
/* Currently we have no support for QEMUTimer in linux-user so we
* can't call gt_get_countervalue(env), instead we directly
* call the lower level functions.
*/
return cpu_get_clock() / gt_cntfrq_period_ns(cpu);
}
static const ARMCPRegInfo generic_timer_cp_reginfo[] = {
{ .name = "CNTFRQ_EL0", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 3, .crn = 14, .crm = 0, .opc2 = 0,
.type = ARM_CP_CONST, .access = PL0_R /* no PL1_RW in linux-user */,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.c14_cntfrq),
.resetvalue = NANOSECONDS_PER_SECOND / GTIMER_SCALE,
},
{ .name = "CNTVCT_EL0", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 3, .crn = 14, .crm = 0, .opc2 = 2,
.access = PL0_R, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW | ARM_CP_IO,
.readfn = gt_virt_cnt_read,
},
};
#endif
static void par_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri, uint64_t value)
{
if (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_LPAE)) {
raw_write(env, ri, value);
} else if (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_V7)) {
raw_write(env, ri, value & 0xfffff6ff);
} else {
raw_write(env, ri, value & 0xfffff1ff);
}
}
#ifndef CONFIG_USER_ONLY
/* get_phys_addr() isn't present for user-mode-only targets */
static CPAccessResult ats_access(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
bool isread)
{
if (ri->opc2 & 4) {
/* The ATS12NSO* operations must trap to EL3 or EL2 if executed in
* Secure EL1 (which can only happen if EL3 is AArch64).
* They are simply UNDEF if executed from NS EL1.
* They function normally from EL2 or EL3.
*/
if (arm_current_el(env) == 1) {
if (arm_is_secure_below_el3(env)) {
if (env->cp15.scr_el3 & SCR_EEL2) {
return CP_ACCESS_TRAP_UNCATEGORIZED_EL2;
}
return CP_ACCESS_TRAP_UNCATEGORIZED_EL3;
}
return CP_ACCESS_TRAP_UNCATEGORIZED;
}
}
return CP_ACCESS_OK;
}
#ifdef CONFIG_TCG
static uint64_t do_ats_write(CPUARMState *env, uint64_t value,
MMUAccessType access_type, ARMMMUIdx mmu_idx)
{
hwaddr phys_addr;
target_ulong page_size;
int prot;
bool ret;
uint64_t par64;
bool format64 = false;
MemTxAttrs attrs = {};
ARMMMUFaultInfo fi = {};
ARMCacheAttrs cacheattrs = {};
ret = get_phys_addr(env, value, access_type, mmu_idx, &phys_addr, &attrs,
&prot, &page_size, &fi, &cacheattrs);
target/arm: Postpone interpretation of stage 2 descriptor attribute bits In the original Arm v8 two-stage translation, both stage 1 and stage 2 specify memory attributes (memory type, cacheability, shareability); these are then combined to produce the overall memory attributes for the whole stage 1+2 access. In QEMU we implement this by having get_phys_addr() fill in an ARMCacheAttrs struct, and we convert both the stage 1 and stage 2 attribute bit formats to the same encoding (an 8-bit attribute value matching the MAIR_EL1 fields, plus a 2-bit shareability value). The new FEAT_S2FWB feature allows the guest to enable a different interpretation of the attribute bits in the stage 2 descriptors. These bits can now be used to control details of how the stage 1 and 2 attributes should be combined (for instance they can say "always use the stage 1 attributes" or "ignore the stage 1 attributes and always be Device memory"). This means we need to pass the raw bit information for stage 2 down to the function which combines the stage 1 and stage 2 information. Add a field to ARMCacheAttrs that indicates whether the attrs field should be interpreted as MAIR format, or as the raw stage 2 attribute bits from the descriptor, and store the appropriate values when filling in cacheattrs. We only need to interpret the attrs field in a few places: * in do_ats_write(), where we know to expect a MAIR value (there is no ATS instruction to do a stage-2-only walk) * in S1_ptw_translate(), where we want to know whether the combined S1 + S2 attributes indicate Device memory that should provoke a fault * in combine_cacheattrs(), which does the S1 + S2 combining Update those places accordingly. Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org> Message-id: 20220505183950.2781801-2-peter.maydell@linaro.org
2022-05-05 20:39:47 +02:00
/*
* ATS operations only do S1 or S1+S2 translations, so we never
* have to deal with the ARMCacheAttrs format for S2 only.
*/
assert(!cacheattrs.is_s2_format);
if (ret) {
/*
* Some kinds of translation fault must cause exceptions rather
* than being reported in the PAR.
*/
int current_el = arm_current_el(env);
int target_el;
uint32_t syn, fsr, fsc;
bool take_exc = false;
if (fi.s1ptw && current_el == 1
&& arm_mmu_idx_is_stage1_of_2(mmu_idx)) {
/*
* Synchronous stage 2 fault on an access made as part of the
* translation table walk for AT S1E0* or AT S1E1* insn
* executed from NS EL1. If this is a synchronous external abort
* and SCR_EL3.EA == 1, then we take a synchronous external abort
* to EL3. Otherwise the fault is taken as an exception to EL2,
* and HPFAR_EL2 holds the faulting IPA.
*/
if (fi.type == ARMFault_SyncExternalOnWalk &&
(env->cp15.scr_el3 & SCR_EA)) {
target_el = 3;
} else {
env->cp15.hpfar_el2 = extract64(fi.s2addr, 12, 47) << 4;
if (arm_is_secure_below_el3(env) && fi.s1ns) {
env->cp15.hpfar_el2 |= HPFAR_NS;
}
target_el = 2;
}
take_exc = true;
} else if (fi.type == ARMFault_SyncExternalOnWalk) {
/*
* Synchronous external aborts during a translation table walk
* are taken as Data Abort exceptions.
*/
if (fi.stage2) {
if (current_el == 3) {
target_el = 3;
} else {
target_el = 2;
}
} else {
target_el = exception_target_el(env);
}
take_exc = true;
}
if (take_exc) {
/* Construct FSR and FSC using same logic as arm_deliver_fault() */
if (target_el == 2 || arm_el_is_aa64(env, target_el) ||
arm_s1_regime_using_lpae_format(env, mmu_idx)) {
fsr = arm_fi_to_lfsc(&fi);
fsc = extract32(fsr, 0, 6);
} else {
fsr = arm_fi_to_sfsc(&fi);
fsc = 0x3f;
}
/*
* Report exception with ESR indicating a fault due to a
* translation table walk for a cache maintenance instruction.
*/
target-arm: kvm64: handle SIGBUS signal from kernel or KVM Add a SIGBUS signal handler. In this handler, it checks the SIGBUS type, translates the host VA delivered by host to guest PA, then fills this PA to guest APEI GHES memory, then notifies guest according to the SIGBUS type. When guest accesses the poisoned memory, it will generate a Synchronous External Abort(SEA). Then host kernel gets an APEI notification and calls memory_failure() to unmapped the affected page in stage 2, finally returns to guest. Guest continues to access the PG_hwpoison page, it will trap to KVM as stage2 fault, then a SIGBUS_MCEERR_AR synchronous signal is delivered to Qemu, Qemu records this error address into guest APEI GHES memory and notifes guest using Synchronous-External-Abort(SEA). In order to inject a vSEA, we introduce the kvm_inject_arm_sea() function in which we can setup the type of exception and the syndrome information. When switching to guest, the target vcpu will jump to the synchronous external abort vector table entry. The ESR_ELx.DFSC is set to synchronous external abort(0x10), and the ESR_ELx.FnV is set to not valid(0x1), which will tell guest that FAR is not valid and hold an UNKNOWN value. These values will be set to KVM register structures through KVM_SET_ONE_REG IOCTL. Signed-off-by: Dongjiu Geng <gengdongjiu@huawei.com> Signed-off-by: Xiang Zheng <zhengxiang9@huawei.com> Reviewed-by: Michael S. Tsirkin <mst@redhat.com> Acked-by: Xiang Zheng <zhengxiang9@huawei.com> Reviewed-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Igor Mammedov <imammedo@redhat.com> Message-id: 20200512030609.19593-10-gengdongjiu@huawei.com Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org>
2020-05-12 05:06:08 +02:00
syn = syn_data_abort_no_iss(current_el == target_el, 0,
fi.ea, 1, fi.s1ptw, 1, fsc);
env->exception.vaddress = value;
env->exception.fsr = fsr;
raise_exception(env, EXCP_DATA_ABORT, syn, target_el);
}
}
if (is_a64(env)) {
format64 = true;
} else if (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_LPAE)) {
/*
* ATS1Cxx:
* * TTBCR.EAE determines whether the result is returned using the
* 32-bit or the 64-bit PAR format
* * Instructions executed in Hyp mode always use the 64bit format
*
* ATS1S2NSOxx uses the 64bit format if any of the following is true:
* * The Non-secure TTBCR.EAE bit is set to 1
* * The implementation includes EL2, and the value of HCR.VM is 1
*
* (Note that HCR.DC makes HCR.VM behave as if it is 1.)
*
* ATS1Hx always uses the 64bit format.
*/
format64 = arm_s1_regime_using_lpae_format(env, mmu_idx);
if (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_EL2)) {
if (mmu_idx == ARMMMUIdx_E10_0 ||
mmu_idx == ARMMMUIdx_E10_1 ||
mmu_idx == ARMMMUIdx_E10_1_PAN) {
format64 |= env->cp15.hcr_el2 & (HCR_VM | HCR_DC);
} else {
format64 |= arm_current_el(env) == 2;
}
}
}
if (format64) {
/* Create a 64-bit PAR */
par64 = (1 << 11); /* LPAE bit always set */
if (!ret) {
par64 |= phys_addr & ~0xfffULL;
if (!attrs.secure) {
par64 |= (1 << 9); /* NS */
}
par64 |= (uint64_t)cacheattrs.attrs << 56; /* ATTR */
par64 |= cacheattrs.shareability << 7; /* SH */
} else {
uint32_t fsr = arm_fi_to_lfsc(&fi);
par64 |= 1; /* F */
par64 |= (fsr & 0x3f) << 1; /* FS */
if (fi.stage2) {
par64 |= (1 << 9); /* S */
}
if (fi.s1ptw) {
par64 |= (1 << 8); /* PTW */
}
}
} else {
/* fsr is a DFSR/IFSR value for the short descriptor
* translation table format (with WnR always clear).
* Convert it to a 32-bit PAR.
*/
if (!ret) {
/* We do not set any attribute bits in the PAR */
if (page_size == (1 << 24)
&& arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_V7)) {
par64 = (phys_addr & 0xff000000) | (1 << 1);
} else {
par64 = phys_addr & 0xfffff000;
}
if (!attrs.secure) {
par64 |= (1 << 9); /* NS */
}
} else {
uint32_t fsr = arm_fi_to_sfsc(&fi);
par64 = ((fsr & (1 << 10)) >> 5) | ((fsr & (1 << 12)) >> 6) |
((fsr & 0xf) << 1) | 1;
}
}
return par64;
}
#endif /* CONFIG_TCG */
static void ats_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri, uint64_t value)
{
#ifdef CONFIG_TCG
MMUAccessType access_type = ri->opc2 & 1 ? MMU_DATA_STORE : MMU_DATA_LOAD;
uint64_t par64;
ARMMMUIdx mmu_idx;
int el = arm_current_el(env);
bool secure = arm_is_secure_below_el3(env);
switch (ri->opc2 & 6) {
case 0:
/* stage 1 current state PL1: ATS1CPR, ATS1CPW, ATS1CPRP, ATS1CPWP */
switch (el) {
case 3:
mmu_idx = ARMMMUIdx_SE3;
break;
case 2:
g_assert(!secure); /* ARMv8.4-SecEL2 is 64-bit only */
/* fall through */
case 1:
if (ri->crm == 9 && (env->uncached_cpsr & CPSR_PAN)) {
mmu_idx = (secure ? ARMMMUIdx_Stage1_SE1_PAN
: ARMMMUIdx_Stage1_E1_PAN);
} else {
mmu_idx = secure ? ARMMMUIdx_Stage1_SE1 : ARMMMUIdx_Stage1_E1;
}
break;
default:
g_assert_not_reached();
}
break;
case 2:
/* stage 1 current state PL0: ATS1CUR, ATS1CUW */
switch (el) {
case 3:
mmu_idx = ARMMMUIdx_SE10_0;
break;
case 2:
g_assert(!secure); /* ARMv8.4-SecEL2 is 64-bit only */
mmu_idx = ARMMMUIdx_Stage1_E0;
break;
case 1:
mmu_idx = secure ? ARMMMUIdx_Stage1_SE0 : ARMMMUIdx_Stage1_E0;
break;
default:
g_assert_not_reached();
}
break;
case 4:
/* stage 1+2 NonSecure PL1: ATS12NSOPR, ATS12NSOPW */
mmu_idx = ARMMMUIdx_E10_1;
break;
case 6:
/* stage 1+2 NonSecure PL0: ATS12NSOUR, ATS12NSOUW */
mmu_idx = ARMMMUIdx_E10_0;
break;
default:
g_assert_not_reached();
}
par64 = do_ats_write(env, value, access_type, mmu_idx);
A32_BANKED_CURRENT_REG_SET(env, par, par64);
#else
/* Handled by hardware accelerator. */
g_assert_not_reached();
#endif /* CONFIG_TCG */
}
static void ats1h_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
#ifdef CONFIG_TCG
MMUAccessType access_type = ri->opc2 & 1 ? MMU_DATA_STORE : MMU_DATA_LOAD;
uint64_t par64;
par64 = do_ats_write(env, value, access_type, ARMMMUIdx_E2);
A32_BANKED_CURRENT_REG_SET(env, par, par64);
#else
/* Handled by hardware accelerator. */
g_assert_not_reached();
#endif /* CONFIG_TCG */
}
static CPAccessResult at_s1e2_access(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
bool isread)
{
if (arm_current_el(env) == 3 &&
!(env->cp15.scr_el3 & (SCR_NS | SCR_EEL2))) {
return CP_ACCESS_TRAP;
}
return CP_ACCESS_OK;
}
static void ats_write64(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
#ifdef CONFIG_TCG
MMUAccessType access_type = ri->opc2 & 1 ? MMU_DATA_STORE : MMU_DATA_LOAD;
ARMMMUIdx mmu_idx;
int secure = arm_is_secure_below_el3(env);
switch (ri->opc2 & 6) {
case 0:
switch (ri->opc1) {
case 0: /* AT S1E1R, AT S1E1W, AT S1E1RP, AT S1E1WP */
if (ri->crm == 9 && (env->pstate & PSTATE_PAN)) {
mmu_idx = (secure ? ARMMMUIdx_Stage1_SE1_PAN
: ARMMMUIdx_Stage1_E1_PAN);
} else {
mmu_idx = secure ? ARMMMUIdx_Stage1_SE1 : ARMMMUIdx_Stage1_E1;
}
break;
case 4: /* AT S1E2R, AT S1E2W */
mmu_idx = secure ? ARMMMUIdx_SE2 : ARMMMUIdx_E2;
break;
case 6: /* AT S1E3R, AT S1E3W */
mmu_idx = ARMMMUIdx_SE3;
break;
default:
g_assert_not_reached();
}
break;
case 2: /* AT S1E0R, AT S1E0W */
mmu_idx = secure ? ARMMMUIdx_Stage1_SE0 : ARMMMUIdx_Stage1_E0;
break;
case 4: /* AT S12E1R, AT S12E1W */
mmu_idx = secure ? ARMMMUIdx_SE10_1 : ARMMMUIdx_E10_1;
break;
case 6: /* AT S12E0R, AT S12E0W */
mmu_idx = secure ? ARMMMUIdx_SE10_0 : ARMMMUIdx_E10_0;
break;
default:
g_assert_not_reached();
}
env->cp15.par_el[1] = do_ats_write(env, value, access_type, mmu_idx);
#else
/* Handled by hardware accelerator. */
g_assert_not_reached();
#endif /* CONFIG_TCG */
}
#endif
static const ARMCPRegInfo vapa_cp_reginfo[] = {
{ .name = "PAR", .cp = 15, .crn = 7, .crm = 4, .opc1 = 0, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL1_RW, .resetvalue = 0,
.bank_fieldoffsets = { offsetoflow32(CPUARMState, cp15.par_s),
offsetoflow32(CPUARMState, cp15.par_ns) },
.writefn = par_write },
#ifndef CONFIG_USER_ONLY
/* This underdecoding is safe because the reginfo is NO_RAW. */
{ .name = "ATS", .cp = 15, .crn = 7, .crm = 8, .opc1 = 0, .opc2 = CP_ANY,
.access = PL1_W, .accessfn = ats_access,
.writefn = ats_write, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW | ARM_CP_RAISES_EXC },
#endif
};
/* Return basic MPU access permission bits. */
static uint32_t simple_mpu_ap_bits(uint32_t val)
{
uint32_t ret;
uint32_t mask;
int i;
ret = 0;
mask = 3;
for (i = 0; i < 16; i += 2) {
ret |= (val >> i) & mask;
mask <<= 2;
}
return ret;
}
/* Pad basic MPU access permission bits to extended format. */
static uint32_t extended_mpu_ap_bits(uint32_t val)
{
uint32_t ret;
uint32_t mask;
int i;
ret = 0;
mask = 3;
for (i = 0; i < 16; i += 2) {
ret |= (val & mask) << i;
mask <<= 2;
}
return ret;
}
static void pmsav5_data_ap_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
env->cp15.pmsav5_data_ap = extended_mpu_ap_bits(value);
}
static uint64_t pmsav5_data_ap_read(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri)
{
return simple_mpu_ap_bits(env->cp15.pmsav5_data_ap);
}
static void pmsav5_insn_ap_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
env->cp15.pmsav5_insn_ap = extended_mpu_ap_bits(value);
}
static uint64_t pmsav5_insn_ap_read(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri)
{
return simple_mpu_ap_bits(env->cp15.pmsav5_insn_ap);
}
static uint64_t pmsav7_read(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri)
{
uint32_t *u32p = *(uint32_t **)raw_ptr(env, ri);
if (!u32p) {
return 0;
}
u32p += env->pmsav7.rnr[M_REG_NS];
return *u32p;
}
static void pmsav7_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
ARMCPU *cpu = env_archcpu(env);
uint32_t *u32p = *(uint32_t **)raw_ptr(env, ri);
if (!u32p) {
return;
}
u32p += env->pmsav7.rnr[M_REG_NS];
tlb_flush(CPU(cpu)); /* Mappings may have changed - purge! */
*u32p = value;
}
static void pmsav7_rgnr_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
ARMCPU *cpu = env_archcpu(env);
uint32_t nrgs = cpu->pmsav7_dregion;
if (value >= nrgs) {
qemu_log_mask(LOG_GUEST_ERROR,
"PMSAv7 RGNR write >= # supported regions, %" PRIu32
" > %" PRIu32 "\n", (uint32_t)value, nrgs);
return;
}
raw_write(env, ri, value);
}
static const ARMCPRegInfo pmsav7_cp_reginfo[] = {
/* Reset for all these registers is handled in arm_cpu_reset(),
* because the PMSAv7 is also used by M-profile CPUs, which do
* not register cpregs but still need the state to be reset.
*/
{ .name = "DRBAR", .cp = 15, .crn = 6, .opc1 = 0, .crm = 1, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL1_RW, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, pmsav7.drbar),
.readfn = pmsav7_read, .writefn = pmsav7_write,
.resetfn = arm_cp_reset_ignore },
{ .name = "DRSR", .cp = 15, .crn = 6, .opc1 = 0, .crm = 1, .opc2 = 2,
.access = PL1_RW, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, pmsav7.drsr),
.readfn = pmsav7_read, .writefn = pmsav7_write,
.resetfn = arm_cp_reset_ignore },
{ .name = "DRACR", .cp = 15, .crn = 6, .opc1 = 0, .crm = 1, .opc2 = 4,
.access = PL1_RW, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, pmsav7.dracr),
.readfn = pmsav7_read, .writefn = pmsav7_write,
.resetfn = arm_cp_reset_ignore },
{ .name = "RGNR", .cp = 15, .crn = 6, .opc1 = 0, .crm = 2, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL1_RW,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, pmsav7.rnr[M_REG_NS]),
.writefn = pmsav7_rgnr_write,
.resetfn = arm_cp_reset_ignore },
};
static const ARMCPRegInfo pmsav5_cp_reginfo[] = {
{ .name = "DATA_AP", .cp = 15, .crn = 5, .crm = 0, .opc1 = 0, .opc2 = 0,
target-arm: Split NO_MIGRATE into ALIAS and NO_RAW We currently mark ARM coprocessor/system register definitions with the flag ARM_CP_NO_MIGRATE for two different reasons: 1) register is an alias on to state that's also visible via some other register, and that other register is the one responsible for migrating the state 2) register is not actually state at all (for instance the TLB or cache maintenance operation "registers") and it makes no sense to attempt to migrate it or otherwise access the raw state This works fine for identifying which registers should be ignored when performing migration, but we also use the same functions for synchronizing system register state between QEMU and the kernel when using KVM. In this case we don't want to try to sync state into registers in category 2, but we do want to sync into registers in category 1, because the kernel might have picked a different one of the aliases as its choice for which one to expose for migration. (In particular, on 32 bit hosts the kernel will expose the state in the AArch32 version of the register, but TCG's convention is to mark the AArch64 version as the version to migrate, even if the CPU being emulated happens to be 32 bit, so almost all system registers will hit this issue now that we've added AArch64 system emulation.) Fix this by splitting the NO_MIGRATE flag in two (ALIAS and NO_RAW) corresponding to the two different reasons we might not want to migrate a register. When setting up the TCG list of registers to migrate we honour both flags; when populating the list from KVM, only ignore registers which are NO_RAW. Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Greg Bellows <greg.bellows@linaro.org> Message-id: 1422282372-13735-2-git-send-email-peter.maydell@linaro.org [PMM: changed ARM_CP_NO_MIGRATE to ARM_CP_ALIAS on new SP_EL1 and SP_EL2 reginfo stanzas since there was a (semantic) merge conflict with the patchset that added those]
2015-02-05 14:37:22 +01:00
.access = PL1_RW, .type = ARM_CP_ALIAS,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.pmsav5_data_ap),
.readfn = pmsav5_data_ap_read, .writefn = pmsav5_data_ap_write, },
{ .name = "INSN_AP", .cp = 15, .crn = 5, .crm = 0, .opc1 = 0, .opc2 = 1,
target-arm: Split NO_MIGRATE into ALIAS and NO_RAW We currently mark ARM coprocessor/system register definitions with the flag ARM_CP_NO_MIGRATE for two different reasons: 1) register is an alias on to state that's also visible via some other register, and that other register is the one responsible for migrating the state 2) register is not actually state at all (for instance the TLB or cache maintenance operation "registers") and it makes no sense to attempt to migrate it or otherwise access the raw state This works fine for identifying which registers should be ignored when performing migration, but we also use the same functions for synchronizing system register state between QEMU and the kernel when using KVM. In this case we don't want to try to sync state into registers in category 2, but we do want to sync into registers in category 1, because the kernel might have picked a different one of the aliases as its choice for which one to expose for migration. (In particular, on 32 bit hosts the kernel will expose the state in the AArch32 version of the register, but TCG's convention is to mark the AArch64 version as the version to migrate, even if the CPU being emulated happens to be 32 bit, so almost all system registers will hit this issue now that we've added AArch64 system emulation.) Fix this by splitting the NO_MIGRATE flag in two (ALIAS and NO_RAW) corresponding to the two different reasons we might not want to migrate a register. When setting up the TCG list of registers to migrate we honour both flags; when populating the list from KVM, only ignore registers which are NO_RAW. Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Greg Bellows <greg.bellows@linaro.org> Message-id: 1422282372-13735-2-git-send-email-peter.maydell@linaro.org [PMM: changed ARM_CP_NO_MIGRATE to ARM_CP_ALIAS on new SP_EL1 and SP_EL2 reginfo stanzas since there was a (semantic) merge conflict with the patchset that added those]
2015-02-05 14:37:22 +01:00
.access = PL1_RW, .type = ARM_CP_ALIAS,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.pmsav5_insn_ap),
.readfn = pmsav5_insn_ap_read, .writefn = pmsav5_insn_ap_write, },
{ .name = "DATA_EXT_AP", .cp = 15, .crn = 5, .crm = 0, .opc1 = 0, .opc2 = 2,
.access = PL1_RW,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.pmsav5_data_ap),
.resetvalue = 0, },
{ .name = "INSN_EXT_AP", .cp = 15, .crn = 5, .crm = 0, .opc1 = 0, .opc2 = 3,
.access = PL1_RW,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.pmsav5_insn_ap),
.resetvalue = 0, },
{ .name = "DCACHE_CFG", .cp = 15, .crn = 2, .crm = 0, .opc1 = 0, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL1_RW,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.c2_data), .resetvalue = 0, },
{ .name = "ICACHE_CFG", .cp = 15, .crn = 2, .crm = 0, .opc1 = 0, .opc2 = 1,
.access = PL1_RW,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.c2_insn), .resetvalue = 0, },
/* Protection region base and size registers */
{ .name = "946_PRBS0", .cp = 15, .crn = 6, .crm = 0, .opc1 = 0,
.opc2 = CP_ANY, .access = PL1_RW, .resetvalue = 0,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.c6_region[0]) },
{ .name = "946_PRBS1", .cp = 15, .crn = 6, .crm = 1, .opc1 = 0,
.opc2 = CP_ANY, .access = PL1_RW, .resetvalue = 0,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.c6_region[1]) },
{ .name = "946_PRBS2", .cp = 15, .crn = 6, .crm = 2, .opc1 = 0,
.opc2 = CP_ANY, .access = PL1_RW, .resetvalue = 0,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.c6_region[2]) },
{ .name = "946_PRBS3", .cp = 15, .crn = 6, .crm = 3, .opc1 = 0,
.opc2 = CP_ANY, .access = PL1_RW, .resetvalue = 0,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.c6_region[3]) },
{ .name = "946_PRBS4", .cp = 15, .crn = 6, .crm = 4, .opc1 = 0,
.opc2 = CP_ANY, .access = PL1_RW, .resetvalue = 0,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.c6_region[4]) },
{ .name = "946_PRBS5", .cp = 15, .crn = 6, .crm = 5, .opc1 = 0,
.opc2 = CP_ANY, .access = PL1_RW, .resetvalue = 0,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.c6_region[5]) },
{ .name = "946_PRBS6", .cp = 15, .crn = 6, .crm = 6, .opc1 = 0,
.opc2 = CP_ANY, .access = PL1_RW, .resetvalue = 0,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.c6_region[6]) },
{ .name = "946_PRBS7", .cp = 15, .crn = 6, .crm = 7, .opc1 = 0,
.opc2 = CP_ANY, .access = PL1_RW, .resetvalue = 0,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.c6_region[7]) },
};
static void vmsa_ttbcr_raw_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
TCR *tcr = raw_ptr(env, ri);
int maskshift = extract32(value, 0, 3);
if (!arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_V8)) {
if (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_LPAE) && (value & TTBCR_EAE)) {
/* Pre ARMv8 bits [21:19], [15:14] and [6:3] are UNK/SBZP when
* using Long-desciptor translation table format */
value &= ~((7 << 19) | (3 << 14) | (0xf << 3));
} else if (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_EL3)) {
/* In an implementation that includes the Security Extensions
* TTBCR has additional fields PD0 [4] and PD1 [5] for
* Short-descriptor translation table format.
*/
value &= TTBCR_PD1 | TTBCR_PD0 | TTBCR_N;
} else {
value &= TTBCR_N;
}
}
/* Update the masks corresponding to the TCR bank being written
* Note that we always calculate mask and base_mask, but
* they are only used for short-descriptor tables (ie if EAE is 0);
* for long-descriptor tables the TCR fields are used differently
* and the mask and base_mask values are meaningless.
*/
tcr->raw_tcr = value;
tcr->mask = ~(((uint32_t)0xffffffffu) >> maskshift);
tcr->base_mask = ~((uint32_t)0x3fffu >> maskshift);
}
static void vmsa_ttbcr_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
ARMCPU *cpu = env_archcpu(env);
TCR *tcr = raw_ptr(env, ri);
if (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_LPAE)) {
/* With LPAE the TTBCR could result in a change of ASID
* via the TTBCR.A1 bit, so do a TLB flush.
*/
tlb_flush(CPU(cpu));
}
/* Preserve the high half of TCR_EL1, set via TTBCR2. */
value = deposit64(tcr->raw_tcr, 0, 32, value);
vmsa_ttbcr_raw_write(env, ri, value);
}
static void vmsa_ttbcr_reset(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri)
{
TCR *tcr = raw_ptr(env, ri);
/* Reset both the TCR as well as the masks corresponding to the bank of
* the TCR being reset.
*/
tcr->raw_tcr = 0;
tcr->mask = 0;
tcr->base_mask = 0xffffc000u;
}
static void vmsa_tcr_el12_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
ARMCPU *cpu = env_archcpu(env);
TCR *tcr = raw_ptr(env, ri);
/* For AArch64 the A1 bit could result in a change of ASID, so TLB flush. */
tlb_flush(CPU(cpu));
tcr->raw_tcr = value;
}
static void vmsa_ttbr_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
/* If the ASID changes (with a 64-bit write), we must flush the TLB. */
if (cpreg_field_is_64bit(ri) &&
extract64(raw_read(env, ri) ^ value, 48, 16) != 0) {
ARMCPU *cpu = env_archcpu(env);
tlb_flush(CPU(cpu));
}
raw_write(env, ri, value);
}
static void vmsa_tcr_ttbr_el2_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
/*
* If we are running with E2&0 regime, then an ASID is active.
* Flush if that might be changing. Note we're not checking
* TCR_EL2.A1 to know if this is really the TTBRx_EL2 that
* holds the active ASID, only checking the field that might.
*/
if (extract64(raw_read(env, ri) ^ value, 48, 16) &&
(arm_hcr_el2_eff(env) & HCR_E2H)) {
uint16_t mask = ARMMMUIdxBit_E20_2 |
ARMMMUIdxBit_E20_2_PAN |
ARMMMUIdxBit_E20_0;
if (arm_is_secure_below_el3(env)) {
mask >>= ARM_MMU_IDX_A_NS;
}
tlb_flush_by_mmuidx(env_cpu(env), mask);
}
raw_write(env, ri, value);
}
static void vttbr_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
ARMCPU *cpu = env_archcpu(env);
CPUState *cs = CPU(cpu);
/*
* A change in VMID to the stage2 page table (Stage2) invalidates
* the combined stage 1&2 tlbs (EL10_1 and EL10_0).
*/
if (raw_read(env, ri) != value) {
uint16_t mask = ARMMMUIdxBit_E10_1 |
ARMMMUIdxBit_E10_1_PAN |
ARMMMUIdxBit_E10_0;
if (arm_is_secure_below_el3(env)) {
mask >>= ARM_MMU_IDX_A_NS;
}
tlb_flush_by_mmuidx(cs, mask);
raw_write(env, ri, value);
}
}
static const ARMCPRegInfo vmsa_pmsa_cp_reginfo[] = {
{ .name = "DFSR", .cp = 15, .crn = 5, .crm = 0, .opc1 = 0, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL1_RW, .accessfn = access_tvm_trvm, .type = ARM_CP_ALIAS,
.bank_fieldoffsets = { offsetoflow32(CPUARMState, cp15.dfsr_s),
offsetoflow32(CPUARMState, cp15.dfsr_ns) }, },
{ .name = "IFSR", .cp = 15, .crn = 5, .crm = 0, .opc1 = 0, .opc2 = 1,
.access = PL1_RW, .accessfn = access_tvm_trvm, .resetvalue = 0,
.bank_fieldoffsets = { offsetoflow32(CPUARMState, cp15.ifsr_s),
offsetoflow32(CPUARMState, cp15.ifsr_ns) } },
{ .name = "DFAR", .cp = 15, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 6, .crm = 0, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL1_RW, .accessfn = access_tvm_trvm, .resetvalue = 0,
.bank_fieldoffsets = { offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.dfar_s),
offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.dfar_ns) } },
{ .name = "FAR_EL1", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .crn = 6, .crm = 0, .opc1 = 0, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL1_RW, .accessfn = access_tvm_trvm,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.far_el[1]),
.resetvalue = 0, },
};
static const ARMCPRegInfo vmsa_cp_reginfo[] = {
{ .name = "ESR_EL1", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .crn = 5, .crm = 2, .opc1 = 0, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL1_RW, .accessfn = access_tvm_trvm,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.esr_el[1]), .resetvalue = 0, },
{ .name = "TTBR0_EL1", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_BOTH,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 2, .crm = 0, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL1_RW, .accessfn = access_tvm_trvm,
.writefn = vmsa_ttbr_write, .resetvalue = 0,
.bank_fieldoffsets = { offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.ttbr0_s),
offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.ttbr0_ns) } },
{ .name = "TTBR1_EL1", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_BOTH,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 2, .crm = 0, .opc2 = 1,
.access = PL1_RW, .accessfn = access_tvm_trvm,
.writefn = vmsa_ttbr_write, .resetvalue = 0,
.bank_fieldoffsets = { offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.ttbr1_s),
offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.ttbr1_ns) } },
{ .name = "TCR_EL1", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .crn = 2, .crm = 0, .opc1 = 0, .opc2 = 2,
.access = PL1_RW, .accessfn = access_tvm_trvm,
.writefn = vmsa_tcr_el12_write,
.resetfn = vmsa_ttbcr_reset, .raw_writefn = raw_write,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.tcr_el[1]) },
{ .name = "TTBCR", .cp = 15, .crn = 2, .crm = 0, .opc1 = 0, .opc2 = 2,
.access = PL1_RW, .accessfn = access_tvm_trvm,
.type = ARM_CP_ALIAS, .writefn = vmsa_ttbcr_write,
.raw_writefn = vmsa_ttbcr_raw_write,
/* No offsetoflow32 -- pass the entire TCR to writefn/raw_writefn. */
.bank_fieldoffsets = { offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.tcr_el[3]),
offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.tcr_el[1])} },
};
/* Note that unlike TTBCR, writing to TTBCR2 does not require flushing
* qemu tlbs nor adjusting cached masks.
*/
static const ARMCPRegInfo ttbcr2_reginfo = {
.name = "TTBCR2", .cp = 15, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 2, .crm = 0, .opc2 = 3,
.access = PL1_RW, .accessfn = access_tvm_trvm,
.type = ARM_CP_ALIAS,
.bank_fieldoffsets = {
offsetofhigh32(CPUARMState, cp15.tcr_el[3].raw_tcr),
offsetofhigh32(CPUARMState, cp15.tcr_el[1].raw_tcr),
},
};
static void omap_ticonfig_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
env->cp15.c15_ticonfig = value & 0xe7;
/* The OS_TYPE bit in this register changes the reported CPUID! */
env->cp15.c0_cpuid = (value & (1 << 5)) ?
ARM_CPUID_TI915T : ARM_CPUID_TI925T;
}
static void omap_threadid_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
env->cp15.c15_threadid = value & 0xffff;
}
static void omap_wfi_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
/* Wait-for-interrupt (deprecated) */
cpu_interrupt(env_cpu(env), CPU_INTERRUPT_HALT);
}
static void omap_cachemaint_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
/* On OMAP there are registers indicating the max/min index of dcache lines
* containing a dirty line; cache flush operations have to reset these.
*/
env->cp15.c15_i_max = 0x000;
env->cp15.c15_i_min = 0xff0;
}
static const ARMCPRegInfo omap_cp_reginfo[] = {
{ .name = "DFSR", .cp = 15, .crn = 5, .crm = CP_ANY,
.opc1 = CP_ANY, .opc2 = CP_ANY, .access = PL1_RW, .type = ARM_CP_OVERRIDE,
.fieldoffset = offsetoflow32(CPUARMState, cp15.esr_el[1]),
.resetvalue = 0, },
{ .name = "", .cp = 15, .crn = 15, .crm = 0, .opc1 = 0, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL1_RW, .type = ARM_CP_NOP },
{ .name = "TICONFIG", .cp = 15, .crn = 15, .crm = 1, .opc1 = 0, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL1_RW,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.c15_ticonfig), .resetvalue = 0,
.writefn = omap_ticonfig_write },
{ .name = "IMAX", .cp = 15, .crn = 15, .crm = 2, .opc1 = 0, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL1_RW,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.c15_i_max), .resetvalue = 0, },
{ .name = "IMIN", .cp = 15, .crn = 15, .crm = 3, .opc1 = 0, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL1_RW, .resetvalue = 0xff0,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.c15_i_min) },
{ .name = "THREADID", .cp = 15, .crn = 15, .crm = 4, .opc1 = 0, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL1_RW,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.c15_threadid), .resetvalue = 0,
.writefn = omap_threadid_write },
{ .name = "TI925T_STATUS", .cp = 15, .crn = 15,
.crm = 8, .opc1 = 0, .opc2 = 0, .access = PL1_RW,
target-arm: Split NO_MIGRATE into ALIAS and NO_RAW We currently mark ARM coprocessor/system register definitions with the flag ARM_CP_NO_MIGRATE for two different reasons: 1) register is an alias on to state that's also visible via some other register, and that other register is the one responsible for migrating the state 2) register is not actually state at all (for instance the TLB or cache maintenance operation "registers") and it makes no sense to attempt to migrate it or otherwise access the raw state This works fine for identifying which registers should be ignored when performing migration, but we also use the same functions for synchronizing system register state between QEMU and the kernel when using KVM. In this case we don't want to try to sync state into registers in category 2, but we do want to sync into registers in category 1, because the kernel might have picked a different one of the aliases as its choice for which one to expose for migration. (In particular, on 32 bit hosts the kernel will expose the state in the AArch32 version of the register, but TCG's convention is to mark the AArch64 version as the version to migrate, even if the CPU being emulated happens to be 32 bit, so almost all system registers will hit this issue now that we've added AArch64 system emulation.) Fix this by splitting the NO_MIGRATE flag in two (ALIAS and NO_RAW) corresponding to the two different reasons we might not want to migrate a register. When setting up the TCG list of registers to migrate we honour both flags; when populating the list from KVM, only ignore registers which are NO_RAW. Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Greg Bellows <greg.bellows@linaro.org> Message-id: 1422282372-13735-2-git-send-email-peter.maydell@linaro.org [PMM: changed ARM_CP_NO_MIGRATE to ARM_CP_ALIAS on new SP_EL1 and SP_EL2 reginfo stanzas since there was a (semantic) merge conflict with the patchset that added those]
2015-02-05 14:37:22 +01:00
.type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW,
.readfn = arm_cp_read_zero, .writefn = omap_wfi_write, },
/* TODO: Peripheral port remap register:
* On OMAP2 mcr p15, 0, rn, c15, c2, 4 sets up the interrupt controller
* base address at $rn & ~0xfff and map size of 0x200 << ($rn & 0xfff),
* when MMU is off.
*/
{ .name = "OMAP_CACHEMAINT", .cp = 15, .crn = 7, .crm = CP_ANY,
.opc1 = 0, .opc2 = CP_ANY, .access = PL1_W,
target-arm: Split NO_MIGRATE into ALIAS and NO_RAW We currently mark ARM coprocessor/system register definitions with the flag ARM_CP_NO_MIGRATE for two different reasons: 1) register is an alias on to state that's also visible via some other register, and that other register is the one responsible for migrating the state 2) register is not actually state at all (for instance the TLB or cache maintenance operation "registers") and it makes no sense to attempt to migrate it or otherwise access the raw state This works fine for identifying which registers should be ignored when performing migration, but we also use the same functions for synchronizing system register state between QEMU and the kernel when using KVM. In this case we don't want to try to sync state into registers in category 2, but we do want to sync into registers in category 1, because the kernel might have picked a different one of the aliases as its choice for which one to expose for migration. (In particular, on 32 bit hosts the kernel will expose the state in the AArch32 version of the register, but TCG's convention is to mark the AArch64 version as the version to migrate, even if the CPU being emulated happens to be 32 bit, so almost all system registers will hit this issue now that we've added AArch64 system emulation.) Fix this by splitting the NO_MIGRATE flag in two (ALIAS and NO_RAW) corresponding to the two different reasons we might not want to migrate a register. When setting up the TCG list of registers to migrate we honour both flags; when populating the list from KVM, only ignore registers which are NO_RAW. Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Greg Bellows <greg.bellows@linaro.org> Message-id: 1422282372-13735-2-git-send-email-peter.maydell@linaro.org [PMM: changed ARM_CP_NO_MIGRATE to ARM_CP_ALIAS on new SP_EL1 and SP_EL2 reginfo stanzas since there was a (semantic) merge conflict with the patchset that added those]
2015-02-05 14:37:22 +01:00
.type = ARM_CP_OVERRIDE | ARM_CP_NO_RAW,
.writefn = omap_cachemaint_write },
{ .name = "C9", .cp = 15, .crn = 9,
.crm = CP_ANY, .opc1 = CP_ANY, .opc2 = CP_ANY, .access = PL1_RW,
.type = ARM_CP_CONST | ARM_CP_OVERRIDE, .resetvalue = 0 },
};
static void xscale_cpar_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
env->cp15.c15_cpar = value & 0x3fff;
}
static const ARMCPRegInfo xscale_cp_reginfo[] = {
{ .name = "XSCALE_CPAR",
.cp = 15, .crn = 15, .crm = 1, .opc1 = 0, .opc2 = 0, .access = PL1_RW,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.c15_cpar), .resetvalue = 0,
.writefn = xscale_cpar_write, },
{ .name = "XSCALE_AUXCR",
.cp = 15, .crn = 1, .crm = 0, .opc1 = 0, .opc2 = 1, .access = PL1_RW,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.c1_xscaleauxcr),
.resetvalue = 0, },
/* XScale specific cache-lockdown: since we have no cache we NOP these
* and hope the guest does not really rely on cache behaviour.
*/
{ .name = "XSCALE_LOCK_ICACHE_LINE",
.cp = 15, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 9, .crm = 1, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL1_W, .type = ARM_CP_NOP },
{ .name = "XSCALE_UNLOCK_ICACHE",
.cp = 15, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 9, .crm = 1, .opc2 = 1,
.access = PL1_W, .type = ARM_CP_NOP },
{ .name = "XSCALE_DCACHE_LOCK",
.cp = 15, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 9, .crm = 2, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL1_RW, .type = ARM_CP_NOP },
{ .name = "XSCALE_UNLOCK_DCACHE",
.cp = 15, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 9, .crm = 2, .opc2 = 1,
.access = PL1_W, .type = ARM_CP_NOP },
};
static const ARMCPRegInfo dummy_c15_cp_reginfo[] = {
/* RAZ/WI the whole crn=15 space, when we don't have a more specific
* implementation of this implementation-defined space.
* Ideally this should eventually disappear in favour of actually
* implementing the correct behaviour for all cores.
*/
{ .name = "C15_IMPDEF", .cp = 15, .crn = 15,
.crm = CP_ANY, .opc1 = CP_ANY, .opc2 = CP_ANY,
.access = PL1_RW,
target-arm: Split NO_MIGRATE into ALIAS and NO_RAW We currently mark ARM coprocessor/system register definitions with the flag ARM_CP_NO_MIGRATE for two different reasons: 1) register is an alias on to state that's also visible via some other register, and that other register is the one responsible for migrating the state 2) register is not actually state at all (for instance the TLB or cache maintenance operation "registers") and it makes no sense to attempt to migrate it or otherwise access the raw state This works fine for identifying which registers should be ignored when performing migration, but we also use the same functions for synchronizing system register state between QEMU and the kernel when using KVM. In this case we don't want to try to sync state into registers in category 2, but we do want to sync into registers in category 1, because the kernel might have picked a different one of the aliases as its choice for which one to expose for migration. (In particular, on 32 bit hosts the kernel will expose the state in the AArch32 version of the register, but TCG's convention is to mark the AArch64 version as the version to migrate, even if the CPU being emulated happens to be 32 bit, so almost all system registers will hit this issue now that we've added AArch64 system emulation.) Fix this by splitting the NO_MIGRATE flag in two (ALIAS and NO_RAW) corresponding to the two different reasons we might not want to migrate a register. When setting up the TCG list of registers to migrate we honour both flags; when populating the list from KVM, only ignore registers which are NO_RAW. Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Greg Bellows <greg.bellows@linaro.org> Message-id: 1422282372-13735-2-git-send-email-peter.maydell@linaro.org [PMM: changed ARM_CP_NO_MIGRATE to ARM_CP_ALIAS on new SP_EL1 and SP_EL2 reginfo stanzas since there was a (semantic) merge conflict with the patchset that added those]
2015-02-05 14:37:22 +01:00
.type = ARM_CP_CONST | ARM_CP_NO_RAW | ARM_CP_OVERRIDE,
.resetvalue = 0 },
};
static const ARMCPRegInfo cache_dirty_status_cp_reginfo[] = {
/* Cache status: RAZ because we have no cache so it's always clean */
{ .name = "CDSR", .cp = 15, .crn = 7, .crm = 10, .opc1 = 0, .opc2 = 6,
target-arm: Split NO_MIGRATE into ALIAS and NO_RAW We currently mark ARM coprocessor/system register definitions with the flag ARM_CP_NO_MIGRATE for two different reasons: 1) register is an alias on to state that's also visible via some other register, and that other register is the one responsible for migrating the state 2) register is not actually state at all (for instance the TLB or cache maintenance operation "registers") and it makes no sense to attempt to migrate it or otherwise access the raw state This works fine for identifying which registers should be ignored when performing migration, but we also use the same functions for synchronizing system register state between QEMU and the kernel when using KVM. In this case we don't want to try to sync state into registers in category 2, but we do want to sync into registers in category 1, because the kernel might have picked a different one of the aliases as its choice for which one to expose for migration. (In particular, on 32 bit hosts the kernel will expose the state in the AArch32 version of the register, but TCG's convention is to mark the AArch64 version as the version to migrate, even if the CPU being emulated happens to be 32 bit, so almost all system registers will hit this issue now that we've added AArch64 system emulation.) Fix this by splitting the NO_MIGRATE flag in two (ALIAS and NO_RAW) corresponding to the two different reasons we might not want to migrate a register. When setting up the TCG list of registers to migrate we honour both flags; when populating the list from KVM, only ignore registers which are NO_RAW. Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Greg Bellows <greg.bellows@linaro.org> Message-id: 1422282372-13735-2-git-send-email-peter.maydell@linaro.org [PMM: changed ARM_CP_NO_MIGRATE to ARM_CP_ALIAS on new SP_EL1 and SP_EL2 reginfo stanzas since there was a (semantic) merge conflict with the patchset that added those]
2015-02-05 14:37:22 +01:00
.access = PL1_R, .type = ARM_CP_CONST | ARM_CP_NO_RAW,
.resetvalue = 0 },
};
static const ARMCPRegInfo cache_block_ops_cp_reginfo[] = {
/* We never have a a block transfer operation in progress */
{ .name = "BXSR", .cp = 15, .crn = 7, .crm = 12, .opc1 = 0, .opc2 = 4,
target-arm: Split NO_MIGRATE into ALIAS and NO_RAW We currently mark ARM coprocessor/system register definitions with the flag ARM_CP_NO_MIGRATE for two different reasons: 1) register is an alias on to state that's also visible via some other register, and that other register is the one responsible for migrating the state 2) register is not actually state at all (for instance the TLB or cache maintenance operation "registers") and it makes no sense to attempt to migrate it or otherwise access the raw state This works fine for identifying which registers should be ignored when performing migration, but we also use the same functions for synchronizing system register state between QEMU and the kernel when using KVM. In this case we don't want to try to sync state into registers in category 2, but we do want to sync into registers in category 1, because the kernel might have picked a different one of the aliases as its choice for which one to expose for migration. (In particular, on 32 bit hosts the kernel will expose the state in the AArch32 version of the register, but TCG's convention is to mark the AArch64 version as the version to migrate, even if the CPU being emulated happens to be 32 bit, so almost all system registers will hit this issue now that we've added AArch64 system emulation.) Fix this by splitting the NO_MIGRATE flag in two (ALIAS and NO_RAW) corresponding to the two different reasons we might not want to migrate a register. When setting up the TCG list of registers to migrate we honour both flags; when populating the list from KVM, only ignore registers which are NO_RAW. Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Greg Bellows <greg.bellows@linaro.org> Message-id: 1422282372-13735-2-git-send-email-peter.maydell@linaro.org [PMM: changed ARM_CP_NO_MIGRATE to ARM_CP_ALIAS on new SP_EL1 and SP_EL2 reginfo stanzas since there was a (semantic) merge conflict with the patchset that added those]
2015-02-05 14:37:22 +01:00
.access = PL0_R, .type = ARM_CP_CONST | ARM_CP_NO_RAW,
.resetvalue = 0 },
/* The cache ops themselves: these all NOP for QEMU */
{ .name = "IICR", .cp = 15, .crm = 5, .opc1 = 0,
.access = PL1_W, .type = ARM_CP_NOP|ARM_CP_64BIT },
{ .name = "IDCR", .cp = 15, .crm = 6, .opc1 = 0,
.access = PL1_W, .type = ARM_CP_NOP|ARM_CP_64BIT },
{ .name = "CDCR", .cp = 15, .crm = 12, .opc1 = 0,
.access = PL0_W, .type = ARM_CP_NOP|ARM_CP_64BIT },
{ .name = "PIR", .cp = 15, .crm = 12, .opc1 = 1,
.access = PL0_W, .type = ARM_CP_NOP|ARM_CP_64BIT },
{ .name = "PDR", .cp = 15, .crm = 12, .opc1 = 2,
.access = PL0_W, .type = ARM_CP_NOP|ARM_CP_64BIT },
{ .name = "CIDCR", .cp = 15, .crm = 14, .opc1 = 0,
.access = PL1_W, .type = ARM_CP_NOP|ARM_CP_64BIT },
};
static const ARMCPRegInfo cache_test_clean_cp_reginfo[] = {
/* The cache test-and-clean instructions always return (1 << 30)
* to indicate that there are no dirty cache lines.
*/
{ .name = "TC_DCACHE", .cp = 15, .crn = 7, .crm = 10, .opc1 = 0, .opc2 = 3,
target-arm: Split NO_MIGRATE into ALIAS and NO_RAW We currently mark ARM coprocessor/system register definitions with the flag ARM_CP_NO_MIGRATE for two different reasons: 1) register is an alias on to state that's also visible via some other register, and that other register is the one responsible for migrating the state 2) register is not actually state at all (for instance the TLB or cache maintenance operation "registers") and it makes no sense to attempt to migrate it or otherwise access the raw state This works fine for identifying which registers should be ignored when performing migration, but we also use the same functions for synchronizing system register state between QEMU and the kernel when using KVM. In this case we don't want to try to sync state into registers in category 2, but we do want to sync into registers in category 1, because the kernel might have picked a different one of the aliases as its choice for which one to expose for migration. (In particular, on 32 bit hosts the kernel will expose the state in the AArch32 version of the register, but TCG's convention is to mark the AArch64 version as the version to migrate, even if the CPU being emulated happens to be 32 bit, so almost all system registers will hit this issue now that we've added AArch64 system emulation.) Fix this by splitting the NO_MIGRATE flag in two (ALIAS and NO_RAW) corresponding to the two different reasons we might not want to migrate a register. When setting up the TCG list of registers to migrate we honour both flags; when populating the list from KVM, only ignore registers which are NO_RAW. Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Greg Bellows <greg.bellows@linaro.org> Message-id: 1422282372-13735-2-git-send-email-peter.maydell@linaro.org [PMM: changed ARM_CP_NO_MIGRATE to ARM_CP_ALIAS on new SP_EL1 and SP_EL2 reginfo stanzas since there was a (semantic) merge conflict with the patchset that added those]
2015-02-05 14:37:22 +01:00
.access = PL0_R, .type = ARM_CP_CONST | ARM_CP_NO_RAW,
.resetvalue = (1 << 30) },
{ .name = "TCI_DCACHE", .cp = 15, .crn = 7, .crm = 14, .opc1 = 0, .opc2 = 3,
target-arm: Split NO_MIGRATE into ALIAS and NO_RAW We currently mark ARM coprocessor/system register definitions with the flag ARM_CP_NO_MIGRATE for two different reasons: 1) register is an alias on to state that's also visible via some other register, and that other register is the one responsible for migrating the state 2) register is not actually state at all (for instance the TLB or cache maintenance operation "registers") and it makes no sense to attempt to migrate it or otherwise access the raw state This works fine for identifying which registers should be ignored when performing migration, but we also use the same functions for synchronizing system register state between QEMU and the kernel when using KVM. In this case we don't want to try to sync state into registers in category 2, but we do want to sync into registers in category 1, because the kernel might have picked a different one of the aliases as its choice for which one to expose for migration. (In particular, on 32 bit hosts the kernel will expose the state in the AArch32 version of the register, but TCG's convention is to mark the AArch64 version as the version to migrate, even if the CPU being emulated happens to be 32 bit, so almost all system registers will hit this issue now that we've added AArch64 system emulation.) Fix this by splitting the NO_MIGRATE flag in two (ALIAS and NO_RAW) corresponding to the two different reasons we might not want to migrate a register. When setting up the TCG list of registers to migrate we honour both flags; when populating the list from KVM, only ignore registers which are NO_RAW. Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Greg Bellows <greg.bellows@linaro.org> Message-id: 1422282372-13735-2-git-send-email-peter.maydell@linaro.org [PMM: changed ARM_CP_NO_MIGRATE to ARM_CP_ALIAS on new SP_EL1 and SP_EL2 reginfo stanzas since there was a (semantic) merge conflict with the patchset that added those]
2015-02-05 14:37:22 +01:00
.access = PL0_R, .type = ARM_CP_CONST | ARM_CP_NO_RAW,
.resetvalue = (1 << 30) },
};
static const ARMCPRegInfo strongarm_cp_reginfo[] = {
/* Ignore ReadBuffer accesses */
{ .name = "C9_READBUFFER", .cp = 15, .crn = 9,
.crm = CP_ANY, .opc1 = CP_ANY, .opc2 = CP_ANY,
.access = PL1_RW, .resetvalue = 0,
target-arm: Split NO_MIGRATE into ALIAS and NO_RAW We currently mark ARM coprocessor/system register definitions with the flag ARM_CP_NO_MIGRATE for two different reasons: 1) register is an alias on to state that's also visible via some other register, and that other register is the one responsible for migrating the state 2) register is not actually state at all (for instance the TLB or cache maintenance operation "registers") and it makes no sense to attempt to migrate it or otherwise access the raw state This works fine for identifying which registers should be ignored when performing migration, but we also use the same functions for synchronizing system register state between QEMU and the kernel when using KVM. In this case we don't want to try to sync state into registers in category 2, but we do want to sync into registers in category 1, because the kernel might have picked a different one of the aliases as its choice for which one to expose for migration. (In particular, on 32 bit hosts the kernel will expose the state in the AArch32 version of the register, but TCG's convention is to mark the AArch64 version as the version to migrate, even if the CPU being emulated happens to be 32 bit, so almost all system registers will hit this issue now that we've added AArch64 system emulation.) Fix this by splitting the NO_MIGRATE flag in two (ALIAS and NO_RAW) corresponding to the two different reasons we might not want to migrate a register. When setting up the TCG list of registers to migrate we honour both flags; when populating the list from KVM, only ignore registers which are NO_RAW. Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Greg Bellows <greg.bellows@linaro.org> Message-id: 1422282372-13735-2-git-send-email-peter.maydell@linaro.org [PMM: changed ARM_CP_NO_MIGRATE to ARM_CP_ALIAS on new SP_EL1 and SP_EL2 reginfo stanzas since there was a (semantic) merge conflict with the patchset that added those]
2015-02-05 14:37:22 +01:00
.type = ARM_CP_CONST | ARM_CP_OVERRIDE | ARM_CP_NO_RAW },
};
static uint64_t midr_read(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri)
{
unsigned int cur_el = arm_current_el(env);
if (arm_is_el2_enabled(env) && cur_el == 1) {
return env->cp15.vpidr_el2;
}
return raw_read(env, ri);
}
static uint64_t mpidr_read_val(CPUARMState *env)
{
ARMCPU *cpu = env_archcpu(env);
uint64_t mpidr = cpu->mp_affinity;
if (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_V7MP)) {
mpidr |= (1U << 31);
/* Cores which are uniprocessor (non-coherent)
* but still implement the MP extensions set
* bit 30. (For instance, Cortex-R5).
*/
if (cpu->mp_is_up) {
mpidr |= (1u << 30);
}
}
return mpidr;
}
static uint64_t mpidr_read(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri)
{
unsigned int cur_el = arm_current_el(env);
if (arm_is_el2_enabled(env) && cur_el == 1) {
return env->cp15.vmpidr_el2;
}
return mpidr_read_val(env);
}
static const ARMCPRegInfo lpae_cp_reginfo[] = {
/* NOP AMAIR0/1 */
{ .name = "AMAIR0", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_BOTH,
.opc0 = 3, .crn = 10, .crm = 3, .opc1 = 0, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL1_RW, .accessfn = access_tvm_trvm,
.type = ARM_CP_CONST, .resetvalue = 0 },
/* AMAIR1 is mapped to AMAIR_EL1[63:32] */
{ .name = "AMAIR1", .cp = 15, .crn = 10, .crm = 3, .opc1 = 0, .opc2 = 1,
.access = PL1_RW, .accessfn = access_tvm_trvm,
.type = ARM_CP_CONST, .resetvalue = 0 },
{ .name = "PAR", .cp = 15, .crm = 7, .opc1 = 0,
.access = PL1_RW, .type = ARM_CP_64BIT, .resetvalue = 0,
.bank_fieldoffsets = { offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.par_s),
offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.par_ns)} },
{ .name = "TTBR0", .cp = 15, .crm = 2, .opc1 = 0,
.access = PL1_RW, .accessfn = access_tvm_trvm,
.type = ARM_CP_64BIT | ARM_CP_ALIAS,
.bank_fieldoffsets = { offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.ttbr0_s),
offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.ttbr0_ns) },
.writefn = vmsa_ttbr_write, },
{ .name = "TTBR1", .cp = 15, .crm = 2, .opc1 = 1,
.access = PL1_RW, .accessfn = access_tvm_trvm,
.type = ARM_CP_64BIT | ARM_CP_ALIAS,
.bank_fieldoffsets = { offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.ttbr1_s),
offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.ttbr1_ns) },
.writefn = vmsa_ttbr_write, },
};
static uint64_t aa64_fpcr_read(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri)
{
return vfp_get_fpcr(env);
}
static void aa64_fpcr_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
vfp_set_fpcr(env, value);
}
static uint64_t aa64_fpsr_read(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri)
{
return vfp_get_fpsr(env);
}
static void aa64_fpsr_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
vfp_set_fpsr(env, value);
}
static CPAccessResult aa64_daif_access(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
bool isread)
{
if (arm_current_el(env) == 0 && !(arm_sctlr(env, 0) & SCTLR_UMA)) {
return CP_ACCESS_TRAP;
}
return CP_ACCESS_OK;
}
static void aa64_daif_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
env->daif = value & PSTATE_DAIF;
}
static uint64_t aa64_pan_read(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri)
{
return env->pstate & PSTATE_PAN;
}
static void aa64_pan_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
env->pstate = (env->pstate & ~PSTATE_PAN) | (value & PSTATE_PAN);
}
static const ARMCPRegInfo pan_reginfo = {
.name = "PAN", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 4, .crm = 2, .opc2 = 3,
.type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW, .access = PL1_RW,
.readfn = aa64_pan_read, .writefn = aa64_pan_write
};
static uint64_t aa64_uao_read(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri)
{
return env->pstate & PSTATE_UAO;
}
static void aa64_uao_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
env->pstate = (env->pstate & ~PSTATE_UAO) | (value & PSTATE_UAO);
}
static const ARMCPRegInfo uao_reginfo = {
.name = "UAO", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 4, .crm = 2, .opc2 = 4,
.type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW, .access = PL1_RW,
.readfn = aa64_uao_read, .writefn = aa64_uao_write
};
static uint64_t aa64_dit_read(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri)
{
return env->pstate & PSTATE_DIT;
}
static void aa64_dit_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
env->pstate = (env->pstate & ~PSTATE_DIT) | (value & PSTATE_DIT);
}
static const ARMCPRegInfo dit_reginfo = {
.name = "DIT", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 3, .crn = 4, .crm = 2, .opc2 = 5,
.type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW, .access = PL0_RW,
.readfn = aa64_dit_read, .writefn = aa64_dit_write
};
static uint64_t aa64_ssbs_read(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri)
{
return env->pstate & PSTATE_SSBS;
}
static void aa64_ssbs_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
env->pstate = (env->pstate & ~PSTATE_SSBS) | (value & PSTATE_SSBS);
}
static const ARMCPRegInfo ssbs_reginfo = {
.name = "SSBS", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 3, .crn = 4, .crm = 2, .opc2 = 6,
.type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW, .access = PL0_RW,
.readfn = aa64_ssbs_read, .writefn = aa64_ssbs_write
};
static CPAccessResult aa64_cacheop_poc_access(CPUARMState *env,
const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
bool isread)
{
/* Cache invalidate/clean to Point of Coherency or Persistence... */
switch (arm_current_el(env)) {
case 0:
/* ... EL0 must UNDEF unless SCTLR_EL1.UCI is set. */
if (!(arm_sctlr(env, 0) & SCTLR_UCI)) {
return CP_ACCESS_TRAP;
}
/* fall through */
case 1:
/* ... EL1 must trap to EL2 if HCR_EL2.TPCP is set. */
if (arm_hcr_el2_eff(env) & HCR_TPCP) {
return CP_ACCESS_TRAP_EL2;
}
break;
}
return CP_ACCESS_OK;
}
static CPAccessResult aa64_cacheop_pou_access(CPUARMState *env,
const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
bool isread)
{
/* Cache invalidate/clean to Point of Unification... */
switch (arm_current_el(env)) {
case 0:
/* ... EL0 must UNDEF unless SCTLR_EL1.UCI is set. */
if (!(arm_sctlr(env, 0) & SCTLR_UCI)) {
return CP_ACCESS_TRAP;
}
/* fall through */
case 1:
/* ... EL1 must trap to EL2 if HCR_EL2.TPU is set. */
if (arm_hcr_el2_eff(env) & HCR_TPU) {
return CP_ACCESS_TRAP_EL2;
}
break;
}
return CP_ACCESS_OK;
}
/* See: D4.7.2 TLB maintenance requirements and the TLB maintenance instructions
* Page D4-1736 (DDI0487A.b)
*/
static int vae1_tlbmask(CPUARMState *env)
{
uint64_t hcr = arm_hcr_el2_eff(env);
uint16_t mask;
if ((hcr & (HCR_E2H | HCR_TGE)) == (HCR_E2H | HCR_TGE)) {
mask = ARMMMUIdxBit_E20_2 |
ARMMMUIdxBit_E20_2_PAN |
ARMMMUIdxBit_E20_0;
} else {
mask = ARMMMUIdxBit_E10_1 |
ARMMMUIdxBit_E10_1_PAN |
ARMMMUIdxBit_E10_0;
}
if (arm_is_secure_below_el3(env)) {
mask >>= ARM_MMU_IDX_A_NS;
}
return mask;
}
/* Return 56 if TBI is enabled, 64 otherwise. */
static int tlbbits_for_regime(CPUARMState *env, ARMMMUIdx mmu_idx,
uint64_t addr)
{
uint64_t tcr = regime_tcr(env, mmu_idx)->raw_tcr;
int tbi = aa64_va_parameter_tbi(tcr, mmu_idx);
int select = extract64(addr, 55, 1);
return (tbi >> select) & 1 ? 56 : 64;
}
static int vae1_tlbbits(CPUARMState *env, uint64_t addr)
{
uint64_t hcr = arm_hcr_el2_eff(env);
ARMMMUIdx mmu_idx;
/* Only the regime of the mmu_idx below is significant. */
if ((hcr & (HCR_E2H | HCR_TGE)) == (HCR_E2H | HCR_TGE)) {
mmu_idx = ARMMMUIdx_E20_0;
} else {
mmu_idx = ARMMMUIdx_E10_0;
}
if (arm_is_secure_below_el3(env)) {
mmu_idx &= ~ARM_MMU_IDX_A_NS;
}
return tlbbits_for_regime(env, mmu_idx, addr);
}
static void tlbi_aa64_vmalle1is_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
CPUState *cs = env_cpu(env);
int mask = vae1_tlbmask(env);
tlb_flush_by_mmuidx_all_cpus_synced(cs, mask);
}
static void tlbi_aa64_vmalle1_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
CPUState *cs = env_cpu(env);
int mask = vae1_tlbmask(env);
if (tlb_force_broadcast(env)) {
tlb_flush_by_mmuidx_all_cpus_synced(cs, mask);
} else {
tlb_flush_by_mmuidx(cs, mask);
}
}
static int alle1_tlbmask(CPUARMState *env)
{
/*
* Note that the 'ALL' scope must invalidate both stage 1 and
* stage 2 translations, whereas most other scopes only invalidate
* stage 1 translations.
*/
if (arm_is_secure_below_el3(env)) {
return ARMMMUIdxBit_SE10_1 |
ARMMMUIdxBit_SE10_1_PAN |
ARMMMUIdxBit_SE10_0;
} else {
return ARMMMUIdxBit_E10_1 |
ARMMMUIdxBit_E10_1_PAN |
ARMMMUIdxBit_E10_0;
}
}
static int e2_tlbmask(CPUARMState *env)
{
if (arm_is_secure_below_el3(env)) {
return ARMMMUIdxBit_SE20_0 |
ARMMMUIdxBit_SE20_2 |
ARMMMUIdxBit_SE20_2_PAN |
ARMMMUIdxBit_SE2;
} else {
return ARMMMUIdxBit_E20_0 |
ARMMMUIdxBit_E20_2 |
ARMMMUIdxBit_E20_2_PAN |
ARMMMUIdxBit_E2;
}
}
static void tlbi_aa64_alle1_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
CPUState *cs = env_cpu(env);
int mask = alle1_tlbmask(env);
tlb_flush_by_mmuidx(cs, mask);
}
static void tlbi_aa64_alle2_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
CPUState *cs = env_cpu(env);
int mask = e2_tlbmask(env);
tlb_flush_by_mmuidx(cs, mask);
}
static void tlbi_aa64_alle3_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
ARMCPU *cpu = env_archcpu(env);
CPUState *cs = CPU(cpu);
tlb_flush_by_mmuidx(cs, ARMMMUIdxBit_SE3);
}
static void tlbi_aa64_alle1is_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
CPUState *cs = env_cpu(env);
int mask = alle1_tlbmask(env);
tlb_flush_by_mmuidx_all_cpus_synced(cs, mask);
}
static void tlbi_aa64_alle2is_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
CPUState *cs = env_cpu(env);
int mask = e2_tlbmask(env);
tlb_flush_by_mmuidx_all_cpus_synced(cs, mask);
}
static void tlbi_aa64_alle3is_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
CPUState *cs = env_cpu(env);
tlb_flush_by_mmuidx_all_cpus_synced(cs, ARMMMUIdxBit_SE3);
}
static void tlbi_aa64_vae2_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
/* Invalidate by VA, EL2
* Currently handles both VAE2 and VALE2, since we don't support
* flush-last-level-only.
*/
CPUState *cs = env_cpu(env);
int mask = e2_tlbmask(env);
uint64_t pageaddr = sextract64(value << 12, 0, 56);
tlb_flush_page_by_mmuidx(cs, pageaddr, mask);
}
static void tlbi_aa64_vae3_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
/* Invalidate by VA, EL3
* Currently handles both VAE3 and VALE3, since we don't support
* flush-last-level-only.
*/
ARMCPU *cpu = env_archcpu(env);
CPUState *cs = CPU(cpu);
uint64_t pageaddr = sextract64(value << 12, 0, 56);
tlb_flush_page_by_mmuidx(cs, pageaddr, ARMMMUIdxBit_SE3);
}
static void tlbi_aa64_vae1is_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
CPUState *cs = env_cpu(env);
int mask = vae1_tlbmask(env);
uint64_t pageaddr = sextract64(value << 12, 0, 56);
int bits = vae1_tlbbits(env, pageaddr);
tlb_flush_page_bits_by_mmuidx_all_cpus_synced(cs, pageaddr, mask, bits);
}
static void tlbi_aa64_vae1_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
/* Invalidate by VA, EL1&0 (AArch64 version).
* Currently handles all of VAE1, VAAE1, VAALE1 and VALE1,
* since we don't support flush-for-specific-ASID-only or
* flush-last-level-only.
*/
CPUState *cs = env_cpu(env);
int mask = vae1_tlbmask(env);
uint64_t pageaddr = sextract64(value << 12, 0, 56);
int bits = vae1_tlbbits(env, pageaddr);
if (tlb_force_broadcast(env)) {
tlb_flush_page_bits_by_mmuidx_all_cpus_synced(cs, pageaddr, mask, bits);
} else {
tlb_flush_page_bits_by_mmuidx(cs, pageaddr, mask, bits);
}
}
static void tlbi_aa64_vae2is_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
CPUState *cs = env_cpu(env);
uint64_t pageaddr = sextract64(value << 12, 0, 56);
bool secure = arm_is_secure_below_el3(env);
int mask = secure ? ARMMMUIdxBit_SE2 : ARMMMUIdxBit_E2;
int bits = tlbbits_for_regime(env, secure ? ARMMMUIdx_SE2 : ARMMMUIdx_E2,
pageaddr);
tlb_flush_page_bits_by_mmuidx_all_cpus_synced(cs, pageaddr, mask, bits);
}
static void tlbi_aa64_vae3is_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
CPUState *cs = env_cpu(env);
uint64_t pageaddr = sextract64(value << 12, 0, 56);
int bits = tlbbits_for_regime(env, ARMMMUIdx_SE3, pageaddr);
tlb_flush_page_bits_by_mmuidx_all_cpus_synced(cs, pageaddr,
ARMMMUIdxBit_SE3, bits);
}
#ifdef TARGET_AARCH64
typedef struct {
uint64_t base;
uint64_t length;
} TLBIRange;
static TLBIRange tlbi_aa64_get_range(CPUARMState *env, ARMMMUIdx mmuidx,
uint64_t value)
{
unsigned int page_size_granule, page_shift, num, scale, exponent;
/* Extract one bit to represent the va selector in use. */
uint64_t select = sextract64(value, 36, 1);
ARMVAParameters param = aa64_va_parameters(env, select, mmuidx, true);
TLBIRange ret = { };
page_size_granule = extract64(value, 46, 2);
/* The granule encoded in value must match the granule in use. */
if (page_size_granule != (param.using64k ? 3 : param.using16k ? 2 : 1)) {
qemu_log_mask(LOG_GUEST_ERROR, "Invalid tlbi page size granule %d\n",
page_size_granule);
return ret;
}
page_shift = (page_size_granule - 1) * 2 + 12;
num = extract64(value, 39, 5);
scale = extract64(value, 44, 2);
exponent = (5 * scale) + 1;
ret.length = (num + 1) << (exponent + page_shift);
if (param.select) {
ret.base = sextract64(value, 0, 37);
} else {
ret.base = extract64(value, 0, 37);
}
if (param.ds) {
/*
* With DS=1, BaseADDR is always shifted 16 so that it is able
* to address all 52 va bits. The input address is perforce
* aligned on a 64k boundary regardless of translation granule.
*/
page_shift = 16;
}
ret.base <<= page_shift;
return ret;
}
static void do_rvae_write(CPUARMState *env, uint64_t value,
int idxmap, bool synced)
{
ARMMMUIdx one_idx = ARM_MMU_IDX_A | ctz32(idxmap);
TLBIRange range;
int bits;
range = tlbi_aa64_get_range(env, one_idx, value);
bits = tlbbits_for_regime(env, one_idx, range.base);
if (synced) {
tlb_flush_range_by_mmuidx_all_cpus_synced(env_cpu(env),
range.base,
range.length,
idxmap,
bits);
} else {
tlb_flush_range_by_mmuidx(env_cpu(env), range.base,
range.length, idxmap, bits);
}
}
static void tlbi_aa64_rvae1_write(CPUARMState *env,
const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
/*
* Invalidate by VA range, EL1&0.
* Currently handles all of RVAE1, RVAAE1, RVAALE1 and RVALE1,
* since we don't support flush-for-specific-ASID-only or
* flush-last-level-only.
*/
do_rvae_write(env, value, vae1_tlbmask(env),
tlb_force_broadcast(env));
}
static void tlbi_aa64_rvae1is_write(CPUARMState *env,
const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
/*
* Invalidate by VA range, Inner/Outer Shareable EL1&0.
* Currently handles all of RVAE1IS, RVAE1OS, RVAAE1IS, RVAAE1OS,
* RVAALE1IS, RVAALE1OS, RVALE1IS and RVALE1OS, since we don't support
* flush-for-specific-ASID-only, flush-last-level-only or inner/outer
* shareable specific flushes.
*/
do_rvae_write(env, value, vae1_tlbmask(env), true);
}
static int vae2_tlbmask(CPUARMState *env)
{
return (arm_is_secure_below_el3(env)
? ARMMMUIdxBit_SE2 : ARMMMUIdxBit_E2);
}
static void tlbi_aa64_rvae2_write(CPUARMState *env,
const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
/*
* Invalidate by VA range, EL2.
* Currently handles all of RVAE2 and RVALE2,
* since we don't support flush-for-specific-ASID-only or
* flush-last-level-only.
*/
do_rvae_write(env, value, vae2_tlbmask(env),
tlb_force_broadcast(env));
}
static void tlbi_aa64_rvae2is_write(CPUARMState *env,
const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
/*
* Invalidate by VA range, Inner/Outer Shareable, EL2.
* Currently handles all of RVAE2IS, RVAE2OS, RVALE2IS and RVALE2OS,
* since we don't support flush-for-specific-ASID-only,
* flush-last-level-only or inner/outer shareable specific flushes.
*/
do_rvae_write(env, value, vae2_tlbmask(env), true);
}
static void tlbi_aa64_rvae3_write(CPUARMState *env,
const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
/*
* Invalidate by VA range, EL3.
* Currently handles all of RVAE3 and RVALE3,
* since we don't support flush-for-specific-ASID-only or
* flush-last-level-only.
*/
do_rvae_write(env, value, ARMMMUIdxBit_SE3,
tlb_force_broadcast(env));
}
static void tlbi_aa64_rvae3is_write(CPUARMState *env,
const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
/*
* Invalidate by VA range, EL3, Inner/Outer Shareable.
* Currently handles all of RVAE3IS, RVAE3OS, RVALE3IS and RVALE3OS,
* since we don't support flush-for-specific-ASID-only,
* flush-last-level-only or inner/outer specific flushes.
*/
do_rvae_write(env, value, ARMMMUIdxBit_SE3, true);
}
#endif
static CPAccessResult aa64_zva_access(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
bool isread)
{
int cur_el = arm_current_el(env);
if (cur_el < 2) {
uint64_t hcr = arm_hcr_el2_eff(env);
if (cur_el == 0) {
if ((hcr & (HCR_E2H | HCR_TGE)) == (HCR_E2H | HCR_TGE)) {
if (!(env->cp15.sctlr_el[2] & SCTLR_DZE)) {
return CP_ACCESS_TRAP_EL2;
}
} else {
if (!(env->cp15.sctlr_el[1] & SCTLR_DZE)) {
return CP_ACCESS_TRAP;
}
if (hcr & HCR_TDZ) {
return CP_ACCESS_TRAP_EL2;
}
}
} else if (hcr & HCR_TDZ) {
return CP_ACCESS_TRAP_EL2;
}
}
return CP_ACCESS_OK;
}
static uint64_t aa64_dczid_read(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri)
{
ARMCPU *cpu = env_archcpu(env);
int dzp_bit = 1 << 4;
/* DZP indicates whether DC ZVA access is allowed */
if (aa64_zva_access(env, NULL, false) == CP_ACCESS_OK) {
dzp_bit = 0;
}
return cpu->dcz_blocksize | dzp_bit;
}
static CPAccessResult sp_el0_access(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
bool isread)
{
if (!(env->pstate & PSTATE_SP)) {
/* Access to SP_EL0 is undefined if it's being used as
* the stack pointer.
*/
return CP_ACCESS_TRAP_UNCATEGORIZED;
}
return CP_ACCESS_OK;
}
static uint64_t spsel_read(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri)
{
return env->pstate & PSTATE_SP;
}
static void spsel_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri, uint64_t val)
{
update_spsel(env, val);
}
static void sctlr_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
ARMCPU *cpu = env_archcpu(env);
if (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_PMSA) && !cpu->has_mpu) {
/* M bit is RAZ/WI for PMSA with no MPU implemented */
value &= ~SCTLR_M;
}
/* ??? Lots of these bits are not implemented. */
if (ri->state == ARM_CP_STATE_AA64 && !cpu_isar_feature(aa64_mte, cpu)) {
if (ri->opc1 == 6) { /* SCTLR_EL3 */
value &= ~(SCTLR_ITFSB | SCTLR_TCF | SCTLR_ATA);
} else {
value &= ~(SCTLR_ITFSB | SCTLR_TCF0 | SCTLR_TCF |
SCTLR_ATA0 | SCTLR_ATA);
}
}
if (raw_read(env, ri) == value) {
/* Skip the TLB flush if nothing actually changed; Linux likes
* to do a lot of pointless SCTLR writes.
*/
return;
}
raw_write(env, ri, value);
/* This may enable/disable the MMU, so do a TLB flush. */
tlb_flush(CPU(cpu));
if (ri->type & ARM_CP_SUPPRESS_TB_END) {
/*
* Normally we would always end the TB on an SCTLR write; see the
* comment in ARMCPRegInfo sctlr initialization below for why Xscale
* is special. Setting ARM_CP_SUPPRESS_TB_END also stops the rebuild
* of hflags from the translator, so do it here.
*/
arm_rebuild_hflags(env);
}
}
static void sdcr_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
env->cp15.mdcr_el3 = value & SDCR_VALID_MASK;
}
static const ARMCPRegInfo v8_cp_reginfo[] = {
/* Minimal set of EL0-visible registers. This will need to be expanded
* significantly for system emulation of AArch64 CPUs.
*/
{ .name = "NZCV", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 3, .opc2 = 0, .crn = 4, .crm = 2,
.access = PL0_RW, .type = ARM_CP_NZCV },
{ .name = "DAIF", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 3, .opc2 = 1, .crn = 4, .crm = 2,
target-arm: Split NO_MIGRATE into ALIAS and NO_RAW We currently mark ARM coprocessor/system register definitions with the flag ARM_CP_NO_MIGRATE for two different reasons: 1) register is an alias on to state that's also visible via some other register, and that other register is the one responsible for migrating the state 2) register is not actually state at all (for instance the TLB or cache maintenance operation "registers") and it makes no sense to attempt to migrate it or otherwise access the raw state This works fine for identifying which registers should be ignored when performing migration, but we also use the same functions for synchronizing system register state between QEMU and the kernel when using KVM. In this case we don't want to try to sync state into registers in category 2, but we do want to sync into registers in category 1, because the kernel might have picked a different one of the aliases as its choice for which one to expose for migration. (In particular, on 32 bit hosts the kernel will expose the state in the AArch32 version of the register, but TCG's convention is to mark the AArch64 version as the version to migrate, even if the CPU being emulated happens to be 32 bit, so almost all system registers will hit this issue now that we've added AArch64 system emulation.) Fix this by splitting the NO_MIGRATE flag in two (ALIAS and NO_RAW) corresponding to the two different reasons we might not want to migrate a register. When setting up the TCG list of registers to migrate we honour both flags; when populating the list from KVM, only ignore registers which are NO_RAW. Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Greg Bellows <greg.bellows@linaro.org> Message-id: 1422282372-13735-2-git-send-email-peter.maydell@linaro.org [PMM: changed ARM_CP_NO_MIGRATE to ARM_CP_ALIAS on new SP_EL1 and SP_EL2 reginfo stanzas since there was a (semantic) merge conflict with the patchset that added those]
2015-02-05 14:37:22 +01:00
.type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW,
.access = PL0_RW, .accessfn = aa64_daif_access,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, daif),
.writefn = aa64_daif_write, .resetfn = arm_cp_reset_ignore },
{ .name = "FPCR", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 3, .opc2 = 0, .crn = 4, .crm = 4,
.access = PL0_RW, .type = ARM_CP_FPU | ARM_CP_SUPPRESS_TB_END,
.readfn = aa64_fpcr_read, .writefn = aa64_fpcr_write },
{ .name = "FPSR", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 3, .opc2 = 1, .crn = 4, .crm = 4,
.access = PL0_RW, .type = ARM_CP_FPU | ARM_CP_SUPPRESS_TB_END,
.readfn = aa64_fpsr_read, .writefn = aa64_fpsr_write },
{ .name = "DCZID_EL0", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 3, .opc2 = 7, .crn = 0, .crm = 0,
target-arm: Split NO_MIGRATE into ALIAS and NO_RAW We currently mark ARM coprocessor/system register definitions with the flag ARM_CP_NO_MIGRATE for two different reasons: 1) register is an alias on to state that's also visible via some other register, and that other register is the one responsible for migrating the state 2) register is not actually state at all (for instance the TLB or cache maintenance operation "registers") and it makes no sense to attempt to migrate it or otherwise access the raw state This works fine for identifying which registers should be ignored when performing migration, but we also use the same functions for synchronizing system register state between QEMU and the kernel when using KVM. In this case we don't want to try to sync state into registers in category 2, but we do want to sync into registers in category 1, because the kernel might have picked a different one of the aliases as its choice for which one to expose for migration. (In particular, on 32 bit hosts the kernel will expose the state in the AArch32 version of the register, but TCG's convention is to mark the AArch64 version as the version to migrate, even if the CPU being emulated happens to be 32 bit, so almost all system registers will hit this issue now that we've added AArch64 system emulation.) Fix this by splitting the NO_MIGRATE flag in two (ALIAS and NO_RAW) corresponding to the two different reasons we might not want to migrate a register. When setting up the TCG list of registers to migrate we honour both flags; when populating the list from KVM, only ignore registers which are NO_RAW. Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Greg Bellows <greg.bellows@linaro.org> Message-id: 1422282372-13735-2-git-send-email-peter.maydell@linaro.org [PMM: changed ARM_CP_NO_MIGRATE to ARM_CP_ALIAS on new SP_EL1 and SP_EL2 reginfo stanzas since there was a (semantic) merge conflict with the patchset that added those]
2015-02-05 14:37:22 +01:00
.access = PL0_R, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW,
.readfn = aa64_dczid_read },
{ .name = "DC_ZVA", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 3, .crn = 7, .crm = 4, .opc2 = 1,
.access = PL0_W, .type = ARM_CP_DC_ZVA,
#ifndef CONFIG_USER_ONLY
/* Avoid overhead of an access check that always passes in user-mode */
.accessfn = aa64_zva_access,
#endif
},
{ .name = "CURRENTEL", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .opc2 = 2, .crn = 4, .crm = 2,
.access = PL1_R, .type = ARM_CP_CURRENTEL },
/* Cache ops: all NOPs since we don't emulate caches */
{ .name = "IC_IALLUIS", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 7, .crm = 1, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL1_W, .type = ARM_CP_NOP,
.accessfn = aa64_cacheop_pou_access },
{ .name = "IC_IALLU", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 7, .crm = 5, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL1_W, .type = ARM_CP_NOP,
.accessfn = aa64_cacheop_pou_access },
{ .name = "IC_IVAU", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 3, .crn = 7, .crm = 5, .opc2 = 1,
.access = PL0_W, .type = ARM_CP_NOP,
.accessfn = aa64_cacheop_pou_access },
{ .name = "DC_IVAC", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 7, .crm = 6, .opc2 = 1,
.access = PL1_W, .accessfn = aa64_cacheop_poc_access,
.type = ARM_CP_NOP },
{ .name = "DC_ISW", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 7, .crm = 6, .opc2 = 2,
.access = PL1_W, .accessfn = access_tsw, .type = ARM_CP_NOP },
{ .name = "DC_CVAC", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 3, .crn = 7, .crm = 10, .opc2 = 1,
.access = PL0_W, .type = ARM_CP_NOP,
.accessfn = aa64_cacheop_poc_access },
{ .name = "DC_CSW", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 7, .crm = 10, .opc2 = 2,
.access = PL1_W, .accessfn = access_tsw, .type = ARM_CP_NOP },
{ .name = "DC_CVAU", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 3, .crn = 7, .crm = 11, .opc2 = 1,
.access = PL0_W, .type = ARM_CP_NOP,
.accessfn = aa64_cacheop_pou_access },
{ .name = "DC_CIVAC", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 3, .crn = 7, .crm = 14, .opc2 = 1,
.access = PL0_W, .type = ARM_CP_NOP,
.accessfn = aa64_cacheop_poc_access },
{ .name = "DC_CISW", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 7, .crm = 14, .opc2 = 2,
.access = PL1_W, .accessfn = access_tsw, .type = ARM_CP_NOP },
/* TLBI operations */
{ .name = "TLBI_VMALLE1IS", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 8, .crm = 3, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL1_W, .accessfn = access_ttlb, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW,
.writefn = tlbi_aa64_vmalle1is_write },
{ .name = "TLBI_VAE1IS", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 8, .crm = 3, .opc2 = 1,
.access = PL1_W, .accessfn = access_ttlb, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW,
.writefn = tlbi_aa64_vae1is_write },
{ .name = "TLBI_ASIDE1IS", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 8, .crm = 3, .opc2 = 2,
.access = PL1_W, .accessfn = access_ttlb, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW,
.writefn = tlbi_aa64_vmalle1is_write },
{ .name = "TLBI_VAAE1IS", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 8, .crm = 3, .opc2 = 3,
.access = PL1_W, .accessfn = access_ttlb, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW,
.writefn = tlbi_aa64_vae1is_write },
{ .name = "TLBI_VALE1IS", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 8, .crm = 3, .opc2 = 5,
.access = PL1_W, .accessfn = access_ttlb, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW,
.writefn = tlbi_aa64_vae1is_write },
{ .name = "TLBI_VAALE1IS", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 8, .crm = 3, .opc2 = 7,
.access = PL1_W, .accessfn = access_ttlb, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW,
.writefn = tlbi_aa64_vae1is_write },
{ .name = "TLBI_VMALLE1", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 8, .crm = 7, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL1_W, .accessfn = access_ttlb, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW,
.writefn = tlbi_aa64_vmalle1_write },
{ .name = "TLBI_VAE1", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 8, .crm = 7, .opc2 = 1,
.access = PL1_W, .accessfn = access_ttlb, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW,
.writefn = tlbi_aa64_vae1_write },
{ .name = "TLBI_ASIDE1", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 8, .crm = 7, .opc2 = 2,
.access = PL1_W, .accessfn = access_ttlb, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW,
.writefn = tlbi_aa64_vmalle1_write },
{ .name = "TLBI_VAAE1", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 8, .crm = 7, .opc2 = 3,
.access = PL1_W, .accessfn = access_ttlb, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW,
.writefn = tlbi_aa64_vae1_write },
{ .name = "TLBI_VALE1", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 8, .crm = 7, .opc2 = 5,
.access = PL1_W, .accessfn = access_ttlb, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW,
.writefn = tlbi_aa64_vae1_write },
{ .name = "TLBI_VAALE1", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 8, .crm = 7, .opc2 = 7,
.access = PL1_W, .accessfn = access_ttlb, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW,
.writefn = tlbi_aa64_vae1_write },
{ .name = "TLBI_IPAS2E1IS", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 8, .crm = 0, .opc2 = 1,
.access = PL2_W, .type = ARM_CP_NOP },
{ .name = "TLBI_IPAS2LE1IS", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 8, .crm = 0, .opc2 = 5,
.access = PL2_W, .type = ARM_CP_NOP },
{ .name = "TLBI_ALLE1IS", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 8, .crm = 3, .opc2 = 4,
.access = PL2_W, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW,
.writefn = tlbi_aa64_alle1is_write },
{ .name = "TLBI_VMALLS12E1IS", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 8, .crm = 3, .opc2 = 6,
.access = PL2_W, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW,
.writefn = tlbi_aa64_alle1is_write },
{ .name = "TLBI_IPAS2E1", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 8, .crm = 4, .opc2 = 1,
.access = PL2_W, .type = ARM_CP_NOP },
{ .name = "TLBI_IPAS2LE1", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 8, .crm = 4, .opc2 = 5,
.access = PL2_W, .type = ARM_CP_NOP },
{ .name = "TLBI_ALLE1", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 8, .crm = 7, .opc2 = 4,
.access = PL2_W, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW,
.writefn = tlbi_aa64_alle1_write },
{ .name = "TLBI_VMALLS12E1", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 8, .crm = 7, .opc2 = 6,
.access = PL2_W, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW,
.writefn = tlbi_aa64_alle1is_write },
#ifndef CONFIG_USER_ONLY
/* 64 bit address translation operations */
{ .name = "AT_S1E1R", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 7, .crm = 8, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL1_W, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW | ARM_CP_RAISES_EXC,
.writefn = ats_write64 },
{ .name = "AT_S1E1W", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 7, .crm = 8, .opc2 = 1,
.access = PL1_W, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW | ARM_CP_RAISES_EXC,
.writefn = ats_write64 },
{ .name = "AT_S1E0R", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 7, .crm = 8, .opc2 = 2,
.access = PL1_W, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW | ARM_CP_RAISES_EXC,
.writefn = ats_write64 },
{ .name = "AT_S1E0W", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 7, .crm = 8, .opc2 = 3,
.access = PL1_W, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW | ARM_CP_RAISES_EXC,
.writefn = ats_write64 },
{ .name = "AT_S12E1R", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 7, .crm = 8, .opc2 = 4,
.access = PL2_W, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW | ARM_CP_RAISES_EXC,
.writefn = ats_write64 },
{ .name = "AT_S12E1W", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 7, .crm = 8, .opc2 = 5,
.access = PL2_W, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW | ARM_CP_RAISES_EXC,
.writefn = ats_write64 },
{ .name = "AT_S12E0R", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 7, .crm = 8, .opc2 = 6,
.access = PL2_W, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW | ARM_CP_RAISES_EXC,
.writefn = ats_write64 },
{ .name = "AT_S12E0W", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 7, .crm = 8, .opc2 = 7,
.access = PL2_W, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW | ARM_CP_RAISES_EXC,
.writefn = ats_write64 },
/* AT S1E2* are elsewhere as they UNDEF from EL3 if EL2 is not present */
{ .name = "AT_S1E3R", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 6, .crn = 7, .crm = 8, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL3_W, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW | ARM_CP_RAISES_EXC,
.writefn = ats_write64 },
{ .name = "AT_S1E3W", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 6, .crn = 7, .crm = 8, .opc2 = 1,
.access = PL3_W, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW | ARM_CP_RAISES_EXC,
.writefn = ats_write64 },
{ .name = "PAR_EL1", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.type = ARM_CP_ALIAS,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 7, .crm = 4, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL1_RW, .resetvalue = 0,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.par_el[1]),
.writefn = par_write },
#endif
/* TLB invalidate last level of translation table walk */
{ .name = "TLBIMVALIS", .cp = 15, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 8, .crm = 3, .opc2 = 5,
.type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW, .access = PL1_W, .accessfn = access_ttlb,
.writefn = tlbimva_is_write },
{ .name = "TLBIMVAALIS", .cp = 15, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 8, .crm = 3, .opc2 = 7,
.type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW, .access = PL1_W, .accessfn = access_ttlb,
.writefn = tlbimvaa_is_write },
{ .name = "TLBIMVAL", .cp = 15, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 8, .crm = 7, .opc2 = 5,
.type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW, .access = PL1_W, .accessfn = access_ttlb,
.writefn = tlbimva_write },
{ .name = "TLBIMVAAL", .cp = 15, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 8, .crm = 7, .opc2 = 7,
.type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW, .access = PL1_W, .accessfn = access_ttlb,
.writefn = tlbimvaa_write },
{ .name = "TLBIMVALH", .cp = 15, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 8, .crm = 7, .opc2 = 5,
.type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW, .access = PL2_W,
.writefn = tlbimva_hyp_write },
{ .name = "TLBIMVALHIS",
.cp = 15, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 8, .crm = 3, .opc2 = 5,
.type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW, .access = PL2_W,
.writefn = tlbimva_hyp_is_write },
{ .name = "TLBIIPAS2",
.cp = 15, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 8, .crm = 4, .opc2 = 1,
.type = ARM_CP_NOP, .access = PL2_W },
{ .name = "TLBIIPAS2IS",
.cp = 15, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 8, .crm = 0, .opc2 = 1,
.type = ARM_CP_NOP, .access = PL2_W },
{ .name = "TLBIIPAS2L",
.cp = 15, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 8, .crm = 4, .opc2 = 5,
.type = ARM_CP_NOP, .access = PL2_W },
{ .name = "TLBIIPAS2LIS",
.cp = 15, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 8, .crm = 0, .opc2 = 5,
.type = ARM_CP_NOP, .access = PL2_W },
/* 32 bit cache operations */
{ .name = "ICIALLUIS", .cp = 15, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 7, .crm = 1, .opc2 = 0,
.type = ARM_CP_NOP, .access = PL1_W, .accessfn = aa64_cacheop_pou_access },
{ .name = "BPIALLUIS", .cp = 15, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 7, .crm = 1, .opc2 = 6,
.type = ARM_CP_NOP, .access = PL1_W },
{ .name = "ICIALLU", .cp = 15, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 7, .crm = 5, .opc2 = 0,
.type = ARM_CP_NOP, .access = PL1_W, .accessfn = aa64_cacheop_pou_access },
{ .name = "ICIMVAU", .cp = 15, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 7, .crm = 5, .opc2 = 1,
.type = ARM_CP_NOP, .access = PL1_W, .accessfn = aa64_cacheop_pou_access },
{ .name = "BPIALL", .cp = 15, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 7, .crm = 5, .opc2 = 6,
.type = ARM_CP_NOP, .access = PL1_W },
{ .name = "BPIMVA", .cp = 15, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 7, .crm = 5, .opc2 = 7,
.type = ARM_CP_NOP, .access = PL1_W },
{ .name = "DCIMVAC", .cp = 15, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 7, .crm = 6, .opc2 = 1,
.type = ARM_CP_NOP, .access = PL1_W, .accessfn = aa64_cacheop_poc_access },
{ .name = "DCISW", .cp = 15, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 7, .crm = 6, .opc2 = 2,
.type = ARM_CP_NOP, .access = PL1_W, .accessfn = access_tsw },
{ .name = "DCCMVAC", .cp = 15, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 7, .crm = 10, .opc2 = 1,
.type = ARM_CP_NOP, .access = PL1_W, .accessfn = aa64_cacheop_poc_access },
{ .name = "DCCSW", .cp = 15, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 7, .crm = 10, .opc2 = 2,
.type = ARM_CP_NOP, .access = PL1_W, .accessfn = access_tsw },
{ .name = "DCCMVAU", .cp = 15, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 7, .crm = 11, .opc2 = 1,
.type = ARM_CP_NOP, .access = PL1_W, .accessfn = aa64_cacheop_pou_access },
{ .name = "DCCIMVAC", .cp = 15, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 7, .crm = 14, .opc2 = 1,
.type = ARM_CP_NOP, .access = PL1_W, .accessfn = aa64_cacheop_poc_access },
{ .name = "DCCISW", .cp = 15, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 7, .crm = 14, .opc2 = 2,
.type = ARM_CP_NOP, .access = PL1_W, .accessfn = access_tsw },
/* MMU Domain access control / MPU write buffer control */
{ .name = "DACR", .cp = 15, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 3, .crm = 0, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL1_RW, .accessfn = access_tvm_trvm, .resetvalue = 0,
.writefn = dacr_write, .raw_writefn = raw_write,
.bank_fieldoffsets = { offsetoflow32(CPUARMState, cp15.dacr_s),
offsetoflow32(CPUARMState, cp15.dacr_ns) } },
{ .name = "ELR_EL1", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
target-arm: Split NO_MIGRATE into ALIAS and NO_RAW We currently mark ARM coprocessor/system register definitions with the flag ARM_CP_NO_MIGRATE for two different reasons: 1) register is an alias on to state that's also visible via some other register, and that other register is the one responsible for migrating the state 2) register is not actually state at all (for instance the TLB or cache maintenance operation "registers") and it makes no sense to attempt to migrate it or otherwise access the raw state This works fine for identifying which registers should be ignored when performing migration, but we also use the same functions for synchronizing system register state between QEMU and the kernel when using KVM. In this case we don't want to try to sync state into registers in category 2, but we do want to sync into registers in category 1, because the kernel might have picked a different one of the aliases as its choice for which one to expose for migration. (In particular, on 32 bit hosts the kernel will expose the state in the AArch32 version of the register, but TCG's convention is to mark the AArch64 version as the version to migrate, even if the CPU being emulated happens to be 32 bit, so almost all system registers will hit this issue now that we've added AArch64 system emulation.) Fix this by splitting the NO_MIGRATE flag in two (ALIAS and NO_RAW) corresponding to the two different reasons we might not want to migrate a register. When setting up the TCG list of registers to migrate we honour both flags; when populating the list from KVM, only ignore registers which are NO_RAW. Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Greg Bellows <greg.bellows@linaro.org> Message-id: 1422282372-13735-2-git-send-email-peter.maydell@linaro.org [PMM: changed ARM_CP_NO_MIGRATE to ARM_CP_ALIAS on new SP_EL1 and SP_EL2 reginfo stanzas since there was a (semantic) merge conflict with the patchset that added those]
2015-02-05 14:37:22 +01:00
.type = ARM_CP_ALIAS,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 4, .crm = 0, .opc2 = 1,
.access = PL1_RW,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, elr_el[1]) },
{ .name = "SPSR_EL1", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
target-arm: Split NO_MIGRATE into ALIAS and NO_RAW We currently mark ARM coprocessor/system register definitions with the flag ARM_CP_NO_MIGRATE for two different reasons: 1) register is an alias on to state that's also visible via some other register, and that other register is the one responsible for migrating the state 2) register is not actually state at all (for instance the TLB or cache maintenance operation "registers") and it makes no sense to attempt to migrate it or otherwise access the raw state This works fine for identifying which registers should be ignored when performing migration, but we also use the same functions for synchronizing system register state between QEMU and the kernel when using KVM. In this case we don't want to try to sync state into registers in category 2, but we do want to sync into registers in category 1, because the kernel might have picked a different one of the aliases as its choice for which one to expose for migration. (In particular, on 32 bit hosts the kernel will expose the state in the AArch32 version of the register, but TCG's convention is to mark the AArch64 version as the version to migrate, even if the CPU being emulated happens to be 32 bit, so almost all system registers will hit this issue now that we've added AArch64 system emulation.) Fix this by splitting the NO_MIGRATE flag in two (ALIAS and NO_RAW) corresponding to the two different reasons we might not want to migrate a register. When setting up the TCG list of registers to migrate we honour both flags; when populating the list from KVM, only ignore registers which are NO_RAW. Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Greg Bellows <greg.bellows@linaro.org> Message-id: 1422282372-13735-2-git-send-email-peter.maydell@linaro.org [PMM: changed ARM_CP_NO_MIGRATE to ARM_CP_ALIAS on new SP_EL1 and SP_EL2 reginfo stanzas since there was a (semantic) merge conflict with the patchset that added those]
2015-02-05 14:37:22 +01:00
.type = ARM_CP_ALIAS,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 4, .crm = 0, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL1_RW,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, banked_spsr[BANK_SVC]) },
/* We rely on the access checks not allowing the guest to write to the
* state field when SPSel indicates that it's being used as the stack
* pointer.
*/
{ .name = "SP_EL0", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 4, .crm = 1, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL1_RW, .accessfn = sp_el0_access,
target-arm: Split NO_MIGRATE into ALIAS and NO_RAW We currently mark ARM coprocessor/system register definitions with the flag ARM_CP_NO_MIGRATE for two different reasons: 1) register is an alias on to state that's also visible via some other register, and that other register is the one responsible for migrating the state 2) register is not actually state at all (for instance the TLB or cache maintenance operation "registers") and it makes no sense to attempt to migrate it or otherwise access the raw state This works fine for identifying which registers should be ignored when performing migration, but we also use the same functions for synchronizing system register state between QEMU and the kernel when using KVM. In this case we don't want to try to sync state into registers in category 2, but we do want to sync into registers in category 1, because the kernel might have picked a different one of the aliases as its choice for which one to expose for migration. (In particular, on 32 bit hosts the kernel will expose the state in the AArch32 version of the register, but TCG's convention is to mark the AArch64 version as the version to migrate, even if the CPU being emulated happens to be 32 bit, so almost all system registers will hit this issue now that we've added AArch64 system emulation.) Fix this by splitting the NO_MIGRATE flag in two (ALIAS and NO_RAW) corresponding to the two different reasons we might not want to migrate a register. When setting up the TCG list of registers to migrate we honour both flags; when populating the list from KVM, only ignore registers which are NO_RAW. Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Greg Bellows <greg.bellows@linaro.org> Message-id: 1422282372-13735-2-git-send-email-peter.maydell@linaro.org [PMM: changed ARM_CP_NO_MIGRATE to ARM_CP_ALIAS on new SP_EL1 and SP_EL2 reginfo stanzas since there was a (semantic) merge conflict with the patchset that added those]
2015-02-05 14:37:22 +01:00
.type = ARM_CP_ALIAS,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, sp_el[0]) },
{ .name = "SP_EL1", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 4, .crm = 1, .opc2 = 0,
target-arm: Split NO_MIGRATE into ALIAS and NO_RAW We currently mark ARM coprocessor/system register definitions with the flag ARM_CP_NO_MIGRATE for two different reasons: 1) register is an alias on to state that's also visible via some other register, and that other register is the one responsible for migrating the state 2) register is not actually state at all (for instance the TLB or cache maintenance operation "registers") and it makes no sense to attempt to migrate it or otherwise access the raw state This works fine for identifying which registers should be ignored when performing migration, but we also use the same functions for synchronizing system register state between QEMU and the kernel when using KVM. In this case we don't want to try to sync state into registers in category 2, but we do want to sync into registers in category 1, because the kernel might have picked a different one of the aliases as its choice for which one to expose for migration. (In particular, on 32 bit hosts the kernel will expose the state in the AArch32 version of the register, but TCG's convention is to mark the AArch64 version as the version to migrate, even if the CPU being emulated happens to be 32 bit, so almost all system registers will hit this issue now that we've added AArch64 system emulation.) Fix this by splitting the NO_MIGRATE flag in two (ALIAS and NO_RAW) corresponding to the two different reasons we might not want to migrate a register. When setting up the TCG list of registers to migrate we honour both flags; when populating the list from KVM, only ignore registers which are NO_RAW. Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Greg Bellows <greg.bellows@linaro.org> Message-id: 1422282372-13735-2-git-send-email-peter.maydell@linaro.org [PMM: changed ARM_CP_NO_MIGRATE to ARM_CP_ALIAS on new SP_EL1 and SP_EL2 reginfo stanzas since there was a (semantic) merge conflict with the patchset that added those]
2015-02-05 14:37:22 +01:00
.access = PL2_RW, .type = ARM_CP_ALIAS,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, sp_el[1]) },
{ .name = "SPSel", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 4, .crm = 2, .opc2 = 0,
target-arm: Split NO_MIGRATE into ALIAS and NO_RAW We currently mark ARM coprocessor/system register definitions with the flag ARM_CP_NO_MIGRATE for two different reasons: 1) register is an alias on to state that's also visible via some other register, and that other register is the one responsible for migrating the state 2) register is not actually state at all (for instance the TLB or cache maintenance operation "registers") and it makes no sense to attempt to migrate it or otherwise access the raw state This works fine for identifying which registers should be ignored when performing migration, but we also use the same functions for synchronizing system register state between QEMU and the kernel when using KVM. In this case we don't want to try to sync state into registers in category 2, but we do want to sync into registers in category 1, because the kernel might have picked a different one of the aliases as its choice for which one to expose for migration. (In particular, on 32 bit hosts the kernel will expose the state in the AArch32 version of the register, but TCG's convention is to mark the AArch64 version as the version to migrate, even if the CPU being emulated happens to be 32 bit, so almost all system registers will hit this issue now that we've added AArch64 system emulation.) Fix this by splitting the NO_MIGRATE flag in two (ALIAS and NO_RAW) corresponding to the two different reasons we might not want to migrate a register. When setting up the TCG list of registers to migrate we honour both flags; when populating the list from KVM, only ignore registers which are NO_RAW. Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Greg Bellows <greg.bellows@linaro.org> Message-id: 1422282372-13735-2-git-send-email-peter.maydell@linaro.org [PMM: changed ARM_CP_NO_MIGRATE to ARM_CP_ALIAS on new SP_EL1 and SP_EL2 reginfo stanzas since there was a (semantic) merge conflict with the patchset that added those]
2015-02-05 14:37:22 +01:00
.type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW,
.access = PL1_RW, .readfn = spsel_read, .writefn = spsel_write },
{ .name = "FPEXC32_EL2", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 5, .crm = 3, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL2_RW,
.type = ARM_CP_ALIAS | ARM_CP_FPU | ARM_CP_EL3_NO_EL2_KEEP,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, vfp.xregs[ARM_VFP_FPEXC]) },
{ .name = "DACR32_EL2", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 3, .crm = 0, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL2_RW, .resetvalue = 0, .type = ARM_CP_EL3_NO_EL2_KEEP,
.writefn = dacr_write, .raw_writefn = raw_write,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.dacr32_el2) },
{ .name = "IFSR32_EL2", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 5, .crm = 0, .opc2 = 1,
.access = PL2_RW, .resetvalue = 0, .type = ARM_CP_EL3_NO_EL2_KEEP,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.ifsr32_el2) },
{ .name = "SPSR_IRQ", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.type = ARM_CP_ALIAS,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 4, .crm = 3, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL2_RW,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, banked_spsr[BANK_IRQ]) },
{ .name = "SPSR_ABT", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.type = ARM_CP_ALIAS,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 4, .crm = 3, .opc2 = 1,
.access = PL2_RW,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, banked_spsr[BANK_ABT]) },
{ .name = "SPSR_UND", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.type = ARM_CP_ALIAS,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 4, .crm = 3, .opc2 = 2,
.access = PL2_RW,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, banked_spsr[BANK_UND]) },
{ .name = "SPSR_FIQ", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.type = ARM_CP_ALIAS,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 4, .crm = 3, .opc2 = 3,
.access = PL2_RW,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, banked_spsr[BANK_FIQ]) },
{ .name = "MDCR_EL3", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 6, .crn = 1, .crm = 3, .opc2 = 1,
.resetvalue = 0,
.access = PL3_RW, .fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.mdcr_el3) },
{ .name = "SDCR", .type = ARM_CP_ALIAS,
.cp = 15, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 1, .crm = 3, .opc2 = 1,
.access = PL1_RW, .accessfn = access_trap_aa32s_el1,
.writefn = sdcr_write,
.fieldoffset = offsetoflow32(CPUARMState, cp15.mdcr_el3) },
};
static void do_hcr_write(CPUARMState *env, uint64_t value, uint64_t valid_mask)
{
ARMCPU *cpu = env_archcpu(env);
if (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_V8)) {
valid_mask |= MAKE_64BIT_MASK(0, 34); /* ARMv8.0 */
} else {
valid_mask |= MAKE_64BIT_MASK(0, 28); /* ARMv7VE */
}
if (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_EL3)) {
valid_mask &= ~HCR_HCD;
} else if (cpu->psci_conduit != QEMU_PSCI_CONDUIT_SMC) {
/* Architecturally HCR.TSC is RES0 if EL3 is not implemented.
* However, if we're using the SMC PSCI conduit then QEMU is
* effectively acting like EL3 firmware and so the guest at
* EL2 should retain the ability to prevent EL1 from being
* able to make SMC calls into the ersatz firmware, so in
* that case HCR.TSC should be read/write.
*/
valid_mask &= ~HCR_TSC;
}
if (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_AARCH64)) {
if (cpu_isar_feature(aa64_vh, cpu)) {
valid_mask |= HCR_E2H;
}
if (cpu_isar_feature(aa64_ras, cpu)) {
valid_mask |= HCR_TERR | HCR_TEA;
}
if (cpu_isar_feature(aa64_lor, cpu)) {
valid_mask |= HCR_TLOR;
}
if (cpu_isar_feature(aa64_pauth, cpu)) {
valid_mask |= HCR_API | HCR_APK;
}
if (cpu_isar_feature(aa64_mte, cpu)) {
valid_mask |= HCR_ATA | HCR_DCT | HCR_TID5;
}
if (cpu_isar_feature(aa64_scxtnum, cpu)) {
valid_mask |= HCR_ENSCXT;
}
if (cpu_isar_feature(aa64_fwb, cpu)) {
valid_mask |= HCR_FWB;
}
}
/* Clear RES0 bits. */
value &= valid_mask;
/*
* These bits change the MMU setup:
* HCR_VM enables stage 2 translation
* HCR_PTW forbids certain page-table setups
* HCR_DC disables stage1 and enables stage2 translation
* HCR_DCT enables tagging on (disabled) stage1 translation
* HCR_FWB changes the interpretation of stage2 descriptor bits
*/
if ((env->cp15.hcr_el2 ^ value) &
(HCR_VM | HCR_PTW | HCR_DC | HCR_DCT | HCR_FWB)) {
tlb_flush(CPU(cpu));
}
env->cp15.hcr_el2 = value;
/*
* Updates to VI and VF require us to update the status of
* virtual interrupts, which are the logical OR of these bits
* and the state of the input lines from the GIC. (This requires
* that we have the iothread lock, which is done by marking the
* reginfo structs as ARM_CP_IO.)
* Note that if a write to HCR pends a VIRQ or VFIQ it is never
* possible for it to be taken immediately, because VIRQ and
* VFIQ are masked unless running at EL0 or EL1, and HCR
* can only be written at EL2.
*/
g_assert(qemu_mutex_iothread_locked());
arm_cpu_update_virq(cpu);
arm_cpu_update_vfiq(cpu);
arm_cpu_update_vserr(cpu);
}
static void hcr_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri, uint64_t value)
{
do_hcr_write(env, value, 0);
}
static void hcr_writehigh(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
/* Handle HCR2 write, i.e. write to high half of HCR_EL2 */
value = deposit64(env->cp15.hcr_el2, 32, 32, value);
do_hcr_write(env, value, MAKE_64BIT_MASK(0, 32));
}
static void hcr_writelow(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
/* Handle HCR write, i.e. write to low half of HCR_EL2 */
value = deposit64(env->cp15.hcr_el2, 0, 32, value);
do_hcr_write(env, value, MAKE_64BIT_MASK(32, 32));
}
/*
* Return the effective value of HCR_EL2.
* Bits that are not included here:
* RW (read from SCR_EL3.RW as needed)
*/
uint64_t arm_hcr_el2_eff(CPUARMState *env)
{
uint64_t ret = env->cp15.hcr_el2;
if (!arm_is_el2_enabled(env)) {
/*
* "This register has no effect if EL2 is not enabled in the
* current Security state". This is ARMv8.4-SecEL2 speak for
* !(SCR_EL3.NS==1 || SCR_EL3.EEL2==1).
*
* Prior to that, the language was "In an implementation that
* includes EL3, when the value of SCR_EL3.NS is 0 the PE behaves
* as if this field is 0 for all purposes other than a direct
* read or write access of HCR_EL2". With lots of enumeration
* on a per-field basis. In current QEMU, this is condition
* is arm_is_secure_below_el3.
*
* Since the v8.4 language applies to the entire register, and
* appears to be backward compatible, use that.
*/
return 0;
}
/*
* For a cpu that supports both aarch64 and aarch32, we can set bits
* in HCR_EL2 (e.g. via EL3) that are RES0 when we enter EL2 as aa32.
* Ignore all of the bits in HCR+HCR2 that are not valid for aarch32.
*/
if (!arm_el_is_aa64(env, 2)) {
uint64_t aa32_valid;
/*
* These bits are up-to-date as of ARMv8.6.
* For HCR, it's easiest to list just the 2 bits that are invalid.
* For HCR2, list those that are valid.
*/
aa32_valid = MAKE_64BIT_MASK(0, 32) & ~(HCR_RW | HCR_TDZ);
aa32_valid |= (HCR_CD | HCR_ID | HCR_TERR | HCR_TEA | HCR_MIOCNCE |
HCR_TID4 | HCR_TICAB | HCR_TOCU | HCR_TTLBIS);
ret &= aa32_valid;
}
if (ret & HCR_TGE) {
/* These bits are up-to-date as of ARMv8.6. */
if (ret & HCR_E2H) {
ret &= ~(HCR_VM | HCR_FMO | HCR_IMO | HCR_AMO |
HCR_BSU_MASK | HCR_DC | HCR_TWI | HCR_TWE |
HCR_TID0 | HCR_TID2 | HCR_TPCP | HCR_TPU |
HCR_TDZ | HCR_CD | HCR_ID | HCR_MIOCNCE |
HCR_TID4 | HCR_TICAB | HCR_TOCU | HCR_ENSCXT |
HCR_TTLBIS | HCR_TTLBOS | HCR_TID5);
} else {
ret |= HCR_FMO | HCR_IMO | HCR_AMO;
}
ret &= ~(HCR_SWIO | HCR_PTW | HCR_VF | HCR_VI | HCR_VSE |
HCR_FB | HCR_TID1 | HCR_TID3 | HCR_TSC | HCR_TACR |
HCR_TSW | HCR_TTLB | HCR_TVM | HCR_HCD | HCR_TRVM |
HCR_TLOR);
}
return ret;
}
static void hcrx_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
uint64_t valid_mask = 0;
/* No features adding bits to HCRX are implemented. */
/* Clear RES0 bits. */
env->cp15.hcrx_el2 = value & valid_mask;
}
static CPAccessResult access_hxen(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
bool isread)
{
if (arm_current_el(env) < 3
&& arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_EL3)
&& !(env->cp15.scr_el3 & SCR_HXEN)) {
return CP_ACCESS_TRAP_EL3;
}
return CP_ACCESS_OK;
}
static const ARMCPRegInfo hcrx_el2_reginfo = {
.name = "HCRX_EL2", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 1, .crm = 2, .opc2 = 2,
.access = PL2_RW, .writefn = hcrx_write, .accessfn = access_hxen,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.hcrx_el2),
};
/* Return the effective value of HCRX_EL2. */
uint64_t arm_hcrx_el2_eff(CPUARMState *env)
{
/*
* The bits in this register behave as 0 for all purposes other than
* direct reads of the register if:
* - EL2 is not enabled in the current security state,
* - SCR_EL3.HXEn is 0.
*/
if (!arm_is_el2_enabled(env)
|| (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_EL3)
&& !(env->cp15.scr_el3 & SCR_HXEN))) {
return 0;
}
return env->cp15.hcrx_el2;
}
static void cptr_el2_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
/*
* For A-profile AArch32 EL3, if NSACR.CP10
* is 0 then HCPTR.{TCP11,TCP10} ignore writes and read as 1.
*/
if (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_EL3) && !arm_el_is_aa64(env, 3) &&
!arm_is_secure(env) && !extract32(env->cp15.nsacr, 10, 1)) {
uint64_t mask = R_HCPTR_TCP11_MASK | R_HCPTR_TCP10_MASK;
value = (value & ~mask) | (env->cp15.cptr_el[2] & mask);
}
env->cp15.cptr_el[2] = value;
}
static uint64_t cptr_el2_read(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri)
{
/*
* For A-profile AArch32 EL3, if NSACR.CP10
* is 0 then HCPTR.{TCP11,TCP10} ignore writes and read as 1.
*/
uint64_t value = env->cp15.cptr_el[2];
if (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_EL3) && !arm_el_is_aa64(env, 3) &&
!arm_is_secure(env) && !extract32(env->cp15.nsacr, 10, 1)) {
value |= R_HCPTR_TCP11_MASK | R_HCPTR_TCP10_MASK;
}
return value;
}
static const ARMCPRegInfo el2_cp_reginfo[] = {
{ .name = "HCR_EL2", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.type = ARM_CP_IO,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 1, .crm = 1, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL2_RW, .fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.hcr_el2),
.writefn = hcr_write },
{ .name = "HCR", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA32,
.type = ARM_CP_ALIAS | ARM_CP_IO,
.cp = 15, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 1, .crm = 1, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL2_RW, .fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.hcr_el2),
.writefn = hcr_writelow },
{ .name = "HACR_EL2", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_BOTH,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 1, .crm = 1, .opc2 = 7,
.access = PL2_RW, .type = ARM_CP_CONST, .resetvalue = 0 },
{ .name = "ELR_EL2", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
target-arm: Split NO_MIGRATE into ALIAS and NO_RAW We currently mark ARM coprocessor/system register definitions with the flag ARM_CP_NO_MIGRATE for two different reasons: 1) register is an alias on to state that's also visible via some other register, and that other register is the one responsible for migrating the state 2) register is not actually state at all (for instance the TLB or cache maintenance operation "registers") and it makes no sense to attempt to migrate it or otherwise access the raw state This works fine for identifying which registers should be ignored when performing migration, but we also use the same functions for synchronizing system register state between QEMU and the kernel when using KVM. In this case we don't want to try to sync state into registers in category 2, but we do want to sync into registers in category 1, because the kernel might have picked a different one of the aliases as its choice for which one to expose for migration. (In particular, on 32 bit hosts the kernel will expose the state in the AArch32 version of the register, but TCG's convention is to mark the AArch64 version as the version to migrate, even if the CPU being emulated happens to be 32 bit, so almost all system registers will hit this issue now that we've added AArch64 system emulation.) Fix this by splitting the NO_MIGRATE flag in two (ALIAS and NO_RAW) corresponding to the two different reasons we might not want to migrate a register. When setting up the TCG list of registers to migrate we honour both flags; when populating the list from KVM, only ignore registers which are NO_RAW. Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Greg Bellows <greg.bellows@linaro.org> Message-id: 1422282372-13735-2-git-send-email-peter.maydell@linaro.org [PMM: changed ARM_CP_NO_MIGRATE to ARM_CP_ALIAS on new SP_EL1 and SP_EL2 reginfo stanzas since there was a (semantic) merge conflict with the patchset that added those]
2015-02-05 14:37:22 +01:00
.type = ARM_CP_ALIAS,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 4, .crm = 0, .opc2 = 1,
.access = PL2_RW,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, elr_el[2]) },
{ .name = "ESR_EL2", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_BOTH,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 5, .crm = 2, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL2_RW, .fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.esr_el[2]) },
{ .name = "FAR_EL2", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_BOTH,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 6, .crm = 0, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL2_RW, .fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.far_el[2]) },
{ .name = "HIFAR", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA32,
.type = ARM_CP_ALIAS,
.cp = 15, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 6, .crm = 0, .opc2 = 2,
.access = PL2_RW,
.fieldoffset = offsetofhigh32(CPUARMState, cp15.far_el[2]) },
{ .name = "SPSR_EL2", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
target-arm: Split NO_MIGRATE into ALIAS and NO_RAW We currently mark ARM coprocessor/system register definitions with the flag ARM_CP_NO_MIGRATE for two different reasons: 1) register is an alias on to state that's also visible via some other register, and that other register is the one responsible for migrating the state 2) register is not actually state at all (for instance the TLB or cache maintenance operation "registers") and it makes no sense to attempt to migrate it or otherwise access the raw state This works fine for identifying which registers should be ignored when performing migration, but we also use the same functions for synchronizing system register state between QEMU and the kernel when using KVM. In this case we don't want to try to sync state into registers in category 2, but we do want to sync into registers in category 1, because the kernel might have picked a different one of the aliases as its choice for which one to expose for migration. (In particular, on 32 bit hosts the kernel will expose the state in the AArch32 version of the register, but TCG's convention is to mark the AArch64 version as the version to migrate, even if the CPU being emulated happens to be 32 bit, so almost all system registers will hit this issue now that we've added AArch64 system emulation.) Fix this by splitting the NO_MIGRATE flag in two (ALIAS and NO_RAW) corresponding to the two different reasons we might not want to migrate a register. When setting up the TCG list of registers to migrate we honour both flags; when populating the list from KVM, only ignore registers which are NO_RAW. Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Greg Bellows <greg.bellows@linaro.org> Message-id: 1422282372-13735-2-git-send-email-peter.maydell@linaro.org [PMM: changed ARM_CP_NO_MIGRATE to ARM_CP_ALIAS on new SP_EL1 and SP_EL2 reginfo stanzas since there was a (semantic) merge conflict with the patchset that added those]
2015-02-05 14:37:22 +01:00
.type = ARM_CP_ALIAS,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 4, .crm = 0, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL2_RW,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, banked_spsr[BANK_HYP]) },
{ .name = "VBAR_EL2", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_BOTH,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 12, .crm = 0, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL2_RW, .writefn = vbar_write,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.vbar_el[2]),
.resetvalue = 0 },
{ .name = "SP_EL2", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 6, .crn = 4, .crm = 1, .opc2 = 0,
target-arm: Split NO_MIGRATE into ALIAS and NO_RAW We currently mark ARM coprocessor/system register definitions with the flag ARM_CP_NO_MIGRATE for two different reasons: 1) register is an alias on to state that's also visible via some other register, and that other register is the one responsible for migrating the state 2) register is not actually state at all (for instance the TLB or cache maintenance operation "registers") and it makes no sense to attempt to migrate it or otherwise access the raw state This works fine for identifying which registers should be ignored when performing migration, but we also use the same functions for synchronizing system register state between QEMU and the kernel when using KVM. In this case we don't want to try to sync state into registers in category 2, but we do want to sync into registers in category 1, because the kernel might have picked a different one of the aliases as its choice for which one to expose for migration. (In particular, on 32 bit hosts the kernel will expose the state in the AArch32 version of the register, but TCG's convention is to mark the AArch64 version as the version to migrate, even if the CPU being emulated happens to be 32 bit, so almost all system registers will hit this issue now that we've added AArch64 system emulation.) Fix this by splitting the NO_MIGRATE flag in two (ALIAS and NO_RAW) corresponding to the two different reasons we might not want to migrate a register. When setting up the TCG list of registers to migrate we honour both flags; when populating the list from KVM, only ignore registers which are NO_RAW. Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Greg Bellows <greg.bellows@linaro.org> Message-id: 1422282372-13735-2-git-send-email-peter.maydell@linaro.org [PMM: changed ARM_CP_NO_MIGRATE to ARM_CP_ALIAS on new SP_EL1 and SP_EL2 reginfo stanzas since there was a (semantic) merge conflict with the patchset that added those]
2015-02-05 14:37:22 +01:00
.access = PL3_RW, .type = ARM_CP_ALIAS,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, sp_el[2]) },
{ .name = "CPTR_EL2", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_BOTH,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 1, .crm = 1, .opc2 = 2,
.access = PL2_RW, .accessfn = cptr_access, .resetvalue = 0,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.cptr_el[2]),
.readfn = cptr_el2_read, .writefn = cptr_el2_write },
{ .name = "MAIR_EL2", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_BOTH,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 10, .crm = 2, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL2_RW, .fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.mair_el[2]),
.resetvalue = 0 },
{ .name = "HMAIR1", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA32,
.cp = 15, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 10, .crm = 2, .opc2 = 1,
.access = PL2_RW, .type = ARM_CP_ALIAS,
.fieldoffset = offsetofhigh32(CPUARMState, cp15.mair_el[2]) },
{ .name = "AMAIR_EL2", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_BOTH,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 10, .crm = 3, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL2_RW, .type = ARM_CP_CONST,
.resetvalue = 0 },
/* HAMAIR1 is mapped to AMAIR_EL2[63:32] */
{ .name = "HAMAIR1", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA32,
.cp = 15, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 10, .crm = 3, .opc2 = 1,
.access = PL2_RW, .type = ARM_CP_CONST,
.resetvalue = 0 },
{ .name = "AFSR0_EL2", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_BOTH,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 5, .crm = 1, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL2_RW, .type = ARM_CP_CONST,
.resetvalue = 0 },
{ .name = "AFSR1_EL2", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_BOTH,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 5, .crm = 1, .opc2 = 1,
.access = PL2_RW, .type = ARM_CP_CONST,
.resetvalue = 0 },
{ .name = "TCR_EL2", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_BOTH,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 2, .crm = 0, .opc2 = 2,
.access = PL2_RW, .writefn = vmsa_tcr_el12_write,
/* no .raw_writefn or .resetfn needed as we never use mask/base_mask */
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.tcr_el[2]) },
{ .name = "VTCR", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA32,
.cp = 15, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 2, .crm = 1, .opc2 = 2,
.type = ARM_CP_ALIAS,
.access = PL2_RW, .accessfn = access_el3_aa32ns,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.vtcr_el2) },
{ .name = "VTCR_EL2", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 2, .crm = 1, .opc2 = 2,
.access = PL2_RW,
/* no .writefn needed as this can't cause an ASID change;
* no .raw_writefn or .resetfn needed as we never use mask/base_mask
*/
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.vtcr_el2) },
{ .name = "VTTBR", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA32,
.cp = 15, .opc1 = 6, .crm = 2,
.type = ARM_CP_64BIT | ARM_CP_ALIAS,
.access = PL2_RW, .accessfn = access_el3_aa32ns,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.vttbr_el2),
.writefn = vttbr_write },
{ .name = "VTTBR_EL2", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 2, .crm = 1, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL2_RW, .writefn = vttbr_write,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.vttbr_el2) },
{ .name = "SCTLR_EL2", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_BOTH,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 1, .crm = 0, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL2_RW, .raw_writefn = raw_write, .writefn = sctlr_write,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.sctlr_el[2]) },
{ .name = "TPIDR_EL2", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_BOTH,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 13, .crm = 0, .opc2 = 2,
.access = PL2_RW, .resetvalue = 0,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.tpidr_el[2]) },
{ .name = "TTBR0_EL2", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 2, .crm = 0, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL2_RW, .resetvalue = 0, .writefn = vmsa_tcr_ttbr_el2_write,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.ttbr0_el[2]) },
{ .name = "HTTBR", .cp = 15, .opc1 = 4, .crm = 2,
.access = PL2_RW, .type = ARM_CP_64BIT | ARM_CP_ALIAS,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.ttbr0_el[2]) },
{ .name = "TLBIALLNSNH",
.cp = 15, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 8, .crm = 7, .opc2 = 4,
.type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW, .access = PL2_W,
.writefn = tlbiall_nsnh_write },
{ .name = "TLBIALLNSNHIS",
.cp = 15, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 8, .crm = 3, .opc2 = 4,
.type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW, .access = PL2_W,
.writefn = tlbiall_nsnh_is_write },
{ .name = "TLBIALLH", .cp = 15, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 8, .crm = 7, .opc2 = 0,
.type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW, .access = PL2_W,
.writefn = tlbiall_hyp_write },
{ .name = "TLBIALLHIS", .cp = 15, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 8, .crm = 3, .opc2 = 0,
.type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW, .access = PL2_W,
.writefn = tlbiall_hyp_is_write },
{ .name = "TLBIMVAH", .cp = 15, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 8, .crm = 7, .opc2 = 1,
.type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW, .access = PL2_W,
.writefn = tlbimva_hyp_write },
{ .name = "TLBIMVAHIS", .cp = 15, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 8, .crm = 3, .opc2 = 1,
.type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW, .access = PL2_W,
.writefn = tlbimva_hyp_is_write },
{ .name = "TLBI_ALLE2", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 8, .crm = 7, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL2_W, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW | ARM_CP_EL3_NO_EL2_UNDEF,
.writefn = tlbi_aa64_alle2_write },
{ .name = "TLBI_VAE2", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 8, .crm = 7, .opc2 = 1,
.access = PL2_W, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW | ARM_CP_EL3_NO_EL2_UNDEF,
.writefn = tlbi_aa64_vae2_write },
{ .name = "TLBI_VALE2", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 8, .crm = 7, .opc2 = 5,
.access = PL2_W, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW | ARM_CP_EL3_NO_EL2_UNDEF,
.writefn = tlbi_aa64_vae2_write },
{ .name = "TLBI_ALLE2IS", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 8, .crm = 3, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL2_W, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW | ARM_CP_EL3_NO_EL2_UNDEF,
.writefn = tlbi_aa64_alle2is_write },
{ .name = "TLBI_VAE2IS", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 8, .crm = 3, .opc2 = 1,
.access = PL2_W, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW | ARM_CP_EL3_NO_EL2_UNDEF,
.writefn = tlbi_aa64_vae2is_write },
{ .name = "TLBI_VALE2IS", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 8, .crm = 3, .opc2 = 5,
.access = PL2_W, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW | ARM_CP_EL3_NO_EL2_UNDEF,
.writefn = tlbi_aa64_vae2is_write },
#ifndef CONFIG_USER_ONLY
/* Unlike the other EL2-related AT operations, these must
* UNDEF from EL3 if EL2 is not implemented, which is why we
* define them here rather than with the rest of the AT ops.
*/
{ .name = "AT_S1E2R", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 7, .crm = 8, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL2_W, .accessfn = at_s1e2_access,
.type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW | ARM_CP_RAISES_EXC | ARM_CP_EL3_NO_EL2_UNDEF,
.writefn = ats_write64 },
{ .name = "AT_S1E2W", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 7, .crm = 8, .opc2 = 1,
.access = PL2_W, .accessfn = at_s1e2_access,
.type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW | ARM_CP_RAISES_EXC | ARM_CP_EL3_NO_EL2_UNDEF,
.writefn = ats_write64 },
/* The AArch32 ATS1H* operations are CONSTRAINED UNPREDICTABLE
* if EL2 is not implemented; we choose to UNDEF. Behaviour at EL3
* with SCR.NS == 0 outside Monitor mode is UNPREDICTABLE; we choose
* to behave as if SCR.NS was 1.
*/
{ .name = "ATS1HR", .cp = 15, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 7, .crm = 8, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL2_W,
.writefn = ats1h_write, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW | ARM_CP_RAISES_EXC },
{ .name = "ATS1HW", .cp = 15, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 7, .crm = 8, .opc2 = 1,
.access = PL2_W,
.writefn = ats1h_write, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW | ARM_CP_RAISES_EXC },
{ .name = "CNTHCTL_EL2", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_BOTH,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 14, .crm = 1, .opc2 = 0,
/* ARMv7 requires bit 0 and 1 to reset to 1. ARMv8 defines the
* reset values as IMPDEF. We choose to reset to 3 to comply with
* both ARMv7 and ARMv8.
*/
.access = PL2_RW, .resetvalue = 3,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.cnthctl_el2) },
{ .name = "CNTVOFF_EL2", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 14, .crm = 0, .opc2 = 3,
.access = PL2_RW, .type = ARM_CP_IO, .resetvalue = 0,
.writefn = gt_cntvoff_write,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.cntvoff_el2) },
{ .name = "CNTVOFF", .cp = 15, .opc1 = 4, .crm = 14,
.access = PL2_RW, .type = ARM_CP_64BIT | ARM_CP_ALIAS | ARM_CP_IO,
.writefn = gt_cntvoff_write,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.cntvoff_el2) },
{ .name = "CNTHP_CVAL_EL2", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 14, .crm = 2, .opc2 = 2,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.c14_timer[GTIMER_HYP].cval),
.type = ARM_CP_IO, .access = PL2_RW,
.writefn = gt_hyp_cval_write, .raw_writefn = raw_write },
{ .name = "CNTHP_CVAL", .cp = 15, .opc1 = 6, .crm = 14,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.c14_timer[GTIMER_HYP].cval),
.access = PL2_RW, .type = ARM_CP_64BIT | ARM_CP_IO,
.writefn = gt_hyp_cval_write, .raw_writefn = raw_write },
{ .name = "CNTHP_TVAL_EL2", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_BOTH,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 14, .crm = 2, .opc2 = 0,
.type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW | ARM_CP_IO, .access = PL2_RW,
.resetfn = gt_hyp_timer_reset,
.readfn = gt_hyp_tval_read, .writefn = gt_hyp_tval_write },
{ .name = "CNTHP_CTL_EL2", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_BOTH,
.type = ARM_CP_IO,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 14, .crm = 2, .opc2 = 1,
.access = PL2_RW,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.c14_timer[GTIMER_HYP].ctl),
.resetvalue = 0,
.writefn = gt_hyp_ctl_write, .raw_writefn = raw_write },
#endif
{ .name = "HPFAR", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA32,
.cp = 15, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 6, .crm = 0, .opc2 = 4,
.access = PL2_RW, .accessfn = access_el3_aa32ns,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.hpfar_el2) },
{ .name = "HPFAR_EL2", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 6, .crm = 0, .opc2 = 4,
.access = PL2_RW,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.hpfar_el2) },
{ .name = "HSTR_EL2", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_BOTH,
.cp = 15, .opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 1, .crm = 1, .opc2 = 3,
.access = PL2_RW,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.hstr_el2) },
};
static const ARMCPRegInfo el2_v8_cp_reginfo[] = {
{ .name = "HCR2", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA32,
.type = ARM_CP_ALIAS | ARM_CP_IO,
.cp = 15, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 1, .crm = 1, .opc2 = 4,
.access = PL2_RW,
.fieldoffset = offsetofhigh32(CPUARMState, cp15.hcr_el2),
.writefn = hcr_writehigh },
};
static CPAccessResult sel2_access(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
bool isread)
{
if (arm_current_el(env) == 3 || arm_is_secure_below_el3(env)) {
return CP_ACCESS_OK;
}
return CP_ACCESS_TRAP_UNCATEGORIZED;
}
static const ARMCPRegInfo el2_sec_cp_reginfo[] = {
{ .name = "VSTTBR_EL2", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 2, .crm = 6, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL2_RW, .accessfn = sel2_access,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.vsttbr_el2) },
{ .name = "VSTCR_EL2", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 2, .crm = 6, .opc2 = 2,
.access = PL2_RW, .accessfn = sel2_access,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.vstcr_el2) },
};
static CPAccessResult nsacr_access(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
bool isread)
{
/* The NSACR is RW at EL3, and RO for NS EL1 and NS EL2.
* At Secure EL1 it traps to EL3 or EL2.
*/
if (arm_current_el(env) == 3) {
return CP_ACCESS_OK;
}
if (arm_is_secure_below_el3(env)) {
if (env->cp15.scr_el3 & SCR_EEL2) {
return CP_ACCESS_TRAP_EL2;
}
return CP_ACCESS_TRAP_EL3;
}
/* Accesses from EL1 NS and EL2 NS are UNDEF for write but allow reads. */
if (isread) {
return CP_ACCESS_OK;
}
return CP_ACCESS_TRAP_UNCATEGORIZED;
}
static const ARMCPRegInfo el3_cp_reginfo[] = {
{ .name = "SCR_EL3", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 6, .crn = 1, .crm = 1, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL3_RW, .fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.scr_el3),
.resetfn = scr_reset, .writefn = scr_write },
{ .name = "SCR", .type = ARM_CP_ALIAS | ARM_CP_NEWEL,
.cp = 15, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 1, .crm = 1, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL1_RW, .accessfn = access_trap_aa32s_el1,
.fieldoffset = offsetoflow32(CPUARMState, cp15.scr_el3),
.writefn = scr_write },
{ .name = "SDER32_EL3", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 6, .crn = 1, .crm = 1, .opc2 = 1,
.access = PL3_RW, .resetvalue = 0,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.sder) },
{ .name = "SDER",
.cp = 15, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 1, .crm = 1, .opc2 = 1,
.access = PL3_RW, .resetvalue = 0,
.fieldoffset = offsetoflow32(CPUARMState, cp15.sder) },
{ .name = "MVBAR", .cp = 15, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 12, .crm = 0, .opc2 = 1,
.access = PL1_RW, .accessfn = access_trap_aa32s_el1,
.writefn = vbar_write, .resetvalue = 0,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.mvbar) },
{ .name = "TTBR0_EL3", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 6, .crn = 2, .crm = 0, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL3_RW, .resetvalue = 0,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.ttbr0_el[3]) },
{ .name = "TCR_EL3", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 6, .crn = 2, .crm = 0, .opc2 = 2,
.access = PL3_RW,
/* no .writefn needed as this can't cause an ASID change;
* we must provide a .raw_writefn and .resetfn because we handle
* reset and migration for the AArch32 TTBCR(S), which might be
* using mask and base_mask.
*/
.resetfn = vmsa_ttbcr_reset, .raw_writefn = vmsa_ttbcr_raw_write,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.tcr_el[3]) },
{ .name = "ELR_EL3", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
target-arm: Split NO_MIGRATE into ALIAS and NO_RAW We currently mark ARM coprocessor/system register definitions with the flag ARM_CP_NO_MIGRATE for two different reasons: 1) register is an alias on to state that's also visible via some other register, and that other register is the one responsible for migrating the state 2) register is not actually state at all (for instance the TLB or cache maintenance operation "registers") and it makes no sense to attempt to migrate it or otherwise access the raw state This works fine for identifying which registers should be ignored when performing migration, but we also use the same functions for synchronizing system register state between QEMU and the kernel when using KVM. In this case we don't want to try to sync state into registers in category 2, but we do want to sync into registers in category 1, because the kernel might have picked a different one of the aliases as its choice for which one to expose for migration. (In particular, on 32 bit hosts the kernel will expose the state in the AArch32 version of the register, but TCG's convention is to mark the AArch64 version as the version to migrate, even if the CPU being emulated happens to be 32 bit, so almost all system registers will hit this issue now that we've added AArch64 system emulation.) Fix this by splitting the NO_MIGRATE flag in two (ALIAS and NO_RAW) corresponding to the two different reasons we might not want to migrate a register. When setting up the TCG list of registers to migrate we honour both flags; when populating the list from KVM, only ignore registers which are NO_RAW. Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Greg Bellows <greg.bellows@linaro.org> Message-id: 1422282372-13735-2-git-send-email-peter.maydell@linaro.org [PMM: changed ARM_CP_NO_MIGRATE to ARM_CP_ALIAS on new SP_EL1 and SP_EL2 reginfo stanzas since there was a (semantic) merge conflict with the patchset that added those]
2015-02-05 14:37:22 +01:00
.type = ARM_CP_ALIAS,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 6, .crn = 4, .crm = 0, .opc2 = 1,
.access = PL3_RW,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, elr_el[3]) },
{ .name = "ESR_EL3", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 6, .crn = 5, .crm = 2, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL3_RW, .fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.esr_el[3]) },
{ .name = "FAR_EL3", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 6, .crn = 6, .crm = 0, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL3_RW, .fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.far_el[3]) },
{ .name = "SPSR_EL3", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
target-arm: Split NO_MIGRATE into ALIAS and NO_RAW We currently mark ARM coprocessor/system register definitions with the flag ARM_CP_NO_MIGRATE for two different reasons: 1) register is an alias on to state that's also visible via some other register, and that other register is the one responsible for migrating the state 2) register is not actually state at all (for instance the TLB or cache maintenance operation "registers") and it makes no sense to attempt to migrate it or otherwise access the raw state This works fine for identifying which registers should be ignored when performing migration, but we also use the same functions for synchronizing system register state between QEMU and the kernel when using KVM. In this case we don't want to try to sync state into registers in category 2, but we do want to sync into registers in category 1, because the kernel might have picked a different one of the aliases as its choice for which one to expose for migration. (In particular, on 32 bit hosts the kernel will expose the state in the AArch32 version of the register, but TCG's convention is to mark the AArch64 version as the version to migrate, even if the CPU being emulated happens to be 32 bit, so almost all system registers will hit this issue now that we've added AArch64 system emulation.) Fix this by splitting the NO_MIGRATE flag in two (ALIAS and NO_RAW) corresponding to the two different reasons we might not want to migrate a register. When setting up the TCG list of registers to migrate we honour both flags; when populating the list from KVM, only ignore registers which are NO_RAW. Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Greg Bellows <greg.bellows@linaro.org> Message-id: 1422282372-13735-2-git-send-email-peter.maydell@linaro.org [PMM: changed ARM_CP_NO_MIGRATE to ARM_CP_ALIAS on new SP_EL1 and SP_EL2 reginfo stanzas since there was a (semantic) merge conflict with the patchset that added those]
2015-02-05 14:37:22 +01:00
.type = ARM_CP_ALIAS,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 6, .crn = 4, .crm = 0, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL3_RW,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, banked_spsr[BANK_MON]) },
{ .name = "VBAR_EL3", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 6, .crn = 12, .crm = 0, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL3_RW, .writefn = vbar_write,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.vbar_el[3]),
.resetvalue = 0 },
{ .name = "CPTR_EL3", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 6, .crn = 1, .crm = 1, .opc2 = 2,
.access = PL3_RW, .accessfn = cptr_access, .resetvalue = 0,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.cptr_el[3]) },
{ .name = "TPIDR_EL3", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 6, .crn = 13, .crm = 0, .opc2 = 2,
.access = PL3_RW, .resetvalue = 0,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.tpidr_el[3]) },
{ .name = "AMAIR_EL3", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 6, .crn = 10, .crm = 3, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL3_RW, .type = ARM_CP_CONST,
.resetvalue = 0 },
{ .name = "AFSR0_EL3", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_BOTH,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 6, .crn = 5, .crm = 1, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL3_RW, .type = ARM_CP_CONST,
.resetvalue = 0 },
{ .name = "AFSR1_EL3", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_BOTH,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 6, .crn = 5, .crm = 1, .opc2 = 1,
.access = PL3_RW, .type = ARM_CP_CONST,
.resetvalue = 0 },
{ .name = "TLBI_ALLE3IS", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 6, .crn = 8, .crm = 3, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL3_W, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW,
.writefn = tlbi_aa64_alle3is_write },
{ .name = "TLBI_VAE3IS", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 6, .crn = 8, .crm = 3, .opc2 = 1,
.access = PL3_W, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW,
.writefn = tlbi_aa64_vae3is_write },
{ .name = "TLBI_VALE3IS", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 6, .crn = 8, .crm = 3, .opc2 = 5,
.access = PL3_W, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW,
.writefn = tlbi_aa64_vae3is_write },
{ .name = "TLBI_ALLE3", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 6, .crn = 8, .crm = 7, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL3_W, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW,
.writefn = tlbi_aa64_alle3_write },
{ .name = "TLBI_VAE3", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 6, .crn = 8, .crm = 7, .opc2 = 1,
.access = PL3_W, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW,
.writefn = tlbi_aa64_vae3_write },
{ .name = "TLBI_VALE3", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 6, .crn = 8, .crm = 7, .opc2 = 5,
.access = PL3_W, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW,
.writefn = tlbi_aa64_vae3_write },
};
#ifndef CONFIG_USER_ONLY
/* Test if system register redirection is to occur in the current state. */
static bool redirect_for_e2h(CPUARMState *env)
{
return arm_current_el(env) == 2 && (arm_hcr_el2_eff(env) & HCR_E2H);
}
static uint64_t el2_e2h_read(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri)
{
CPReadFn *readfn;
if (redirect_for_e2h(env)) {
/* Switch to the saved EL2 version of the register. */
ri = ri->opaque;
readfn = ri->readfn;
} else {
readfn = ri->orig_readfn;
}
if (readfn == NULL) {
readfn = raw_read;
}
return readfn(env, ri);
}
static void el2_e2h_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
CPWriteFn *writefn;
if (redirect_for_e2h(env)) {
/* Switch to the saved EL2 version of the register. */
ri = ri->opaque;
writefn = ri->writefn;
} else {
writefn = ri->orig_writefn;
}
if (writefn == NULL) {
writefn = raw_write;
}
writefn(env, ri, value);
}
static void define_arm_vh_e2h_redirects_aliases(ARMCPU *cpu)
{
struct E2HAlias {
uint32_t src_key, dst_key, new_key;
const char *src_name, *dst_name, *new_name;
bool (*feature)(const ARMISARegisters *id);
};
#define K(op0, op1, crn, crm, op2) \
ENCODE_AA64_CP_REG(CP_REG_ARM64_SYSREG_CP, crn, crm, op0, op1, op2)
static const struct E2HAlias aliases[] = {
{ K(3, 0, 1, 0, 0), K(3, 4, 1, 0, 0), K(3, 5, 1, 0, 0),
"SCTLR", "SCTLR_EL2", "SCTLR_EL12" },
{ K(3, 0, 1, 0, 2), K(3, 4, 1, 1, 2), K(3, 5, 1, 0, 2),
"CPACR", "CPTR_EL2", "CPACR_EL12" },
{ K(3, 0, 2, 0, 0), K(3, 4, 2, 0, 0), K(3, 5, 2, 0, 0),
"TTBR0_EL1", "TTBR0_EL2", "TTBR0_EL12" },
{ K(3, 0, 2, 0, 1), K(3, 4, 2, 0, 1), K(3, 5, 2, 0, 1),
"TTBR1_EL1", "TTBR1_EL2", "TTBR1_EL12" },
{ K(3, 0, 2, 0, 2), K(3, 4, 2, 0, 2), K(3, 5, 2, 0, 2),
"TCR_EL1", "TCR_EL2", "TCR_EL12" },
{ K(3, 0, 4, 0, 0), K(3, 4, 4, 0, 0), K(3, 5, 4, 0, 0),
"SPSR_EL1", "SPSR_EL2", "SPSR_EL12" },
{ K(3, 0, 4, 0, 1), K(3, 4, 4, 0, 1), K(3, 5, 4, 0, 1),
"ELR_EL1", "ELR_EL2", "ELR_EL12" },
{ K(3, 0, 5, 1, 0), K(3, 4, 5, 1, 0), K(3, 5, 5, 1, 0),
"AFSR0_EL1", "AFSR0_EL2", "AFSR0_EL12" },
{ K(3, 0, 5, 1, 1), K(3, 4, 5, 1, 1), K(3, 5, 5, 1, 1),
"AFSR1_EL1", "AFSR1_EL2", "AFSR1_EL12" },
{ K(3, 0, 5, 2, 0), K(3, 4, 5, 2, 0), K(3, 5, 5, 2, 0),
"ESR_EL1", "ESR_EL2", "ESR_EL12" },
{ K(3, 0, 6, 0, 0), K(3, 4, 6, 0, 0), K(3, 5, 6, 0, 0),
"FAR_EL1", "FAR_EL2", "FAR_EL12" },
{ K(3, 0, 10, 2, 0), K(3, 4, 10, 2, 0), K(3, 5, 10, 2, 0),
"MAIR_EL1", "MAIR_EL2", "MAIR_EL12" },
{ K(3, 0, 10, 3, 0), K(3, 4, 10, 3, 0), K(3, 5, 10, 3, 0),
"AMAIR0", "AMAIR_EL2", "AMAIR_EL12" },
{ K(3, 0, 12, 0, 0), K(3, 4, 12, 0, 0), K(3, 5, 12, 0, 0),
"VBAR", "VBAR_EL2", "VBAR_EL12" },
{ K(3, 0, 13, 0, 1), K(3, 4, 13, 0, 1), K(3, 5, 13, 0, 1),
"CONTEXTIDR_EL1", "CONTEXTIDR_EL2", "CONTEXTIDR_EL12" },
{ K(3, 0, 14, 1, 0), K(3, 4, 14, 1, 0), K(3, 5, 14, 1, 0),
"CNTKCTL", "CNTHCTL_EL2", "CNTKCTL_EL12" },
/*
* Note that redirection of ZCR is mentioned in the description
* of ZCR_EL2, and aliasing in the description of ZCR_EL1, but
* not in the summary table.
*/
{ K(3, 0, 1, 2, 0), K(3, 4, 1, 2, 0), K(3, 5, 1, 2, 0),
"ZCR_EL1", "ZCR_EL2", "ZCR_EL12", isar_feature_aa64_sve },
{ K(3, 0, 5, 6, 0), K(3, 4, 5, 6, 0), K(3, 5, 5, 6, 0),
"TFSR_EL1", "TFSR_EL2", "TFSR_EL12", isar_feature_aa64_mte },
{ K(3, 0, 13, 0, 7), K(3, 4, 13, 0, 7), K(3, 5, 13, 0, 7),
"SCXTNUM_EL1", "SCXTNUM_EL2", "SCXTNUM_EL12",
isar_feature_aa64_scxtnum },
/* TODO: ARMv8.2-SPE -- PMSCR_EL2 */
/* TODO: ARMv8.4-Trace -- TRFCR_EL2 */
};
#undef K
size_t i;
for (i = 0; i < ARRAY_SIZE(aliases); i++) {
const struct E2HAlias *a = &aliases[i];
ARMCPRegInfo *src_reg, *dst_reg, *new_reg;
bool ok;
if (a->feature && !a->feature(&cpu->isar)) {
continue;
}
src_reg = g_hash_table_lookup(cpu->cp_regs,
(gpointer)(uintptr_t)a->src_key);
dst_reg = g_hash_table_lookup(cpu->cp_regs,
(gpointer)(uintptr_t)a->dst_key);
g_assert(src_reg != NULL);
g_assert(dst_reg != NULL);
/* Cross-compare names to detect typos in the keys. */
g_assert(strcmp(src_reg->name, a->src_name) == 0);
g_assert(strcmp(dst_reg->name, a->dst_name) == 0);
/* None of the core system registers use opaque; we will. */
g_assert(src_reg->opaque == NULL);
/* Create alias before redirection so we dup the right data. */
new_reg = g_memdup(src_reg, sizeof(ARMCPRegInfo));
new_reg->name = a->new_name;
new_reg->type |= ARM_CP_ALIAS;
/* Remove PL1/PL0 access, leaving PL2/PL3 R/W in place. */
new_reg->access &= PL2_RW | PL3_RW;
ok = g_hash_table_insert(cpu->cp_regs,
(gpointer)(uintptr_t)a->new_key, new_reg);
g_assert(ok);
src_reg->opaque = dst_reg;
src_reg->orig_readfn = src_reg->readfn ?: raw_read;
src_reg->orig_writefn = src_reg->writefn ?: raw_write;
if (!src_reg->raw_readfn) {
src_reg->raw_readfn = raw_read;
}
if (!src_reg->raw_writefn) {
src_reg->raw_writefn = raw_write;
}
src_reg->readfn = el2_e2h_read;
src_reg->writefn = el2_e2h_write;
}
}
#endif
static CPAccessResult ctr_el0_access(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
bool isread)
{
int cur_el = arm_current_el(env);
if (cur_el < 2) {
uint64_t hcr = arm_hcr_el2_eff(env);
if (cur_el == 0) {
if ((hcr & (HCR_E2H | HCR_TGE)) == (HCR_E2H | HCR_TGE)) {
if (!(env->cp15.sctlr_el[2] & SCTLR_UCT)) {
return CP_ACCESS_TRAP_EL2;
}
} else {
if (!(env->cp15.sctlr_el[1] & SCTLR_UCT)) {
return CP_ACCESS_TRAP;
}
if (hcr & HCR_TID2) {
return CP_ACCESS_TRAP_EL2;
}
}
} else if (hcr & HCR_TID2) {
return CP_ACCESS_TRAP_EL2;
}
}
if (arm_current_el(env) < 2 && arm_hcr_el2_eff(env) & HCR_TID2) {
return CP_ACCESS_TRAP_EL2;
}
return CP_ACCESS_OK;
}
static void oslar_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
/* Writes to OSLAR_EL1 may update the OS lock status, which can be
* read via a bit in OSLSR_EL1.
*/
int oslock;
if (ri->state == ARM_CP_STATE_AA32) {
oslock = (value == 0xC5ACCE55);
} else {
oslock = value & 1;
}
env->cp15.oslsr_el1 = deposit32(env->cp15.oslsr_el1, 1, 1, oslock);
}
static const ARMCPRegInfo debug_cp_reginfo[] = {
/* DBGDRAR, DBGDSAR: always RAZ since we don't implement memory mapped
* debug components. The AArch64 version of DBGDRAR is named MDRAR_EL1;
* unlike DBGDRAR it is never accessible from EL0.
* DBGDSAR is deprecated and must RAZ from v8 anyway, so it has no AArch64
* accessor.
*/
{ .name = "DBGDRAR", .cp = 14, .crn = 1, .crm = 0, .opc1 = 0, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL0_R, .accessfn = access_tdra,
.type = ARM_CP_CONST, .resetvalue = 0 },
{ .name = "MDRAR_EL1", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 2, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 1, .crm = 0, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL1_R, .accessfn = access_tdra,
.type = ARM_CP_CONST, .resetvalue = 0 },
{ .name = "DBGDSAR", .cp = 14, .crn = 2, .crm = 0, .opc1 = 0, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL0_R, .accessfn = access_tdra,
.type = ARM_CP_CONST, .resetvalue = 0 },
/* Monitor debug system control register; the 32-bit alias is DBGDSCRext. */
{ .name = "MDSCR_EL1", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_BOTH,
.cp = 14, .opc0 = 2, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 0, .crm = 2, .opc2 = 2,
.access = PL1_RW, .accessfn = access_tda,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.mdscr_el1),
.resetvalue = 0 },
/*
* MDCCSR_EL0[30:29] map to EDSCR[30:29]. Simply RAZ as the external
* Debug Communication Channel is not implemented.
*/
{ .name = "MDCCSR_EL0", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 2, .opc1 = 3, .crn = 0, .crm = 1, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL0_R, .accessfn = access_tda,
.type = ARM_CP_CONST, .resetvalue = 0 },
/*
* DBGDSCRint[15,12,5:2] map to MDSCR_EL1[15,12,5:2]. Map all bits as
* it is unlikely a guest will care.
* We don't implement the configurable EL0 access.
*/
{ .name = "DBGDSCRint", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA32,
.cp = 14, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 0, .crm = 1, .opc2 = 0,
target-arm: Split NO_MIGRATE into ALIAS and NO_RAW We currently mark ARM coprocessor/system register definitions with the flag ARM_CP_NO_MIGRATE for two different reasons: 1) register is an alias on to state that's also visible via some other register, and that other register is the one responsible for migrating the state 2) register is not actually state at all (for instance the TLB or cache maintenance operation "registers") and it makes no sense to attempt to migrate it or otherwise access the raw state This works fine for identifying which registers should be ignored when performing migration, but we also use the same functions for synchronizing system register state between QEMU and the kernel when using KVM. In this case we don't want to try to sync state into registers in category 2, but we do want to sync into registers in category 1, because the kernel might have picked a different one of the aliases as its choice for which one to expose for migration. (In particular, on 32 bit hosts the kernel will expose the state in the AArch32 version of the register, but TCG's convention is to mark the AArch64 version as the version to migrate, even if the CPU being emulated happens to be 32 bit, so almost all system registers will hit this issue now that we've added AArch64 system emulation.) Fix this by splitting the NO_MIGRATE flag in two (ALIAS and NO_RAW) corresponding to the two different reasons we might not want to migrate a register. When setting up the TCG list of registers to migrate we honour both flags; when populating the list from KVM, only ignore registers which are NO_RAW. Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Greg Bellows <greg.bellows@linaro.org> Message-id: 1422282372-13735-2-git-send-email-peter.maydell@linaro.org [PMM: changed ARM_CP_NO_MIGRATE to ARM_CP_ALIAS on new SP_EL1 and SP_EL2 reginfo stanzas since there was a (semantic) merge conflict with the patchset that added those]
2015-02-05 14:37:22 +01:00
.type = ARM_CP_ALIAS,
.access = PL1_R, .accessfn = access_tda,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.mdscr_el1), },
{ .name = "OSLAR_EL1", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_BOTH,
.cp = 14, .opc0 = 2, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 1, .crm = 0, .opc2 = 4,
.access = PL1_W, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW,
.accessfn = access_tdosa,
.writefn = oslar_write },
{ .name = "OSLSR_EL1", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_BOTH,
.cp = 14, .opc0 = 2, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 1, .crm = 1, .opc2 = 4,
.access = PL1_R, .resetvalue = 10,
.accessfn = access_tdosa,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.oslsr_el1) },
/* Dummy OSDLR_EL1: 32-bit Linux will read this */
{ .name = "OSDLR_EL1", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_BOTH,
.cp = 14, .opc0 = 2, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 1, .crm = 3, .opc2 = 4,
.access = PL1_RW, .accessfn = access_tdosa,
.type = ARM_CP_NOP },
/* Dummy DBGVCR: Linux wants to clear this on startup, but we don't
* implement vector catch debug events yet.
*/
{ .name = "DBGVCR",
.cp = 14, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 0, .crm = 7, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL1_RW, .accessfn = access_tda,
.type = ARM_CP_NOP },
/* Dummy DBGVCR32_EL2 (which is only for a 64-bit hypervisor
* to save and restore a 32-bit guest's DBGVCR)
*/
{ .name = "DBGVCR32_EL2", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 2, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 0, .crm = 7, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL2_RW, .accessfn = access_tda,
.type = ARM_CP_NOP | ARM_CP_EL3_NO_EL2_KEEP },
/* Dummy MDCCINT_EL1, since we don't implement the Debug Communications
* Channel but Linux may try to access this register. The 32-bit
* alias is DBGDCCINT.
*/
{ .name = "MDCCINT_EL1", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_BOTH,
.cp = 14, .opc0 = 2, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 0, .crm = 2, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL1_RW, .accessfn = access_tda,
.type = ARM_CP_NOP },
};
static const ARMCPRegInfo debug_lpae_cp_reginfo[] = {
/* 64 bit access versions of the (dummy) debug registers */
{ .name = "DBGDRAR", .cp = 14, .crm = 1, .opc1 = 0,
.access = PL0_R, .type = ARM_CP_CONST|ARM_CP_64BIT, .resetvalue = 0 },
{ .name = "DBGDSAR", .cp = 14, .crm = 2, .opc1 = 0,
.access = PL0_R, .type = ARM_CP_CONST|ARM_CP_64BIT, .resetvalue = 0 },
};
/*
* Check for traps to RAS registers, which are controlled
* by HCR_EL2.TERR and SCR_EL3.TERR.
*/
static CPAccessResult access_terr(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
bool isread)
{
int el = arm_current_el(env);
if (el < 2 && (arm_hcr_el2_eff(env) & HCR_TERR)) {
return CP_ACCESS_TRAP_EL2;
}
if (el < 3 && (env->cp15.scr_el3 & SCR_TERR)) {
return CP_ACCESS_TRAP_EL3;
}
return CP_ACCESS_OK;
}
static uint64_t disr_read(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri)
{
int el = arm_current_el(env);
if (el < 2 && (arm_hcr_el2_eff(env) & HCR_AMO)) {
return env->cp15.vdisr_el2;
}
if (el < 3 && (env->cp15.scr_el3 & SCR_EA)) {
return 0; /* RAZ/WI */
}
return env->cp15.disr_el1;
}
static void disr_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri, uint64_t val)
{
int el = arm_current_el(env);
if (el < 2 && (arm_hcr_el2_eff(env) & HCR_AMO)) {
env->cp15.vdisr_el2 = val;
return;
}
if (el < 3 && (env->cp15.scr_el3 & SCR_EA)) {
return; /* RAZ/WI */
}
env->cp15.disr_el1 = val;
}
/*
* Minimal RAS implementation with no Error Records.
* Which means that all of the Error Record registers:
* ERXADDR_EL1
* ERXCTLR_EL1
* ERXFR_EL1
* ERXMISC0_EL1
* ERXMISC1_EL1
* ERXMISC2_EL1
* ERXMISC3_EL1
* ERXPFGCDN_EL1 (RASv1p1)
* ERXPFGCTL_EL1 (RASv1p1)
* ERXPFGF_EL1 (RASv1p1)
* ERXSTATUS_EL1
* and
* ERRSELR_EL1
* may generate UNDEFINED, which is the effect we get by not
* listing them at all.
*/
static const ARMCPRegInfo minimal_ras_reginfo[] = {
{ .name = "DISR_EL1", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_BOTH,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 12, .crm = 1, .opc2 = 1,
.access = PL1_RW, .fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.disr_el1),
.readfn = disr_read, .writefn = disr_write, .raw_writefn = raw_write },
{ .name = "ERRIDR_EL1", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_BOTH,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 5, .crm = 3, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL1_R, .accessfn = access_terr,
.type = ARM_CP_CONST, .resetvalue = 0 },
{ .name = "VDISR_EL2", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_BOTH,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 12, .crm = 1, .opc2 = 1,
.access = PL2_RW, .fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.vdisr_el2) },
{ .name = "VSESR_EL2", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_BOTH,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 5, .crm = 2, .opc2 = 3,
.access = PL2_RW, .fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.vsesr_el2) },
};
/* Return the exception level to which exceptions should be taken
* via SVEAccessTrap. If an exception should be routed through
* AArch64.AdvSIMDFPAccessTrap, return 0; fp_exception_el should
* take care of raising that exception.
* C.f. the ARM pseudocode function CheckSVEEnabled.
*/
int sve_exception_el(CPUARMState *env, int el)
{
#ifndef CONFIG_USER_ONLY
uint64_t hcr_el2 = arm_hcr_el2_eff(env);
if (el <= 1 && (hcr_el2 & (HCR_E2H | HCR_TGE)) != (HCR_E2H | HCR_TGE)) {
switch (FIELD_EX64(env->cp15.cpacr_el1, CPACR_EL1, ZEN)) {
case 1:
if (el != 0) {
break;
}
/* fall through */
case 0:
case 2:
/* route_to_el2 */
return hcr_el2 & HCR_TGE ? 2 : 1;
}
/* Check CPACR.FPEN. */
switch (FIELD_EX64(env->cp15.cpacr_el1, CPACR_EL1, FPEN)) {
case 1:
if (el != 0) {
break;
}
/* fall through */
case 0:
case 2:
return 0;
}
}
/*
* CPTR_EL2 changes format with HCR_EL2.E2H (regardless of TGE).
*/
if (el <= 2) {
if (hcr_el2 & HCR_E2H) {
switch (FIELD_EX64(env->cp15.cptr_el[2], CPTR_EL2, ZEN)) {
case 1:
if (el != 0 || !(hcr_el2 & HCR_TGE)) {
break;
}
/* fall through */
case 0:
case 2:
return 2;
}
switch (FIELD_EX32(env->cp15.cptr_el[2], CPTR_EL2, FPEN)) {
case 1:
if (el == 2 || !(hcr_el2 & HCR_TGE)) {
break;
}
/* fall through */
case 0:
case 2:
return 0;
}
} else if (arm_is_el2_enabled(env)) {
if (FIELD_EX64(env->cp15.cptr_el[2], CPTR_EL2, TZ)) {
return 2;
}
if (FIELD_EX64(env->cp15.cptr_el[2], CPTR_EL2, TFP)) {
return 0;
}
}
}
/* CPTR_EL3. Since EZ is negative we must check for EL3. */
if (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_EL3)
&& !FIELD_EX64(env->cp15.cptr_el[3], CPTR_EL3, EZ)) {
return 3;
}
#endif
return 0;
}
uint32_t aarch64_sve_zcr_get_valid_len(ARMCPU *cpu, uint32_t start_len)
target/arm/cpu64: max cpu: Introduce sve<N> properties Introduce cpu properties to give fine control over SVE vector lengths. We introduce a property for each valid length up to the current maximum supported, which is 2048-bits. The properties are named, e.g. sve128, sve256, sve384, sve512, ..., where the number is the number of bits. See the updates to docs/arm-cpu-features.rst for a description of the semantics and for example uses. Note, as sve-max-vq is still present and we'd like to be able to support qmp_query_cpu_model_expansion with guests launched with e.g. -cpu max,sve-max-vq=8 on their command lines, then we do allow sve-max-vq and sve<N> properties to be provided at the same time, but this is not recommended, and is why sve-max-vq is not mentioned in the document. If sve-max-vq is provided then it enables all lengths smaller than and including the max and disables all lengths larger. It also has the side-effect that no larger lengths may be enabled and that the max itself cannot be disabled. Smaller non-power-of-two lengths may, however, be disabled, e.g. -cpu max,sve-max-vq=4,sve384=off provides a guest the vector lengths 128, 256, and 512 bits. This patch has been co-authored with Richard Henderson, who reworked the target/arm/cpu64.c changes in order to push all the validation and auto-enabling/disabling steps into the finalizer, resulting in a nice LOC reduction. Signed-off-by: Andrew Jones <drjones@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Eric Auger <eric.auger@redhat.com> Tested-by: Masayoshi Mizuma <m.mizuma@jp.fujitsu.com> Reviewed-by: Beata Michalska <beata.michalska@linaro.org> Message-id: 20191031142734.8590-5-drjones@redhat.com Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org>
2019-10-31 15:27:29 +01:00
{
uint32_t end_len;
target/arm/cpu64: max cpu: Introduce sve<N> properties Introduce cpu properties to give fine control over SVE vector lengths. We introduce a property for each valid length up to the current maximum supported, which is 2048-bits. The properties are named, e.g. sve128, sve256, sve384, sve512, ..., where the number is the number of bits. See the updates to docs/arm-cpu-features.rst for a description of the semantics and for example uses. Note, as sve-max-vq is still present and we'd like to be able to support qmp_query_cpu_model_expansion with guests launched with e.g. -cpu max,sve-max-vq=8 on their command lines, then we do allow sve-max-vq and sve<N> properties to be provided at the same time, but this is not recommended, and is why sve-max-vq is not mentioned in the document. If sve-max-vq is provided then it enables all lengths smaller than and including the max and disables all lengths larger. It also has the side-effect that no larger lengths may be enabled and that the max itself cannot be disabled. Smaller non-power-of-two lengths may, however, be disabled, e.g. -cpu max,sve-max-vq=4,sve384=off provides a guest the vector lengths 128, 256, and 512 bits. This patch has been co-authored with Richard Henderson, who reworked the target/arm/cpu64.c changes in order to push all the validation and auto-enabling/disabling steps into the finalizer, resulting in a nice LOC reduction. Signed-off-by: Andrew Jones <drjones@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Eric Auger <eric.auger@redhat.com> Tested-by: Masayoshi Mizuma <m.mizuma@jp.fujitsu.com> Reviewed-by: Beata Michalska <beata.michalska@linaro.org> Message-id: 20191031142734.8590-5-drjones@redhat.com Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org>
2019-10-31 15:27:29 +01:00
start_len = MIN(start_len, ARM_MAX_VQ - 1);
end_len = start_len;
if (!test_bit(start_len, cpu->sve_vq_map)) {
end_len = find_last_bit(cpu->sve_vq_map, start_len);
assert(end_len < start_len);
}
return end_len;
target/arm/cpu64: max cpu: Introduce sve<N> properties Introduce cpu properties to give fine control over SVE vector lengths. We introduce a property for each valid length up to the current maximum supported, which is 2048-bits. The properties are named, e.g. sve128, sve256, sve384, sve512, ..., where the number is the number of bits. See the updates to docs/arm-cpu-features.rst for a description of the semantics and for example uses. Note, as sve-max-vq is still present and we'd like to be able to support qmp_query_cpu_model_expansion with guests launched with e.g. -cpu max,sve-max-vq=8 on their command lines, then we do allow sve-max-vq and sve<N> properties to be provided at the same time, but this is not recommended, and is why sve-max-vq is not mentioned in the document. If sve-max-vq is provided then it enables all lengths smaller than and including the max and disables all lengths larger. It also has the side-effect that no larger lengths may be enabled and that the max itself cannot be disabled. Smaller non-power-of-two lengths may, however, be disabled, e.g. -cpu max,sve-max-vq=4,sve384=off provides a guest the vector lengths 128, 256, and 512 bits. This patch has been co-authored with Richard Henderson, who reworked the target/arm/cpu64.c changes in order to push all the validation and auto-enabling/disabling steps into the finalizer, resulting in a nice LOC reduction. Signed-off-by: Andrew Jones <drjones@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Eric Auger <eric.auger@redhat.com> Tested-by: Masayoshi Mizuma <m.mizuma@jp.fujitsu.com> Reviewed-by: Beata Michalska <beata.michalska@linaro.org> Message-id: 20191031142734.8590-5-drjones@redhat.com Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org>
2019-10-31 15:27:29 +01:00
}
/*
* Given that SVE is enabled, return the vector length for EL.
*/
uint32_t sve_zcr_len_for_el(CPUARMState *env, int el)
{
ARMCPU *cpu = env_archcpu(env);
uint32_t zcr_len = cpu->sve_max_vq - 1;
if (el <= 1 &&
(arm_hcr_el2_eff(env) & (HCR_E2H | HCR_TGE)) != (HCR_E2H | HCR_TGE)) {
zcr_len = MIN(zcr_len, 0xf & (uint32_t)env->vfp.zcr_el[1]);
}
if (el <= 2 && arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_EL2)) {
zcr_len = MIN(zcr_len, 0xf & (uint32_t)env->vfp.zcr_el[2]);
}
if (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_EL3)) {
zcr_len = MIN(zcr_len, 0xf & (uint32_t)env->vfp.zcr_el[3]);
}
target/arm/cpu64: max cpu: Introduce sve<N> properties Introduce cpu properties to give fine control over SVE vector lengths. We introduce a property for each valid length up to the current maximum supported, which is 2048-bits. The properties are named, e.g. sve128, sve256, sve384, sve512, ..., where the number is the number of bits. See the updates to docs/arm-cpu-features.rst for a description of the semantics and for example uses. Note, as sve-max-vq is still present and we'd like to be able to support qmp_query_cpu_model_expansion with guests launched with e.g. -cpu max,sve-max-vq=8 on their command lines, then we do allow sve-max-vq and sve<N> properties to be provided at the same time, but this is not recommended, and is why sve-max-vq is not mentioned in the document. If sve-max-vq is provided then it enables all lengths smaller than and including the max and disables all lengths larger. It also has the side-effect that no larger lengths may be enabled and that the max itself cannot be disabled. Smaller non-power-of-two lengths may, however, be disabled, e.g. -cpu max,sve-max-vq=4,sve384=off provides a guest the vector lengths 128, 256, and 512 bits. This patch has been co-authored with Richard Henderson, who reworked the target/arm/cpu64.c changes in order to push all the validation and auto-enabling/disabling steps into the finalizer, resulting in a nice LOC reduction. Signed-off-by: Andrew Jones <drjones@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Eric Auger <eric.auger@redhat.com> Tested-by: Masayoshi Mizuma <m.mizuma@jp.fujitsu.com> Reviewed-by: Beata Michalska <beata.michalska@linaro.org> Message-id: 20191031142734.8590-5-drjones@redhat.com Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org>
2019-10-31 15:27:29 +01:00
return aarch64_sve_zcr_get_valid_len(cpu, zcr_len);
}
static void zcr_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
int cur_el = arm_current_el(env);
int old_len = sve_zcr_len_for_el(env, cur_el);
int new_len;
/* Bits other than [3:0] are RAZ/WI. */
QEMU_BUILD_BUG_ON(ARM_MAX_VQ > 16);
raw_write(env, ri, value & 0xf);
/*
* Because we arrived here, we know both FP and SVE are enabled;
* otherwise we would have trapped access to the ZCR_ELn register.
*/
new_len = sve_zcr_len_for_el(env, cur_el);
if (new_len < old_len) {
aarch64_sve_narrow_vq(env, new_len + 1);
}
}
static const ARMCPRegInfo zcr_reginfo[] = {
{ .name = "ZCR_EL1", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 1, .crm = 2, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL1_RW, .type = ARM_CP_SVE,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, vfp.zcr_el[1]),
.writefn = zcr_write, .raw_writefn = raw_write },
{ .name = "ZCR_EL2", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 1, .crm = 2, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL2_RW, .type = ARM_CP_SVE,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, vfp.zcr_el[2]),
.writefn = zcr_write, .raw_writefn = raw_write },
{ .name = "ZCR_EL3", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 6, .crn = 1, .crm = 2, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL3_RW, .type = ARM_CP_SVE,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, vfp.zcr_el[3]),
.writefn = zcr_write, .raw_writefn = raw_write },
};
void hw_watchpoint_update(ARMCPU *cpu, int n)
{
CPUARMState *env = &cpu->env;
vaddr len = 0;
vaddr wvr = env->cp15.dbgwvr[n];
uint64_t wcr = env->cp15.dbgwcr[n];
int mask;
int flags = BP_CPU | BP_STOP_BEFORE_ACCESS;
if (env->cpu_watchpoint[n]) {
cpu_watchpoint_remove_by_ref(CPU(cpu), env->cpu_watchpoint[n]);
env->cpu_watchpoint[n] = NULL;
}
if (!FIELD_EX64(wcr, DBGWCR, E)) {
/* E bit clear : watchpoint disabled */
return;
}
switch (FIELD_EX64(wcr, DBGWCR, LSC)) {
case 0:
/* LSC 00 is reserved and must behave as if the wp is disabled */
return;
case 1:
flags |= BP_MEM_READ;
break;
case 2:
flags |= BP_MEM_WRITE;
break;
case 3:
flags |= BP_MEM_ACCESS;
break;
}
/* Attempts to use both MASK and BAS fields simultaneously are
* CONSTRAINED UNPREDICTABLE; we opt to ignore BAS in this case,
* thus generating a watchpoint for every byte in the masked region.
*/
mask = FIELD_EX64(wcr, DBGWCR, MASK);
if (mask == 1 || mask == 2) {
/* Reserved values of MASK; we must act as if the mask value was
* some non-reserved value, or as if the watchpoint were disabled.
* We choose the latter.
*/
return;
} else if (mask) {
/* Watchpoint covers an aligned area up to 2GB in size */
len = 1ULL << mask;
/* If masked bits in WVR are not zero it's CONSTRAINED UNPREDICTABLE
* whether the watchpoint fires when the unmasked bits match; we opt
* to generate the exceptions.
*/
wvr &= ~(len - 1);
} else {
/* Watchpoint covers bytes defined by the byte address select bits */
int bas = FIELD_EX64(wcr, DBGWCR, BAS);
int basstart;
if (extract64(wvr, 2, 1)) {
/* Deprecated case of an only 4-aligned address. BAS[7:4] are
* ignored, and BAS[3:0] define which bytes to watch.
*/
bas &= 0xf;
}
if (bas == 0) {
/* This must act as if the watchpoint is disabled */
return;
}
/* The BAS bits are supposed to be programmed to indicate a contiguous
* range of bytes. Otherwise it is CONSTRAINED UNPREDICTABLE whether
* we fire for each byte in the word/doubleword addressed by the WVR.
* We choose to ignore any non-zero bits after the first range of 1s.
*/
basstart = ctz32(bas);
len = cto32(bas >> basstart);
wvr += basstart;
}
cpu_watchpoint_insert(CPU(cpu), wvr, len, flags,
&env->cpu_watchpoint[n]);
}
void hw_watchpoint_update_all(ARMCPU *cpu)
{
int i;
CPUARMState *env = &cpu->env;
/* Completely clear out existing QEMU watchpoints and our array, to
* avoid possible stale entries following migration load.
*/
cpu_watchpoint_remove_all(CPU(cpu), BP_CPU);
memset(env->cpu_watchpoint, 0, sizeof(env->cpu_watchpoint));
for (i = 0; i < ARRAY_SIZE(cpu->env.cpu_watchpoint); i++) {
hw_watchpoint_update(cpu, i);
}
}
static void dbgwvr_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
ARMCPU *cpu = env_archcpu(env);
int i = ri->crm;
/*
* Bits [1:0] are RES0.
*
* It is IMPLEMENTATION DEFINED whether [63:49] ([63:53] with FEAT_LVA)
* are hardwired to the value of bit [48] ([52] with FEAT_LVA), or if
* they contain the value written. It is CONSTRAINED UNPREDICTABLE
* whether the RESS bits are ignored when comparing an address.
*
* Therefore we are allowed to compare the entire register, which lets
* us avoid considering whether or not FEAT_LVA is actually enabled.
*/
value &= ~3ULL;
raw_write(env, ri, value);
hw_watchpoint_update(cpu, i);
}
static void dbgwcr_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
ARMCPU *cpu = env_archcpu(env);
int i = ri->crm;
raw_write(env, ri, value);
hw_watchpoint_update(cpu, i);
}
void hw_breakpoint_update(ARMCPU *cpu, int n)
{
CPUARMState *env = &cpu->env;
uint64_t bvr = env->cp15.dbgbvr[n];
uint64_t bcr = env->cp15.dbgbcr[n];
vaddr addr;
int bt;
int flags = BP_CPU;
if (env->cpu_breakpoint[n]) {
cpu_breakpoint_remove_by_ref(CPU(cpu), env->cpu_breakpoint[n]);
env->cpu_breakpoint[n] = NULL;
}
if (!extract64(bcr, 0, 1)) {
/* E bit clear : watchpoint disabled */
return;
}
bt = extract64(bcr, 20, 4);
switch (bt) {
case 4: /* unlinked address mismatch (reserved if AArch64) */
case 5: /* linked address mismatch (reserved if AArch64) */
qemu_log_mask(LOG_UNIMP,
"arm: address mismatch breakpoint types not implemented\n");
return;
case 0: /* unlinked address match */
case 1: /* linked address match */
{
/*
* Bits [1:0] are RES0.
*
* It is IMPLEMENTATION DEFINED whether bits [63:49]
* ([63:53] for FEAT_LVA) are hardwired to a copy of the sign bit
* of the VA field ([48] or [52] for FEAT_LVA), or whether the
* value is read as written. It is CONSTRAINED UNPREDICTABLE
* whether the RESS bits are ignored when comparing an address.
* Therefore we are allowed to compare the entire register, which
* lets us avoid considering whether FEAT_LVA is actually enabled.
*
* The BAS field is used to allow setting breakpoints on 16-bit
* wide instructions; it is CONSTRAINED UNPREDICTABLE whether
* a bp will fire if the addresses covered by the bp and the addresses
* covered by the insn overlap but the insn doesn't start at the
* start of the bp address range. We choose to require the insn and
* the bp to have the same address. The constraints on writing to
* BAS enforced in dbgbcr_write mean we have only four cases:
* 0b0000 => no breakpoint
* 0b0011 => breakpoint on addr
* 0b1100 => breakpoint on addr + 2
* 0b1111 => breakpoint on addr
* See also figure D2-3 in the v8 ARM ARM (DDI0487A.c).
*/
int bas = extract64(bcr, 5, 4);
addr = bvr & ~3ULL;
if (bas == 0) {
return;
}
if (bas == 0xc) {
addr += 2;
}
break;
}
case 2: /* unlinked context ID match */
case 8: /* unlinked VMID match (reserved if no EL2) */
case 10: /* unlinked context ID and VMID match (reserved if no EL2) */
qemu_log_mask(LOG_UNIMP,
"arm: unlinked context breakpoint types not implemented\n");
return;
case 9: /* linked VMID match (reserved if no EL2) */
case 11: /* linked context ID and VMID match (reserved if no EL2) */
case 3: /* linked context ID match */
default:
/* We must generate no events for Linked context matches (unless
* they are linked to by some other bp/wp, which is handled in
* updates for the linking bp/wp). We choose to also generate no events
* for reserved values.
*/
return;
}
cpu_breakpoint_insert(CPU(cpu), addr, flags, &env->cpu_breakpoint[n]);
}
void hw_breakpoint_update_all(ARMCPU *cpu)
{
int i;
CPUARMState *env = &cpu->env;
/* Completely clear out existing QEMU breakpoints and our array, to
* avoid possible stale entries following migration load.
*/
cpu_breakpoint_remove_all(CPU(cpu), BP_CPU);
memset(env->cpu_breakpoint, 0, sizeof(env->cpu_breakpoint));
for (i = 0; i < ARRAY_SIZE(cpu->env.cpu_breakpoint); i++) {
hw_breakpoint_update(cpu, i);
}
}
static void dbgbvr_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
ARMCPU *cpu = env_archcpu(env);
int i = ri->crm;
raw_write(env, ri, value);
hw_breakpoint_update(cpu, i);
}
static void dbgbcr_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
ARMCPU *cpu = env_archcpu(env);
int i = ri->crm;
/* BAS[3] is a read-only copy of BAS[2], and BAS[1] a read-only
* copy of BAS[0].
*/
value = deposit64(value, 6, 1, extract64(value, 5, 1));
value = deposit64(value, 8, 1, extract64(value, 7, 1));
raw_write(env, ri, value);
hw_breakpoint_update(cpu, i);
}
static void define_debug_regs(ARMCPU *cpu)
{
/* Define v7 and v8 architectural debug registers.
* These are just dummy implementations for now.
*/
int i;
int wrps, brps, ctx_cmps;
/*
* The Arm ARM says DBGDIDR is optional and deprecated if EL1 cannot
* use AArch32. Given that bit 15 is RES1, if the value is 0 then
* the register must not exist for this cpu.
*/
if (cpu->isar.dbgdidr != 0) {
ARMCPRegInfo dbgdidr = {
.name = "DBGDIDR", .cp = 14, .crn = 0, .crm = 0,
.opc1 = 0, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL0_R, .accessfn = access_tda,
.type = ARM_CP_CONST, .resetvalue = cpu->isar.dbgdidr,
};
define_one_arm_cp_reg(cpu, &dbgdidr);
}
brps = arm_num_brps(cpu);
wrps = arm_num_wrps(cpu);
ctx_cmps = arm_num_ctx_cmps(cpu);
assert(ctx_cmps <= brps);
define_arm_cp_regs(cpu, debug_cp_reginfo);
if (arm_feature(&cpu->env, ARM_FEATURE_LPAE)) {
define_arm_cp_regs(cpu, debug_lpae_cp_reginfo);
}
for (i = 0; i < brps; i++) {
char *dbgbvr_el1_name = g_strdup_printf("DBGBVR%d_EL1", i);
char *dbgbcr_el1_name = g_strdup_printf("DBGBCR%d_EL1", i);
ARMCPRegInfo dbgregs[] = {
{ .name = dbgbvr_el1_name, .state = ARM_CP_STATE_BOTH,
.cp = 14, .opc0 = 2, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 0, .crm = i, .opc2 = 4,
.access = PL1_RW, .accessfn = access_tda,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.dbgbvr[i]),
.writefn = dbgbvr_write, .raw_writefn = raw_write
},
{ .name = dbgbcr_el1_name, .state = ARM_CP_STATE_BOTH,
.cp = 14, .opc0 = 2, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 0, .crm = i, .opc2 = 5,
.access = PL1_RW, .accessfn = access_tda,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.dbgbcr[i]),
.writefn = dbgbcr_write, .raw_writefn = raw_write
},
};
define_arm_cp_regs(cpu, dbgregs);
g_free(dbgbvr_el1_name);
g_free(dbgbcr_el1_name);
}
for (i = 0; i < wrps; i++) {
char *dbgwvr_el1_name = g_strdup_printf("DBGWVR%d_EL1", i);
char *dbgwcr_el1_name = g_strdup_printf("DBGWCR%d_EL1", i);
ARMCPRegInfo dbgregs[] = {
{ .name = dbgwvr_el1_name, .state = ARM_CP_STATE_BOTH,
.cp = 14, .opc0 = 2, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 0, .crm = i, .opc2 = 6,
.access = PL1_RW, .accessfn = access_tda,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.dbgwvr[i]),
.writefn = dbgwvr_write, .raw_writefn = raw_write
},
{ .name = dbgwcr_el1_name, .state = ARM_CP_STATE_BOTH,
.cp = 14, .opc0 = 2, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 0, .crm = i, .opc2 = 7,
.access = PL1_RW, .accessfn = access_tda,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.dbgwcr[i]),
.writefn = dbgwcr_write, .raw_writefn = raw_write
},
};
define_arm_cp_regs(cpu, dbgregs);
g_free(dbgwvr_el1_name);
g_free(dbgwcr_el1_name);
}
}
static void define_pmu_regs(ARMCPU *cpu)
{
/*
* v7 performance monitor control register: same implementor
* field as main ID register, and we implement four counters in
* addition to the cycle count register.
*/
target/arm: Make number of counters in PMCR follow the CPU Currently we give all the v7-and-up CPUs a PMU with 4 counters. This means that we don't provide the 6 counters that are required by the Arm BSA (Base System Architecture) specification if the CPU supports the Virtualization extensions. Instead of having a single PMCR_NUM_COUNTERS, make each CPU type specify the PMCR reset value (obtained from the appropriate TRM), and use the 'N' field of that value to define the number of counters provided. This means that we now supply 6 counters instead of 4 for: Cortex-A9, Cortex-A15, Cortex-A53, Cortex-A57, Cortex-A72, Cortex-A76, Neoverse-N1, '-cpu max' This CPU goes from 4 to 8 counters: A64FX These CPUs remain with 4 counters: Cortex-A7, Cortex-A8 This CPU goes down from 4 to 3 counters: Cortex-R5 Note that because we now use the PMCR reset value of the specific implementation, we no longer set the LC bit out of reset. This has an UNKNOWN value out of reset for all cores with any AArch32 support, so guest software should be setting it anyway if it wants it. This change was originally landed in commit f7fb73b8cdd3f7 (during the 6.0 release cycle) but was then reverted by commit 21c2dd77a6aa517 before that release because it did not work with KVM. This version fixes that by creating the scratch vCPU in kvm_arm_get_host_cpu_features() with the KVM_ARM_VCPU_PMU_V3 feature if KVM supports it, and then only asking KVM for the PMCR_EL0 value if the vCPU has a PMU. Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org> [PMM: Added the correct value for a64fx] Message-id: 20220513122852.4063586-1-peter.maydell@linaro.org
2022-05-13 14:28:52 +02:00
unsigned int i, pmcrn = pmu_num_counters(&cpu->env);
ARMCPRegInfo pmcr = {
.name = "PMCR", .cp = 15, .crn = 9, .crm = 12, .opc1 = 0, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL0_RW,
.type = ARM_CP_IO | ARM_CP_ALIAS,
.fieldoffset = offsetoflow32(CPUARMState, cp15.c9_pmcr),
.accessfn = pmreg_access, .writefn = pmcr_write,
.raw_writefn = raw_write,
};
ARMCPRegInfo pmcr64 = {
.name = "PMCR_EL0", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 3, .crn = 9, .crm = 12, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL0_RW, .accessfn = pmreg_access,
.type = ARM_CP_IO,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.c9_pmcr),
target/arm: Make number of counters in PMCR follow the CPU Currently we give all the v7-and-up CPUs a PMU with 4 counters. This means that we don't provide the 6 counters that are required by the Arm BSA (Base System Architecture) specification if the CPU supports the Virtualization extensions. Instead of having a single PMCR_NUM_COUNTERS, make each CPU type specify the PMCR reset value (obtained from the appropriate TRM), and use the 'N' field of that value to define the number of counters provided. This means that we now supply 6 counters instead of 4 for: Cortex-A9, Cortex-A15, Cortex-A53, Cortex-A57, Cortex-A72, Cortex-A76, Neoverse-N1, '-cpu max' This CPU goes from 4 to 8 counters: A64FX These CPUs remain with 4 counters: Cortex-A7, Cortex-A8 This CPU goes down from 4 to 3 counters: Cortex-R5 Note that because we now use the PMCR reset value of the specific implementation, we no longer set the LC bit out of reset. This has an UNKNOWN value out of reset for all cores with any AArch32 support, so guest software should be setting it anyway if it wants it. This change was originally landed in commit f7fb73b8cdd3f7 (during the 6.0 release cycle) but was then reverted by commit 21c2dd77a6aa517 before that release because it did not work with KVM. This version fixes that by creating the scratch vCPU in kvm_arm_get_host_cpu_features() with the KVM_ARM_VCPU_PMU_V3 feature if KVM supports it, and then only asking KVM for the PMCR_EL0 value if the vCPU has a PMU. Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org> [PMM: Added the correct value for a64fx] Message-id: 20220513122852.4063586-1-peter.maydell@linaro.org
2022-05-13 14:28:52 +02:00
.resetvalue = cpu->isar.reset_pmcr_el0,
.writefn = pmcr_write, .raw_writefn = raw_write,
};
target/arm: Make number of counters in PMCR follow the CPU Currently we give all the v7-and-up CPUs a PMU with 4 counters. This means that we don't provide the 6 counters that are required by the Arm BSA (Base System Architecture) specification if the CPU supports the Virtualization extensions. Instead of having a single PMCR_NUM_COUNTERS, make each CPU type specify the PMCR reset value (obtained from the appropriate TRM), and use the 'N' field of that value to define the number of counters provided. This means that we now supply 6 counters instead of 4 for: Cortex-A9, Cortex-A15, Cortex-A53, Cortex-A57, Cortex-A72, Cortex-A76, Neoverse-N1, '-cpu max' This CPU goes from 4 to 8 counters: A64FX These CPUs remain with 4 counters: Cortex-A7, Cortex-A8 This CPU goes down from 4 to 3 counters: Cortex-R5 Note that because we now use the PMCR reset value of the specific implementation, we no longer set the LC bit out of reset. This has an UNKNOWN value out of reset for all cores with any AArch32 support, so guest software should be setting it anyway if it wants it. This change was originally landed in commit f7fb73b8cdd3f7 (during the 6.0 release cycle) but was then reverted by commit 21c2dd77a6aa517 before that release because it did not work with KVM. This version fixes that by creating the scratch vCPU in kvm_arm_get_host_cpu_features() with the KVM_ARM_VCPU_PMU_V3 feature if KVM supports it, and then only asking KVM for the PMCR_EL0 value if the vCPU has a PMU. Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org> [PMM: Added the correct value for a64fx] Message-id: 20220513122852.4063586-1-peter.maydell@linaro.org
2022-05-13 14:28:52 +02:00
define_one_arm_cp_reg(cpu, &pmcr);
define_one_arm_cp_reg(cpu, &pmcr64);
for (i = 0; i < pmcrn; i++) {
char *pmevcntr_name = g_strdup_printf("PMEVCNTR%d", i);
char *pmevcntr_el0_name = g_strdup_printf("PMEVCNTR%d_EL0", i);
char *pmevtyper_name = g_strdup_printf("PMEVTYPER%d", i);
char *pmevtyper_el0_name = g_strdup_printf("PMEVTYPER%d_EL0", i);
ARMCPRegInfo pmev_regs[] = {
{ .name = pmevcntr_name, .cp = 15, .crn = 14,
.crm = 8 | (3 & (i >> 3)), .opc1 = 0, .opc2 = i & 7,
.access = PL0_RW, .type = ARM_CP_IO | ARM_CP_ALIAS,
.readfn = pmevcntr_readfn, .writefn = pmevcntr_writefn,
.accessfn = pmreg_access_xevcntr },
{ .name = pmevcntr_el0_name, .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 3, .crn = 14, .crm = 8 | (3 & (i >> 3)),
.opc2 = i & 7, .access = PL0_RW, .accessfn = pmreg_access_xevcntr,
.type = ARM_CP_IO,
.readfn = pmevcntr_readfn, .writefn = pmevcntr_writefn,
.raw_readfn = pmevcntr_rawread,
.raw_writefn = pmevcntr_rawwrite },
{ .name = pmevtyper_name, .cp = 15, .crn = 14,
.crm = 12 | (3 & (i >> 3)), .opc1 = 0, .opc2 = i & 7,
.access = PL0_RW, .type = ARM_CP_IO | ARM_CP_ALIAS,
.readfn = pmevtyper_readfn, .writefn = pmevtyper_writefn,
.accessfn = pmreg_access },
{ .name = pmevtyper_el0_name, .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 3, .crn = 14, .crm = 12 | (3 & (i >> 3)),
.opc2 = i & 7, .access = PL0_RW, .accessfn = pmreg_access,
.type = ARM_CP_IO,
.readfn = pmevtyper_readfn, .writefn = pmevtyper_writefn,
.raw_writefn = pmevtyper_rawwrite },
};
define_arm_cp_regs(cpu, pmev_regs);
g_free(pmevcntr_name);
g_free(pmevcntr_el0_name);
g_free(pmevtyper_name);
g_free(pmevtyper_el0_name);
}
if (cpu_isar_feature(aa32_pmu_8_1, cpu)) {
ARMCPRegInfo v81_pmu_regs[] = {
{ .name = "PMCEID2", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA32,
.cp = 15, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 9, .crm = 14, .opc2 = 4,
.access = PL0_R, .accessfn = pmreg_access, .type = ARM_CP_CONST,
.resetvalue = extract64(cpu->pmceid0, 32, 32) },
{ .name = "PMCEID3", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA32,
.cp = 15, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 9, .crm = 14, .opc2 = 5,
.access = PL0_R, .accessfn = pmreg_access, .type = ARM_CP_CONST,
.resetvalue = extract64(cpu->pmceid1, 32, 32) },
};
define_arm_cp_regs(cpu, v81_pmu_regs);
}
if (cpu_isar_feature(any_pmu_8_4, cpu)) {
static const ARMCPRegInfo v84_pmmir = {
.name = "PMMIR_EL1", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_BOTH,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 9, .crm = 14, .opc2 = 6,
.access = PL1_R, .accessfn = pmreg_access, .type = ARM_CP_CONST,
.resetvalue = 0
};
define_one_arm_cp_reg(cpu, &v84_pmmir);
}
}
/* We don't know until after realize whether there's a GICv3
* attached, and that is what registers the gicv3 sysregs.
* So we have to fill in the GIC fields in ID_PFR/ID_PFR1_EL1/ID_AA64PFR0_EL1
* at runtime.
*/
static uint64_t id_pfr1_read(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri)
{
ARMCPU *cpu = env_archcpu(env);
uint64_t pfr1 = cpu->isar.id_pfr1;
if (env->gicv3state) {
pfr1 |= 1 << 28;
}
return pfr1;
}
#ifndef CONFIG_USER_ONLY
static uint64_t id_aa64pfr0_read(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri)
{
ARMCPU *cpu = env_archcpu(env);
uint64_t pfr0 = cpu->isar.id_aa64pfr0;
if (env->gicv3state) {
pfr0 |= 1 << 24;
}
return pfr0;
}
#endif
/* Shared logic between LORID and the rest of the LOR* registers.
* Secure state exclusion has already been dealt with.
*/
static CPAccessResult access_lor_ns(CPUARMState *env,
const ARMCPRegInfo *ri, bool isread)
{
int el = arm_current_el(env);
if (el < 2 && (arm_hcr_el2_eff(env) & HCR_TLOR)) {
return CP_ACCESS_TRAP_EL2;
}
if (el < 3 && (env->cp15.scr_el3 & SCR_TLOR)) {
return CP_ACCESS_TRAP_EL3;
}
return CP_ACCESS_OK;
}
static CPAccessResult access_lor_other(CPUARMState *env,
const ARMCPRegInfo *ri, bool isread)
{
if (arm_is_secure_below_el3(env)) {
/* Access denied in secure mode. */
return CP_ACCESS_TRAP;
}
return access_lor_ns(env, ri, isread);
}
/*
* A trivial implementation of ARMv8.1-LOR leaves all of these
* registers fixed at 0, which indicates that there are zero
* supported Limited Ordering regions.
*/
static const ARMCPRegInfo lor_reginfo[] = {
{ .name = "LORSA_EL1", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 10, .crm = 4, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL1_RW, .accessfn = access_lor_other,
.type = ARM_CP_CONST, .resetvalue = 0 },
{ .name = "LOREA_EL1", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 10, .crm = 4, .opc2 = 1,
.access = PL1_RW, .accessfn = access_lor_other,
.type = ARM_CP_CONST, .resetvalue = 0 },
{ .name = "LORN_EL1", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 10, .crm = 4, .opc2 = 2,
.access = PL1_RW, .accessfn = access_lor_other,
.type = ARM_CP_CONST, .resetvalue = 0 },
{ .name = "LORC_EL1", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 10, .crm = 4, .opc2 = 3,
.access = PL1_RW, .accessfn = access_lor_other,
.type = ARM_CP_CONST, .resetvalue = 0 },
{ .name = "LORID_EL1", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 10, .crm = 4, .opc2 = 7,
.access = PL1_R, .accessfn = access_lor_ns,
.type = ARM_CP_CONST, .resetvalue = 0 },
};
#ifdef TARGET_AARCH64
static CPAccessResult access_pauth(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
bool isread)
{
int el = arm_current_el(env);
if (el < 2 &&
arm_is_el2_enabled(env) &&
!(arm_hcr_el2_eff(env) & HCR_APK)) {
return CP_ACCESS_TRAP_EL2;
}
if (el < 3 &&
arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_EL3) &&
!(env->cp15.scr_el3 & SCR_APK)) {
return CP_ACCESS_TRAP_EL3;
}
return CP_ACCESS_OK;
}
static const ARMCPRegInfo pauth_reginfo[] = {
{ .name = "APDAKEYLO_EL1", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 2, .crm = 2, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL1_RW, .accessfn = access_pauth,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, keys.apda.lo) },
{ .name = "APDAKEYHI_EL1", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 2, .crm = 2, .opc2 = 1,
.access = PL1_RW, .accessfn = access_pauth,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, keys.apda.hi) },
{ .name = "APDBKEYLO_EL1", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 2, .crm = 2, .opc2 = 2,
.access = PL1_RW, .accessfn = access_pauth,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, keys.apdb.lo) },
{ .name = "APDBKEYHI_EL1", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 2, .crm = 2, .opc2 = 3,
.access = PL1_RW, .accessfn = access_pauth,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, keys.apdb.hi) },
{ .name = "APGAKEYLO_EL1", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 2, .crm = 3, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL1_RW, .accessfn = access_pauth,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, keys.apga.lo) },
{ .name = "APGAKEYHI_EL1", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 2, .crm = 3, .opc2 = 1,
.access = PL1_RW, .accessfn = access_pauth,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, keys.apga.hi) },
{ .name = "APIAKEYLO_EL1", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 2, .crm = 1, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL1_RW, .accessfn = access_pauth,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, keys.apia.lo) },
{ .name = "APIAKEYHI_EL1", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 2, .crm = 1, .opc2 = 1,
.access = PL1_RW, .accessfn = access_pauth,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, keys.apia.hi) },
{ .name = "APIBKEYLO_EL1", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 2, .crm = 1, .opc2 = 2,
.access = PL1_RW, .accessfn = access_pauth,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, keys.apib.lo) },
{ .name = "APIBKEYHI_EL1", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 2, .crm = 1, .opc2 = 3,
.access = PL1_RW, .accessfn = access_pauth,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, keys.apib.hi) },
};
static const ARMCPRegInfo tlbirange_reginfo[] = {
{ .name = "TLBI_RVAE1IS", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 8, .crm = 2, .opc2 = 1,
.access = PL1_W, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW,
.writefn = tlbi_aa64_rvae1is_write },
{ .name = "TLBI_RVAAE1IS", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 8, .crm = 2, .opc2 = 3,
.access = PL1_W, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW,
.writefn = tlbi_aa64_rvae1is_write },
{ .name = "TLBI_RVALE1IS", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 8, .crm = 2, .opc2 = 5,
.access = PL1_W, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW,
.writefn = tlbi_aa64_rvae1is_write },
{ .name = "TLBI_RVAALE1IS", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 8, .crm = 2, .opc2 = 7,
.access = PL1_W, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW,
.writefn = tlbi_aa64_rvae1is_write },
{ .name = "TLBI_RVAE1OS", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 8, .crm = 5, .opc2 = 1,
.access = PL1_W, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW,
.writefn = tlbi_aa64_rvae1is_write },
{ .name = "TLBI_RVAAE1OS", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 8, .crm = 5, .opc2 = 3,
.access = PL1_W, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW,
.writefn = tlbi_aa64_rvae1is_write },
{ .name = "TLBI_RVALE1OS", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 8, .crm = 5, .opc2 = 5,
.access = PL1_W, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW,
.writefn = tlbi_aa64_rvae1is_write },
{ .name = "TLBI_RVAALE1OS", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 8, .crm = 5, .opc2 = 7,
.access = PL1_W, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW,
.writefn = tlbi_aa64_rvae1is_write },
{ .name = "TLBI_RVAE1", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 8, .crm = 6, .opc2 = 1,
.access = PL1_W, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW,
.writefn = tlbi_aa64_rvae1_write },
{ .name = "TLBI_RVAAE1", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 8, .crm = 6, .opc2 = 3,
.access = PL1_W, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW,
.writefn = tlbi_aa64_rvae1_write },
{ .name = "TLBI_RVALE1", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 8, .crm = 6, .opc2 = 5,
.access = PL1_W, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW,
.writefn = tlbi_aa64_rvae1_write },
{ .name = "TLBI_RVAALE1", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 8, .crm = 6, .opc2 = 7,
.access = PL1_W, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW,
.writefn = tlbi_aa64_rvae1_write },
{ .name = "TLBI_RIPAS2E1IS", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 8, .crm = 0, .opc2 = 2,
.access = PL2_W, .type = ARM_CP_NOP },
{ .name = "TLBI_RIPAS2LE1IS", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 8, .crm = 0, .opc2 = 6,
.access = PL2_W, .type = ARM_CP_NOP },
{ .name = "TLBI_RVAE2IS", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 8, .crm = 2, .opc2 = 1,
.access = PL2_W, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW | ARM_CP_EL3_NO_EL2_UNDEF,
.writefn = tlbi_aa64_rvae2is_write },
{ .name = "TLBI_RVALE2IS", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 8, .crm = 2, .opc2 = 5,
.access = PL2_W, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW | ARM_CP_EL3_NO_EL2_UNDEF,
.writefn = tlbi_aa64_rvae2is_write },
{ .name = "TLBI_RIPAS2E1", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 8, .crm = 4, .opc2 = 2,
.access = PL2_W, .type = ARM_CP_NOP },
{ .name = "TLBI_RIPAS2LE1", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 8, .crm = 4, .opc2 = 6,
.access = PL2_W, .type = ARM_CP_NOP },
{ .name = "TLBI_RVAE2OS", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 8, .crm = 5, .opc2 = 1,
.access = PL2_W, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW | ARM_CP_EL3_NO_EL2_UNDEF,
.writefn = tlbi_aa64_rvae2is_write },
{ .name = "TLBI_RVALE2OS", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 8, .crm = 5, .opc2 = 5,
.access = PL2_W, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW | ARM_CP_EL3_NO_EL2_UNDEF,
.writefn = tlbi_aa64_rvae2is_write },
{ .name = "TLBI_RVAE2", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 8, .crm = 6, .opc2 = 1,
.access = PL2_W, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW | ARM_CP_EL3_NO_EL2_UNDEF,
.writefn = tlbi_aa64_rvae2_write },
{ .name = "TLBI_RVALE2", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 8, .crm = 6, .opc2 = 5,
.access = PL2_W, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW | ARM_CP_EL3_NO_EL2_UNDEF,
.writefn = tlbi_aa64_rvae2_write },
{ .name = "TLBI_RVAE3IS", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 6, .crn = 8, .crm = 2, .opc2 = 1,
.access = PL3_W, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW,
.writefn = tlbi_aa64_rvae3is_write },
{ .name = "TLBI_RVALE3IS", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 6, .crn = 8, .crm = 2, .opc2 = 5,
.access = PL3_W, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW,
.writefn = tlbi_aa64_rvae3is_write },
{ .name = "TLBI_RVAE3OS", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 6, .crn = 8, .crm = 5, .opc2 = 1,
.access = PL3_W, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW,
.writefn = tlbi_aa64_rvae3is_write },
{ .name = "TLBI_RVALE3OS", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 6, .crn = 8, .crm = 5, .opc2 = 5,
.access = PL3_W, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW,
.writefn = tlbi_aa64_rvae3is_write },
{ .name = "TLBI_RVAE3", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 6, .crn = 8, .crm = 6, .opc2 = 1,
.access = PL3_W, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW,
.writefn = tlbi_aa64_rvae3_write },
{ .name = "TLBI_RVALE3", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 6, .crn = 8, .crm = 6, .opc2 = 5,
.access = PL3_W, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW,
.writefn = tlbi_aa64_rvae3_write },
};
static const ARMCPRegInfo tlbios_reginfo[] = {
{ .name = "TLBI_VMALLE1OS", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 8, .crm = 1, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL1_W, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW,
.writefn = tlbi_aa64_vmalle1is_write },
{ .name = "TLBI_VAE1OS", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 8, .crm = 1, .opc2 = 1,
.access = PL1_W, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW,
.writefn = tlbi_aa64_vae1is_write },
{ .name = "TLBI_ASIDE1OS", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 8, .crm = 1, .opc2 = 2,
.access = PL1_W, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW,
.writefn = tlbi_aa64_vmalle1is_write },
{ .name = "TLBI_VAAE1OS", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 8, .crm = 1, .opc2 = 3,
.access = PL1_W, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW,
.writefn = tlbi_aa64_vae1is_write },
{ .name = "TLBI_VALE1OS", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 8, .crm = 1, .opc2 = 5,
.access = PL1_W, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW,
.writefn = tlbi_aa64_vae1is_write },
{ .name = "TLBI_VAALE1OS", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 8, .crm = 1, .opc2 = 7,
.access = PL1_W, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW,
.writefn = tlbi_aa64_vae1is_write },
{ .name = "TLBI_ALLE2OS", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 8, .crm = 1, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL2_W, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW | ARM_CP_EL3_NO_EL2_UNDEF,
.writefn = tlbi_aa64_alle2is_write },
{ .name = "TLBI_VAE2OS", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 8, .crm = 1, .opc2 = 1,
.access = PL2_W, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW | ARM_CP_EL3_NO_EL2_UNDEF,
.writefn = tlbi_aa64_vae2is_write },
{ .name = "TLBI_ALLE1OS", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 8, .crm = 1, .opc2 = 4,
.access = PL2_W, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW,
.writefn = tlbi_aa64_alle1is_write },
{ .name = "TLBI_VALE2OS", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 8, .crm = 1, .opc2 = 5,
.access = PL2_W, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW | ARM_CP_EL3_NO_EL2_UNDEF,
.writefn = tlbi_aa64_vae2is_write },
{ .name = "TLBI_VMALLS12E1OS", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 8, .crm = 1, .opc2 = 6,
.access = PL2_W, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW,
.writefn = tlbi_aa64_alle1is_write },
{ .name = "TLBI_IPAS2E1OS", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 8, .crm = 4, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL2_W, .type = ARM_CP_NOP },
{ .name = "TLBI_RIPAS2E1OS", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 8, .crm = 4, .opc2 = 3,
.access = PL2_W, .type = ARM_CP_NOP },
{ .name = "TLBI_IPAS2LE1OS", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 8, .crm = 4, .opc2 = 4,
.access = PL2_W, .type = ARM_CP_NOP },
{ .name = "TLBI_RIPAS2LE1OS", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 8, .crm = 4, .opc2 = 7,
.access = PL2_W, .type = ARM_CP_NOP },
{ .name = "TLBI_ALLE3OS", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 6, .crn = 8, .crm = 1, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL3_W, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW,
.writefn = tlbi_aa64_alle3is_write },
{ .name = "TLBI_VAE3OS", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 6, .crn = 8, .crm = 1, .opc2 = 1,
.access = PL3_W, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW,
.writefn = tlbi_aa64_vae3is_write },
{ .name = "TLBI_VALE3OS", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 6, .crn = 8, .crm = 1, .opc2 = 5,
.access = PL3_W, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW,
.writefn = tlbi_aa64_vae3is_write },
};
static uint64_t rndr_readfn(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri)
{
Error *err = NULL;
uint64_t ret;
/* Success sets NZCV = 0000. */
env->NF = env->CF = env->VF = 0, env->ZF = 1;
if (qemu_guest_getrandom(&ret, sizeof(ret), &err) < 0) {
/*
* ??? Failed, for unknown reasons in the crypto subsystem.
* The best we can do is log the reason and return the
* timed-out indication to the guest. There is no reason
* we know to expect this failure to be transitory, so the
* guest may well hang retrying the operation.
*/
qemu_log_mask(LOG_UNIMP, "%s: Crypto failure: %s",
ri->name, error_get_pretty(err));
error_free(err);
env->ZF = 0; /* NZCF = 0100 */
return 0;
}
return ret;
}
/* We do not support re-seeding, so the two registers operate the same. */
static const ARMCPRegInfo rndr_reginfo[] = {
{ .name = "RNDR", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW | ARM_CP_SUPPRESS_TB_END | ARM_CP_IO,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 3, .crn = 2, .crm = 4, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL0_R, .readfn = rndr_readfn },
{ .name = "RNDRRS", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW | ARM_CP_SUPPRESS_TB_END | ARM_CP_IO,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 3, .crn = 2, .crm = 4, .opc2 = 1,
.access = PL0_R, .readfn = rndr_readfn },
};
#ifndef CONFIG_USER_ONLY
static void dccvap_writefn(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *opaque,
uint64_t value)
{
ARMCPU *cpu = env_archcpu(env);
/* CTR_EL0 System register -> DminLine, bits [19:16] */
uint64_t dline_size = 4 << ((cpu->ctr >> 16) & 0xF);
uint64_t vaddr_in = (uint64_t) value;
uint64_t vaddr = vaddr_in & ~(dline_size - 1);
void *haddr;
int mem_idx = cpu_mmu_index(env, false);
/* This won't be crossing page boundaries */
haddr = probe_read(env, vaddr, dline_size, mem_idx, GETPC());
if (haddr) {
ram_addr_t offset;
MemoryRegion *mr;
/* RCU lock is already being held */
mr = memory_region_from_host(haddr, &offset);
if (mr) {
memory_region_writeback(mr, offset, dline_size);
}
}
}
static const ARMCPRegInfo dcpop_reg[] = {
{ .name = "DC_CVAP", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 3, .crn = 7, .crm = 12, .opc2 = 1,
.access = PL0_W, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW | ARM_CP_SUPPRESS_TB_END,
.accessfn = aa64_cacheop_poc_access, .writefn = dccvap_writefn },
};
static const ARMCPRegInfo dcpodp_reg[] = {
{ .name = "DC_CVADP", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 3, .crn = 7, .crm = 13, .opc2 = 1,
.access = PL0_W, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW | ARM_CP_SUPPRESS_TB_END,
.accessfn = aa64_cacheop_poc_access, .writefn = dccvap_writefn },
};
#endif /*CONFIG_USER_ONLY*/
static CPAccessResult access_aa64_tid5(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
bool isread)
{
if ((arm_current_el(env) < 2) && (arm_hcr_el2_eff(env) & HCR_TID5)) {
return CP_ACCESS_TRAP_EL2;
}
return CP_ACCESS_OK;
}
static CPAccessResult access_mte(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
bool isread)
{
int el = arm_current_el(env);
if (el < 2 && arm_is_el2_enabled(env)) {
uint64_t hcr = arm_hcr_el2_eff(env);
if (!(hcr & HCR_ATA) && (!(hcr & HCR_E2H) || !(hcr & HCR_TGE))) {
return CP_ACCESS_TRAP_EL2;
}
}
if (el < 3 &&
arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_EL3) &&
!(env->cp15.scr_el3 & SCR_ATA)) {
return CP_ACCESS_TRAP_EL3;
}
return CP_ACCESS_OK;
}
static uint64_t tco_read(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri)
{
return env->pstate & PSTATE_TCO;
}
static void tco_write(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri, uint64_t val)
{
env->pstate = (env->pstate & ~PSTATE_TCO) | (val & PSTATE_TCO);
}
static const ARMCPRegInfo mte_reginfo[] = {
{ .name = "TFSRE0_EL1", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 5, .crm = 6, .opc2 = 1,
.access = PL1_RW, .accessfn = access_mte,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.tfsr_el[0]) },
{ .name = "TFSR_EL1", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 5, .crm = 6, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL1_RW, .accessfn = access_mte,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.tfsr_el[1]) },
{ .name = "TFSR_EL2", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 5, .crm = 6, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL2_RW, .accessfn = access_mte,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.tfsr_el[2]) },
{ .name = "TFSR_EL3", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 6, .crn = 5, .crm = 6, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL3_RW,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.tfsr_el[3]) },
{ .name = "RGSR_EL1", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 1, .crm = 0, .opc2 = 5,
.access = PL1_RW, .accessfn = access_mte,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.rgsr_el1) },
{ .name = "GCR_EL1", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 1, .crm = 0, .opc2 = 6,
.access = PL1_RW, .accessfn = access_mte,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.gcr_el1) },
{ .name = "GMID_EL1", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 1, .crn = 0, .crm = 0, .opc2 = 4,
.access = PL1_R, .accessfn = access_aa64_tid5,
.type = ARM_CP_CONST, .resetvalue = GMID_EL1_BS },
{ .name = "TCO", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 3, .crn = 4, .crm = 2, .opc2 = 7,
.type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW,
.access = PL0_RW, .readfn = tco_read, .writefn = tco_write },
{ .name = "DC_IGVAC", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 7, .crm = 6, .opc2 = 3,
.type = ARM_CP_NOP, .access = PL1_W,
.accessfn = aa64_cacheop_poc_access },
{ .name = "DC_IGSW", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 7, .crm = 6, .opc2 = 4,
.type = ARM_CP_NOP, .access = PL1_W, .accessfn = access_tsw },
{ .name = "DC_IGDVAC", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 7, .crm = 6, .opc2 = 5,
.type = ARM_CP_NOP, .access = PL1_W,
.accessfn = aa64_cacheop_poc_access },
{ .name = "DC_IGDSW", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 7, .crm = 6, .opc2 = 6,
.type = ARM_CP_NOP, .access = PL1_W, .accessfn = access_tsw },
{ .name = "DC_CGSW", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 7, .crm = 10, .opc2 = 4,
.type = ARM_CP_NOP, .access = PL1_W, .accessfn = access_tsw },
{ .name = "DC_CGDSW", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 7, .crm = 10, .opc2 = 6,
.type = ARM_CP_NOP, .access = PL1_W, .accessfn = access_tsw },
{ .name = "DC_CIGSW", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 7, .crm = 14, .opc2 = 4,
.type = ARM_CP_NOP, .access = PL1_W, .accessfn = access_tsw },
{ .name = "DC_CIGDSW", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 7, .crm = 14, .opc2 = 6,
.type = ARM_CP_NOP, .access = PL1_W, .accessfn = access_tsw },
};
static const ARMCPRegInfo mte_tco_ro_reginfo[] = {
{ .name = "TCO", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 3, .crn = 4, .crm = 2, .opc2 = 7,
.type = ARM_CP_CONST, .access = PL0_RW, },
};
static const ARMCPRegInfo mte_el0_cacheop_reginfo[] = {
{ .name = "DC_CGVAC", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 3, .crn = 7, .crm = 10, .opc2 = 3,
.type = ARM_CP_NOP, .access = PL0_W,
.accessfn = aa64_cacheop_poc_access },
{ .name = "DC_CGDVAC", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 3, .crn = 7, .crm = 10, .opc2 = 5,
.type = ARM_CP_NOP, .access = PL0_W,
.accessfn = aa64_cacheop_poc_access },
{ .name = "DC_CGVAP", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 3, .crn = 7, .crm = 12, .opc2 = 3,
.type = ARM_CP_NOP, .access = PL0_W,
.accessfn = aa64_cacheop_poc_access },
{ .name = "DC_CGDVAP", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 3, .crn = 7, .crm = 12, .opc2 = 5,
.type = ARM_CP_NOP, .access = PL0_W,
.accessfn = aa64_cacheop_poc_access },
{ .name = "DC_CGVADP", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 3, .crn = 7, .crm = 13, .opc2 = 3,
.type = ARM_CP_NOP, .access = PL0_W,
.accessfn = aa64_cacheop_poc_access },
{ .name = "DC_CGDVADP", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 3, .crn = 7, .crm = 13, .opc2 = 5,
.type = ARM_CP_NOP, .access = PL0_W,
.accessfn = aa64_cacheop_poc_access },
{ .name = "DC_CIGVAC", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 3, .crn = 7, .crm = 14, .opc2 = 3,
.type = ARM_CP_NOP, .access = PL0_W,
.accessfn = aa64_cacheop_poc_access },
{ .name = "DC_CIGDVAC", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 3, .crn = 7, .crm = 14, .opc2 = 5,
.type = ARM_CP_NOP, .access = PL0_W,
.accessfn = aa64_cacheop_poc_access },
{ .name = "DC_GVA", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 3, .crn = 7, .crm = 4, .opc2 = 3,
.access = PL0_W, .type = ARM_CP_DC_GVA,
#ifndef CONFIG_USER_ONLY
/* Avoid overhead of an access check that always passes in user-mode */
.accessfn = aa64_zva_access,
#endif
},
{ .name = "DC_GZVA", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 3, .crn = 7, .crm = 4, .opc2 = 4,
.access = PL0_W, .type = ARM_CP_DC_GZVA,
#ifndef CONFIG_USER_ONLY
/* Avoid overhead of an access check that always passes in user-mode */
.accessfn = aa64_zva_access,
#endif
},
};
static CPAccessResult access_scxtnum(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
bool isread)
{
uint64_t hcr = arm_hcr_el2_eff(env);
int el = arm_current_el(env);
if (el == 0 && !((hcr & HCR_E2H) && (hcr & HCR_TGE))) {
if (env->cp15.sctlr_el[1] & SCTLR_TSCXT) {
if (hcr & HCR_TGE) {
return CP_ACCESS_TRAP_EL2;
}
return CP_ACCESS_TRAP;
}
} else if (el < 2 && (env->cp15.sctlr_el[2] & SCTLR_TSCXT)) {
return CP_ACCESS_TRAP_EL2;
}
if (el < 2 && arm_is_el2_enabled(env) && !(hcr & HCR_ENSCXT)) {
return CP_ACCESS_TRAP_EL2;
}
if (el < 3
&& arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_EL3)
&& !(env->cp15.scr_el3 & SCR_ENSCXT)) {
return CP_ACCESS_TRAP_EL3;
}
return CP_ACCESS_OK;
}
static const ARMCPRegInfo scxtnum_reginfo[] = {
{ .name = "SCXTNUM_EL0", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 3, .crn = 13, .crm = 0, .opc2 = 7,
.access = PL0_RW, .accessfn = access_scxtnum,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, scxtnum_el[0]) },
{ .name = "SCXTNUM_EL1", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 13, .crm = 0, .opc2 = 7,
.access = PL1_RW, .accessfn = access_scxtnum,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, scxtnum_el[1]) },
{ .name = "SCXTNUM_EL2", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 13, .crm = 0, .opc2 = 7,
.access = PL2_RW, .accessfn = access_scxtnum,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, scxtnum_el[2]) },
{ .name = "SCXTNUM_EL3", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 6, .crn = 13, .crm = 0, .opc2 = 7,
.access = PL3_RW,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, scxtnum_el[3]) },
};
#endif /* TARGET_AARCH64 */
static CPAccessResult access_predinv(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
bool isread)
{
int el = arm_current_el(env);
if (el == 0) {
uint64_t sctlr = arm_sctlr(env, el);
if (!(sctlr & SCTLR_EnRCTX)) {
return CP_ACCESS_TRAP;
}
} else if (el == 1) {
uint64_t hcr = arm_hcr_el2_eff(env);
if (hcr & HCR_NV) {
return CP_ACCESS_TRAP_EL2;
}
}
return CP_ACCESS_OK;
}
static const ARMCPRegInfo predinv_reginfo[] = {
{ .name = "CFP_RCTX", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 3, .crn = 7, .crm = 3, .opc2 = 4,
.type = ARM_CP_NOP, .access = PL0_W, .accessfn = access_predinv },
{ .name = "DVP_RCTX", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 3, .crn = 7, .crm = 3, .opc2 = 5,
.type = ARM_CP_NOP, .access = PL0_W, .accessfn = access_predinv },
{ .name = "CPP_RCTX", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 3, .crn = 7, .crm = 3, .opc2 = 7,
.type = ARM_CP_NOP, .access = PL0_W, .accessfn = access_predinv },
/*
* Note the AArch32 opcodes have a different OPC1.
*/
{ .name = "CFPRCTX", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA32,
.cp = 15, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 7, .crm = 3, .opc2 = 4,
.type = ARM_CP_NOP, .access = PL0_W, .accessfn = access_predinv },
{ .name = "DVPRCTX", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA32,
.cp = 15, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 7, .crm = 3, .opc2 = 5,
.type = ARM_CP_NOP, .access = PL0_W, .accessfn = access_predinv },
{ .name = "CPPRCTX", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA32,
.cp = 15, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 7, .crm = 3, .opc2 = 7,
.type = ARM_CP_NOP, .access = PL0_W, .accessfn = access_predinv },
};
static uint64_t ccsidr2_read(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri)
{
/* Read the high 32 bits of the current CCSIDR */
return extract64(ccsidr_read(env, ri), 32, 32);
}
static const ARMCPRegInfo ccsidr2_reginfo[] = {
{ .name = "CCSIDR2", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_BOTH,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 1, .crn = 0, .crm = 0, .opc2 = 2,
.access = PL1_R,
.accessfn = access_aa64_tid2,
.readfn = ccsidr2_read, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW },
};
static CPAccessResult access_aa64_tid3(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
bool isread)
{
if ((arm_current_el(env) < 2) && (arm_hcr_el2_eff(env) & HCR_TID3)) {
return CP_ACCESS_TRAP_EL2;
}
return CP_ACCESS_OK;
}
static CPAccessResult access_aa32_tid3(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
bool isread)
{
if (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_V8)) {
return access_aa64_tid3(env, ri, isread);
}
return CP_ACCESS_OK;
}
static CPAccessResult access_jazelle(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
bool isread)
{
if (arm_current_el(env) == 1 && (arm_hcr_el2_eff(env) & HCR_TID0)) {
return CP_ACCESS_TRAP_EL2;
}
return CP_ACCESS_OK;
}
static CPAccessResult access_joscr_jmcr(CPUARMState *env,
const ARMCPRegInfo *ri, bool isread)
{
/*
* HSTR.TJDBX traps JOSCR and JMCR accesses, but it exists only
* in v7A, not in v8A.
*/
if (!arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_V8) &&
arm_current_el(env) < 2 && !arm_is_secure_below_el3(env) &&
(env->cp15.hstr_el2 & HSTR_TJDBX)) {
return CP_ACCESS_TRAP_EL2;
}
return CP_ACCESS_OK;
}
static const ARMCPRegInfo jazelle_regs[] = {
{ .name = "JIDR",
.cp = 14, .crn = 0, .crm = 0, .opc1 = 7, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL1_R, .accessfn = access_jazelle,
.type = ARM_CP_CONST, .resetvalue = 0 },
{ .name = "JOSCR",
.cp = 14, .crn = 1, .crm = 0, .opc1 = 7, .opc2 = 0,
.accessfn = access_joscr_jmcr,
.access = PL1_RW, .type = ARM_CP_CONST, .resetvalue = 0 },
{ .name = "JMCR",
.cp = 14, .crn = 2, .crm = 0, .opc1 = 7, .opc2 = 0,
.accessfn = access_joscr_jmcr,
.access = PL1_RW, .type = ARM_CP_CONST, .resetvalue = 0 },
};
static const ARMCPRegInfo contextidr_el2 = {
.name = "CONTEXTIDR_EL2", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 13, .crm = 0, .opc2 = 1,
.access = PL2_RW,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.contextidr_el[2])
};
static const ARMCPRegInfo vhe_reginfo[] = {
{ .name = "TTBR1_EL2", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 2, .crm = 0, .opc2 = 1,
.access = PL2_RW, .writefn = vmsa_tcr_ttbr_el2_write,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.ttbr1_el[2]) },
#ifndef CONFIG_USER_ONLY
{ .name = "CNTHV_CVAL_EL2", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 14, .crm = 3, .opc2 = 2,
.fieldoffset =
offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.c14_timer[GTIMER_HYPVIRT].cval),
.type = ARM_CP_IO, .access = PL2_RW,
.writefn = gt_hv_cval_write, .raw_writefn = raw_write },
{ .name = "CNTHV_TVAL_EL2", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_BOTH,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 14, .crm = 3, .opc2 = 0,
.type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW | ARM_CP_IO, .access = PL2_RW,
.resetfn = gt_hv_timer_reset,
.readfn = gt_hv_tval_read, .writefn = gt_hv_tval_write },
{ .name = "CNTHV_CTL_EL2", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_BOTH,
.type = ARM_CP_IO,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 14, .crm = 3, .opc2 = 1,
.access = PL2_RW,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.c14_timer[GTIMER_HYPVIRT].ctl),
.writefn = gt_hv_ctl_write, .raw_writefn = raw_write },
{ .name = "CNTP_CTL_EL02", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 5, .crn = 14, .crm = 2, .opc2 = 1,
.type = ARM_CP_IO | ARM_CP_ALIAS,
.access = PL2_RW, .accessfn = e2h_access,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.c14_timer[GTIMER_PHYS].ctl),
.writefn = gt_phys_ctl_write, .raw_writefn = raw_write },
{ .name = "CNTV_CTL_EL02", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 5, .crn = 14, .crm = 3, .opc2 = 1,
.type = ARM_CP_IO | ARM_CP_ALIAS,
.access = PL2_RW, .accessfn = e2h_access,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.c14_timer[GTIMER_VIRT].ctl),
.writefn = gt_virt_ctl_write, .raw_writefn = raw_write },
{ .name = "CNTP_TVAL_EL02", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 5, .crn = 14, .crm = 2, .opc2 = 0,
.type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW | ARM_CP_IO | ARM_CP_ALIAS,
.access = PL2_RW, .accessfn = e2h_access,
.readfn = gt_phys_tval_read, .writefn = gt_phys_tval_write },
{ .name = "CNTV_TVAL_EL02", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 5, .crn = 14, .crm = 3, .opc2 = 0,
.type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW | ARM_CP_IO | ARM_CP_ALIAS,
.access = PL2_RW, .accessfn = e2h_access,
.readfn = gt_virt_tval_read, .writefn = gt_virt_tval_write },
{ .name = "CNTP_CVAL_EL02", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 5, .crn = 14, .crm = 2, .opc2 = 2,
.type = ARM_CP_IO | ARM_CP_ALIAS,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.c14_timer[GTIMER_PHYS].cval),
.access = PL2_RW, .accessfn = e2h_access,
.writefn = gt_phys_cval_write, .raw_writefn = raw_write },
{ .name = "CNTV_CVAL_EL02", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 5, .crn = 14, .crm = 3, .opc2 = 2,
.type = ARM_CP_IO | ARM_CP_ALIAS,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.c14_timer[GTIMER_VIRT].cval),
.access = PL2_RW, .accessfn = e2h_access,
.writefn = gt_virt_cval_write, .raw_writefn = raw_write },
#endif
};
#ifndef CONFIG_USER_ONLY
static const ARMCPRegInfo ats1e1_reginfo[] = {
{ .name = "AT_S1E1R", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 7, .crm = 9, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL1_W, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW | ARM_CP_RAISES_EXC,
.writefn = ats_write64 },
{ .name = "AT_S1E1W", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 1, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 7, .crm = 9, .opc2 = 1,
.access = PL1_W, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW | ARM_CP_RAISES_EXC,
.writefn = ats_write64 },
};
static const ARMCPRegInfo ats1cp_reginfo[] = {
{ .name = "ATS1CPRP",
.cp = 15, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 7, .crm = 9, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL1_W, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW | ARM_CP_RAISES_EXC,
.writefn = ats_write },
{ .name = "ATS1CPWP",
.cp = 15, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 7, .crm = 9, .opc2 = 1,
.access = PL1_W, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW | ARM_CP_RAISES_EXC,
.writefn = ats_write },
};
#endif
/*
* ACTLR2 and HACTLR2 map to ACTLR_EL1[63:32] and
* ACTLR_EL2[63:32]. They exist only if the ID_MMFR4.AC2 field
* is non-zero, which is never for ARMv7, optionally in ARMv8
* and mandatorily for ARMv8.2 and up.
* ACTLR2 is banked for S and NS if EL3 is AArch32. Since QEMU's
* implementation is RAZ/WI we can ignore this detail, as we
* do for ACTLR.
*/
static const ARMCPRegInfo actlr2_hactlr2_reginfo[] = {
{ .name = "ACTLR2", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA32,
.cp = 15, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 1, .crm = 0, .opc2 = 3,
.access = PL1_RW, .accessfn = access_tacr,
.type = ARM_CP_CONST, .resetvalue = 0 },
{ .name = "HACTLR2", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA32,
.cp = 15, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 1, .crm = 0, .opc2 = 3,
.access = PL2_RW, .type = ARM_CP_CONST,
.resetvalue = 0 },
};
void register_cp_regs_for_features(ARMCPU *cpu)
{
/* Register all the coprocessor registers based on feature bits */
CPUARMState *env = &cpu->env;
if (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_M)) {
/* M profile has no coprocessor registers */
return;
}
define_arm_cp_regs(cpu, cp_reginfo);
if (!arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_V8)) {
/* Must go early as it is full of wildcards that may be
* overridden by later definitions.
*/
define_arm_cp_regs(cpu, not_v8_cp_reginfo);
}
if (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_V6)) {
/* The ID registers all have impdef reset values */
ARMCPRegInfo v6_idregs[] = {
{ .name = "ID_PFR0", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_BOTH,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 0, .crm = 1, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL1_R, .type = ARM_CP_CONST,
.accessfn = access_aa32_tid3,
.resetvalue = cpu->isar.id_pfr0 },
/* ID_PFR1 is not a plain ARM_CP_CONST because we don't know
* the value of the GIC field until after we define these regs.
*/
{ .name = "ID_PFR1", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_BOTH,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 0, .crm = 1, .opc2 = 1,
.access = PL1_R, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW,
.accessfn = access_aa32_tid3,
.readfn = id_pfr1_read,
.writefn = arm_cp_write_ignore },
{ .name = "ID_DFR0", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_BOTH,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 0, .crm = 1, .opc2 = 2,
.access = PL1_R, .type = ARM_CP_CONST,
.accessfn = access_aa32_tid3,
.resetvalue = cpu->isar.id_dfr0 },
{ .name = "ID_AFR0", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_BOTH,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 0, .crm = 1, .opc2 = 3,
.access = PL1_R, .type = ARM_CP_CONST,
.accessfn = access_aa32_tid3,
.resetvalue = cpu->id_afr0 },
{ .name = "ID_MMFR0", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_BOTH,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 0, .crm = 1, .opc2 = 4,
.access = PL1_R, .type = ARM_CP_CONST,
.accessfn = access_aa32_tid3,
.resetvalue = cpu->isar.id_mmfr0 },
{ .name = "ID_MMFR1", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_BOTH,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 0, .crm = 1, .opc2 = 5,
.access = PL1_R, .type = ARM_CP_CONST,
.accessfn = access_aa32_tid3,
.resetvalue = cpu->isar.id_mmfr1 },
{ .name = "ID_MMFR2", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_BOTH,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 0, .crm = 1, .opc2 = 6,
.access = PL1_R, .type = ARM_CP_CONST,
.accessfn = access_aa32_tid3,
.resetvalue = cpu->isar.id_mmfr2 },
{ .name = "ID_MMFR3", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_BOTH,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 0, .crm = 1, .opc2 = 7,
.access = PL1_R, .type = ARM_CP_CONST,
.accessfn = access_aa32_tid3,
.resetvalue = cpu->isar.id_mmfr3 },
{ .name = "ID_ISAR0", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_BOTH,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 0, .crm = 2, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL1_R, .type = ARM_CP_CONST,
.accessfn = access_aa32_tid3,
.resetvalue = cpu->isar.id_isar0 },
{ .name = "ID_ISAR1", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_BOTH,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 0, .crm = 2, .opc2 = 1,
.access = PL1_R, .type = ARM_CP_CONST,
.accessfn = access_aa32_tid3,
.resetvalue = cpu->isar.id_isar1 },
{ .name = "ID_ISAR2", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_BOTH,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 0, .crm = 2, .opc2 = 2,
.access = PL1_R, .type = ARM_CP_CONST,
.accessfn = access_aa32_tid3,
.resetvalue = cpu->isar.id_isar2 },
{ .name = "ID_ISAR3", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_BOTH,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 0, .crm = 2, .opc2 = 3,
.access = PL1_R, .type = ARM_CP_CONST,
.accessfn = access_aa32_tid3,
.resetvalue = cpu->isar.id_isar3 },
{ .name = "ID_ISAR4", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_BOTH,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 0, .crm = 2, .opc2 = 4,
.access = PL1_R, .type = ARM_CP_CONST,
.accessfn = access_aa32_tid3,
.resetvalue = cpu->isar.id_isar4 },
{ .name = "ID_ISAR5", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_BOTH,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 0, .crm = 2, .opc2 = 5,
.access = PL1_R, .type = ARM_CP_CONST,
.accessfn = access_aa32_tid3,
.resetvalue = cpu->isar.id_isar5 },
{ .name = "ID_MMFR4", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_BOTH,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 0, .crm = 2, .opc2 = 6,
.access = PL1_R, .type = ARM_CP_CONST,
.accessfn = access_aa32_tid3,
.resetvalue = cpu->isar.id_mmfr4 },
{ .name = "ID_ISAR6", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_BOTH,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 0, .crm = 2, .opc2 = 7,
.access = PL1_R, .type = ARM_CP_CONST,
.accessfn = access_aa32_tid3,
.resetvalue = cpu->isar.id_isar6 },
};
define_arm_cp_regs(cpu, v6_idregs);
define_arm_cp_regs(cpu, v6_cp_reginfo);
} else {
define_arm_cp_regs(cpu, not_v6_cp_reginfo);
}
if (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_V6K)) {
define_arm_cp_regs(cpu, v6k_cp_reginfo);
}
if (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_V7MP) &&
!arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_PMSA)) {
define_arm_cp_regs(cpu, v7mp_cp_reginfo);
}
if (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_V7VE)) {
define_arm_cp_regs(cpu, pmovsset_cp_reginfo);
}
if (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_V7)) {
ARMCPRegInfo clidr = {
.name = "CLIDR", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_BOTH,
.opc0 = 3, .crn = 0, .crm = 0, .opc1 = 1, .opc2 = 1,
.access = PL1_R, .type = ARM_CP_CONST,
.accessfn = access_aa64_tid2,
.resetvalue = cpu->clidr
};
define_one_arm_cp_reg(cpu, &clidr);
define_arm_cp_regs(cpu, v7_cp_reginfo);
define_debug_regs(cpu);
define_pmu_regs(cpu);
} else {
define_arm_cp_regs(cpu, not_v7_cp_reginfo);
}
if (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_V8)) {
/* AArch64 ID registers, which all have impdef reset values.
* Note that within the ID register ranges the unused slots
* must all RAZ, not UNDEF; future architecture versions may
* define new registers here.
*/
ARMCPRegInfo v8_idregs[] = {
/*
* ID_AA64PFR0_EL1 is not a plain ARM_CP_CONST in system
* emulation because we don't know the right value for the
* GIC field until after we define these regs.
*/
{ .name = "ID_AA64PFR0_EL1", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 0, .crm = 4, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL1_R,
#ifdef CONFIG_USER_ONLY
.type = ARM_CP_CONST,
.resetvalue = cpu->isar.id_aa64pfr0
#else
.type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW,
.accessfn = access_aa64_tid3,
.readfn = id_aa64pfr0_read,
.writefn = arm_cp_write_ignore
#endif
},
{ .name = "ID_AA64PFR1_EL1", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 0, .crm = 4, .opc2 = 1,
.access = PL1_R, .type = ARM_CP_CONST,
.accessfn = access_aa64_tid3,
.resetvalue = cpu->isar.id_aa64pfr1},
{ .name = "ID_AA64PFR2_EL1_RESERVED", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 0, .crm = 4, .opc2 = 2,
.access = PL1_R, .type = ARM_CP_CONST,
.accessfn = access_aa64_tid3,
.resetvalue = 0 },
{ .name = "ID_AA64PFR3_EL1_RESERVED", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 0, .crm = 4, .opc2 = 3,
.access = PL1_R, .type = ARM_CP_CONST,
.accessfn = access_aa64_tid3,
.resetvalue = 0 },
{ .name = "ID_AA64ZFR0_EL1", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 0, .crm = 4, .opc2 = 4,
.access = PL1_R, .type = ARM_CP_CONST,
.accessfn = access_aa64_tid3,
.resetvalue = cpu->isar.id_aa64zfr0 },
{ .name = "ID_AA64PFR5_EL1_RESERVED", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 0, .crm = 4, .opc2 = 5,
.access = PL1_R, .type = ARM_CP_CONST,
.accessfn = access_aa64_tid3,
.resetvalue = 0 },
{ .name = "ID_AA64PFR6_EL1_RESERVED", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 0, .crm = 4, .opc2 = 6,
.access = PL1_R, .type = ARM_CP_CONST,
.accessfn = access_aa64_tid3,
.resetvalue = 0 },
{ .name = "ID_AA64PFR7_EL1_RESERVED", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 0, .crm = 4, .opc2 = 7,
.access = PL1_R, .type = ARM_CP_CONST,
.accessfn = access_aa64_tid3,
.resetvalue = 0 },
{ .name = "ID_AA64DFR0_EL1", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 0, .crm = 5, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL1_R, .type = ARM_CP_CONST,
.accessfn = access_aa64_tid3,
.resetvalue = cpu->isar.id_aa64dfr0 },
{ .name = "ID_AA64DFR1_EL1", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 0, .crm = 5, .opc2 = 1,
.access = PL1_R, .type = ARM_CP_CONST,
.accessfn = access_aa64_tid3,
.resetvalue = cpu->isar.id_aa64dfr1 },
{ .name = "ID_AA64DFR2_EL1_RESERVED", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 0, .crm = 5, .opc2 = 2,
.access = PL1_R, .type = ARM_CP_CONST,
.accessfn = access_aa64_tid3,
.resetvalue = 0 },
{ .name = "ID_AA64DFR3_EL1_RESERVED", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 0, .crm = 5, .opc2 = 3,
.access = PL1_R, .type = ARM_CP_CONST,
.accessfn = access_aa64_tid3,
.resetvalue = 0 },
{ .name = "ID_AA64AFR0_EL1", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 0, .crm = 5, .opc2 = 4,
.access = PL1_R, .type = ARM_CP_CONST,
.accessfn = access_aa64_tid3,
.resetvalue = cpu->id_aa64afr0 },
{ .name = "ID_AA64AFR1_EL1", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 0, .crm = 5, .opc2 = 5,
.access = PL1_R, .type = ARM_CP_CONST,
.accessfn = access_aa64_tid3,
.resetvalue = cpu->id_aa64afr1 },
{ .name = "ID_AA64AFR2_EL1_RESERVED", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 0, .crm = 5, .opc2 = 6,
.access = PL1_R, .type = ARM_CP_CONST,
.accessfn = access_aa64_tid3,
.resetvalue = 0 },
{ .name = "ID_AA64AFR3_EL1_RESERVED", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 0, .crm = 5, .opc2 = 7,
.access = PL1_R, .type = ARM_CP_CONST,
.accessfn = access_aa64_tid3,
.resetvalue = 0 },
{ .name = "ID_AA64ISAR0_EL1", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 0, .crm = 6, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL1_R, .type = ARM_CP_CONST,
.accessfn = access_aa64_tid3,
.resetvalue = cpu->isar.id_aa64isar0 },
{ .name = "ID_AA64ISAR1_EL1", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 0, .crm = 6, .opc2 = 1,
.access = PL1_R, .type = ARM_CP_CONST,
.accessfn = access_aa64_tid3,
.resetvalue = cpu->isar.id_aa64isar1 },
{ .name = "ID_AA64ISAR2_EL1_RESERVED", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 0, .crm = 6, .opc2 = 2,
.access = PL1_R, .type = ARM_CP_CONST,
.accessfn = access_aa64_tid3,
.resetvalue = 0 },
{ .name = "ID_AA64ISAR3_EL1_RESERVED", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 0, .crm = 6, .opc2 = 3,
.access = PL1_R, .type = ARM_CP_CONST,
.accessfn = access_aa64_tid3,
.resetvalue = 0 },
{ .name = "ID_AA64ISAR4_EL1_RESERVED", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 0, .crm = 6, .opc2 = 4,
.access = PL1_R, .type = ARM_CP_CONST,
.accessfn = access_aa64_tid3,
.resetvalue = 0 },
{ .name = "ID_AA64ISAR5_EL1_RESERVED", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 0, .crm = 6, .opc2 = 5,
.access = PL1_R, .type = ARM_CP_CONST,
.accessfn = access_aa64_tid3,
.resetvalue = 0 },
{ .name = "ID_AA64ISAR6_EL1_RESERVED", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 0, .crm = 6, .opc2 = 6,
.access = PL1_R, .type = ARM_CP_CONST,
.accessfn = access_aa64_tid3,
.resetvalue = 0 },
{ .name = "ID_AA64ISAR7_EL1_RESERVED", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 0, .crm = 6, .opc2 = 7,
.access = PL1_R, .type = ARM_CP_CONST,
.accessfn = access_aa64_tid3,
.resetvalue = 0 },
{ .name = "ID_AA64MMFR0_EL1", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 0, .crm = 7, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL1_R, .type = ARM_CP_CONST,
.accessfn = access_aa64_tid3,
.resetvalue = cpu->isar.id_aa64mmfr0 },
{ .name = "ID_AA64MMFR1_EL1", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 0, .crm = 7, .opc2 = 1,
.access = PL1_R, .type = ARM_CP_CONST,
.accessfn = access_aa64_tid3,
.resetvalue = cpu->isar.id_aa64mmfr1 },
{ .name = "ID_AA64MMFR2_EL1", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 0, .crm = 7, .opc2 = 2,
.access = PL1_R, .type = ARM_CP_CONST,
.accessfn = access_aa64_tid3,
.resetvalue = cpu->isar.id_aa64mmfr2 },
{ .name = "ID_AA64MMFR3_EL1_RESERVED", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 0, .crm = 7, .opc2 = 3,
.access = PL1_R, .type = ARM_CP_CONST,
.accessfn = access_aa64_tid3,
.resetvalue = 0 },
{ .name = "ID_AA64MMFR4_EL1_RESERVED", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 0, .crm = 7, .opc2 = 4,
.access = PL1_R, .type = ARM_CP_CONST,
.accessfn = access_aa64_tid3,
.resetvalue = 0 },
{ .name = "ID_AA64MMFR5_EL1_RESERVED", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 0, .crm = 7, .opc2 = 5,
.access = PL1_R, .type = ARM_CP_CONST,
.accessfn = access_aa64_tid3,
.resetvalue = 0 },
{ .name = "ID_AA64MMFR6_EL1_RESERVED", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 0, .crm = 7, .opc2 = 6,
.access = PL1_R, .type = ARM_CP_CONST,
.accessfn = access_aa64_tid3,
.resetvalue = 0 },
{ .name = "ID_AA64MMFR7_EL1_RESERVED", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 0, .crm = 7, .opc2 = 7,
.access = PL1_R, .type = ARM_CP_CONST,
.accessfn = access_aa64_tid3,
.resetvalue = 0 },
{ .name = "MVFR0_EL1", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 0, .crm = 3, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL1_R, .type = ARM_CP_CONST,
.accessfn = access_aa64_tid3,
.resetvalue = cpu->isar.mvfr0 },
{ .name = "MVFR1_EL1", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 0, .crm = 3, .opc2 = 1,
.access = PL1_R, .type = ARM_CP_CONST,
.accessfn = access_aa64_tid3,
.resetvalue = cpu->isar.mvfr1 },
{ .name = "MVFR2_EL1", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 0, .crm = 3, .opc2 = 2,
.access = PL1_R, .type = ARM_CP_CONST,
.accessfn = access_aa64_tid3,
.resetvalue = cpu->isar.mvfr2 },
{ .name = "MVFR3_EL1_RESERVED", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 0, .crm = 3, .opc2 = 3,
.access = PL1_R, .type = ARM_CP_CONST,
.accessfn = access_aa64_tid3,
.resetvalue = 0 },
{ .name = "ID_PFR2", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_BOTH,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 0, .crm = 3, .opc2 = 4,
.access = PL1_R, .type = ARM_CP_CONST,
.accessfn = access_aa64_tid3,
.resetvalue = cpu->isar.id_pfr2 },
{ .name = "MVFR5_EL1_RESERVED", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 0, .crm = 3, .opc2 = 5,
.access = PL1_R, .type = ARM_CP_CONST,
.accessfn = access_aa64_tid3,
.resetvalue = 0 },
{ .name = "MVFR6_EL1_RESERVED", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 0, .crm = 3, .opc2 = 6,
.access = PL1_R, .type = ARM_CP_CONST,
.accessfn = access_aa64_tid3,
.resetvalue = 0 },
{ .name = "MVFR7_EL1_RESERVED", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 0, .crm = 3, .opc2 = 7,
.access = PL1_R, .type = ARM_CP_CONST,
.accessfn = access_aa64_tid3,
.resetvalue = 0 },
{ .name = "PMCEID0", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA32,
.cp = 15, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 9, .crm = 12, .opc2 = 6,
.access = PL0_R, .accessfn = pmreg_access, .type = ARM_CP_CONST,
.resetvalue = extract64(cpu->pmceid0, 0, 32) },
{ .name = "PMCEID0_EL0", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 3, .crn = 9, .crm = 12, .opc2 = 6,
.access = PL0_R, .accessfn = pmreg_access, .type = ARM_CP_CONST,
.resetvalue = cpu->pmceid0 },
{ .name = "PMCEID1", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA32,
.cp = 15, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 9, .crm = 12, .opc2 = 7,
.access = PL0_R, .accessfn = pmreg_access, .type = ARM_CP_CONST,
.resetvalue = extract64(cpu->pmceid1, 0, 32) },
{ .name = "PMCEID1_EL0", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 3, .crn = 9, .crm = 12, .opc2 = 7,
.access = PL0_R, .accessfn = pmreg_access, .type = ARM_CP_CONST,
.resetvalue = cpu->pmceid1 },
};
#ifdef CONFIG_USER_ONLY
static const ARMCPRegUserSpaceInfo v8_user_idregs[] = {
{ .name = "ID_AA64PFR0_EL1",
.exported_bits = 0x000f000f00ff0000,
.fixed_bits = 0x0000000000000011 },
{ .name = "ID_AA64PFR1_EL1",
.exported_bits = 0x00000000000000f0 },
{ .name = "ID_AA64PFR*_EL1_RESERVED",
.is_glob = true },
{ .name = "ID_AA64ZFR0_EL1" },
{ .name = "ID_AA64MMFR0_EL1",
.fixed_bits = 0x00000000ff000000 },
{ .name = "ID_AA64MMFR1_EL1" },
{ .name = "ID_AA64MMFR*_EL1_RESERVED",
.is_glob = true },
{ .name = "ID_AA64DFR0_EL1",
.fixed_bits = 0x0000000000000006 },
{ .name = "ID_AA64DFR1_EL1" },
{ .name = "ID_AA64DFR*_EL1_RESERVED",
.is_glob = true },
{ .name = "ID_AA64AFR*",
.is_glob = true },
{ .name = "ID_AA64ISAR0_EL1",
.exported_bits = 0x00fffffff0fffff0 },
{ .name = "ID_AA64ISAR1_EL1",
.exported_bits = 0x000000f0ffffffff },
{ .name = "ID_AA64ISAR*_EL1_RESERVED",
.is_glob = true },
};
modify_arm_cp_regs(v8_idregs, v8_user_idregs);
#endif
/* RVBAR_EL1 is only implemented if EL1 is the highest EL */
if (!arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_EL3) &&
!arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_EL2)) {
ARMCPRegInfo rvbar = {
.name = "RVBAR_EL1", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 12, .crm = 0, .opc2 = 1,
.access = PL1_R,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.rvbar),
};
define_one_arm_cp_reg(cpu, &rvbar);
}
define_arm_cp_regs(cpu, v8_idregs);
define_arm_cp_regs(cpu, v8_cp_reginfo);
}
/*
* Register the base EL2 cpregs.
* Pre v8, these registers are implemented only as part of the
* Virtualization Extensions (EL2 present). Beginning with v8,
* if EL2 is missing but EL3 is enabled, mostly these become
* RES0 from EL3, with some specific exceptions.
*/
if (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_EL2)
|| (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_EL3)
&& arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_V8))) {
uint64_t vmpidr_def = mpidr_read_val(env);
ARMCPRegInfo vpidr_regs[] = {
{ .name = "VPIDR", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA32,
.cp = 15, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 0, .crm = 0, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL2_RW, .accessfn = access_el3_aa32ns,
.resetvalue = cpu->midr,
.type = ARM_CP_ALIAS | ARM_CP_EL3_NO_EL2_C_NZ,
.fieldoffset = offsetoflow32(CPUARMState, cp15.vpidr_el2) },
{ .name = "VPIDR_EL2", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 0, .crm = 0, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL2_RW, .resetvalue = cpu->midr,
.type = ARM_CP_EL3_NO_EL2_C_NZ,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.vpidr_el2) },
{ .name = "VMPIDR", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA32,
.cp = 15, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 0, .crm = 0, .opc2 = 5,
.access = PL2_RW, .accessfn = access_el3_aa32ns,
.resetvalue = vmpidr_def,
.type = ARM_CP_ALIAS | ARM_CP_EL3_NO_EL2_C_NZ,
.fieldoffset = offsetoflow32(CPUARMState, cp15.vmpidr_el2) },
{ .name = "VMPIDR_EL2", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 0, .crm = 0, .opc2 = 5,
.access = PL2_RW, .resetvalue = vmpidr_def,
.type = ARM_CP_EL3_NO_EL2_C_NZ,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.vmpidr_el2) },
};
target/arm: Make number of counters in PMCR follow the CPU Currently we give all the v7-and-up CPUs a PMU with 4 counters. This means that we don't provide the 6 counters that are required by the Arm BSA (Base System Architecture) specification if the CPU supports the Virtualization extensions. Instead of having a single PMCR_NUM_COUNTERS, make each CPU type specify the PMCR reset value (obtained from the appropriate TRM), and use the 'N' field of that value to define the number of counters provided. This means that we now supply 6 counters instead of 4 for: Cortex-A9, Cortex-A15, Cortex-A53, Cortex-A57, Cortex-A72, Cortex-A76, Neoverse-N1, '-cpu max' This CPU goes from 4 to 8 counters: A64FX These CPUs remain with 4 counters: Cortex-A7, Cortex-A8 This CPU goes down from 4 to 3 counters: Cortex-R5 Note that because we now use the PMCR reset value of the specific implementation, we no longer set the LC bit out of reset. This has an UNKNOWN value out of reset for all cores with any AArch32 support, so guest software should be setting it anyway if it wants it. This change was originally landed in commit f7fb73b8cdd3f7 (during the 6.0 release cycle) but was then reverted by commit 21c2dd77a6aa517 before that release because it did not work with KVM. This version fixes that by creating the scratch vCPU in kvm_arm_get_host_cpu_features() with the KVM_ARM_VCPU_PMU_V3 feature if KVM supports it, and then only asking KVM for the PMCR_EL0 value if the vCPU has a PMU. Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org> [PMM: Added the correct value for a64fx] Message-id: 20220513122852.4063586-1-peter.maydell@linaro.org
2022-05-13 14:28:52 +02:00
/*
* The only field of MDCR_EL2 that has a defined architectural reset
* value is MDCR_EL2.HPMN which should reset to the value of PMCR_EL0.N.
*/
ARMCPRegInfo mdcr_el2 = {
.name = "MDCR_EL2", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_BOTH,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 1, .crm = 1, .opc2 = 1,
.access = PL2_RW, .resetvalue = pmu_num_counters(env),
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.mdcr_el2),
};
define_one_arm_cp_reg(cpu, &mdcr_el2);
define_arm_cp_regs(cpu, vpidr_regs);
define_arm_cp_regs(cpu, el2_cp_reginfo);
if (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_V8)) {
define_arm_cp_regs(cpu, el2_v8_cp_reginfo);
}
if (cpu_isar_feature(aa64_sel2, cpu)) {
define_arm_cp_regs(cpu, el2_sec_cp_reginfo);
}
/* RVBAR_EL2 is only implemented if EL2 is the highest EL */
if (!arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_EL3)) {
ARMCPRegInfo rvbar = {
.name = "RVBAR_EL2", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 12, .crm = 0, .opc2 = 1,
.access = PL2_R,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.rvbar),
};
define_one_arm_cp_reg(cpu, &rvbar);
}
}
/* Register the base EL3 cpregs. */
if (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_EL3)) {
define_arm_cp_regs(cpu, el3_cp_reginfo);
ARMCPRegInfo el3_regs[] = {
{ .name = "RVBAR_EL3", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 6, .crn = 12, .crm = 0, .opc2 = 1,
.access = PL3_R,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.rvbar),
},
{ .name = "SCTLR_EL3", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 6, .crn = 1, .crm = 0, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL3_RW,
.raw_writefn = raw_write, .writefn = sctlr_write,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.sctlr_el[3]),
.resetvalue = cpu->reset_sctlr },
};
define_arm_cp_regs(cpu, el3_regs);
}
/* The behaviour of NSACR is sufficiently various that we don't
* try to describe it in a single reginfo:
* if EL3 is 64 bit, then trap to EL3 from S EL1,
* reads as constant 0xc00 from NS EL1 and NS EL2
* if EL3 is 32 bit, then RW at EL3, RO at NS EL1 and NS EL2
* if v7 without EL3, register doesn't exist
* if v8 without EL3, reads as constant 0xc00 from NS EL1 and NS EL2
*/
if (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_EL3)) {
if (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_AARCH64)) {
static const ARMCPRegInfo nsacr = {
.name = "NSACR", .type = ARM_CP_CONST,
.cp = 15, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 1, .crm = 1, .opc2 = 2,
.access = PL1_RW, .accessfn = nsacr_access,
.resetvalue = 0xc00
};
define_one_arm_cp_reg(cpu, &nsacr);
} else {
static const ARMCPRegInfo nsacr = {
.name = "NSACR",
.cp = 15, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 1, .crm = 1, .opc2 = 2,
.access = PL3_RW | PL1_R,
.resetvalue = 0,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.nsacr)
};
define_one_arm_cp_reg(cpu, &nsacr);
}
} else {
if (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_V8)) {
static const ARMCPRegInfo nsacr = {
.name = "NSACR", .type = ARM_CP_CONST,
.cp = 15, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 1, .crm = 1, .opc2 = 2,
.access = PL1_R,
.resetvalue = 0xc00
};
define_one_arm_cp_reg(cpu, &nsacr);
}
}
if (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_PMSA)) {
if (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_V6)) {
/* PMSAv6 not implemented */
assert(arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_V7));
define_arm_cp_regs(cpu, vmsa_pmsa_cp_reginfo);
define_arm_cp_regs(cpu, pmsav7_cp_reginfo);
} else {
define_arm_cp_regs(cpu, pmsav5_cp_reginfo);
}
} else {
define_arm_cp_regs(cpu, vmsa_pmsa_cp_reginfo);
define_arm_cp_regs(cpu, vmsa_cp_reginfo);
/* TTCBR2 is introduced with ARMv8.2-AA32HPD. */
if (cpu_isar_feature(aa32_hpd, cpu)) {
define_one_arm_cp_reg(cpu, &ttbcr2_reginfo);
}
}
if (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_THUMB2EE)) {
define_arm_cp_regs(cpu, t2ee_cp_reginfo);
}
if (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_GENERIC_TIMER)) {
define_arm_cp_regs(cpu, generic_timer_cp_reginfo);
}
if (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_VAPA)) {
define_arm_cp_regs(cpu, vapa_cp_reginfo);
}
if (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_CACHE_TEST_CLEAN)) {
define_arm_cp_regs(cpu, cache_test_clean_cp_reginfo);
}
if (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_CACHE_DIRTY_REG)) {
define_arm_cp_regs(cpu, cache_dirty_status_cp_reginfo);
}
if (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_CACHE_BLOCK_OPS)) {
define_arm_cp_regs(cpu, cache_block_ops_cp_reginfo);
}
if (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_OMAPCP)) {
define_arm_cp_regs(cpu, omap_cp_reginfo);
}
if (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_STRONGARM)) {
define_arm_cp_regs(cpu, strongarm_cp_reginfo);
}
if (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_XSCALE)) {
define_arm_cp_regs(cpu, xscale_cp_reginfo);
}
if (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_DUMMY_C15_REGS)) {
define_arm_cp_regs(cpu, dummy_c15_cp_reginfo);
}
if (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_LPAE)) {
define_arm_cp_regs(cpu, lpae_cp_reginfo);
}
if (cpu_isar_feature(aa32_jazelle, cpu)) {
define_arm_cp_regs(cpu, jazelle_regs);
}
/* Slightly awkwardly, the OMAP and StrongARM cores need all of
* cp15 crn=0 to be writes-ignored, whereas for other cores they should
* be read-only (ie write causes UNDEF exception).
*/
{
ARMCPRegInfo id_pre_v8_midr_cp_reginfo[] = {
/* Pre-v8 MIDR space.
* Note that the MIDR isn't a simple constant register because
* of the TI925 behaviour where writes to another register can
* cause the MIDR value to change.
*
* Unimplemented registers in the c15 0 0 0 space default to
* MIDR. Define MIDR first as this entire space, then CTR, TCMTR
* and friends override accordingly.
*/
{ .name = "MIDR",
.cp = 15, .crn = 0, .crm = 0, .opc1 = 0, .opc2 = CP_ANY,
.access = PL1_R, .resetvalue = cpu->midr,
.writefn = arm_cp_write_ignore, .raw_writefn = raw_write,
.readfn = midr_read,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.c0_cpuid),
.type = ARM_CP_OVERRIDE },
/* crn = 0 op1 = 0 crm = 3..7 : currently unassigned; we RAZ. */
{ .name = "DUMMY",
.cp = 15, .crn = 0, .crm = 3, .opc1 = 0, .opc2 = CP_ANY,
.access = PL1_R, .type = ARM_CP_CONST, .resetvalue = 0 },
{ .name = "DUMMY",
.cp = 15, .crn = 0, .crm = 4, .opc1 = 0, .opc2 = CP_ANY,
.access = PL1_R, .type = ARM_CP_CONST, .resetvalue = 0 },
{ .name = "DUMMY",
.cp = 15, .crn = 0, .crm = 5, .opc1 = 0, .opc2 = CP_ANY,
.access = PL1_R, .type = ARM_CP_CONST, .resetvalue = 0 },
{ .name = "DUMMY",
.cp = 15, .crn = 0, .crm = 6, .opc1 = 0, .opc2 = CP_ANY,
.access = PL1_R, .type = ARM_CP_CONST, .resetvalue = 0 },
{ .name = "DUMMY",
.cp = 15, .crn = 0, .crm = 7, .opc1 = 0, .opc2 = CP_ANY,
.access = PL1_R, .type = ARM_CP_CONST, .resetvalue = 0 },
};
ARMCPRegInfo id_v8_midr_cp_reginfo[] = {
{ .name = "MIDR_EL1", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_BOTH,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 0, .crm = 0, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL1_R, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW, .resetvalue = cpu->midr,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.c0_cpuid),
.readfn = midr_read },
/* crn = 0 op1 = 0 crm = 0 op2 = 4,7 : AArch32 aliases of MIDR */
{ .name = "MIDR", .type = ARM_CP_ALIAS | ARM_CP_CONST,
.cp = 15, .crn = 0, .crm = 0, .opc1 = 0, .opc2 = 4,
.access = PL1_R, .resetvalue = cpu->midr },
{ .name = "MIDR", .type = ARM_CP_ALIAS | ARM_CP_CONST,
.cp = 15, .crn = 0, .crm = 0, .opc1 = 0, .opc2 = 7,
.access = PL1_R, .resetvalue = cpu->midr },
{ .name = "REVIDR_EL1", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_BOTH,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 0, .crm = 0, .opc2 = 6,
.access = PL1_R,
.accessfn = access_aa64_tid1,
.type = ARM_CP_CONST, .resetvalue = cpu->revidr },
};
ARMCPRegInfo id_cp_reginfo[] = {
/* These are common to v8 and pre-v8 */
{ .name = "CTR",
.cp = 15, .crn = 0, .crm = 0, .opc1 = 0, .opc2 = 1,
.access = PL1_R, .accessfn = ctr_el0_access,
.type = ARM_CP_CONST, .resetvalue = cpu->ctr },
{ .name = "CTR_EL0", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 3, .opc2 = 1, .crn = 0, .crm = 0,
.access = PL0_R, .accessfn = ctr_el0_access,
.type = ARM_CP_CONST, .resetvalue = cpu->ctr },
/* TCMTR and TLBTR exist in v8 but have no 64-bit versions */
{ .name = "TCMTR",
.cp = 15, .crn = 0, .crm = 0, .opc1 = 0, .opc2 = 2,
.access = PL1_R,
.accessfn = access_aa32_tid1,
.type = ARM_CP_CONST, .resetvalue = 0 },
};
/* TLBTR is specific to VMSA */
ARMCPRegInfo id_tlbtr_reginfo = {
.name = "TLBTR",
.cp = 15, .crn = 0, .crm = 0, .opc1 = 0, .opc2 = 3,
.access = PL1_R,
.accessfn = access_aa32_tid1,
.type = ARM_CP_CONST, .resetvalue = 0,
};
/* MPUIR is specific to PMSA V6+ */
ARMCPRegInfo id_mpuir_reginfo = {
.name = "MPUIR",
.cp = 15, .crn = 0, .crm = 0, .opc1 = 0, .opc2 = 4,
.access = PL1_R, .type = ARM_CP_CONST,
.resetvalue = cpu->pmsav7_dregion << 8
};
static const ARMCPRegInfo crn0_wi_reginfo = {
.name = "CRN0_WI", .cp = 15, .crn = 0, .crm = CP_ANY,
.opc1 = CP_ANY, .opc2 = CP_ANY, .access = PL1_W,
.type = ARM_CP_NOP | ARM_CP_OVERRIDE
};
#ifdef CONFIG_USER_ONLY
static const ARMCPRegUserSpaceInfo id_v8_user_midr_cp_reginfo[] = {
{ .name = "MIDR_EL1",
.exported_bits = 0x00000000ffffffff },
{ .name = "REVIDR_EL1" },
};
modify_arm_cp_regs(id_v8_midr_cp_reginfo, id_v8_user_midr_cp_reginfo);
#endif
if (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_OMAPCP) ||
arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_STRONGARM)) {
size_t i;
/* Register the blanket "writes ignored" value first to cover the
* whole space. Then update the specific ID registers to allow write
* access, so that they ignore writes rather than causing them to
* UNDEF.
*/
define_one_arm_cp_reg(cpu, &crn0_wi_reginfo);
for (i = 0; i < ARRAY_SIZE(id_pre_v8_midr_cp_reginfo); ++i) {
id_pre_v8_midr_cp_reginfo[i].access = PL1_RW;
}
for (i = 0; i < ARRAY_SIZE(id_cp_reginfo); ++i) {
id_cp_reginfo[i].access = PL1_RW;
}
id_mpuir_reginfo.access = PL1_RW;
id_tlbtr_reginfo.access = PL1_RW;
}
if (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_V8)) {
define_arm_cp_regs(cpu, id_v8_midr_cp_reginfo);
} else {
define_arm_cp_regs(cpu, id_pre_v8_midr_cp_reginfo);
}
define_arm_cp_regs(cpu, id_cp_reginfo);
if (!arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_PMSA)) {
define_one_arm_cp_reg(cpu, &id_tlbtr_reginfo);
} else if (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_V7)) {
define_one_arm_cp_reg(cpu, &id_mpuir_reginfo);
}
}
if (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_MPIDR)) {
ARMCPRegInfo mpidr_cp_reginfo[] = {
{ .name = "MPIDR_EL1", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_BOTH,
.opc0 = 3, .crn = 0, .crm = 0, .opc1 = 0, .opc2 = 5,
.access = PL1_R, .readfn = mpidr_read, .type = ARM_CP_NO_RAW },
};
#ifdef CONFIG_USER_ONLY
static const ARMCPRegUserSpaceInfo mpidr_user_cp_reginfo[] = {
{ .name = "MPIDR_EL1",
.fixed_bits = 0x0000000080000000 },
};
modify_arm_cp_regs(mpidr_cp_reginfo, mpidr_user_cp_reginfo);
#endif
define_arm_cp_regs(cpu, mpidr_cp_reginfo);
}
if (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_AUXCR)) {
ARMCPRegInfo auxcr_reginfo[] = {
{ .name = "ACTLR_EL1", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_BOTH,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 1, .crm = 0, .opc2 = 1,
.access = PL1_RW, .accessfn = access_tacr,
.type = ARM_CP_CONST, .resetvalue = cpu->reset_auxcr },
{ .name = "ACTLR_EL2", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_BOTH,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 4, .crn = 1, .crm = 0, .opc2 = 1,
.access = PL2_RW, .type = ARM_CP_CONST,
.resetvalue = 0 },
{ .name = "ACTLR_EL3", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 6, .crn = 1, .crm = 0, .opc2 = 1,
.access = PL3_RW, .type = ARM_CP_CONST,
.resetvalue = 0 },
};
define_arm_cp_regs(cpu, auxcr_reginfo);
if (cpu_isar_feature(aa32_ac2, cpu)) {
define_arm_cp_regs(cpu, actlr2_hactlr2_reginfo);
}
}
if (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_CBAR)) {
/*
* CBAR is IMPDEF, but common on Arm Cortex-A implementations.
* There are two flavours:
* (1) older 32-bit only cores have a simple 32-bit CBAR
* (2) 64-bit cores have a 64-bit CBAR visible to AArch64, plus a
* 32-bit register visible to AArch32 at a different encoding
* to the "flavour 1" register and with the bits rearranged to
* be able to squash a 64-bit address into the 32-bit view.
* We distinguish the two via the ARM_FEATURE_AARCH64 flag, but
* in future if we support AArch32-only configs of some of the
* AArch64 cores we might need to add a specific feature flag
* to indicate cores with "flavour 2" CBAR.
*/
if (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_AARCH64)) {
/* 32 bit view is [31:18] 0...0 [43:32]. */
uint32_t cbar32 = (extract64(cpu->reset_cbar, 18, 14) << 18)
| extract64(cpu->reset_cbar, 32, 12);
ARMCPRegInfo cbar_reginfo[] = {
{ .name = "CBAR",
.type = ARM_CP_CONST,
.cp = 15, .crn = 15, .crm = 3, .opc1 = 1, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL1_R, .resetvalue = cbar32 },
{ .name = "CBAR_EL1", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA64,
.type = ARM_CP_CONST,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 1, .crn = 15, .crm = 3, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL1_R, .resetvalue = cpu->reset_cbar },
};
/* We don't implement a r/w 64 bit CBAR currently */
assert(arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_CBAR_RO));
define_arm_cp_regs(cpu, cbar_reginfo);
} else {
ARMCPRegInfo cbar = {
.name = "CBAR",
.cp = 15, .crn = 15, .crm = 0, .opc1 = 4, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL1_R|PL3_W, .resetvalue = cpu->reset_cbar,
.fieldoffset = offsetof(CPUARMState,
cp15.c15_config_base_address)
};
if (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_CBAR_RO)) {
cbar.access = PL1_R;
cbar.fieldoffset = 0;
cbar.type = ARM_CP_CONST;
}
define_one_arm_cp_reg(cpu, &cbar);
}
}
if (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_VBAR)) {
static const ARMCPRegInfo vbar_cp_reginfo[] = {
{ .name = "VBAR", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_BOTH,
.opc0 = 3, .crn = 12, .crm = 0, .opc1 = 0, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL1_RW, .writefn = vbar_write,
.bank_fieldoffsets = { offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.vbar_s),
offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.vbar_ns) },
.resetvalue = 0 },
};
define_arm_cp_regs(cpu, vbar_cp_reginfo);
}
/* Generic registers whose values depend on the implementation */
{
ARMCPRegInfo sctlr = {
.name = "SCTLR", .state = ARM_CP_STATE_BOTH,
.opc0 = 3, .opc1 = 0, .crn = 1, .crm = 0, .opc2 = 0,
.access = PL1_RW, .accessfn = access_tvm_trvm,
.bank_fieldoffsets = { offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.sctlr_s),
offsetof(CPUARMState, cp15.sctlr_ns) },
.writefn = sctlr_write, .resetvalue = cpu->reset_sctlr,
.raw_writefn = raw_write,
};
if (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_XSCALE)) {
/* Normally we would always end the TB on an SCTLR write, but Linux
* arch/arm/mach-pxa/sleep.S expects two instructions following
* an MMU enable to execute from cache. Imitate this behaviour.
*/
sctlr.type |= ARM_CP_SUPPRESS_TB_END;
}
define_one_arm_cp_reg(cpu, &sctlr);
}
if (cpu_isar_feature(aa64_lor, cpu)) {
define_arm_cp_regs(cpu, lor_reginfo);
}
if (cpu_isar_feature(aa64_pan, cpu)) {
define_one_arm_cp_reg(cpu, &pan_reginfo);
}
#ifndef CONFIG_USER_ONLY
if (cpu_isar_feature(aa64_ats1e1, cpu)) {
define_arm_cp_regs(cpu, ats1e1_reginfo);
}
if (cpu_isar_feature(aa32_ats1e1, cpu)) {
define_arm_cp_regs(cpu, ats1cp_reginfo);
}
#endif
if (cpu_isar_feature(aa64_uao, cpu)) {
define_one_arm_cp_reg(cpu, &uao_reginfo);
}
if (cpu_isar_feature(aa64_dit, cpu)) {
define_one_arm_cp_reg(cpu, &dit_reginfo);
}
if (cpu_isar_feature(aa64_ssbs, cpu)) {
define_one_arm_cp_reg(cpu, &ssbs_reginfo);
}
if (cpu_isar_feature(any_ras, cpu)) {
define_arm_cp_regs(cpu, minimal_ras_reginfo);
}
if (cpu_isar_feature(aa64_vh, cpu) ||
cpu_isar_feature(aa64_debugv8p2, cpu)) {
define_one_arm_cp_reg(cpu, &contextidr_el2);
}
if (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_EL2) && cpu_isar_feature(aa64_vh, cpu)) {
define_arm_cp_regs(cpu, vhe_reginfo);
}
if (cpu_isar_feature(aa64_sve, cpu)) {
define_arm_cp_regs(cpu, zcr_reginfo);
}
if (cpu_isar_feature(aa64_hcx, cpu)) {
define_one_arm_cp_reg(cpu, &hcrx_el2_reginfo);
}
#ifdef TARGET_AARCH64
if (cpu_isar_feature(aa64_pauth, cpu)) {
define_arm_cp_regs(cpu, pauth_reginfo);
}
if (cpu_isar_feature(aa64_rndr, cpu)) {
define_arm_cp_regs(cpu, rndr_reginfo);
}
if (cpu_isar_feature(aa64_tlbirange, cpu)) {
define_arm_cp_regs(cpu, tlbirange_reginfo);
}
if (cpu_isar_feature(aa64_tlbios, cpu)) {
define_arm_cp_regs(cpu, tlbios_reginfo);
}
#ifndef CONFIG_USER_ONLY
/* Data Cache clean instructions up to PoP */
if (cpu_isar_feature(aa64_dcpop, cpu)) {
define_one_arm_cp_reg(cpu, dcpop_reg);
if (cpu_isar_feature(aa64_dcpodp, cpu)) {
define_one_arm_cp_reg(cpu, dcpodp_reg);
}
}
#endif /*CONFIG_USER_ONLY*/
/*
* If full MTE is enabled, add all of the system registers.
* If only "instructions available at EL0" are enabled,
* then define only a RAZ/WI version of PSTATE.TCO.
*/
if (cpu_isar_feature(aa64_mte, cpu)) {
define_arm_cp_regs(cpu, mte_reginfo);
define_arm_cp_regs(cpu, mte_el0_cacheop_reginfo);
} else if (cpu_isar_feature(aa64_mte_insn_reg, cpu)) {
define_arm_cp_regs(cpu, mte_tco_ro_reginfo);
define_arm_cp_regs(cpu, mte_el0_cacheop_reginfo);
}
if (cpu_isar_feature(aa64_scxtnum, cpu)) {
define_arm_cp_regs(cpu, scxtnum_reginfo);
}
#endif
if (cpu_isar_feature(any_predinv, cpu)) {
define_arm_cp_regs(cpu, predinv_reginfo);
}
if (cpu_isar_feature(any_ccidx, cpu)) {
define_arm_cp_regs(cpu, ccsidr2_reginfo);
}
#ifndef CONFIG_USER_ONLY
/*
* Register redirections and aliases must be done last,
* after the registers from the other extensions have been defined.
*/
if (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_EL2) && cpu_isar_feature(aa64_vh, cpu)) {
define_arm_vh_e2h_redirects_aliases(cpu);
}
#endif
}
/* Sort alphabetically by type name, except for "any". */
static gint arm_cpu_list_compare(gconstpointer a, gconstpointer b)
{
ObjectClass *class_a = (ObjectClass *)a;
ObjectClass *class_b = (ObjectClass *)b;
const char *name_a, *name_b;
name_a = object_class_get_name(class_a);
name_b = object_class_get_name(class_b);
if (strcmp(name_a, "any-" TYPE_ARM_CPU) == 0) {
return 1;
} else if (strcmp(name_b, "any-" TYPE_ARM_CPU) == 0) {
return -1;
} else {
return strcmp(name_a, name_b);
}
}
static void arm_cpu_list_entry(gpointer data, gpointer user_data)
{
ObjectClass *oc = data;
const char *typename;
char *name;
typename = object_class_get_name(oc);
name = g_strndup(typename, strlen(typename) - strlen("-" TYPE_ARM_CPU));
qemu_printf(" %s\n", name);
g_free(name);
}
void arm_cpu_list(void)
{
GSList *list;
list = object_class_get_list(TYPE_ARM_CPU, false);
list = g_slist_sort(list, arm_cpu_list_compare);
qemu_printf("Available CPUs:\n");
g_slist_foreach(list, arm_cpu_list_entry, NULL);
g_slist_free(list);
}
static void arm_cpu_add_definition(gpointer data, gpointer user_data)
{
ObjectClass *oc = data;
CpuDefinitionInfoList **cpu_list = user_data;
CpuDefinitionInfo *info;
const char *typename;
typename = object_class_get_name(oc);
info = g_malloc0(sizeof(*info));
info->name = g_strndup(typename,
strlen(typename) - strlen("-" TYPE_ARM_CPU));
info->q_typename = g_strdup(typename);
QAPI_LIST_PREPEND(*cpu_list, info);
}
CpuDefinitionInfoList *qmp_query_cpu_definitions(Error **errp)
{
CpuDefinitionInfoList *cpu_list = NULL;
GSList *list;
list = object_class_get_list(TYPE_ARM_CPU, false);
g_slist_foreach(list, arm_cpu_add_definition, &cpu_list);
g_slist_free(list);
return cpu_list;
}
/*
* Private utility function for define_one_arm_cp_reg_with_opaque():
* add a single reginfo struct to the hash table.
*/
static void add_cpreg_to_hashtable(ARMCPU *cpu, const ARMCPRegInfo *r,
void *opaque, CPState state,
CPSecureState secstate,
int crm, int opc1, int opc2,
const char *name)
{
CPUARMState *env = &cpu->env;
uint32_t key;
ARMCPRegInfo *r2;
bool is64 = r->type & ARM_CP_64BIT;
bool ns = secstate & ARM_CP_SECSTATE_NS;
int cp = r->cp;
size_t name_len;
bool make_const;
switch (state) {
case ARM_CP_STATE_AA32:
/* We assume it is a cp15 register if the .cp field is left unset. */
if (cp == 0 && r->state == ARM_CP_STATE_BOTH) {
cp = 15;
}
key = ENCODE_CP_REG(cp, is64, ns, r->crn, crm, opc1, opc2);
break;
case ARM_CP_STATE_AA64:
/*
* To allow abbreviation of ARMCPRegInfo definitions, we treat
* cp == 0 as equivalent to the value for "standard guest-visible
* sysreg". STATE_BOTH definitions are also always "standard sysreg"
* in their AArch64 view (the .cp value may be non-zero for the
* benefit of the AArch32 view).
*/
if (cp == 0 || r->state == ARM_CP_STATE_BOTH) {
cp = CP_REG_ARM64_SYSREG_CP;
}
key = ENCODE_AA64_CP_REG(cp, r->crn, crm, r->opc0, opc1, opc2);
break;
default:
g_assert_not_reached();
}
/* Overriding of an existing definition must be explicitly requested. */
if (!(r->type & ARM_CP_OVERRIDE)) {
const ARMCPRegInfo *oldreg = get_arm_cp_reginfo(cpu->cp_regs, key);
if (oldreg) {
assert(oldreg->type & ARM_CP_OVERRIDE);
}
}
/*
* Eliminate registers that are not present because the EL is missing.
* Doing this here makes it easier to put all registers for a given
* feature into the same ARMCPRegInfo array and define them all at once.
*/
make_const = false;
if (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_EL3)) {
/*
* An EL2 register without EL2 but with EL3 is (usually) RES0.
* See rule RJFFP in section D1.1.3 of DDI0487H.a.
*/
int min_el = ctz32(r->access) / 2;
if (min_el == 2 && !arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_EL2)) {
if (r->type & ARM_CP_EL3_NO_EL2_UNDEF) {
return;
}
make_const = !(r->type & ARM_CP_EL3_NO_EL2_KEEP);
}
} else {
CPAccessRights max_el = (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_EL2)
? PL2_RW : PL1_RW);
if ((r->access & max_el) == 0) {
return;
}
}
/* Combine cpreg and name into one allocation. */
name_len = strlen(name) + 1;
r2 = g_malloc(sizeof(*r2) + name_len);
*r2 = *r;
r2->name = memcpy(r2 + 1, name, name_len);
/*
* Update fields to match the instantiation, overwiting wildcards
* such as CP_ANY, ARM_CP_STATE_BOTH, or ARM_CP_SECSTATE_BOTH.
*/
r2->cp = cp;
r2->crm = crm;
r2->opc1 = opc1;
r2->opc2 = opc2;
r2->state = state;
r2->secure = secstate;
if (opaque) {
r2->opaque = opaque;
}
if (make_const) {
/* This should not have been a very special register to begin. */
int old_special = r2->type & ARM_CP_SPECIAL_MASK;
assert(old_special == 0 || old_special == ARM_CP_NOP);
/*
* Set the special function to CONST, retaining the other flags.
* This is important for e.g. ARM_CP_SVE so that we still
* take the SVE trap if CPTR_EL3.EZ == 0.
*/
r2->type = (r2->type & ~ARM_CP_SPECIAL_MASK) | ARM_CP_CONST;
/*
* Usually, these registers become RES0, but there are a few
* special cases like VPIDR_EL2 which have a constant non-zero
* value with writes ignored.
*/
if (!(r->type & ARM_CP_EL3_NO_EL2_C_NZ)) {
r2->resetvalue = 0;
}
/*
* ARM_CP_CONST has precedence, so removing the callbacks and
* offsets are not strictly necessary, but it is potentially
* less confusing to debug later.
*/
r2->readfn = NULL;
r2->writefn = NULL;
r2->raw_readfn = NULL;
r2->raw_writefn = NULL;
r2->resetfn = NULL;
r2->fieldoffset = 0;
r2->bank_fieldoffsets[0] = 0;
r2->bank_fieldoffsets[1] = 0;
} else {
bool isbanked = r->bank_fieldoffsets[0] && r->bank_fieldoffsets[1];
if (isbanked) {
/*
* Register is banked (using both entries in array).
* Overwriting fieldoffset as the array is only used to define
* banked registers but later only fieldoffset is used.
*/
r2->fieldoffset = r->bank_fieldoffsets[ns];
}
if (state == ARM_CP_STATE_AA32) {
if (isbanked) {
/*
* If the register is banked then we don't need to migrate or
* reset the 32-bit instance in certain cases:
*
* 1) If the register has both 32-bit and 64-bit instances
* then we can count on the 64-bit instance taking care
* of the non-secure bank.
* 2) If ARMv8 is enabled then we can count on a 64-bit
* version taking care of the secure bank. This requires
* that separate 32 and 64-bit definitions are provided.
*/
if ((r->state == ARM_CP_STATE_BOTH && ns) ||
(arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_V8) && !ns)) {
r2->type |= ARM_CP_ALIAS;
}
} else if ((secstate != r->secure) && !ns) {
/*
* The register is not banked so we only want to allow
* migration of the non-secure instance.
*/
target-arm: Split NO_MIGRATE into ALIAS and NO_RAW We currently mark ARM coprocessor/system register definitions with the flag ARM_CP_NO_MIGRATE for two different reasons: 1) register is an alias on to state that's also visible via some other register, and that other register is the one responsible for migrating the state 2) register is not actually state at all (for instance the TLB or cache maintenance operation "registers") and it makes no sense to attempt to migrate it or otherwise access the raw state This works fine for identifying which registers should be ignored when performing migration, but we also use the same functions for synchronizing system register state between QEMU and the kernel when using KVM. In this case we don't want to try to sync state into registers in category 2, but we do want to sync into registers in category 1, because the kernel might have picked a different one of the aliases as its choice for which one to expose for migration. (In particular, on 32 bit hosts the kernel will expose the state in the AArch32 version of the register, but TCG's convention is to mark the AArch64 version as the version to migrate, even if the CPU being emulated happens to be 32 bit, so almost all system registers will hit this issue now that we've added AArch64 system emulation.) Fix this by splitting the NO_MIGRATE flag in two (ALIAS and NO_RAW) corresponding to the two different reasons we might not want to migrate a register. When setting up the TCG list of registers to migrate we honour both flags; when populating the list from KVM, only ignore registers which are NO_RAW. Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Greg Bellows <greg.bellows@linaro.org> Message-id: 1422282372-13735-2-git-send-email-peter.maydell@linaro.org [PMM: changed ARM_CP_NO_MIGRATE to ARM_CP_ALIAS on new SP_EL1 and SP_EL2 reginfo stanzas since there was a (semantic) merge conflict with the patchset that added those]
2015-02-05 14:37:22 +01:00
r2->type |= ARM_CP_ALIAS;
}
if (HOST_BIG_ENDIAN &&
r->state == ARM_CP_STATE_BOTH && r2->fieldoffset) {
r2->fieldoffset += sizeof(uint32_t);
}
}
}
/*
* By convention, for wildcarded registers only the first
* entry is used for migration; the others are marked as
target-arm: Split NO_MIGRATE into ALIAS and NO_RAW We currently mark ARM coprocessor/system register definitions with the flag ARM_CP_NO_MIGRATE for two different reasons: 1) register is an alias on to state that's also visible via some other register, and that other register is the one responsible for migrating the state 2) register is not actually state at all (for instance the TLB or cache maintenance operation "registers") and it makes no sense to attempt to migrate it or otherwise access the raw state This works fine for identifying which registers should be ignored when performing migration, but we also use the same functions for synchronizing system register state between QEMU and the kernel when using KVM. In this case we don't want to try to sync state into registers in category 2, but we do want to sync into registers in category 1, because the kernel might have picked a different one of the aliases as its choice for which one to expose for migration. (In particular, on 32 bit hosts the kernel will expose the state in the AArch32 version of the register, but TCG's convention is to mark the AArch64 version as the version to migrate, even if the CPU being emulated happens to be 32 bit, so almost all system registers will hit this issue now that we've added AArch64 system emulation.) Fix this by splitting the NO_MIGRATE flag in two (ALIAS and NO_RAW) corresponding to the two different reasons we might not want to migrate a register. When setting up the TCG list of registers to migrate we honour both flags; when populating the list from KVM, only ignore registers which are NO_RAW. Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Greg Bellows <greg.bellows@linaro.org> Message-id: 1422282372-13735-2-git-send-email-peter.maydell@linaro.org [PMM: changed ARM_CP_NO_MIGRATE to ARM_CP_ALIAS on new SP_EL1 and SP_EL2 reginfo stanzas since there was a (semantic) merge conflict with the patchset that added those]
2015-02-05 14:37:22 +01:00
* ALIAS so we don't try to transfer the register
* multiple times. Special registers (ie NOP/WFI) are
target-arm: Split NO_MIGRATE into ALIAS and NO_RAW We currently mark ARM coprocessor/system register definitions with the flag ARM_CP_NO_MIGRATE for two different reasons: 1) register is an alias on to state that's also visible via some other register, and that other register is the one responsible for migrating the state 2) register is not actually state at all (for instance the TLB or cache maintenance operation "registers") and it makes no sense to attempt to migrate it or otherwise access the raw state This works fine for identifying which registers should be ignored when performing migration, but we also use the same functions for synchronizing system register state between QEMU and the kernel when using KVM. In this case we don't want to try to sync state into registers in category 2, but we do want to sync into registers in category 1, because the kernel might have picked a different one of the aliases as its choice for which one to expose for migration. (In particular, on 32 bit hosts the kernel will expose the state in the AArch32 version of the register, but TCG's convention is to mark the AArch64 version as the version to migrate, even if the CPU being emulated happens to be 32 bit, so almost all system registers will hit this issue now that we've added AArch64 system emulation.) Fix this by splitting the NO_MIGRATE flag in two (ALIAS and NO_RAW) corresponding to the two different reasons we might not want to migrate a register. When setting up the TCG list of registers to migrate we honour both flags; when populating the list from KVM, only ignore registers which are NO_RAW. Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Greg Bellows <greg.bellows@linaro.org> Message-id: 1422282372-13735-2-git-send-email-peter.maydell@linaro.org [PMM: changed ARM_CP_NO_MIGRATE to ARM_CP_ALIAS on new SP_EL1 and SP_EL2 reginfo stanzas since there was a (semantic) merge conflict with the patchset that added those]
2015-02-05 14:37:22 +01:00
* never migratable and not even raw-accessible.
*/
if (r2->type & ARM_CP_SPECIAL_MASK) {
target-arm: Split NO_MIGRATE into ALIAS and NO_RAW We currently mark ARM coprocessor/system register definitions with the flag ARM_CP_NO_MIGRATE for two different reasons: 1) register is an alias on to state that's also visible via some other register, and that other register is the one responsible for migrating the state 2) register is not actually state at all (for instance the TLB or cache maintenance operation "registers") and it makes no sense to attempt to migrate it or otherwise access the raw state This works fine for identifying which registers should be ignored when performing migration, but we also use the same functions for synchronizing system register state between QEMU and the kernel when using KVM. In this case we don't want to try to sync state into registers in category 2, but we do want to sync into registers in category 1, because the kernel might have picked a different one of the aliases as its choice for which one to expose for migration. (In particular, on 32 bit hosts the kernel will expose the state in the AArch32 version of the register, but TCG's convention is to mark the AArch64 version as the version to migrate, even if the CPU being emulated happens to be 32 bit, so almost all system registers will hit this issue now that we've added AArch64 system emulation.) Fix this by splitting the NO_MIGRATE flag in two (ALIAS and NO_RAW) corresponding to the two different reasons we might not want to migrate a register. When setting up the TCG list of registers to migrate we honour both flags; when populating the list from KVM, only ignore registers which are NO_RAW. Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Greg Bellows <greg.bellows@linaro.org> Message-id: 1422282372-13735-2-git-send-email-peter.maydell@linaro.org [PMM: changed ARM_CP_NO_MIGRATE to ARM_CP_ALIAS on new SP_EL1 and SP_EL2 reginfo stanzas since there was a (semantic) merge conflict with the patchset that added those]
2015-02-05 14:37:22 +01:00
r2->type |= ARM_CP_NO_RAW;
}
if (((r->crm == CP_ANY) && crm != 0) ||
((r->opc1 == CP_ANY) && opc1 != 0) ||
((r->opc2 == CP_ANY) && opc2 != 0)) {
r2->type |= ARM_CP_ALIAS | ARM_CP_NO_GDB;
}
/*
* Check that raw accesses are either forbidden or handled. Note that
* we can't assert this earlier because the setup of fieldoffset for
* banked registers has to be done first.
*/
if (!(r2->type & ARM_CP_NO_RAW)) {
assert(!raw_accessors_invalid(r2));
}
g_hash_table_insert(cpu->cp_regs, (gpointer)(uintptr_t)key, r2);
}
void define_one_arm_cp_reg_with_opaque(ARMCPU *cpu,
const ARMCPRegInfo *r, void *opaque)
{
/* Define implementations of coprocessor registers.
* We store these in a hashtable because typically
* there are less than 150 registers in a space which
* is 16*16*16*8*8 = 262144 in size.
* Wildcarding is supported for the crm, opc1 and opc2 fields.
* If a register is defined twice then the second definition is
* used, so this can be used to define some generic registers and
* then override them with implementation specific variations.
* At least one of the original and the second definition should
* include ARM_CP_OVERRIDE in its type bits -- this is just a guard
* against accidental use.
*
* The state field defines whether the register is to be
* visible in the AArch32 or AArch64 execution state. If the
* state is set to ARM_CP_STATE_BOTH then we synthesise a
* reginfo structure for the AArch32 view, which sees the lower
* 32 bits of the 64 bit register.
*
* Only registers visible in AArch64 may set r->opc0; opc0 cannot
* be wildcarded. AArch64 registers are always considered to be 64
* bits; the ARM_CP_64BIT* flag applies only to the AArch32 view of
* the register, if any.
*/
int crm, opc1, opc2;
int crmmin = (r->crm == CP_ANY) ? 0 : r->crm;
int crmmax = (r->crm == CP_ANY) ? 15 : r->crm;
int opc1min = (r->opc1 == CP_ANY) ? 0 : r->opc1;
int opc1max = (r->opc1 == CP_ANY) ? 7 : r->opc1;
int opc2min = (r->opc2 == CP_ANY) ? 0 : r->opc2;
int opc2max = (r->opc2 == CP_ANY) ? 7 : r->opc2;
CPState state;
/* 64 bit registers have only CRm and Opc1 fields */
assert(!((r->type & ARM_CP_64BIT) && (r->opc2 || r->crn)));
/* op0 only exists in the AArch64 encodings */
assert((r->state != ARM_CP_STATE_AA32) || (r->opc0 == 0));
/* AArch64 regs are all 64 bit so ARM_CP_64BIT is meaningless */
assert((r->state != ARM_CP_STATE_AA64) || !(r->type & ARM_CP_64BIT));
/*
* This API is only for Arm's system coprocessors (14 and 15) or
* (M-profile or v7A-and-earlier only) for implementation defined
* coprocessors in the range 0..7. Our decode assumes this, since
* 8..13 can be used for other insns including VFP and Neon. See
* valid_cp() in translate.c. Assert here that we haven't tried
* to use an invalid coprocessor number.
*/
switch (r->state) {
case ARM_CP_STATE_BOTH:
/* 0 has a special meaning, but otherwise the same rules as AA32. */
if (r->cp == 0) {
break;
}
/* fall through */
case ARM_CP_STATE_AA32:
if (arm_feature(&cpu->env, ARM_FEATURE_V8) &&
!arm_feature(&cpu->env, ARM_FEATURE_M)) {
assert(r->cp >= 14 && r->cp <= 15);
} else {
assert(r->cp < 8 || (r->cp >= 14 && r->cp <= 15));
}
break;
case ARM_CP_STATE_AA64:
assert(r->cp == 0 || r->cp == CP_REG_ARM64_SYSREG_CP);
break;
default:
g_assert_not_reached();
}
/* The AArch64 pseudocode CheckSystemAccess() specifies that op1
* encodes a minimum access level for the register. We roll this
* runtime check into our general permission check code, so check
* here that the reginfo's specified permissions are strict enough
* to encompass the generic architectural permission check.
*/
if (r->state != ARM_CP_STATE_AA32) {
CPAccessRights mask;
switch (r->opc1) {
case 0:
/* min_EL EL1, but some accessible to EL0 via kernel ABI */
mask = PL0U_R | PL1_RW;
break;
case 1: case 2:
/* min_EL EL1 */
mask = PL1_RW;
break;
case 3:
/* min_EL EL0 */
mask = PL0_RW;
break;
case 4:
case 5:
/* min_EL EL2 */
mask = PL2_RW;
break;
case 6:
/* min_EL EL3 */
mask = PL3_RW;
break;
case 7:
/* min_EL EL1, secure mode only (we don't check the latter) */
mask = PL1_RW;
break;
default:
/* broken reginfo with out-of-range opc1 */
g_assert_not_reached();
}
/* assert our permissions are not too lax (stricter is fine) */
assert((r->access & ~mask) == 0);
}
/* Check that the register definition has enough info to handle
* reads and writes if they are permitted.
*/
if (!(r->type & (ARM_CP_SPECIAL_MASK | ARM_CP_CONST))) {
if (r->access & PL3_R) {
assert((r->fieldoffset ||
(r->bank_fieldoffsets[0] && r->bank_fieldoffsets[1])) ||
r->readfn);
}
if (r->access & PL3_W) {
assert((r->fieldoffset ||
(r->bank_fieldoffsets[0] && r->bank_fieldoffsets[1])) ||
r->writefn);
}
}
for (crm = crmmin; crm <= crmmax; crm++) {
for (opc1 = opc1min; opc1 <= opc1max; opc1++) {
for (opc2 = opc2min; opc2 <= opc2max; opc2++) {
for (state = ARM_CP_STATE_AA32;
state <= ARM_CP_STATE_AA64; state++) {
if (r->state != state && r->state != ARM_CP_STATE_BOTH) {
continue;
}
if (state == ARM_CP_STATE_AA32) {
/* Under AArch32 CP registers can be common
* (same for secure and non-secure world) or banked.
*/
char *name;
switch (r->secure) {
case ARM_CP_SECSTATE_S:
case ARM_CP_SECSTATE_NS:
add_cpreg_to_hashtable(cpu, r, opaque, state,
r->secure, crm, opc1, opc2,
r->name);
break;
case ARM_CP_SECSTATE_BOTH:
name = g_strdup_printf("%s_S", r->name);
add_cpreg_to_hashtable(cpu, r, opaque, state,
ARM_CP_SECSTATE_S,
crm, opc1, opc2, name);
g_free(name);
add_cpreg_to_hashtable(cpu, r, opaque, state,
ARM_CP_SECSTATE_NS,
crm, opc1, opc2, r->name);
break;
default:
g_assert_not_reached();
}
} else {
/* AArch64 registers get mapped to non-secure instance
* of AArch32 */
add_cpreg_to_hashtable(cpu, r, opaque, state,
ARM_CP_SECSTATE_NS,
crm, opc1, opc2, r->name);
}
}
}
}
}
}
/* Define a whole list of registers */
void define_arm_cp_regs_with_opaque_len(ARMCPU *cpu, const ARMCPRegInfo *regs,
void *opaque, size_t len)
{
size_t i;
for (i = 0; i < len; ++i) {
define_one_arm_cp_reg_with_opaque(cpu, regs + i, opaque);
}
}
/*
* Modify ARMCPRegInfo for access from userspace.
*
* This is a data driven modification directed by
* ARMCPRegUserSpaceInfo. All registers become ARM_CP_CONST as
* user-space cannot alter any values and dynamic values pertaining to
* execution state are hidden from user space view anyway.
*/
void modify_arm_cp_regs_with_len(ARMCPRegInfo *regs, size_t regs_len,
const ARMCPRegUserSpaceInfo *mods,
size_t mods_len)
{
for (size_t mi = 0; mi < mods_len; ++mi) {
const ARMCPRegUserSpaceInfo *m = mods + mi;
GPatternSpec *pat = NULL;
if (m->is_glob) {
pat = g_pattern_spec_new(m->name);
}
for (size_t ri = 0; ri < regs_len; ++ri) {
ARMCPRegInfo *r = regs + ri;
if (pat && g_pattern_match_string(pat, r->name)) {
r->type = ARM_CP_CONST;
r->access = PL0U_R;
r->resetvalue = 0;
/* continue */
} else if (strcmp(r->name, m->name) == 0) {
r->type = ARM_CP_CONST;
r->access = PL0U_R;
r->resetvalue &= m->exported_bits;
r->resetvalue |= m->fixed_bits;
break;
}
}
if (pat) {
g_pattern_spec_free(pat);
}
}
}
const ARMCPRegInfo *get_arm_cp_reginfo(GHashTable *cpregs, uint32_t encoded_cp)
{
return g_hash_table_lookup(cpregs, (gpointer)(uintptr_t)encoded_cp);
}
void arm_cp_write_ignore(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri,
uint64_t value)
{
/* Helper coprocessor write function for write-ignore registers */
}
uint64_t arm_cp_read_zero(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *ri)
{
/* Helper coprocessor write function for read-as-zero registers */
return 0;
}
void arm_cp_reset_ignore(CPUARMState *env, const ARMCPRegInfo *opaque)
{
/* Helper coprocessor reset function for do-nothing-on-reset registers */
}
static int bad_mode_switch(CPUARMState *env, int mode, CPSRWriteType write_type)
{
/* Return true if it is not valid for us to switch to
* this CPU mode (ie all the UNPREDICTABLE cases in
* the ARM ARM CPSRWriteByInstr pseudocode).
*/
/* Changes to or from Hyp via MSR and CPS are illegal. */
if (write_type == CPSRWriteByInstr &&
((env->uncached_cpsr & CPSR_M) == ARM_CPU_MODE_HYP ||
mode == ARM_CPU_MODE_HYP)) {
return 1;
}
switch (mode) {
case ARM_CPU_MODE_USR:
return 0;
case ARM_CPU_MODE_SYS:
case ARM_CPU_MODE_SVC:
case ARM_CPU_MODE_ABT:
case ARM_CPU_MODE_UND:
case ARM_CPU_MODE_IRQ:
case ARM_CPU_MODE_FIQ:
/* Note that we don't implement the IMPDEF NSACR.RFR which in v7
* allows FIQ mode to be Secure-only. (In v8 this doesn't exist.)
*/
/* If HCR.TGE is set then changes from Monitor to NS PL1 via MSR
* and CPS are treated as illegal mode changes.
*/
if (write_type == CPSRWriteByInstr &&
(env->uncached_cpsr & CPSR_M) == ARM_CPU_MODE_MON &&
(arm_hcr_el2_eff(env) & HCR_TGE)) {
return 1;
}
return 0;
case ARM_CPU_MODE_HYP:
return !arm_is_el2_enabled(env) || arm_current_el(env) < 2;
case ARM_CPU_MODE_MON:
return arm_current_el(env) < 3;
default:
return 1;
}
}
uint32_t cpsr_read(CPUARMState *env)
{
int ZF;
ZF = (env->ZF == 0);
return env->uncached_cpsr | (env->NF & 0x80000000) | (ZF << 30) |
(env->CF << 29) | ((env->VF & 0x80000000) >> 3) | (env->QF << 27)
| (env->thumb << 5) | ((env->condexec_bits & 3) << 25)
| ((env->condexec_bits & 0xfc) << 8)
| (env->GE << 16) | (env->daif & CPSR_AIF);
}
void cpsr_write(CPUARMState *env, uint32_t val, uint32_t mask,
CPSRWriteType write_type)
{
uint32_t changed_daif;
target/arm: Do hflags rebuild in cpsr_write() Currently we rely on all the callsites of cpsr_write() to rebuild the cached hflags if they change one of the CPSR bits which we use as a TB flag and cache in hflags. This is a bit awkward when we want to change the set of CPSR bits that we cache, because it means we need to re-audit all the cpsr_write() callsites to see which flags they are writing and whether they now need to rebuild the hflags. Switch instead to making cpsr_write() call arm_rebuild_hflags() itself if one of the bits being changed is a cached bit. We don't do the rebuild for the CPSRWriteRaw write type, because that kind of write is generally doing something special anyway. For the CPSRWriteRaw callsites in the KVM code and inbound migration we definitely don't want to recalculate the hflags; the callsites in boot.c and arm-powerctl.c have to do a rebuild-hflags call themselves anyway because of other CPU state changes they make. This allows us to drop explicit arm_rebuild_hflags() calls in a couple of places where the only reason we needed to call it was the CPSR write. This fixes a bug where we were incorrectly failing to rebuild hflags in the code path for a gdbstub write to CPSR, which meant that you could make QEMU assert by breaking into a running guest, altering the CPSR to change the value of, for example, CPSR.E, and then continuing. Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org> Message-id: 20210817201843.3829-1-peter.maydell@linaro.org
2021-08-17 22:18:43 +02:00
bool rebuild_hflags = (write_type != CPSRWriteRaw) &&
(mask & (CPSR_M | CPSR_E | CPSR_IL));
if (mask & CPSR_NZCV) {
env->ZF = (~val) & CPSR_Z;
env->NF = val;
env->CF = (val >> 29) & 1;
env->VF = (val << 3) & 0x80000000;
}
if (mask & CPSR_Q)
env->QF = ((val & CPSR_Q) != 0);
if (mask & CPSR_T)
env->thumb = ((val & CPSR_T) != 0);
if (mask & CPSR_IT_0_1) {
env->condexec_bits &= ~3;
env->condexec_bits |= (val >> 25) & 3;
}
if (mask & CPSR_IT_2_7) {
env->condexec_bits &= 3;
env->condexec_bits |= (val >> 8) & 0xfc;
}
if (mask & CPSR_GE) {
env->GE = (val >> 16) & 0xf;
}
/* In a V7 implementation that includes the security extensions but does
* not include Virtualization Extensions the SCR.FW and SCR.AW bits control
* whether non-secure software is allowed to change the CPSR_F and CPSR_A
* bits respectively.
*
* In a V8 implementation, it is permitted for privileged software to
* change the CPSR A/F bits regardless of the SCR.AW/FW bits.
*/
if (write_type != CPSRWriteRaw && !arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_V8) &&
arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_EL3) &&
!arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_EL2) &&
!arm_is_secure(env)) {
changed_daif = (env->daif ^ val) & mask;
if (changed_daif & CPSR_A) {
/* Check to see if we are allowed to change the masking of async
* abort exceptions from a non-secure state.
*/
if (!(env->cp15.scr_el3 & SCR_AW)) {
qemu_log_mask(LOG_GUEST_ERROR,
"Ignoring attempt to switch CPSR_A flag from "
"non-secure world with SCR.AW bit clear\n");
mask &= ~CPSR_A;
}
}
if (changed_daif & CPSR_F) {
/* Check to see if we are allowed to change the masking of FIQ
* exceptions from a non-secure state.
*/
if (!(env->cp15.scr_el3 & SCR_FW)) {
qemu_log_mask(LOG_GUEST_ERROR,
"Ignoring attempt to switch CPSR_F flag from "
"non-secure world with SCR.FW bit clear\n");
mask &= ~CPSR_F;
}
/* Check whether non-maskable FIQ (NMFI) support is enabled.
* If this bit is set software is not allowed to mask
* FIQs, but is allowed to set CPSR_F to 0.
*/
if ((A32_BANKED_CURRENT_REG_GET(env, sctlr) & SCTLR_NMFI) &&
(val & CPSR_F)) {
qemu_log_mask(LOG_GUEST_ERROR,
"Ignoring attempt to enable CPSR_F flag "
"(non-maskable FIQ [NMFI] support enabled)\n");
mask &= ~CPSR_F;
}
}
}
env->daif &= ~(CPSR_AIF & mask);
env->daif |= val & CPSR_AIF & mask;
if (write_type != CPSRWriteRaw &&
((env->uncached_cpsr ^ val) & mask & CPSR_M)) {
if ((env->uncached_cpsr & CPSR_M) == ARM_CPU_MODE_USR) {
/* Note that we can only get here in USR mode if this is a
* gdb stub write; for this case we follow the architectural
* behaviour for guest writes in USR mode of ignoring an attempt
* to switch mode. (Those are caught by translate.c for writes
* triggered by guest instructions.)
*/
mask &= ~CPSR_M;
} else if (bad_mode_switch(env, val & CPSR_M, write_type)) {
/* Attempt to switch to an invalid mode: this is UNPREDICTABLE in
* v7, and has defined behaviour in v8:
* + leave CPSR.M untouched
* + allow changes to the other CPSR fields
* + set PSTATE.IL
* For user changes via the GDB stub, we don't set PSTATE.IL,
* as this would be unnecessarily harsh for a user error.
*/
mask &= ~CPSR_M;
if (write_type != CPSRWriteByGDBStub &&
arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_V8)) {
mask |= CPSR_IL;
val |= CPSR_IL;
}
qemu_log_mask(LOG_GUEST_ERROR,
"Illegal AArch32 mode switch attempt from %s to %s\n",
aarch32_mode_name(env->uncached_cpsr),
aarch32_mode_name(val));
} else {
qemu_log_mask(CPU_LOG_INT, "%s %s to %s PC 0x%" PRIx32 "\n",
write_type == CPSRWriteExceptionReturn ?
"Exception return from AArch32" :
"AArch32 mode switch from",
aarch32_mode_name(env->uncached_cpsr),
aarch32_mode_name(val), env->regs[15]);
switch_mode(env, val & CPSR_M);
}
}
mask &= ~CACHED_CPSR_BITS;
env->uncached_cpsr = (env->uncached_cpsr & ~mask) | (val & mask);
target/arm: Do hflags rebuild in cpsr_write() Currently we rely on all the callsites of cpsr_write() to rebuild the cached hflags if they change one of the CPSR bits which we use as a TB flag and cache in hflags. This is a bit awkward when we want to change the set of CPSR bits that we cache, because it means we need to re-audit all the cpsr_write() callsites to see which flags they are writing and whether they now need to rebuild the hflags. Switch instead to making cpsr_write() call arm_rebuild_hflags() itself if one of the bits being changed is a cached bit. We don't do the rebuild for the CPSRWriteRaw write type, because that kind of write is generally doing something special anyway. For the CPSRWriteRaw callsites in the KVM code and inbound migration we definitely don't want to recalculate the hflags; the callsites in boot.c and arm-powerctl.c have to do a rebuild-hflags call themselves anyway because of other CPU state changes they make. This allows us to drop explicit arm_rebuild_hflags() calls in a couple of places where the only reason we needed to call it was the CPSR write. This fixes a bug where we were incorrectly failing to rebuild hflags in the code path for a gdbstub write to CPSR, which meant that you could make QEMU assert by breaking into a running guest, altering the CPSR to change the value of, for example, CPSR.E, and then continuing. Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org> Message-id: 20210817201843.3829-1-peter.maydell@linaro.org
2021-08-17 22:18:43 +02:00
if (rebuild_hflags) {
arm_rebuild_hflags(env);
}
}
/* Sign/zero extend */
uint32_t HELPER(sxtb16)(uint32_t x)
{
uint32_t res;
res = (uint16_t)(int8_t)x;
res |= (uint32_t)(int8_t)(x >> 16) << 16;
return res;
}
static void handle_possible_div0_trap(CPUARMState *env, uintptr_t ra)
{
/*
* Take a division-by-zero exception if necessary; otherwise return
* to get the usual non-trapping division behaviour (result of 0)
*/
if (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_M)
&& (env->v7m.ccr[env->v7m.secure] & R_V7M_CCR_DIV_0_TRP_MASK)) {
raise_exception_ra(env, EXCP_DIVBYZERO, 0, 1, ra);
}
}
uint32_t HELPER(uxtb16)(uint32_t x)
{
uint32_t res;
res = (uint16_t)(uint8_t)x;
res |= (uint32_t)(uint8_t)(x >> 16) << 16;
return res;
}
int32_t HELPER(sdiv)(CPUARMState *env, int32_t num, int32_t den)
{
if (den == 0) {
handle_possible_div0_trap(env, GETPC());
return 0;
}
if (num == INT_MIN && den == -1) {
return INT_MIN;
}
return num / den;
}
uint32_t HELPER(udiv)(CPUARMState *env, uint32_t num, uint32_t den)
{
if (den == 0) {
handle_possible_div0_trap(env, GETPC());
return 0;
}
return num / den;
}
uint32_t HELPER(rbit)(uint32_t x)
{
return revbit32(x);
}
#ifdef CONFIG_USER_ONLY
static void switch_mode(CPUARMState *env, int mode)
{
ARMCPU *cpu = env_archcpu(env);
if (mode != ARM_CPU_MODE_USR) {
cpu_abort(CPU(cpu), "Tried to switch out of user mode\n");
}
}
uint32_t arm_phys_excp_target_el(CPUState *cs, uint32_t excp_idx,
uint32_t cur_el, bool secure)
{
return 1;
}
void aarch64_sync_64_to_32(CPUARMState *env)
{
g_assert_not_reached();
}
#else
static void switch_mode(CPUARMState *env, int mode)
{
int old_mode;
int i;
old_mode = env->uncached_cpsr & CPSR_M;
if (mode == old_mode)
return;
if (old_mode == ARM_CPU_MODE_FIQ) {
memcpy (env->fiq_regs, env->regs + 8, 5 * sizeof(uint32_t));
memcpy (env->regs + 8, env->usr_regs, 5 * sizeof(uint32_t));
} else if (mode == ARM_CPU_MODE_FIQ) {
memcpy (env->usr_regs, env->regs + 8, 5 * sizeof(uint32_t));
memcpy (env->regs + 8, env->fiq_regs, 5 * sizeof(uint32_t));
}
i = bank_number(old_mode);
env->banked_r13[i] = env->regs[13];
env->banked_spsr[i] = env->spsr;
i = bank_number(mode);
env->regs[13] = env->banked_r13[i];
env->spsr = env->banked_spsr[i];
env->banked_r14[r14_bank_number(old_mode)] = env->regs[14];
env->regs[14] = env->banked_r14[r14_bank_number(mode)];
}
/* Physical Interrupt Target EL Lookup Table
*
* [ From ARM ARM section G1.13.4 (Table G1-15) ]
*
* The below multi-dimensional table is used for looking up the target
* exception level given numerous condition criteria. Specifically, the
* target EL is based on SCR and HCR routing controls as well as the
* currently executing EL and secure state.
*
* Dimensions:
* target_el_table[2][2][2][2][2][4]
* | | | | | +--- Current EL
* | | | | +------ Non-secure(0)/Secure(1)
* | | | +--------- HCR mask override
* | | +------------ SCR exec state control
* | +--------------- SCR mask override
* +------------------ 32-bit(0)/64-bit(1) EL3
*
* The table values are as such:
* 0-3 = EL0-EL3
* -1 = Cannot occur
*
* The ARM ARM target EL table includes entries indicating that an "exception
* is not taken". The two cases where this is applicable are:
* 1) An exception is taken from EL3 but the SCR does not have the exception
* routed to EL3.
* 2) An exception is taken from EL2 but the HCR does not have the exception
* routed to EL2.
* In these two cases, the below table contain a target of EL1. This value is
* returned as it is expected that the consumer of the table data will check
* for "target EL >= current EL" to ensure the exception is not taken.
*
* SCR HCR
* 64 EA AMO From
* BIT IRQ IMO Non-secure Secure
* EL3 FIQ RW FMO EL0 EL1 EL2 EL3 EL0 EL1 EL2 EL3
*/
static const int8_t target_el_table[2][2][2][2][2][4] = {
{{{{/* 0 0 0 0 */{ 1, 1, 2, -1 },{ 3, -1, -1, 3 },},
{/* 0 0 0 1 */{ 2, 2, 2, -1 },{ 3, -1, -1, 3 },},},
{{/* 0 0 1 0 */{ 1, 1, 2, -1 },{ 3, -1, -1, 3 },},
{/* 0 0 1 1 */{ 2, 2, 2, -1 },{ 3, -1, -1, 3 },},},},
{{{/* 0 1 0 0 */{ 3, 3, 3, -1 },{ 3, -1, -1, 3 },},
{/* 0 1 0 1 */{ 3, 3, 3, -1 },{ 3, -1, -1, 3 },},},
{{/* 0 1 1 0 */{ 3, 3, 3, -1 },{ 3, -1, -1, 3 },},
{/* 0 1 1 1 */{ 3, 3, 3, -1 },{ 3, -1, -1, 3 },},},},},
{{{{/* 1 0 0 0 */{ 1, 1, 2, -1 },{ 1, 1, -1, 1 },},
{/* 1 0 0 1 */{ 2, 2, 2, -1 },{ 2, 2, -1, 1 },},},
{{/* 1 0 1 0 */{ 1, 1, 1, -1 },{ 1, 1, 1, 1 },},
{/* 1 0 1 1 */{ 2, 2, 2, -1 },{ 2, 2, 2, 1 },},},},
{{{/* 1 1 0 0 */{ 3, 3, 3, -1 },{ 3, 3, -1, 3 },},
{/* 1 1 0 1 */{ 3, 3, 3, -1 },{ 3, 3, -1, 3 },},},
{{/* 1 1 1 0 */{ 3, 3, 3, -1 },{ 3, 3, 3, 3 },},
{/* 1 1 1 1 */{ 3, 3, 3, -1 },{ 3, 3, 3, 3 },},},},},
};
/*
* Determine the target EL for physical exceptions
*/
uint32_t arm_phys_excp_target_el(CPUState *cs, uint32_t excp_idx,
uint32_t cur_el, bool secure)
{
CPUARMState *env = cs->env_ptr;
bool rw;
bool scr;
bool hcr;
int target_el;
/* Is the highest EL AArch64? */
bool is64 = arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_AARCH64);
uint64_t hcr_el2;
if (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_EL3)) {
rw = ((env->cp15.scr_el3 & SCR_RW) == SCR_RW);
} else {
/* Either EL2 is the highest EL (and so the EL2 register width
* is given by is64); or there is no EL2 or EL3, in which case
* the value of 'rw' does not affect the table lookup anyway.
*/
rw = is64;
}
hcr_el2 = arm_hcr_el2_eff(env);
switch (excp_idx) {
case EXCP_IRQ:
scr = ((env->cp15.scr_el3 & SCR_IRQ) == SCR_IRQ);
hcr = hcr_el2 & HCR_IMO;
break;
case EXCP_FIQ:
scr = ((env->cp15.scr_el3 & SCR_FIQ) == SCR_FIQ);
hcr = hcr_el2 & HCR_FMO;
break;
default:
scr = ((env->cp15.scr_el3 & SCR_EA) == SCR_EA);
hcr = hcr_el2 & HCR_AMO;
break;
};
/*
* For these purposes, TGE and AMO/IMO/FMO both force the
* interrupt to EL2. Fold TGE into the bit extracted above.
*/
hcr |= (hcr_el2 & HCR_TGE) != 0;
/* Perform a table-lookup for the target EL given the current state */
target_el = target_el_table[is64][scr][rw][hcr][secure][cur_el];
assert(target_el > 0);
return target_el;
}
void arm_log_exception(CPUState *cs)
{
int idx = cs->exception_index;
if (qemu_loglevel_mask(CPU_LOG_INT)) {
const char *exc = NULL;
static const char * const excnames[] = {
[EXCP_UDEF] = "Undefined Instruction",
[EXCP_SWI] = "SVC",
[EXCP_PREFETCH_ABORT] = "Prefetch Abort",
[EXCP_DATA_ABORT] = "Data Abort",
[EXCP_IRQ] = "IRQ",
[EXCP_FIQ] = "FIQ",
[EXCP_BKPT] = "Breakpoint",
[EXCP_EXCEPTION_EXIT] = "QEMU v7M exception exit",
[EXCP_KERNEL_TRAP] = "QEMU intercept of kernel commpage",
[EXCP_HVC] = "Hypervisor Call",
[EXCP_HYP_TRAP] = "Hypervisor Trap",
[EXCP_SMC] = "Secure Monitor Call",
[EXCP_VIRQ] = "Virtual IRQ",
[EXCP_VFIQ] = "Virtual FIQ",
[EXCP_SEMIHOST] = "Semihosting call",
[EXCP_NOCP] = "v7M NOCP UsageFault",
[EXCP_INVSTATE] = "v7M INVSTATE UsageFault",
[EXCP_STKOF] = "v8M STKOF UsageFault",
[EXCP_LAZYFP] = "v7M exception during lazy FP stacking",
[EXCP_LSERR] = "v8M LSERR UsageFault",
[EXCP_UNALIGNED] = "v7M UNALIGNED UsageFault",
[EXCP_DIVBYZERO] = "v7M DIVBYZERO UsageFault",
[EXCP_VSERR] = "Virtual SERR",
};
if (idx >= 0 && idx < ARRAY_SIZE(excnames)) {
exc = excnames[idx];
}
if (!exc) {
exc = "unknown";
}
qemu_log_mask(CPU_LOG_INT, "Taking exception %d [%s] on CPU %d\n",
idx, exc, cs->cpu_index);
}
}
/*
* Function used to synchronize QEMU's AArch64 register set with AArch32
* register set. This is necessary when switching between AArch32 and AArch64
* execution state.
*/
void aarch64_sync_32_to_64(CPUARMState *env)
{
int i;
uint32_t mode = env->uncached_cpsr & CPSR_M;
/* We can blanket copy R[0:7] to X[0:7] */
for (i = 0; i < 8; i++) {
env->xregs[i] = env->regs[i];
}
/*
* Unless we are in FIQ mode, x8-x12 come from the user registers r8-r12.
* Otherwise, they come from the banked user regs.
*/
if (mode == ARM_CPU_MODE_FIQ) {
for (i = 8; i < 13; i++) {
env->xregs[i] = env->usr_regs[i - 8];
}
} else {
for (i = 8; i < 13; i++) {
env->xregs[i] = env->regs[i];
}
}
/*
* Registers x13-x23 are the various mode SP and FP registers. Registers
* r13 and r14 are only copied if we are in that mode, otherwise we copy
* from the mode banked register.
*/
if (mode == ARM_CPU_MODE_USR || mode == ARM_CPU_MODE_SYS) {
env->xregs[13] = env->regs[13];
env->xregs[14] = env->regs[14];
} else {
env->xregs[13] = env->banked_r13[bank_number(ARM_CPU_MODE_USR)];
/* HYP is an exception in that it is copied from r14 */
if (mode == ARM_CPU_MODE_HYP) {
env->xregs[14] = env->regs[14];
} else {
env->xregs[14] = env->banked_r14[r14_bank_number(ARM_CPU_MODE_USR)];
}
}
if (mode == ARM_CPU_MODE_HYP) {
env->xregs[15] = env->regs[13];
} else {
env->xregs[15] = env->banked_r13[bank_number(ARM_CPU_MODE_HYP)];
}
if (mode == ARM_CPU_MODE_IRQ) {
env->xregs[16] = env->regs[14];
env->xregs[17] = env->regs[13];
} else {
env->xregs[16] = env->banked_r14[r14_bank_number(ARM_CPU_MODE_IRQ)];
env->xregs[17] = env->banked_r13[bank_number(ARM_CPU_MODE_IRQ)];
}
if (mode == ARM_CPU_MODE_SVC) {
env->xregs[18] = env->regs[14];
env->xregs[19] = env->regs[13];
} else {
env->xregs[18] = env->banked_r14[r14_bank_number(ARM_CPU_MODE_SVC)];
env->xregs[19] = env->banked_r13[bank_number(ARM_CPU_MODE_SVC)];
}
if (mode == ARM_CPU_MODE_ABT) {
env->xregs[20] = env->regs[14];
env->xregs[21] = env->regs[13];
} else {
env->xregs[20] = env->banked_r14[r14_bank_number(ARM_CPU_MODE_ABT)];
env->xregs[21] = env->banked_r13[bank_number(ARM_CPU_MODE_ABT)];
}
if (mode == ARM_CPU_MODE_UND) {
env->xregs[22] = env->regs[14];
env->xregs[23] = env->regs[13];
} else {
env->xregs[22] = env->banked_r14[r14_bank_number(ARM_CPU_MODE_UND)];
env->xregs[23] = env->banked_r13[bank_number(ARM_CPU_MODE_UND)];
}
/*
* Registers x24-x30 are mapped to r8-r14 in FIQ mode. If we are in FIQ
* mode, then we can copy from r8-r14. Otherwise, we copy from the
* FIQ bank for r8-r14.
*/
if (mode == ARM_CPU_MODE_FIQ) {
for (i = 24; i < 31; i++) {
env->xregs[i] = env->regs[i - 16]; /* X[24:30] <- R[8:14] */
}
} else {
for (i = 24; i < 29; i++) {
env->xregs[i] = env->fiq_regs[i - 24];
}
env->xregs[29] = env->banked_r13[bank_number(ARM_CPU_MODE_FIQ)];
env->xregs[30] = env->banked_r14[r14_bank_number(ARM_CPU_MODE_FIQ)];
}
env->pc = env->regs[15];
}
/*
* Function used to synchronize QEMU's AArch32 register set with AArch64
* register set. This is necessary when switching between AArch32 and AArch64
* execution state.
*/
void aarch64_sync_64_to_32(CPUARMState *env)
{
int i;
uint32_t mode = env->uncached_cpsr & CPSR_M;
/* We can blanket copy X[0:7] to R[0:7] */
for (i = 0; i < 8; i++) {
env->regs[i] = env->xregs[i];
}
/*
* Unless we are in FIQ mode, r8-r12 come from the user registers x8-x12.
* Otherwise, we copy x8-x12 into the banked user regs.
*/
if (mode == ARM_CPU_MODE_FIQ) {
for (i = 8; i < 13; i++) {
env->usr_regs[i - 8] = env->xregs[i];
}
} else {
for (i = 8; i < 13; i++) {
env->regs[i] = env->xregs[i];
}
}
/*
* Registers r13 & r14 depend on the current mode.
* If we are in a given mode, we copy the corresponding x registers to r13
* and r14. Otherwise, we copy the x register to the banked r13 and r14
* for the mode.
*/
if (mode == ARM_CPU_MODE_USR || mode == ARM_CPU_MODE_SYS) {
env->regs[13] = env->xregs[13];
env->regs[14] = env->xregs[14];
} else {
env->banked_r13[bank_number(ARM_CPU_MODE_USR)] = env->xregs[13];
/*
* HYP is an exception in that it does not have its own banked r14 but
* shares the USR r14
*/
if (mode == ARM_CPU_MODE_HYP) {
env->regs[14] = env->xregs[14];
} else {
env->banked_r14[r14_bank_number(ARM_CPU_MODE_USR)] = env->xregs[14];
}
}
if (mode == ARM_CPU_MODE_HYP) {
env->regs[13] = env->xregs[15];
} else {
env->banked_r13[bank_number(ARM_CPU_MODE_HYP)] = env->xregs[15];
}
if (mode == ARM_CPU_MODE_IRQ) {
env->regs[14] = env->xregs[16];
env->regs[13] = env->xregs[17];
} else {
env->banked_r14[r14_bank_number(ARM_CPU_MODE_IRQ)] = env->xregs[16];
env->banked_r13[bank_number(ARM_CPU_MODE_IRQ)] = env->xregs[17];
}
if (mode == ARM_CPU_MODE_SVC) {
env->regs[14] = env->xregs[18];
env->regs[13] = env->xregs[19];
} else {
env->banked_r14[r14_bank_number(ARM_CPU_MODE_SVC)] = env->xregs[18];
env->banked_r13[bank_number(ARM_CPU_MODE_SVC)] = env->xregs[19];
}
if (mode == ARM_CPU_MODE_ABT) {
env->regs[14] = env->xregs[20];
env->regs[13] = env->xregs[21];
} else {
env->banked_r14[r14_bank_number(ARM_CPU_MODE_ABT)] = env->xregs[20];
env->banked_r13[bank_number(ARM_CPU_MODE_ABT)] = env->xregs[21];
}
if (mode == ARM_CPU_MODE_UND) {
env->regs[14] = env->xregs[22];
env->regs[13] = env->xregs[23];
} else {
env->banked_r14[r14_bank_number(ARM_CPU_MODE_UND)] = env->xregs[22];
env->banked_r13[bank_number(ARM_CPU_MODE_UND)] = env->xregs[23];
}
/* Registers x24-x30 are mapped to r8-r14 in FIQ mode. If we are in FIQ
* mode, then we can copy to r8-r14. Otherwise, we copy to the
* FIQ bank for r8-r14.
*/
if (mode == ARM_CPU_MODE_FIQ) {
for (i = 24; i < 31; i++) {
env->regs[i - 16] = env->xregs[i]; /* X[24:30] -> R[8:14] */
}
} else {
for (i = 24; i < 29; i++) {
env->fiq_regs[i - 24] = env->xregs[i];
}
env->banked_r13[bank_number(ARM_CPU_MODE_FIQ)] = env->xregs[29];
env->banked_r14[r14_bank_number(ARM_CPU_MODE_FIQ)] = env->xregs[30];
}
env->regs[15] = env->pc;
}
static void take_aarch32_exception(CPUARMState *env, int new_mode,
uint32_t mask, uint32_t offset,
uint32_t newpc)
{
int new_el;
/* Change the CPU state so as to actually take the exception. */
switch_mode(env, new_mode);
/*
* For exceptions taken to AArch32 we must clear the SS bit in both
* PSTATE and in the old-state value we save to SPSR_<mode>, so zero it now.
*/
env->pstate &= ~PSTATE_SS;
env->spsr = cpsr_read(env);
/* Clear IT bits. */
env->condexec_bits = 0;
/* Switch to the new mode, and to the correct instruction set. */
env->uncached_cpsr = (env->uncached_cpsr & ~CPSR_M) | new_mode;
/* This must be after mode switching. */
new_el = arm_current_el(env);
/* Set new mode endianness */
env->uncached_cpsr &= ~CPSR_E;
if (env->cp15.sctlr_el[new_el] & SCTLR_EE) {
env->uncached_cpsr |= CPSR_E;
}
/* J and IL must always be cleared for exception entry */
env->uncached_cpsr &= ~(CPSR_IL | CPSR_J);
env->daif |= mask;
if (cpu_isar_feature(aa32_ssbs, env_archcpu(env))) {
if (env->cp15.sctlr_el[new_el] & SCTLR_DSSBS_32) {
env->uncached_cpsr |= CPSR_SSBS;
} else {
env->uncached_cpsr &= ~CPSR_SSBS;
}
}
if (new_mode == ARM_CPU_MODE_HYP) {
env->thumb = (env->cp15.sctlr_el[2] & SCTLR_TE) != 0;
env->elr_el[2] = env->regs[15];
} else {
/* CPSR.PAN is normally preserved preserved unless... */
if (cpu_isar_feature(aa32_pan, env_archcpu(env))) {
switch (new_el) {
case 3:
if (!arm_is_secure_below_el3(env)) {
/* ... the target is EL3, from non-secure state. */
env->uncached_cpsr &= ~CPSR_PAN;
break;
}
/* ... the target is EL3, from secure state ... */
/* fall through */
case 1:
/* ... the target is EL1 and SCTLR.SPAN is 0. */
if (!(env->cp15.sctlr_el[new_el] & SCTLR_SPAN)) {
env->uncached_cpsr |= CPSR_PAN;
}
break;
}
}
/*
* this is a lie, as there was no c1_sys on V4T/V5, but who cares
* and we should just guard the thumb mode on V4
*/
if (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_V4T)) {
env->thumb =
(A32_BANKED_CURRENT_REG_GET(env, sctlr) & SCTLR_TE) != 0;
}
env->regs[14] = env->regs[15] + offset;
}
env->regs[15] = newpc;
arm_rebuild_hflags(env);
}
static void arm_cpu_do_interrupt_aarch32_hyp(CPUState *cs)
{
/*
* Handle exception entry to Hyp mode; this is sufficiently
* different to entry to other AArch32 modes that we handle it
* separately here.
*
* The vector table entry used is always the 0x14 Hyp mode entry point,
* unless this is an UNDEF/SVC/HVC/abort taken from Hyp to Hyp.
* The offset applied to the preferred return address is always zero
* (see DDI0487C.a section G1.12.3).
* PSTATE A/I/F masks are set based only on the SCR.EA/IRQ/FIQ values.
*/
uint32_t addr, mask;
ARMCPU *cpu = ARM_CPU(cs);
CPUARMState *env = &cpu->env;
switch (cs->exception_index) {
case EXCP_UDEF:
addr = 0x04;
break;
case EXCP_SWI:
addr = 0x08;
break;
case EXCP_BKPT:
/* Fall through to prefetch abort. */
case EXCP_PREFETCH_ABORT:
env->cp15.ifar_s = env->exception.vaddress;
qemu_log_mask(CPU_LOG_INT, "...with HIFAR 0x%x\n",
(uint32_t)env->exception.vaddress);
addr = 0x0c;
break;
case EXCP_DATA_ABORT:
env->cp15.dfar_s = env->exception.vaddress;
qemu_log_mask(CPU_LOG_INT, "...with HDFAR 0x%x\n",
(uint32_t)env->exception.vaddress);
addr = 0x10;
break;
case EXCP_IRQ:
addr = 0x18;
break;
case EXCP_FIQ:
addr = 0x1c;
break;
case EXCP_HVC:
addr = 0x08;
break;
case EXCP_HYP_TRAP:
addr = 0x14;
break;
default:
cpu_abort(cs, "Unhandled exception 0x%x\n", cs->exception_index);
}
if (cs->exception_index != EXCP_IRQ && cs->exception_index != EXCP_FIQ) {
if (!arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_V8)) {
/*
* QEMU syndrome values are v8-style. v7 has the IL bit
* UNK/SBZP for "field not valid" cases, where v8 uses RES1.
* If this is a v7 CPU, squash the IL bit in those cases.
*/
if (cs->exception_index == EXCP_PREFETCH_ABORT ||
(cs->exception_index == EXCP_DATA_ABORT &&
!(env->exception.syndrome & ARM_EL_ISV)) ||
syn_get_ec(env->exception.syndrome) == EC_UNCATEGORIZED) {
env->exception.syndrome &= ~ARM_EL_IL;
}
}
env->cp15.esr_el[2] = env->exception.syndrome;
}
if (arm_current_el(env) != 2 && addr < 0x14) {
addr = 0x14;
}
mask = 0;
if (!(env->cp15.scr_el3 & SCR_EA)) {
mask |= CPSR_A;
}
if (!(env->cp15.scr_el3 & SCR_IRQ)) {
mask |= CPSR_I;
}
if (!(env->cp15.scr_el3 & SCR_FIQ)) {
mask |= CPSR_F;
}
addr += env->cp15.hvbar;
take_aarch32_exception(env, ARM_CPU_MODE_HYP, mask, 0, addr);
}
static void arm_cpu_do_interrupt_aarch32(CPUState *cs)
{
ARMCPU *cpu = ARM_CPU(cs);
CPUARMState *env = &cpu->env;
uint32_t addr;
uint32_t mask;
int new_mode;
uint32_t offset;
uint32_t moe;
/* If this is a debug exception we must update the DBGDSCR.MOE bits */
switch (syn_get_ec(env->exception.syndrome)) {
case EC_BREAKPOINT:
case EC_BREAKPOINT_SAME_EL:
moe = 1;
break;
case EC_WATCHPOINT:
case EC_WATCHPOINT_SAME_EL:
moe = 10;
break;
case EC_AA32_BKPT:
moe = 3;
break;
case EC_VECTORCATCH:
moe = 5;
break;
default:
moe = 0;
break;
}
if (moe) {
env->cp15.mdscr_el1 = deposit64(env->cp15.mdscr_el1, 2, 4, moe);
}
if (env->exception.target_el == 2) {
arm_cpu_do_interrupt_aarch32_hyp(cs);
return;
}
switch (cs->exception_index) {
case EXCP_UDEF:
new_mode = ARM_CPU_MODE_UND;
addr = 0x04;
mask = CPSR_I;
if (env->thumb)
offset = 2;
else
offset = 4;
break;
case EXCP_SWI:
new_mode = ARM_CPU_MODE_SVC;
addr = 0x08;
mask = CPSR_I;
/* The PC already points to the next instruction. */
offset = 0;
break;
case EXCP_BKPT:
/* Fall through to prefetch abort. */
case EXCP_PREFETCH_ABORT:
A32_BANKED_CURRENT_REG_SET(env, ifsr, env->exception.fsr);
A32_BANKED_CURRENT_REG_SET(env, ifar, env->exception.vaddress);
qemu_log_mask(CPU_LOG_INT, "...with IFSR 0x%x IFAR 0x%x\n",
env->exception.fsr, (uint32_t)env->exception.vaddress);
new_mode = ARM_CPU_MODE_ABT;
addr = 0x0c;
mask = CPSR_A | CPSR_I;
offset = 4;
break;
case EXCP_DATA_ABORT:
A32_BANKED_CURRENT_REG_SET(env, dfsr, env->exception.fsr);
A32_BANKED_CURRENT_REG_SET(env, dfar, env->exception.vaddress);
qemu_log_mask(CPU_LOG_INT, "...with DFSR 0x%x DFAR 0x%x\n",
env->exception.fsr,
(uint32_t)env->exception.vaddress);
new_mode = ARM_CPU_MODE_ABT;
addr = 0x10;
mask = CPSR_A | CPSR_I;
offset = 8;
break;
case EXCP_IRQ:
new_mode = ARM_CPU_MODE_IRQ;
addr = 0x18;
/* Disable IRQ and imprecise data aborts. */
mask = CPSR_A | CPSR_I;
offset = 4;
if (env->cp15.scr_el3 & SCR_IRQ) {
/* IRQ routed to monitor mode */
new_mode = ARM_CPU_MODE_MON;
mask |= CPSR_F;
}
break;
case EXCP_FIQ:
new_mode = ARM_CPU_MODE_FIQ;
addr = 0x1c;
/* Disable FIQ, IRQ and imprecise data aborts. */
mask = CPSR_A | CPSR_I | CPSR_F;
if (env->cp15.scr_el3 & SCR_FIQ) {
/* FIQ routed to monitor mode */
new_mode = ARM_CPU_MODE_MON;
}
offset = 4;
break;
case EXCP_VIRQ:
new_mode = ARM_CPU_MODE_IRQ;
addr = 0x18;
/* Disable IRQ and imprecise data aborts. */
mask = CPSR_A | CPSR_I;
offset = 4;
break;
case EXCP_VFIQ:
new_mode = ARM_CPU_MODE_FIQ;
addr = 0x1c;
/* Disable FIQ, IRQ and imprecise data aborts. */
mask = CPSR_A | CPSR_I | CPSR_F;
offset = 4;
break;
case EXCP_VSERR:
{
/*
* Note that this is reported as a data abort, but the DFAR
* has an UNKNOWN value. Construct the SError syndrome from
* AET and ExT fields.
*/
ARMMMUFaultInfo fi = { .type = ARMFault_AsyncExternal, };
if (extended_addresses_enabled(env)) {
env->exception.fsr = arm_fi_to_lfsc(&fi);
} else {
env->exception.fsr = arm_fi_to_sfsc(&fi);
}
env->exception.fsr |= env->cp15.vsesr_el2 & 0xd000;
A32_BANKED_CURRENT_REG_SET(env, dfsr, env->exception.fsr);
qemu_log_mask(CPU_LOG_INT, "...with IFSR 0x%x\n",
env->exception.fsr);
new_mode = ARM_CPU_MODE_ABT;
addr = 0x10;
mask = CPSR_A | CPSR_I;
offset = 8;
}
break;
case EXCP_SMC:
new_mode = ARM_CPU_MODE_MON;
addr = 0x08;
mask = CPSR_A | CPSR_I | CPSR_F;
offset = 0;
break;
default:
cpu_abort(cs, "Unhandled exception 0x%x\n", cs->exception_index);
return; /* Never happens. Keep compiler happy. */
}
if (new_mode == ARM_CPU_MODE_MON) {
addr += env->cp15.mvbar;
} else if (A32_BANKED_CURRENT_REG_GET(env, sctlr) & SCTLR_V) {
/* High vectors. When enabled, base address cannot be remapped. */
addr += 0xffff0000;
} else {
/* ARM v7 architectures provide a vector base address register to remap
* the interrupt vector table.
* This register is only followed in non-monitor mode, and is banked.
* Note: only bits 31:5 are valid.
*/
addr += A32_BANKED_CURRENT_REG_GET(env, vbar);
}
if ((env->uncached_cpsr & CPSR_M) == ARM_CPU_MODE_MON) {
env->cp15.scr_el3 &= ~SCR_NS;
}
take_aarch32_exception(env, new_mode, mask, offset, addr);
}
static int aarch64_regnum(CPUARMState *env, int aarch32_reg)
{
/*
* Return the register number of the AArch64 view of the AArch32
* register @aarch32_reg. The CPUARMState CPSR is assumed to still
* be that of the AArch32 mode the exception came from.
*/
int mode = env->uncached_cpsr & CPSR_M;
switch (aarch32_reg) {
case 0 ... 7:
return aarch32_reg;
case 8 ... 12:
return mode == ARM_CPU_MODE_FIQ ? aarch32_reg + 16 : aarch32_reg;
case 13:
switch (mode) {
case ARM_CPU_MODE_USR:
case ARM_CPU_MODE_SYS:
return 13;
case ARM_CPU_MODE_HYP:
return 15;
case ARM_CPU_MODE_IRQ:
return 17;
case ARM_CPU_MODE_SVC:
return 19;
case ARM_CPU_MODE_ABT:
return 21;
case ARM_CPU_MODE_UND:
return 23;
case ARM_CPU_MODE_FIQ:
return 29;
default:
g_assert_not_reached();
}
case 14:
switch (mode) {
case ARM_CPU_MODE_USR:
case ARM_CPU_MODE_SYS:
case ARM_CPU_MODE_HYP:
return 14;
case ARM_CPU_MODE_IRQ:
return 16;
case ARM_CPU_MODE_SVC:
return 18;
case ARM_CPU_MODE_ABT:
return 20;
case ARM_CPU_MODE_UND:
return 22;
case ARM_CPU_MODE_FIQ:
return 30;
default:
g_assert_not_reached();
}
case 15:
return 31;
default:
g_assert_not_reached();
}
}
static uint32_t cpsr_read_for_spsr_elx(CPUARMState *env)
{
uint32_t ret = cpsr_read(env);
/* Move DIT to the correct location for SPSR_ELx */
if (ret & CPSR_DIT) {
ret &= ~CPSR_DIT;
ret |= PSTATE_DIT;
}
/* Merge PSTATE.SS into SPSR_ELx */
ret |= env->pstate & PSTATE_SS;
return ret;
}
/* Handle exception entry to a target EL which is using AArch64 */
static void arm_cpu_do_interrupt_aarch64(CPUState *cs)
{
ARMCPU *cpu = ARM_CPU(cs);
CPUARMState *env = &cpu->env;
unsigned int new_el = env->exception.target_el;
target_ulong addr = env->cp15.vbar_el[new_el];
unsigned int new_mode = aarch64_pstate_mode(new_el, true);
unsigned int old_mode;
unsigned int cur_el = arm_current_el(env);
int rt;
/*
* Note that new_el can never be 0. If cur_el is 0, then
* el0_a64 is is_a64(), else el0_a64 is ignored.
*/
aarch64_sve_change_el(env, cur_el, new_el, is_a64(env));
if (cur_el < new_el) {
/* Entry vector offset depends on whether the implemented EL
* immediately lower than the target level is using AArch32 or AArch64
*/
bool is_aa64;
uint64_t hcr;
switch (new_el) {
case 3:
is_aa64 = (env->cp15.scr_el3 & SCR_RW) != 0;
break;
case 2:
hcr = arm_hcr_el2_eff(env);
if ((hcr & (HCR_E2H | HCR_TGE)) != (HCR_E2H | HCR_TGE)) {
is_aa64 = (hcr & HCR_RW) != 0;
break;
}
/* fall through */
case 1:
is_aa64 = is_a64(env);
break;
default:
g_assert_not_reached();
}
if (is_aa64) {
addr += 0x400;
} else {
addr += 0x600;
}
} else if (pstate_read(env) & PSTATE_SP) {
addr += 0x200;
}
switch (cs->exception_index) {
case EXCP_PREFETCH_ABORT:
case EXCP_DATA_ABORT:
env->cp15.far_el[new_el] = env->exception.vaddress;
qemu_log_mask(CPU_LOG_INT, "...with FAR 0x%" PRIx64 "\n",
env->cp15.far_el[new_el]);
/* fall through */
case EXCP_BKPT:
case EXCP_UDEF:
case EXCP_SWI:
case EXCP_HVC:
case EXCP_HYP_TRAP:
case EXCP_SMC:
switch (syn_get_ec(env->exception.syndrome)) {
case EC_ADVSIMDFPACCESSTRAP:
/*
* QEMU internal FP/SIMD syndromes from AArch32 include the
* TA and coproc fields which are only exposed if the exception
* is taken to AArch32 Hyp mode. Mask them out to get a valid
* AArch64 format syndrome.
*/
env->exception.syndrome &= ~MAKE_64BIT_MASK(0, 20);
break;
case EC_CP14RTTRAP:
case EC_CP15RTTRAP:
case EC_CP14DTTRAP:
/*
* For a trap on AArch32 MRC/MCR/LDC/STC the Rt field is currently
* the raw register field from the insn; when taking this to
* AArch64 we must convert it to the AArch64 view of the register
* number. Notice that we read a 4-bit AArch32 register number and
* write back a 5-bit AArch64 one.
*/
rt = extract32(env->exception.syndrome, 5, 4);
rt = aarch64_regnum(env, rt);
env->exception.syndrome = deposit32(env->exception.syndrome,
5, 5, rt);
break;
case EC_CP15RRTTRAP:
case EC_CP14RRTTRAP:
/* Similarly for MRRC/MCRR traps for Rt and Rt2 fields */
rt = extract32(env->exception.syndrome, 5, 4);
rt = aarch64_regnum(env, rt);
env->exception.syndrome = deposit32(env->exception.syndrome,
5, 5, rt);
rt = extract32(env->exception.syndrome, 10, 4);
rt = aarch64_regnum(env, rt);
env->exception.syndrome = deposit32(env->exception.syndrome,
10, 5, rt);
break;
}
env->cp15.esr_el[new_el] = env->exception.syndrome;
break;
case EXCP_IRQ:
case EXCP_VIRQ:
addr += 0x80;
break;
case EXCP_FIQ:
case EXCP_VFIQ:
addr += 0x100;
break;
case EXCP_VSERR:
addr += 0x180;
/* Construct the SError syndrome from IDS and ISS fields. */
env->exception.syndrome = syn_serror(env->cp15.vsesr_el2 & 0x1ffffff);
env->cp15.esr_el[new_el] = env->exception.syndrome;
break;
default:
cpu_abort(cs, "Unhandled exception 0x%x\n", cs->exception_index);
}
if (is_a64(env)) {
old_mode = pstate_read(env);
aarch64_save_sp(env, arm_current_el(env));
env->elr_el[new_el] = env->pc;
} else {
old_mode = cpsr_read_for_spsr_elx(env);
env->elr_el[new_el] = env->regs[15];
aarch64_sync_32_to_64(env);
env->condexec_bits = 0;
}
env->banked_spsr[aarch64_banked_spsr_index(new_el)] = old_mode;
qemu_log_mask(CPU_LOG_INT, "...with ELR 0x%" PRIx64 "\n",
env->elr_el[new_el]);
if (cpu_isar_feature(aa64_pan, cpu)) {
/* The value of PSTATE.PAN is normally preserved, except when ... */
new_mode |= old_mode & PSTATE_PAN;
switch (new_el) {
case 2:
/* ... the target is EL2 with HCR_EL2.{E2H,TGE} == '11' ... */
if ((arm_hcr_el2_eff(env) & (HCR_E2H | HCR_TGE))
!= (HCR_E2H | HCR_TGE)) {
break;
}
/* fall through */
case 1:
/* ... the target is EL1 ... */
/* ... and SCTLR_ELx.SPAN == 0, then set to 1. */
if ((env->cp15.sctlr_el[new_el] & SCTLR_SPAN) == 0) {
new_mode |= PSTATE_PAN;
}
break;
}
}
if (cpu_isar_feature(aa64_mte, cpu)) {
new_mode |= PSTATE_TCO;
}
if (cpu_isar_feature(aa64_ssbs, cpu)) {
if (env->cp15.sctlr_el[new_el] & SCTLR_DSSBS_64) {
new_mode |= PSTATE_SSBS;
} else {
new_mode &= ~PSTATE_SSBS;
}
}
pstate_write(env, PSTATE_DAIF | new_mode);
env->aarch64 = true;
aarch64_restore_sp(env, new_el);
helper_rebuild_hflags_a64(env, new_el);
env->pc = addr;
qemu_log_mask(CPU_LOG_INT, "...to EL%d PC 0x%" PRIx64 " PSTATE 0x%x\n",
new_el, env->pc, pstate_read(env));
}
/*
* Do semihosting call and set the appropriate return value. All the
* permission and validity checks have been done at translate time.
*
* We only see semihosting exceptions in TCG only as they are not
* trapped to the hypervisor in KVM.
*/
#ifdef CONFIG_TCG
static void handle_semihosting(CPUState *cs)
{
ARMCPU *cpu = ARM_CPU(cs);
CPUARMState *env = &cpu->env;
if (is_a64(env)) {
qemu_log_mask(CPU_LOG_INT,
"...handling as semihosting call 0x%" PRIx64 "\n",
env->xregs[0]);
env->xregs[0] = do_common_semihosting(cs);
env->pc += 4;
} else {
qemu_log_mask(CPU_LOG_INT,
"...handling as semihosting call 0x%x\n",
env->regs[0]);
env->regs[0] = do_common_semihosting(cs);
env->regs[15] += env->thumb ? 2 : 4;
}
}
#endif
/* Handle a CPU exception for A and R profile CPUs.
* Do any appropriate logging, handle PSCI calls, and then hand off
* to the AArch64-entry or AArch32-entry function depending on the
* target exception level's register width.
target/arm: do not use cc->do_interrupt for KVM directly cc->do_interrupt is in theory a TCG callback used in accel/tcg only, to prepare the emulated architecture to take an interrupt as defined in the hardware specifications, but in reality the _do_interrupt style of functions in targets are also occasionally reused by KVM to prepare the architecture state in a similar way where userspace code has identified that it needs to deliver an exception to the guest. In the case of ARM, that includes: 1) the vcpu thread got a SIGBUS indicating a memory error, and we need to deliver a Synchronous External Abort to the guest to let it know about the error. 2) the kernel told us about a debug exception (breakpoint, watchpoint) but it is not for one of QEMU's own gdbstub breakpoints/watchpoints so it must be a breakpoint the guest itself has set up, therefore we need to deliver it to the guest. So in order to reuse code, the same arm_do_interrupt function is used. This is all fine, but we need to avoid calling it using the callback registered in CPUClass, since that one is now TCG-only. Fortunately this is easily solved by replacing calls to CPUClass::do_interrupt() with explicit calls to arm_do_interrupt(). Signed-off-by: Claudio Fontana <cfontana@suse.de> Reviewed-by: Alex Bennée <alex.bennee@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Philippe Mathieu-Daudé <philmd@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org> Cc: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Message-Id: <20210204163931.7358-9-cfontana@suse.de> Signed-off-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org>
2021-02-04 17:39:16 +01:00
*
* Note: this is used for both TCG (as the do_interrupt tcg op),
* and KVM to re-inject guest debug exceptions, and to
* inject a Synchronous-External-Abort.
*/
void arm_cpu_do_interrupt(CPUState *cs)
{
ARMCPU *cpu = ARM_CPU(cs);
CPUARMState *env = &cpu->env;
unsigned int new_el = env->exception.target_el;
assert(!arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_M));
arm_log_exception(cs);
qemu_log_mask(CPU_LOG_INT, "...from EL%d to EL%d\n", arm_current_el(env),
new_el);
if (qemu_loglevel_mask(CPU_LOG_INT)
&& !excp_is_internal(cs->exception_index)) {
qemu_log_mask(CPU_LOG_INT, "...with ESR 0x%x/0x%" PRIx32 "\n",
syn_get_ec(env->exception.syndrome),
env->exception.syndrome);
}
if (arm_is_psci_call(cpu, cs->exception_index)) {
arm_handle_psci_call(cpu);
qemu_log_mask(CPU_LOG_INT, "...handled as PSCI call\n");
return;
}
/*
* Semihosting semantics depend on the register width of the code
* that caused the exception, not the target exception level, so
* must be handled here.
*/
#ifdef CONFIG_TCG
if (cs->exception_index == EXCP_SEMIHOST) {
handle_semihosting(cs);
return;
}
#endif
/* Hooks may change global state so BQL should be held, also the
* BQL needs to be held for any modification of
* cs->interrupt_request.
*/
g_assert(qemu_mutex_iothread_locked());
arm_call_pre_el_change_hook(cpu);
assert(!excp_is_internal(cs->exception_index));
if (arm_el_is_aa64(env, new_el)) {
arm_cpu_do_interrupt_aarch64(cs);
} else {
arm_cpu_do_interrupt_aarch32(cs);
}
arm_call_el_change_hook(cpu);
if (!kvm_enabled()) {
cs->interrupt_request |= CPU_INTERRUPT_EXITTB;
}
}
#endif /* !CONFIG_USER_ONLY */
uint64_t arm_sctlr(CPUARMState *env, int el)
{
/* Only EL0 needs to be adjusted for EL1&0 or EL2&0. */
if (el == 0) {
ARMMMUIdx mmu_idx = arm_mmu_idx_el(env, 0);
el = (mmu_idx == ARMMMUIdx_E20_0 || mmu_idx == ARMMMUIdx_SE20_0)
? 2 : 1;
}
return env->cp15.sctlr_el[el];
}
/* Return the SCTLR value which controls this address translation regime */
static inline uint64_t regime_sctlr(CPUARMState *env, ARMMMUIdx mmu_idx)
{
return env->cp15.sctlr_el[regime_el(env, mmu_idx)];
}
#ifndef CONFIG_USER_ONLY
/* Return true if the specified stage of address translation is disabled */
static inline bool regime_translation_disabled(CPUARMState *env,
ARMMMUIdx mmu_idx)
{
uint64_t hcr_el2;
if (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_M)) {
switch (env->v7m.mpu_ctrl[regime_is_secure(env, mmu_idx)] &
(R_V7M_MPU_CTRL_ENABLE_MASK | R_V7M_MPU_CTRL_HFNMIENA_MASK)) {
case R_V7M_MPU_CTRL_ENABLE_MASK:
/* Enabled, but not for HardFault and NMI */
return mmu_idx & ARM_MMU_IDX_M_NEGPRI;
case R_V7M_MPU_CTRL_ENABLE_MASK | R_V7M_MPU_CTRL_HFNMIENA_MASK:
/* Enabled for all cases */
return false;
case 0:
default:
/* HFNMIENA set and ENABLE clear is UNPREDICTABLE, but
* we warned about that in armv7m_nvic.c when the guest set it.
*/
return true;
}
}
hcr_el2 = arm_hcr_el2_eff(env);
if (mmu_idx == ARMMMUIdx_Stage2 || mmu_idx == ARMMMUIdx_Stage2_S) {
/* HCR.DC means HCR.VM behaves as 1 */
return (hcr_el2 & (HCR_DC | HCR_VM)) == 0;
}
if (hcr_el2 & HCR_TGE) {
/* TGE means that NS EL0/1 act as if SCTLR_EL1.M is zero */
if (!regime_is_secure(env, mmu_idx) && regime_el(env, mmu_idx) == 1) {
return true;
}
}
if ((hcr_el2 & HCR_DC) && arm_mmu_idx_is_stage1_of_2(mmu_idx)) {
/* HCR.DC means SCTLR_EL1.M behaves as 0 */
return true;
}
return (regime_sctlr(env, mmu_idx) & SCTLR_M) == 0;
}
static inline bool regime_translation_big_endian(CPUARMState *env,
ARMMMUIdx mmu_idx)
{
return (regime_sctlr(env, mmu_idx) & SCTLR_EE) != 0;
}
/* Return the TTBR associated with this translation regime */
static inline uint64_t regime_ttbr(CPUARMState *env, ARMMMUIdx mmu_idx,
int ttbrn)
{
if (mmu_idx == ARMMMUIdx_Stage2) {
return env->cp15.vttbr_el2;
}
if (mmu_idx == ARMMMUIdx_Stage2_S) {
return env->cp15.vsttbr_el2;
}
if (ttbrn == 0) {
return env->cp15.ttbr0_el[regime_el(env, mmu_idx)];
} else {
return env->cp15.ttbr1_el[regime_el(env, mmu_idx)];
}
}
#endif /* !CONFIG_USER_ONLY */
/* Convert a possible stage1+2 MMU index into the appropriate
* stage 1 MMU index
*/
static inline ARMMMUIdx stage_1_mmu_idx(ARMMMUIdx mmu_idx)
{
switch (mmu_idx) {
case ARMMMUIdx_SE10_0:
return ARMMMUIdx_Stage1_SE0;
case ARMMMUIdx_SE10_1:
return ARMMMUIdx_Stage1_SE1;
case ARMMMUIdx_SE10_1_PAN:
return ARMMMUIdx_Stage1_SE1_PAN;
case ARMMMUIdx_E10_0:
return ARMMMUIdx_Stage1_E0;
case ARMMMUIdx_E10_1:
return ARMMMUIdx_Stage1_E1;
case ARMMMUIdx_E10_1_PAN:
return ARMMMUIdx_Stage1_E1_PAN;
default:
return mmu_idx;
}
}
/* Return true if the translation regime is using LPAE format page tables */
static inline bool regime_using_lpae_format(CPUARMState *env,
ARMMMUIdx mmu_idx)
{
int el = regime_el(env, mmu_idx);
if (el == 2 || arm_el_is_aa64(env, el)) {
return true;
}
if (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_LPAE)
&& (regime_tcr(env, mmu_idx)->raw_tcr & TTBCR_EAE)) {
return true;
}
return false;
}
/* Returns true if the stage 1 translation regime is using LPAE format page
* tables. Used when raising alignment exceptions, whose FSR changes depending
* on whether the long or short descriptor format is in use. */
bool arm_s1_regime_using_lpae_format(CPUARMState *env, ARMMMUIdx mmu_idx)
{
mmu_idx = stage_1_mmu_idx(mmu_idx);
return regime_using_lpae_format(env, mmu_idx);
}
#ifndef CONFIG_USER_ONLY
static inline bool regime_is_user(CPUARMState *env, ARMMMUIdx mmu_idx)
{
switch (mmu_idx) {
case ARMMMUIdx_SE10_0:
case ARMMMUIdx_E20_0:
case ARMMMUIdx_SE20_0:
case ARMMMUIdx_Stage1_E0:
case ARMMMUIdx_Stage1_SE0:
case ARMMMUIdx_MUser:
case ARMMMUIdx_MSUser:
case ARMMMUIdx_MUserNegPri:
case ARMMMUIdx_MSUserNegPri:
return true;
default:
return false;
case ARMMMUIdx_E10_0:
case ARMMMUIdx_E10_1:
case ARMMMUIdx_E10_1_PAN:
g_assert_not_reached();
}
}
/* Translate section/page access permissions to page
* R/W protection flags
*
* @env: CPUARMState
* @mmu_idx: MMU index indicating required translation regime
* @ap: The 3-bit access permissions (AP[2:0])
* @domain_prot: The 2-bit domain access permissions
*/
static inline int ap_to_rw_prot(CPUARMState *env, ARMMMUIdx mmu_idx,
int ap, int domain_prot)
{
bool is_user = regime_is_user(env, mmu_idx);
if (domain_prot == 3) {
return PAGE_READ | PAGE_WRITE;
}
switch (ap) {
case 0:
if (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_V7)) {
return 0;
}
switch (regime_sctlr(env, mmu_idx) & (SCTLR_S | SCTLR_R)) {
case SCTLR_S:
return is_user ? 0 : PAGE_READ;
case SCTLR_R:
return PAGE_READ;
default:
return 0;
}
case 1:
return is_user ? 0 : PAGE_READ | PAGE_WRITE;
case 2:
if (is_user) {
return PAGE_READ;
} else {
return PAGE_READ | PAGE_WRITE;
}
case 3:
return PAGE_READ | PAGE_WRITE;
case 4: /* Reserved. */
return 0;
case 5:
return is_user ? 0 : PAGE_READ;
case 6:
return PAGE_READ;
case 7:
if (!arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_V6K)) {
return 0;
}
return PAGE_READ;
default:
g_assert_not_reached();
}
}
/* Translate section/page access permissions to page
* R/W protection flags.
*
* @ap: The 2-bit simple AP (AP[2:1])
* @is_user: TRUE if accessing from PL0
*/
static inline int simple_ap_to_rw_prot_is_user(int ap, bool is_user)
{
switch (ap) {
case 0:
return is_user ? 0 : PAGE_READ | PAGE_WRITE;
case 1:
return PAGE_READ | PAGE_WRITE;
case 2:
return is_user ? 0 : PAGE_READ;
case 3:
return PAGE_READ;
default:
g_assert_not_reached();
}
}
static inline int
simple_ap_to_rw_prot(CPUARMState *env, ARMMMUIdx mmu_idx, int ap)
{
return simple_ap_to_rw_prot_is_user(ap, regime_is_user(env, mmu_idx));
}
/* Translate S2 section/page access permissions to protection flags
*
* @env: CPUARMState
* @s2ap: The 2-bit stage2 access permissions (S2AP)
* @xn: XN (execute-never) bits
* @s1_is_el0: true if this is S2 of an S1+2 walk for EL0
*/
static int get_S2prot(CPUARMState *env, int s2ap, int xn, bool s1_is_el0)
{
int prot = 0;
if (s2ap & 1) {
prot |= PAGE_READ;
}
if (s2ap & 2) {
prot |= PAGE_WRITE;
}
if (cpu_isar_feature(any_tts2uxn, env_archcpu(env))) {
switch (xn) {
case 0:
prot |= PAGE_EXEC;
break;
case 1:
if (s1_is_el0) {
prot |= PAGE_EXEC;
}
break;
case 2:
break;
case 3:
if (!s1_is_el0) {
prot |= PAGE_EXEC;
}
break;
default:
g_assert_not_reached();
}
} else {
if (!extract32(xn, 1, 1)) {
if (arm_el_is_aa64(env, 2) || prot & PAGE_READ) {
prot |= PAGE_EXEC;
}
}
}
return prot;
}
/* Translate section/page access permissions to protection flags
*
* @env: CPUARMState
* @mmu_idx: MMU index indicating required translation regime
* @is_aa64: TRUE if AArch64
* @ap: The 2-bit simple AP (AP[2:1])
* @ns: NS (non-secure) bit
* @xn: XN (execute-never) bit
* @pxn: PXN (privileged execute-never) bit
*/
static int get_S1prot(CPUARMState *env, ARMMMUIdx mmu_idx, bool is_aa64,
int ap, int ns, int xn, int pxn)
{
bool is_user = regime_is_user(env, mmu_idx);
int prot_rw, user_rw;
bool have_wxn;
int wxn = 0;
assert(mmu_idx != ARMMMUIdx_Stage2);
assert(mmu_idx != ARMMMUIdx_Stage2_S);
user_rw = simple_ap_to_rw_prot_is_user(ap, true);
if (is_user) {
prot_rw = user_rw;
} else {
if (user_rw && regime_is_pan(env, mmu_idx)) {
/* PAN forbids data accesses but doesn't affect insn fetch */
prot_rw = 0;
} else {
prot_rw = simple_ap_to_rw_prot_is_user(ap, false);
}
}
if (ns && arm_is_secure(env) && (env->cp15.scr_el3 & SCR_SIF)) {
return prot_rw;
}
/* TODO have_wxn should be replaced with
* ARM_FEATURE_V8 || (ARM_FEATURE_V7 && ARM_FEATURE_EL2)
* when ARM_FEATURE_EL2 starts getting set. For now we assume all LPAE
* compatible processors have EL2, which is required for [U]WXN.
*/
have_wxn = arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_LPAE);
if (have_wxn) {
wxn = regime_sctlr(env, mmu_idx) & SCTLR_WXN;
}
if (is_aa64) {
if (regime_has_2_ranges(mmu_idx) && !is_user) {
xn = pxn || (user_rw & PAGE_WRITE);
}
} else if (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_V7)) {
switch (regime_el(env, mmu_idx)) {
case 1:
case 3:
if (is_user) {
xn = xn || !(user_rw & PAGE_READ);
} else {
int uwxn = 0;
if (have_wxn) {
uwxn = regime_sctlr(env, mmu_idx) & SCTLR_UWXN;
}
xn = xn || !(prot_rw & PAGE_READ) || pxn ||
(uwxn && (user_rw & PAGE_WRITE));
}
break;
case 2:
break;
}
} else {
xn = wxn = 0;
}
if (xn || (wxn && (prot_rw & PAGE_WRITE))) {
return prot_rw;
}
return prot_rw | PAGE_EXEC;
}
static bool get_level1_table_address(CPUARMState *env, ARMMMUIdx mmu_idx,
uint32_t *table, uint32_t address)
{
/* Note that we can only get here for an AArch32 PL0/PL1 lookup */
TCR *tcr = regime_tcr(env, mmu_idx);
if (address & tcr->mask) {
if (tcr->raw_tcr & TTBCR_PD1) {
/* Translation table walk disabled for TTBR1 */
return false;
}
*table = regime_ttbr(env, mmu_idx, 1) & 0xffffc000;
} else {
if (tcr->raw_tcr & TTBCR_PD0) {
/* Translation table walk disabled for TTBR0 */
return false;
}
*table = regime_ttbr(env, mmu_idx, 0) & tcr->base_mask;
}
*table |= (address >> 18) & 0x3ffc;
return true;
}
target/arm: Postpone interpretation of stage 2 descriptor attribute bits In the original Arm v8 two-stage translation, both stage 1 and stage 2 specify memory attributes (memory type, cacheability, shareability); these are then combined to produce the overall memory attributes for the whole stage 1+2 access. In QEMU we implement this by having get_phys_addr() fill in an ARMCacheAttrs struct, and we convert both the stage 1 and stage 2 attribute bit formats to the same encoding (an 8-bit attribute value matching the MAIR_EL1 fields, plus a 2-bit shareability value). The new FEAT_S2FWB feature allows the guest to enable a different interpretation of the attribute bits in the stage 2 descriptors. These bits can now be used to control details of how the stage 1 and 2 attributes should be combined (for instance they can say "always use the stage 1 attributes" or "ignore the stage 1 attributes and always be Device memory"). This means we need to pass the raw bit information for stage 2 down to the function which combines the stage 1 and stage 2 information. Add a field to ARMCacheAttrs that indicates whether the attrs field should be interpreted as MAIR format, or as the raw stage 2 attribute bits from the descriptor, and store the appropriate values when filling in cacheattrs. We only need to interpret the attrs field in a few places: * in do_ats_write(), where we know to expect a MAIR value (there is no ATS instruction to do a stage-2-only walk) * in S1_ptw_translate(), where we want to know whether the combined S1 + S2 attributes indicate Device memory that should provoke a fault * in combine_cacheattrs(), which does the S1 + S2 combining Update those places accordingly. Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org> Message-id: 20220505183950.2781801-2-peter.maydell@linaro.org
2022-05-05 20:39:47 +02:00
static bool ptw_attrs_are_device(CPUARMState *env, ARMCacheAttrs cacheattrs)
{
/*
* For an S1 page table walk, the stage 1 attributes are always
* some form of "this is Normal memory". The combined S1+S2
* attributes are therefore only Device if stage 2 specifies Device.
* With HCR_EL2.FWB == 0 this is when descriptor bits [5:4] are 0b00,
* ie when cacheattrs.attrs bits [3:2] are 0b00.
* With HCR_EL2.FWB == 1 this is when descriptor bit [4] is 0, ie
* when cacheattrs.attrs bit [2] is 0.
target/arm: Postpone interpretation of stage 2 descriptor attribute bits In the original Arm v8 two-stage translation, both stage 1 and stage 2 specify memory attributes (memory type, cacheability, shareability); these are then combined to produce the overall memory attributes for the whole stage 1+2 access. In QEMU we implement this by having get_phys_addr() fill in an ARMCacheAttrs struct, and we convert both the stage 1 and stage 2 attribute bit formats to the same encoding (an 8-bit attribute value matching the MAIR_EL1 fields, plus a 2-bit shareability value). The new FEAT_S2FWB feature allows the guest to enable a different interpretation of the attribute bits in the stage 2 descriptors. These bits can now be used to control details of how the stage 1 and 2 attributes should be combined (for instance they can say "always use the stage 1 attributes" or "ignore the stage 1 attributes and always be Device memory"). This means we need to pass the raw bit information for stage 2 down to the function which combines the stage 1 and stage 2 information. Add a field to ARMCacheAttrs that indicates whether the attrs field should be interpreted as MAIR format, or as the raw stage 2 attribute bits from the descriptor, and store the appropriate values when filling in cacheattrs. We only need to interpret the attrs field in a few places: * in do_ats_write(), where we know to expect a MAIR value (there is no ATS instruction to do a stage-2-only walk) * in S1_ptw_translate(), where we want to know whether the combined S1 + S2 attributes indicate Device memory that should provoke a fault * in combine_cacheattrs(), which does the S1 + S2 combining Update those places accordingly. Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org> Message-id: 20220505183950.2781801-2-peter.maydell@linaro.org
2022-05-05 20:39:47 +02:00
*/
assert(cacheattrs.is_s2_format);
if (arm_hcr_el2_eff(env) & HCR_FWB) {
return (cacheattrs.attrs & 0x4) == 0;
} else {
return (cacheattrs.attrs & 0xc) == 0;
}
target/arm: Postpone interpretation of stage 2 descriptor attribute bits In the original Arm v8 two-stage translation, both stage 1 and stage 2 specify memory attributes (memory type, cacheability, shareability); these are then combined to produce the overall memory attributes for the whole stage 1+2 access. In QEMU we implement this by having get_phys_addr() fill in an ARMCacheAttrs struct, and we convert both the stage 1 and stage 2 attribute bit formats to the same encoding (an 8-bit attribute value matching the MAIR_EL1 fields, plus a 2-bit shareability value). The new FEAT_S2FWB feature allows the guest to enable a different interpretation of the attribute bits in the stage 2 descriptors. These bits can now be used to control details of how the stage 1 and 2 attributes should be combined (for instance they can say "always use the stage 1 attributes" or "ignore the stage 1 attributes and always be Device memory"). This means we need to pass the raw bit information for stage 2 down to the function which combines the stage 1 and stage 2 information. Add a field to ARMCacheAttrs that indicates whether the attrs field should be interpreted as MAIR format, or as the raw stage 2 attribute bits from the descriptor, and store the appropriate values when filling in cacheattrs. We only need to interpret the attrs field in a few places: * in do_ats_write(), where we know to expect a MAIR value (there is no ATS instruction to do a stage-2-only walk) * in S1_ptw_translate(), where we want to know whether the combined S1 + S2 attributes indicate Device memory that should provoke a fault * in combine_cacheattrs(), which does the S1 + S2 combining Update those places accordingly. Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org> Message-id: 20220505183950.2781801-2-peter.maydell@linaro.org
2022-05-05 20:39:47 +02:00
}
/* Translate a S1 pagetable walk through S2 if needed. */
static hwaddr S1_ptw_translate(CPUARMState *env, ARMMMUIdx mmu_idx,
hwaddr addr, bool *is_secure,
ARMMMUFaultInfo *fi)
{
if (arm_mmu_idx_is_stage1_of_2(mmu_idx) &&
!regime_translation_disabled(env, ARMMMUIdx_Stage2)) {
target_ulong s2size;
hwaddr s2pa;
int s2prot;
int ret;
ARMMMUIdx s2_mmu_idx = *is_secure ? ARMMMUIdx_Stage2_S
: ARMMMUIdx_Stage2;
ARMCacheAttrs cacheattrs = {};
MemTxAttrs txattrs = {};
ret = get_phys_addr_lpae(env, addr, MMU_DATA_LOAD, s2_mmu_idx, false,
&s2pa, &txattrs, &s2prot, &s2size, fi,
&cacheattrs);
if (ret) {
assert(fi->type != ARMFault_None);
fi->s2addr = addr;
fi->stage2 = true;
fi->s1ptw = true;
fi->s1ns = !*is_secure;
return ~0;
}
if ((arm_hcr_el2_eff(env) & HCR_PTW) &&
target/arm: Postpone interpretation of stage 2 descriptor attribute bits In the original Arm v8 two-stage translation, both stage 1 and stage 2 specify memory attributes (memory type, cacheability, shareability); these are then combined to produce the overall memory attributes for the whole stage 1+2 access. In QEMU we implement this by having get_phys_addr() fill in an ARMCacheAttrs struct, and we convert both the stage 1 and stage 2 attribute bit formats to the same encoding (an 8-bit attribute value matching the MAIR_EL1 fields, plus a 2-bit shareability value). The new FEAT_S2FWB feature allows the guest to enable a different interpretation of the attribute bits in the stage 2 descriptors. These bits can now be used to control details of how the stage 1 and 2 attributes should be combined (for instance they can say "always use the stage 1 attributes" or "ignore the stage 1 attributes and always be Device memory"). This means we need to pass the raw bit information for stage 2 down to the function which combines the stage 1 and stage 2 information. Add a field to ARMCacheAttrs that indicates whether the attrs field should be interpreted as MAIR format, or as the raw stage 2 attribute bits from the descriptor, and store the appropriate values when filling in cacheattrs. We only need to interpret the attrs field in a few places: * in do_ats_write(), where we know to expect a MAIR value (there is no ATS instruction to do a stage-2-only walk) * in S1_ptw_translate(), where we want to know whether the combined S1 + S2 attributes indicate Device memory that should provoke a fault * in combine_cacheattrs(), which does the S1 + S2 combining Update those places accordingly. Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org> Message-id: 20220505183950.2781801-2-peter.maydell@linaro.org
2022-05-05 20:39:47 +02:00
ptw_attrs_are_device(env, cacheattrs)) {
/*
* PTW set and S1 walk touched S2 Device memory:
* generate Permission fault.
*/
fi->type = ARMFault_Permission;
fi->s2addr = addr;
fi->stage2 = true;
fi->s1ptw = true;
fi->s1ns = !*is_secure;
return ~0;
}
if (arm_is_secure_below_el3(env)) {
/* Check if page table walk is to secure or non-secure PA space. */
if (*is_secure) {
*is_secure = !(env->cp15.vstcr_el2.raw_tcr & VSTCR_SW);
} else {
*is_secure = !(env->cp15.vtcr_el2.raw_tcr & VTCR_NSW);
}
} else {
assert(!*is_secure);
}
addr = s2pa;
}
return addr;
}
/* All loads done in the course of a page table walk go through here. */
static uint32_t arm_ldl_ptw(CPUState *cs, hwaddr addr, bool is_secure,
ARMMMUIdx mmu_idx, ARMMMUFaultInfo *fi)
{
ARMCPU *cpu = ARM_CPU(cs);
CPUARMState *env = &cpu->env;
MemTxAttrs attrs = {};
MemTxResult result = MEMTX_OK;
AddressSpace *as;
uint32_t data;
addr = S1_ptw_translate(env, mmu_idx, addr, &is_secure, fi);
attrs.secure = is_secure;
as = arm_addressspace(cs, attrs);
if (fi->s1ptw) {
return 0;
}
if (regime_translation_big_endian(env, mmu_idx)) {
data = address_space_ldl_be(as, addr, attrs, &result);
} else {
data = address_space_ldl_le(as, addr, attrs, &result);
}
if (result == MEMTX_OK) {
return data;
}
fi->type = ARMFault_SyncExternalOnWalk;
fi->ea = arm_extabort_type(result);
return 0;
}
static uint64_t arm_ldq_ptw(CPUState *cs, hwaddr addr, bool is_secure,
ARMMMUIdx mmu_idx, ARMMMUFaultInfo *fi)
{
ARMCPU *cpu = ARM_CPU(cs);
CPUARMState *env = &cpu->env;
MemTxAttrs attrs = {};
MemTxResult result = MEMTX_OK;
AddressSpace *as;
uint64_t data;
addr = S1_ptw_translate(env, mmu_idx, addr, &is_secure, fi);
attrs.secure = is_secure;
as = arm_addressspace(cs, attrs);
if (fi->s1ptw) {
return 0;
}
if (regime_translation_big_endian(env, mmu_idx)) {
data = address_space_ldq_be(as, addr, attrs, &result);
} else {
data = address_space_ldq_le(as, addr, attrs, &result);
}
if (result == MEMTX_OK) {
return data;
}
fi->type = ARMFault_SyncExternalOnWalk;
fi->ea = arm_extabort_type(result);
return 0;
}
static bool get_phys_addr_v5(CPUARMState *env, uint32_t address,
MMUAccessType access_type, ARMMMUIdx mmu_idx,
hwaddr *phys_ptr, int *prot,
target_ulong *page_size,
ARMMMUFaultInfo *fi)
{
CPUState *cs = env_cpu(env);
int level = 1;
uint32_t table;
uint32_t desc;
int type;
int ap;
int domain = 0;
int domain_prot;
hwaddr phys_addr;
uint32_t dacr;
/* Pagetable walk. */
/* Lookup l1 descriptor. */
if (!get_level1_table_address(env, mmu_idx, &table, address)) {
/* Section translation fault if page walk is disabled by PD0 or PD1 */
fi->type = ARMFault_Translation;
goto do_fault;
}
desc = arm_ldl_ptw(cs, table, regime_is_secure(env, mmu_idx),
mmu_idx, fi);
if (fi->type != ARMFault_None) {
goto do_fault;
}
type = (desc & 3);
domain = (desc >> 5) & 0x0f;
if (regime_el(env, mmu_idx) == 1) {
dacr = env->cp15.dacr_ns;
} else {
dacr = env->cp15.dacr_s;
}
domain_prot = (dacr >> (domain * 2)) & 3;
if (type == 0) {
/* Section translation fault. */
fi->type = ARMFault_Translation;
goto do_fault;
}
if (type != 2) {
level = 2;
}
if (domain_prot == 0 || domain_prot == 2) {
fi->type = ARMFault_Domain;
goto do_fault;
}
if (type == 2) {
/* 1Mb section. */
phys_addr = (desc & 0xfff00000) | (address & 0x000fffff);
ap = (desc >> 10) & 3;
*page_size = 1024 * 1024;
} else {
/* Lookup l2 entry. */
if (type == 1) {
/* Coarse pagetable. */
table = (desc & 0xfffffc00) | ((address >> 10) & 0x3fc);
} else {
/* Fine pagetable. */
table = (desc & 0xfffff000) | ((address >> 8) & 0xffc);
}
desc = arm_ldl_ptw(cs, table, regime_is_secure(env, mmu_idx),
mmu_idx, fi);
if (fi->type != ARMFault_None) {
goto do_fault;
}
switch (desc & 3) {
case 0: /* Page translation fault. */
fi->type = ARMFault_Translation;
goto do_fault;
case 1: /* 64k page. */
phys_addr = (desc & 0xffff0000) | (address & 0xffff);
ap = (desc >> (4 + ((address >> 13) & 6))) & 3;
*page_size = 0x10000;
break;
case 2: /* 4k page. */
phys_addr = (desc & 0xfffff000) | (address & 0xfff);
ap = (desc >> (4 + ((address >> 9) & 6))) & 3;
*page_size = 0x1000;
break;
case 3: /* 1k page, or ARMv6/XScale "extended small (4k) page" */
if (type == 1) {
/* ARMv6/XScale extended small page format */
if (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_XSCALE)
|| arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_V6)) {
phys_addr = (desc & 0xfffff000) | (address & 0xfff);
*page_size = 0x1000;
} else {
/* UNPREDICTABLE in ARMv5; we choose to take a
* page translation fault.
*/
fi->type = ARMFault_Translation;
goto do_fault;
}
} else {
phys_addr = (desc & 0xfffffc00) | (address & 0x3ff);
*page_size = 0x400;
}
ap = (desc >> 4) & 3;
break;
default:
/* Never happens, but compiler isn't smart enough to tell. */
g_assert_not_reached();
}
}
*prot = ap_to_rw_prot(env, mmu_idx, ap, domain_prot);
*prot |= *prot ? PAGE_EXEC : 0;
if (!(*prot & (1 << access_type))) {
/* Access permission fault. */
fi->type = ARMFault_Permission;
goto do_fault;
}
*phys_ptr = phys_addr;
return false;
do_fault:
fi->domain = domain;
fi->level = level;
return true;
}
static bool get_phys_addr_v6(CPUARMState *env, uint32_t address,
MMUAccessType access_type, ARMMMUIdx mmu_idx,
hwaddr *phys_ptr, MemTxAttrs *attrs, int *prot,
target_ulong *page_size, ARMMMUFaultInfo *fi)
{
CPUState *cs = env_cpu(env);
ARMCPU *cpu = env_archcpu(env);
int level = 1;
uint32_t table;
uint32_t desc;
uint32_t xn;
uint32_t pxn = 0;
int type;
int ap;
int domain = 0;
int domain_prot;
hwaddr phys_addr;
uint32_t dacr;
bool ns;
/* Pagetable walk. */
/* Lookup l1 descriptor. */
if (!get_level1_table_address(env, mmu_idx, &table, address)) {
/* Section translation fault if page walk is disabled by PD0 or PD1 */
fi->type = ARMFault_Translation;
goto do_fault;
}
desc = arm_ldl_ptw(cs, table, regime_is_secure(env, mmu_idx),
mmu_idx, fi);
if (fi->type != ARMFault_None) {
goto do_fault;
}
type = (desc & 3);
if (type == 0 || (type == 3 && !cpu_isar_feature(aa32_pxn, cpu))) {
/* Section translation fault, or attempt to use the encoding
* which is Reserved on implementations without PXN.
*/
fi->type = ARMFault_Translation;
goto do_fault;
}
if ((type == 1) || !(desc & (1 << 18))) {
/* Page or Section. */
domain = (desc >> 5) & 0x0f;
}
if (regime_el(env, mmu_idx) == 1) {
dacr = env->cp15.dacr_ns;
} else {
dacr = env->cp15.dacr_s;
}
if (type == 1) {
level = 2;
}
domain_prot = (dacr >> (domain * 2)) & 3;
if (domain_prot == 0 || domain_prot == 2) {
/* Section or Page domain fault */
fi->type = ARMFault_Domain;
goto do_fault;
}
if (type != 1) {
if (desc & (1 << 18)) {
/* Supersection. */
phys_addr = (desc & 0xff000000) | (address & 0x00ffffff);
phys_addr |= (uint64_t)extract32(desc, 20, 4) << 32;
phys_addr |= (uint64_t)extract32(desc, 5, 4) << 36;
*page_size = 0x1000000;
} else {
/* Section. */
phys_addr = (desc & 0xfff00000) | (address & 0x000fffff);
*page_size = 0x100000;
}
ap = ((desc >> 10) & 3) | ((desc >> 13) & 4);
xn = desc & (1 << 4);
pxn = desc & 1;
ns = extract32(desc, 19, 1);
} else {
if (cpu_isar_feature(aa32_pxn, cpu)) {
pxn = (desc >> 2) & 1;
}
ns = extract32(desc, 3, 1);
/* Lookup l2 entry. */
table = (desc & 0xfffffc00) | ((address >> 10) & 0x3fc);
desc = arm_ldl_ptw(cs, table, regime_is_secure(env, mmu_idx),
mmu_idx, fi);
if (fi->type != ARMFault_None) {
goto do_fault;
}
ap = ((desc >> 4) & 3) | ((desc >> 7) & 4);
switch (desc & 3) {
case 0: /* Page translation fault. */
fi->type = ARMFault_Translation;
goto do_fault;
case 1: /* 64k page. */
phys_addr = (desc & 0xffff0000) | (address & 0xffff);
xn = desc & (1 << 15);
*page_size = 0x10000;
break;
case 2: case 3: /* 4k page. */
phys_addr = (desc & 0xfffff000) | (address & 0xfff);
xn = desc & 1;
*page_size = 0x1000;
break;
default:
/* Never happens, but compiler isn't smart enough to tell. */
g_assert_not_reached();
}
}
if (domain_prot == 3) {
*prot = PAGE_READ | PAGE_WRITE | PAGE_EXEC;
} else {
if (pxn && !regime_is_user(env, mmu_idx)) {
xn = 1;
}
if (xn && access_type == MMU_INST_FETCH) {
fi->type = ARMFault_Permission;
goto do_fault;
}
if (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_V6K) &&
(regime_sctlr(env, mmu_idx) & SCTLR_AFE)) {
/* The simplified model uses AP[0] as an access control bit. */
if ((ap & 1) == 0) {
/* Access flag fault. */
fi->type = ARMFault_AccessFlag;
goto do_fault;
}
*prot = simple_ap_to_rw_prot(env, mmu_idx, ap >> 1);
} else {
*prot = ap_to_rw_prot(env, mmu_idx, ap, domain_prot);
}
if (*prot && !xn) {
*prot |= PAGE_EXEC;
}
if (!(*prot & (1 << access_type))) {
/* Access permission fault. */
fi->type = ARMFault_Permission;
goto do_fault;
}
}
if (ns) {
/* The NS bit will (as required by the architecture) have no effect if
* the CPU doesn't support TZ or this is a non-secure translation
* regime, because the attribute will already be non-secure.
*/
attrs->secure = false;
}
*phys_ptr = phys_addr;
return false;
do_fault:
fi->domain = domain;
fi->level = level;
return true;
}
/*
* check_s2_mmu_setup
* @cpu: ARMCPU
* @is_aa64: True if the translation regime is in AArch64 state
* @startlevel: Suggested starting level
* @inputsize: Bitsize of IPAs
* @stride: Page-table stride (See the ARM ARM)
*
* Returns true if the suggested S2 translation parameters are OK and
* false otherwise.
*/
static bool check_s2_mmu_setup(ARMCPU *cpu, bool is_aa64, int level,
int inputsize, int stride, int outputsize)
{
const int grainsize = stride + 3;
int startsizecheck;
/*
* Negative levels are usually not allowed...
* Except for FEAT_LPA2, 4k page table, 52-bit address space, which
* begins with level -1. Note that previous feature tests will have
* eliminated this combination if it is not enabled.
*/
if (level < (inputsize == 52 && stride == 9 ? -1 : 0)) {
return false;
}
startsizecheck = inputsize - ((3 - level) * stride + grainsize);
if (startsizecheck < 1 || startsizecheck > stride + 4) {
return false;
}
if (is_aa64) {
switch (stride) {
case 13: /* 64KB Pages. */
if (level == 0 || (level == 1 && outputsize <= 42)) {
return false;
}
break;
case 11: /* 16KB Pages. */
if (level == 0 || (level == 1 && outputsize <= 40)) {
return false;
}
break;
case 9: /* 4KB Pages. */
if (level == 0 && outputsize <= 42) {
return false;
}
break;
default:
g_assert_not_reached();
}
/* Inputsize checks. */
if (inputsize > outputsize &&
(arm_el_is_aa64(&cpu->env, 1) || inputsize > 40)) {
/* This is CONSTRAINED UNPREDICTABLE and we choose to fault. */
return false;
}
} else {
/* AArch32 only supports 4KB pages. Assert on that. */
assert(stride == 9);
if (level == 0) {
return false;
}
}
return true;
}
/* Translate from the 4-bit stage 2 representation of
* memory attributes (without cache-allocation hints) to
* the 8-bit representation of the stage 1 MAIR registers
* (which includes allocation hints).
*
* ref: shared/translation/attrs/S2AttrDecode()
* .../S2ConvertAttrsHints()
*/
static uint8_t convert_stage2_attrs(CPUARMState *env, uint8_t s2attrs)
{
uint8_t hiattr = extract32(s2attrs, 2, 2);
uint8_t loattr = extract32(s2attrs, 0, 2);
uint8_t hihint = 0, lohint = 0;
if (hiattr != 0) { /* normal memory */
if (arm_hcr_el2_eff(env) & HCR_CD) { /* cache disabled */
hiattr = loattr = 1; /* non-cacheable */
} else {
if (hiattr != 1) { /* Write-through or write-back */
hihint = 3; /* RW allocate */
}
if (loattr != 1) { /* Write-through or write-back */
lohint = 3; /* RW allocate */
}
}
}
return (hiattr << 6) | (hihint << 4) | (loattr << 2) | lohint;
}
#endif /* !CONFIG_USER_ONLY */
/* This mapping is common between ID_AA64MMFR0.PARANGE and TCR_ELx.{I}PS. */
static const uint8_t pamax_map[] = {
[0] = 32,
[1] = 36,
[2] = 40,
[3] = 42,
[4] = 44,
[5] = 48,
[6] = 52,
};
/* The cpu-specific constant value of PAMax; also used by hw/arm/virt. */
unsigned int arm_pamax(ARMCPU *cpu)
{
unsigned int parange =
FIELD_EX64(cpu->isar.id_aa64mmfr0, ID_AA64MMFR0, PARANGE);
/*
* id_aa64mmfr0 is a read-only register so values outside of the
* supported mappings can be considered an implementation error.
*/
assert(parange < ARRAY_SIZE(pamax_map));
return pamax_map[parange];
}
static int aa64_va_parameter_tbi(uint64_t tcr, ARMMMUIdx mmu_idx)
{
if (regime_has_2_ranges(mmu_idx)) {
return extract64(tcr, 37, 2);
} else if (mmu_idx == ARMMMUIdx_Stage2 || mmu_idx == ARMMMUIdx_Stage2_S) {
return 0; /* VTCR_EL2 */
} else {
/* Replicate the single TBI bit so we always have 2 bits. */
return extract32(tcr, 20, 1) * 3;
}
}
static int aa64_va_parameter_tbid(uint64_t tcr, ARMMMUIdx mmu_idx)
{
if (regime_has_2_ranges(mmu_idx)) {
return extract64(tcr, 51, 2);
} else if (mmu_idx == ARMMMUIdx_Stage2 || mmu_idx == ARMMMUIdx_Stage2_S) {
return 0; /* VTCR_EL2 */
} else {
/* Replicate the single TBID bit so we always have 2 bits. */
return extract32(tcr, 29, 1) * 3;
}
}
static int aa64_va_parameter_tcma(uint64_t tcr, ARMMMUIdx mmu_idx)
{
if (regime_has_2_ranges(mmu_idx)) {
return extract64(tcr, 57, 2);
} else {
/* Replicate the single TCMA bit so we always have 2 bits. */
return extract32(tcr, 30, 1) * 3;
}
}
ARMVAParameters aa64_va_parameters(CPUARMState *env, uint64_t va,
ARMMMUIdx mmu_idx, bool data)
{
uint64_t tcr = regime_tcr(env, mmu_idx)->raw_tcr;
bool epd, hpd, using16k, using64k, tsz_oob, ds;
int select, tsz, tbi, max_tsz, min_tsz, ps, sh;
ARMCPU *cpu = env_archcpu(env);
if (!regime_has_2_ranges(mmu_idx)) {
select = 0;
tsz = extract32(tcr, 0, 6);
using64k = extract32(tcr, 14, 1);
using16k = extract32(tcr, 15, 1);
if (mmu_idx == ARMMMUIdx_Stage2 || mmu_idx == ARMMMUIdx_Stage2_S) {
/* VTCR_EL2 */
hpd = false;
} else {
hpd = extract32(tcr, 24, 1);
}
epd = false;
sh = extract32(tcr, 12, 2);
ps = extract32(tcr, 16, 3);
ds = extract64(tcr, 32, 1);
} else {
/*
* Bit 55 is always between the two regions, and is canonical for
* determining if address tagging is enabled.
*/
select = extract64(va, 55, 1);
if (!select) {
tsz = extract32(tcr, 0, 6);
epd = extract32(tcr, 7, 1);
sh = extract32(tcr, 12, 2);
using64k = extract32(tcr, 14, 1);
using16k = extract32(tcr, 15, 1);
hpd = extract64(tcr, 41, 1);
} else {
int tg = extract32(tcr, 30, 2);
using16k = tg == 1;
using64k = tg == 3;
tsz = extract32(tcr, 16, 6);
epd = extract32(tcr, 23, 1);
sh = extract32(tcr, 28, 2);
hpd = extract64(tcr, 42, 1);
}
ps = extract64(tcr, 32, 3);
ds = extract64(tcr, 59, 1);
}
if (cpu_isar_feature(aa64_st, cpu)) {
max_tsz = 48 - using64k;
} else {
max_tsz = 39;
}
/*
* DS is RES0 unless FEAT_LPA2 is supported for the given page size;
* adjust the effective value of DS, as documented.
*/
min_tsz = 16;
if (using64k) {
if (cpu_isar_feature(aa64_lva, cpu)) {
min_tsz = 12;
}
ds = false;
} else if (ds) {
switch (mmu_idx) {
case ARMMMUIdx_Stage2:
case ARMMMUIdx_Stage2_S:
if (using16k) {
ds = cpu_isar_feature(aa64_tgran16_2_lpa2, cpu);
} else {
ds = cpu_isar_feature(aa64_tgran4_2_lpa2, cpu);
}
break;
default:
if (using16k) {
ds = cpu_isar_feature(aa64_tgran16_lpa2, cpu);
} else {
ds = cpu_isar_feature(aa64_tgran4_lpa2, cpu);
}
break;
}
if (ds) {
min_tsz = 12;
}
}
if (tsz > max_tsz) {
tsz = max_tsz;
tsz_oob = true;
} else if (tsz < min_tsz) {
tsz = min_tsz;
tsz_oob = true;
} else {
tsz_oob = false;
}
/* Present TBI as a composite with TBID. */
tbi = aa64_va_parameter_tbi(tcr, mmu_idx);
if (!data) {
tbi &= ~aa64_va_parameter_tbid(tcr, mmu_idx);
}
tbi = (tbi >> select) & 1;
return (ARMVAParameters) {
.tsz = tsz,
.ps = ps,
.sh = sh,
.select = select,
.tbi = tbi,
.epd = epd,
.hpd = hpd,
.using16k = using16k,
.using64k = using64k,
.tsz_oob = tsz_oob,
.ds = ds,
};
}
#ifndef CONFIG_USER_ONLY
static ARMVAParameters aa32_va_parameters(CPUARMState *env, uint32_t va,
ARMMMUIdx mmu_idx)
{
uint64_t tcr = regime_tcr(env, mmu_idx)->raw_tcr;
uint32_t el = regime_el(env, mmu_idx);
int select, tsz;
bool epd, hpd;
assert(mmu_idx != ARMMMUIdx_Stage2_S);
if (mmu_idx == ARMMMUIdx_Stage2) {
/* VTCR */
bool sext = extract32(tcr, 4, 1);
bool sign = extract32(tcr, 3, 1);
/*
* If the sign-extend bit is not the same as t0sz[3], the result
* is unpredictable. Flag this as a guest error.
*/
if (sign != sext) {
qemu_log_mask(LOG_GUEST_ERROR,
"AArch32: VTCR.S / VTCR.T0SZ[3] mismatch\n");
}
tsz = sextract32(tcr, 0, 4) + 8;
select = 0;
hpd = false;
epd = false;
} else if (el == 2) {
/* HTCR */
tsz = extract32(tcr, 0, 3);
select = 0;
hpd = extract64(tcr, 24, 1);
epd = false;
} else {
int t0sz = extract32(tcr, 0, 3);
int t1sz = extract32(tcr, 16, 3);
if (t1sz == 0) {
select = va > (0xffffffffu >> t0sz);
} else {
/* Note that we will detect errors later. */
select = va >= ~(0xffffffffu >> t1sz);
}
if (!select) {
tsz = t0sz;
epd = extract32(tcr, 7, 1);
hpd = extract64(tcr, 41, 1);
} else {
tsz = t1sz;
epd = extract32(tcr, 23, 1);
hpd = extract64(tcr, 42, 1);
}
/* For aarch32, hpd0 is not enabled without t2e as well. */
hpd &= extract32(tcr, 6, 1);
}
return (ARMVAParameters) {
.tsz = tsz,
.select = select,
.epd = epd,
.hpd = hpd,
};
}
/**
* get_phys_addr_lpae: perform one stage of page table walk, LPAE format
*
* Returns false if the translation was successful. Otherwise, phys_ptr, attrs,
* prot and page_size may not be filled in, and the populated fsr value provides
* information on why the translation aborted, in the format of a long-format
* DFSR/IFSR fault register, with the following caveats:
* * the WnR bit is never set (the caller must do this).
*
* @env: CPUARMState
* @address: virtual address to get physical address for
* @access_type: MMU_DATA_LOAD, MMU_DATA_STORE or MMU_INST_FETCH
* @mmu_idx: MMU index indicating required translation regime
* @s1_is_el0: if @mmu_idx is ARMMMUIdx_Stage2 (so this is a stage 2 page table
* walk), must be true if this is stage 2 of a stage 1+2 walk for an
* EL0 access). If @mmu_idx is anything else, @s1_is_el0 is ignored.
* @phys_ptr: set to the physical address corresponding to the virtual address
* @attrs: set to the memory transaction attributes to use
* @prot: set to the permissions for the page containing phys_ptr
* @page_size_ptr: set to the size of the page containing phys_ptr
* @fi: set to fault info if the translation fails
* @cacheattrs: (if non-NULL) set to the cacheability/shareability attributes
*/
static bool get_phys_addr_lpae(CPUARMState *env, uint64_t address,
MMUAccessType access_type, ARMMMUIdx mmu_idx,
bool s1_is_el0,
hwaddr *phys_ptr, MemTxAttrs *txattrs, int *prot,
target_ulong *page_size_ptr,
ARMMMUFaultInfo *fi, ARMCacheAttrs *cacheattrs)
{
ARMCPU *cpu = env_archcpu(env);
CPUState *cs = CPU(cpu);
/* Read an LPAE long-descriptor translation table. */
ARMFaultType fault_type = ARMFault_Translation;
uint32_t level;
ARMVAParameters param;
uint64_t ttbr;
hwaddr descaddr, indexmask, indexmask_grainsize;
uint32_t tableattrs;
target_ulong page_size;
uint32_t attrs;
int32_t stride;
int addrsize, inputsize, outputsize;
TCR *tcr = regime_tcr(env, mmu_idx);
int ap, ns, xn, pxn;
uint32_t el = regime_el(env, mmu_idx);
uint64_t descaddrmask;
bool aarch64 = arm_el_is_aa64(env, el);
bool guarded = false;
/* TODO: This code does not support shareability levels. */
if (aarch64) {
int ps;
param = aa64_va_parameters(env, address, mmu_idx,
access_type != MMU_INST_FETCH);
level = 0;
/*
* If TxSZ is programmed to a value larger than the maximum,
* or smaller than the effective minimum, it is IMPLEMENTATION
* DEFINED whether we behave as if the field were programmed
* within bounds, or if a level 0 Translation fault is generated.
*
* With FEAT_LVA, fault on less than minimum becomes required,
* so our choice is to always raise the fault.
*/
if (param.tsz_oob) {
fault_type = ARMFault_Translation;
goto do_fault;
}
addrsize = 64 - 8 * param.tbi;
inputsize = 64 - param.tsz;
/*
* Bound PS by PARANGE to find the effective output address size.
* ID_AA64MMFR0 is a read-only register so values outside of the
* supported mappings can be considered an implementation error.
*/
ps = FIELD_EX64(cpu->isar.id_aa64mmfr0, ID_AA64MMFR0, PARANGE);
ps = MIN(ps, param.ps);
assert(ps < ARRAY_SIZE(pamax_map));
outputsize = pamax_map[ps];
} else {
param = aa32_va_parameters(env, address, mmu_idx);
level = 1;
addrsize = (mmu_idx == ARMMMUIdx_Stage2 ? 40 : 32);
inputsize = addrsize - param.tsz;
outputsize = 40;
}
/*
* We determined the region when collecting the parameters, but we
* have not yet validated that the address is valid for the region.
* Extract the top bits and verify that they all match select.
*
* For aa32, if inputsize == addrsize, then we have selected the
* region by exclusion in aa32_va_parameters and there is no more
* validation to do here.
*/
if (inputsize < addrsize) {
target_ulong top_bits = sextract64(address, inputsize,
addrsize - inputsize);
if (-top_bits != param.select) {
/* The gap between the two regions is a Translation fault */
fault_type = ARMFault_Translation;
goto do_fault;
}
}
if (param.using64k) {
stride = 13;
} else if (param.using16k) {
stride = 11;
} else {
stride = 9;
}
/* Note that QEMU ignores shareability and cacheability attributes,
* so we don't need to do anything with the SH, ORGN, IRGN fields
* in the TTBCR. Similarly, TTBCR:A1 selects whether we get the
* ASID from TTBR0 or TTBR1, but QEMU's TLB doesn't currently
* implement any ASID-like capability so we can ignore it (instead
* we will always flush the TLB any time the ASID is changed).
*/
ttbr = regime_ttbr(env, mmu_idx, param.select);
/* Here we should have set up all the parameters for the translation:
* inputsize, ttbr, epd, stride, tbi
*/
if (param.epd) {
/* Translation table walk disabled => Translation fault on TLB miss
* Note: This is always 0 on 64-bit EL2 and EL3.
*/
goto do_fault;
}
if (mmu_idx != ARMMMUIdx_Stage2 && mmu_idx != ARMMMUIdx_Stage2_S) {
/* The starting level depends on the virtual address size (which can
* be up to 48 bits) and the translation granule size. It indicates
* the number of strides (stride bits at a time) needed to
* consume the bits of the input address. In the pseudocode this is:
* level = 4 - RoundUp((inputsize - grainsize) / stride)
* where their 'inputsize' is our 'inputsize', 'grainsize' is
* our 'stride + 3' and 'stride' is our 'stride'.
* Applying the usual "rounded up m/n is (m+n-1)/n" and simplifying:
* = 4 - (inputsize - stride - 3 + stride - 1) / stride
* = 4 - (inputsize - 4) / stride;
*/
level = 4 - (inputsize - 4) / stride;
} else {
/* For stage 2 translations the starting level is specified by the
* VTCR_EL2.SL0 field (whose interpretation depends on the page size)
*/
uint32_t sl0 = extract32(tcr->raw_tcr, 6, 2);
uint32_t sl2 = extract64(tcr->raw_tcr, 33, 1);
uint32_t startlevel;
bool ok;
/* SL2 is RES0 unless DS=1 & 4kb granule. */
if (param.ds && stride == 9 && sl2) {
if (sl0 != 0) {
level = 0;
fault_type = ARMFault_Translation;
goto do_fault;
}
startlevel = -1;
} else if (!aarch64 || stride == 9) {
/* AArch32 or 4KB pages */
startlevel = 2 - sl0;
if (cpu_isar_feature(aa64_st, cpu)) {
startlevel &= 3;
}
} else {
/* 16KB or 64KB pages */
startlevel = 3 - sl0;
}
/* Check that the starting level is valid. */
ok = check_s2_mmu_setup(cpu, aarch64, startlevel,
inputsize, stride, outputsize);
if (!ok) {
fault_type = ARMFault_Translation;
goto do_fault;
}
level = startlevel;
}
indexmask_grainsize = MAKE_64BIT_MASK(0, stride + 3);
indexmask = MAKE_64BIT_MASK(0, inputsize - (stride * (4 - level)));
/* Now we can extract the actual base address from the TTBR */
descaddr = extract64(ttbr, 0, 48);
/*
* For FEAT_LPA and PS=6, bits [51:48] of descaddr are in [5:2] of TTBR.
*
* Otherwise, if the base address is out of range, raise AddressSizeFault.
* In the pseudocode, this is !IsZero(baseregister<47:outputsize>),
* but we've just cleared the bits above 47, so simplify the test.
*/
if (outputsize > 48) {
descaddr |= extract64(ttbr, 2, 4) << 48;
} else if (descaddr >> outputsize) {
level = 0;
fault_type = ARMFault_AddressSize;
goto do_fault;
}
/*
* We rely on this masking to clear the RES0 bits at the bottom of the TTBR
* and also to mask out CnP (bit 0) which could validly be non-zero.
*/
descaddr &= ~indexmask;
/*
* For AArch32, the address field in the descriptor goes up to bit 39
* for both v7 and v8. However, for v8 the SBZ bits [47:40] must be 0
* or an AddressSize fault is raised. So for v8 we extract those SBZ
* bits as part of the address, which will be checked via outputsize.
* For AArch64, the address field goes up to bit 47, or 49 with FEAT_LPA2;
* the highest bits of a 52-bit output are placed elsewhere.
*/
if (param.ds) {
descaddrmask = MAKE_64BIT_MASK(0, 50);
} else if (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_V8)) {
descaddrmask = MAKE_64BIT_MASK(0, 48);
} else {
descaddrmask = MAKE_64BIT_MASK(0, 40);
}
descaddrmask &= ~indexmask_grainsize;
/* Secure accesses start with the page table in secure memory and
* can be downgraded to non-secure at any step. Non-secure accesses
* remain non-secure. We implement this by just ORing in the NSTable/NS
* bits at each step.
*/
tableattrs = regime_is_secure(env, mmu_idx) ? 0 : (1 << 4);
for (;;) {
uint64_t descriptor;
bool nstable;
descaddr |= (address >> (stride * (4 - level))) & indexmask;
descaddr &= ~7ULL;
nstable = extract32(tableattrs, 4, 1);
descriptor = arm_ldq_ptw(cs, descaddr, !nstable, mmu_idx, fi);
if (fi->type != ARMFault_None) {
goto do_fault;
}
if (!(descriptor & 1) ||
(!(descriptor & 2) && (level == 3))) {
/* Invalid, or the Reserved level 3 encoding */
goto do_fault;
}
descaddr = descriptor & descaddrmask;
/*
* For FEAT_LPA and PS=6, bits [51:48] of descaddr are in [15:12]
* of descriptor. For FEAT_LPA2 and effective DS, bits [51:50] of
* descaddr are in [9:8]. Otherwise, if descaddr is out of range,
* raise AddressSizeFault.
*/
if (outputsize > 48) {
if (param.ds) {
descaddr |= extract64(descriptor, 8, 2) << 50;
} else {
descaddr |= extract64(descriptor, 12, 4) << 48;
}
} else if (descaddr >> outputsize) {
fault_type = ARMFault_AddressSize;
goto do_fault;
}
if ((descriptor & 2) && (level < 3)) {
/* Table entry. The top five bits are attributes which may
* propagate down through lower levels of the table (and
* which are all arranged so that 0 means "no effect", so
* we can gather them up by ORing in the bits at each level).
*/
tableattrs |= extract64(descriptor, 59, 5);
level++;
indexmask = indexmask_grainsize;
continue;
}
target/arm: Fix handling of LPAE block descriptors LPAE descriptors come in three forms: * table descriptors, giving the address of the next level page table * page descriptors, which occur only at level 3 and describe the mapping of one page (which might be 4K, 16K or 64K) * block descriptors, which occur at higher page table levels, and describe the mapping of huge pages QEMU's page-table-walk code treats block and page entries identically, simply ORing in a number of bits from the input virtual address that depends on the level of the page table that we stopped at; we depend on the previous masking of descaddr with descaddrmask to have already cleared out the low bits of the descriptor word. This is not quite right: the address field in a block descriptor is smaller, and so there are bits which are valid address bits in a page descriptor or a table descriptor but which are not supposed to be part of the address in a block descriptor, and descaddrmask does not clear them. We previously mostly got away with this because those descriptor bits are RES0; however with FEAT_BBM (part of Armv8.4) block descriptor bit 16 is defined to be the nT bit. No emulated QEMU CPU has FEAT_BBM yet, but if the host CPU has it then we might see it when using KVM or hvf. Explicitly zero out all the descaddr bits we're about to OR vaddr bits into. Resolves: https://gitlab.com/qemu-project/qemu/-/issues/790 Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org> Message-id: 20220304165628.2345765-1-peter.maydell@linaro.org
2022-03-04 17:56:28 +01:00
/*
* Block entry at level 1 or 2, or page entry at level 3.
* These are basically the same thing, although the number
target/arm: Fix handling of LPAE block descriptors LPAE descriptors come in three forms: * table descriptors, giving the address of the next level page table * page descriptors, which occur only at level 3 and describe the mapping of one page (which might be 4K, 16K or 64K) * block descriptors, which occur at higher page table levels, and describe the mapping of huge pages QEMU's page-table-walk code treats block and page entries identically, simply ORing in a number of bits from the input virtual address that depends on the level of the page table that we stopped at; we depend on the previous masking of descaddr with descaddrmask to have already cleared out the low bits of the descriptor word. This is not quite right: the address field in a block descriptor is smaller, and so there are bits which are valid address bits in a page descriptor or a table descriptor but which are not supposed to be part of the address in a block descriptor, and descaddrmask does not clear them. We previously mostly got away with this because those descriptor bits are RES0; however with FEAT_BBM (part of Armv8.4) block descriptor bit 16 is defined to be the nT bit. No emulated QEMU CPU has FEAT_BBM yet, but if the host CPU has it then we might see it when using KVM or hvf. Explicitly zero out all the descaddr bits we're about to OR vaddr bits into. Resolves: https://gitlab.com/qemu-project/qemu/-/issues/790 Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org> Message-id: 20220304165628.2345765-1-peter.maydell@linaro.org
2022-03-04 17:56:28 +01:00
* of bits we pull in from the vaddr varies. Note that although
* descaddrmask masks enough of the low bits of the descriptor
* to give a correct page or table address, the address field
* in a block descriptor is smaller; so we need to explicitly
* clear the lower bits here before ORing in the low vaddr bits.
*/
page_size = (1ULL << ((stride * (4 - level)) + 3));
target/arm: Fix handling of LPAE block descriptors LPAE descriptors come in three forms: * table descriptors, giving the address of the next level page table * page descriptors, which occur only at level 3 and describe the mapping of one page (which might be 4K, 16K or 64K) * block descriptors, which occur at higher page table levels, and describe the mapping of huge pages QEMU's page-table-walk code treats block and page entries identically, simply ORing in a number of bits from the input virtual address that depends on the level of the page table that we stopped at; we depend on the previous masking of descaddr with descaddrmask to have already cleared out the low bits of the descriptor word. This is not quite right: the address field in a block descriptor is smaller, and so there are bits which are valid address bits in a page descriptor or a table descriptor but which are not supposed to be part of the address in a block descriptor, and descaddrmask does not clear them. We previously mostly got away with this because those descriptor bits are RES0; however with FEAT_BBM (part of Armv8.4) block descriptor bit 16 is defined to be the nT bit. No emulated QEMU CPU has FEAT_BBM yet, but if the host CPU has it then we might see it when using KVM or hvf. Explicitly zero out all the descaddr bits we're about to OR vaddr bits into. Resolves: https://gitlab.com/qemu-project/qemu/-/issues/790 Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org> Message-id: 20220304165628.2345765-1-peter.maydell@linaro.org
2022-03-04 17:56:28 +01:00
descaddr &= ~(page_size - 1);
descaddr |= (address & (page_size - 1));
/* Extract attributes from the descriptor */
attrs = extract64(descriptor, 2, 10)
| (extract64(descriptor, 52, 12) << 10);
if (mmu_idx == ARMMMUIdx_Stage2 || mmu_idx == ARMMMUIdx_Stage2_S) {
/* Stage 2 table descriptors do not include any attribute fields */
break;
}
/* Merge in attributes from table descriptors */
attrs |= nstable << 3; /* NS */
guarded = extract64(descriptor, 50, 1); /* GP */
if (param.hpd) {
/* HPD disables all the table attributes except NSTable. */
break;
}
attrs |= extract32(tableattrs, 0, 2) << 11; /* XN, PXN */
/* The sense of AP[1] vs APTable[0] is reversed, as APTable[0] == 1
* means "force PL1 access only", which means forcing AP[1] to 0.
*/
attrs &= ~(extract32(tableattrs, 2, 1) << 4); /* !APT[0] => AP[1] */
attrs |= extract32(tableattrs, 3, 1) << 5; /* APT[1] => AP[2] */
break;
}
/* Here descaddr is the final physical address, and attributes
* are all in attrs.
*/
fault_type = ARMFault_AccessFlag;
if ((attrs & (1 << 8)) == 0) {
/* Access flag */
goto do_fault;
}
ap = extract32(attrs, 4, 2);
if (mmu_idx == ARMMMUIdx_Stage2 || mmu_idx == ARMMMUIdx_Stage2_S) {
ns = mmu_idx == ARMMMUIdx_Stage2;
xn = extract32(attrs, 11, 2);
*prot = get_S2prot(env, ap, xn, s1_is_el0);
} else {
ns = extract32(attrs, 3, 1);
xn = extract32(attrs, 12, 1);
pxn = extract32(attrs, 11, 1);
*prot = get_S1prot(env, mmu_idx, aarch64, ap, ns, xn, pxn);
}
fault_type = ARMFault_Permission;
if (!(*prot & (1 << access_type))) {
goto do_fault;
}
if (ns) {
/* The NS bit will (as required by the architecture) have no effect if
* the CPU doesn't support TZ or this is a non-secure translation
* regime, because the attribute will already be non-secure.
*/
txattrs->secure = false;
}
/* When in aarch64 mode, and BTI is enabled, remember GP in the IOTLB. */
if (aarch64 && guarded && cpu_isar_feature(aa64_bti, cpu)) {
arm_tlb_bti_gp(txattrs) = true;
}
if (mmu_idx == ARMMMUIdx_Stage2 || mmu_idx == ARMMMUIdx_Stage2_S) {
target/arm: Postpone interpretation of stage 2 descriptor attribute bits In the original Arm v8 two-stage translation, both stage 1 and stage 2 specify memory attributes (memory type, cacheability, shareability); these are then combined to produce the overall memory attributes for the whole stage 1+2 access. In QEMU we implement this by having get_phys_addr() fill in an ARMCacheAttrs struct, and we convert both the stage 1 and stage 2 attribute bit formats to the same encoding (an 8-bit attribute value matching the MAIR_EL1 fields, plus a 2-bit shareability value). The new FEAT_S2FWB feature allows the guest to enable a different interpretation of the attribute bits in the stage 2 descriptors. These bits can now be used to control details of how the stage 1 and 2 attributes should be combined (for instance they can say "always use the stage 1 attributes" or "ignore the stage 1 attributes and always be Device memory"). This means we need to pass the raw bit information for stage 2 down to the function which combines the stage 1 and stage 2 information. Add a field to ARMCacheAttrs that indicates whether the attrs field should be interpreted as MAIR format, or as the raw stage 2 attribute bits from the descriptor, and store the appropriate values when filling in cacheattrs. We only need to interpret the attrs field in a few places: * in do_ats_write(), where we know to expect a MAIR value (there is no ATS instruction to do a stage-2-only walk) * in S1_ptw_translate(), where we want to know whether the combined S1 + S2 attributes indicate Device memory that should provoke a fault * in combine_cacheattrs(), which does the S1 + S2 combining Update those places accordingly. Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org> Message-id: 20220505183950.2781801-2-peter.maydell@linaro.org
2022-05-05 20:39:47 +02:00
cacheattrs->is_s2_format = true;
cacheattrs->attrs = extract32(attrs, 0, 4);
} else {
/* Index into MAIR registers for cache attributes */
uint8_t attrindx = extract32(attrs, 0, 3);
uint64_t mair = env->cp15.mair_el[regime_el(env, mmu_idx)];
assert(attrindx <= 7);
target/arm: Postpone interpretation of stage 2 descriptor attribute bits In the original Arm v8 two-stage translation, both stage 1 and stage 2 specify memory attributes (memory type, cacheability, shareability); these are then combined to produce the overall memory attributes for the whole stage 1+2 access. In QEMU we implement this by having get_phys_addr() fill in an ARMCacheAttrs struct, and we convert both the stage 1 and stage 2 attribute bit formats to the same encoding (an 8-bit attribute value matching the MAIR_EL1 fields, plus a 2-bit shareability value). The new FEAT_S2FWB feature allows the guest to enable a different interpretation of the attribute bits in the stage 2 descriptors. These bits can now be used to control details of how the stage 1 and 2 attributes should be combined (for instance they can say "always use the stage 1 attributes" or "ignore the stage 1 attributes and always be Device memory"). This means we need to pass the raw bit information for stage 2 down to the function which combines the stage 1 and stage 2 information. Add a field to ARMCacheAttrs that indicates whether the attrs field should be interpreted as MAIR format, or as the raw stage 2 attribute bits from the descriptor, and store the appropriate values when filling in cacheattrs. We only need to interpret the attrs field in a few places: * in do_ats_write(), where we know to expect a MAIR value (there is no ATS instruction to do a stage-2-only walk) * in S1_ptw_translate(), where we want to know whether the combined S1 + S2 attributes indicate Device memory that should provoke a fault * in combine_cacheattrs(), which does the S1 + S2 combining Update those places accordingly. Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org> Message-id: 20220505183950.2781801-2-peter.maydell@linaro.org
2022-05-05 20:39:47 +02:00
cacheattrs->is_s2_format = false;
cacheattrs->attrs = extract64(mair, attrindx * 8, 8);
}
/*
* For FEAT_LPA2 and effective DS, the SH field in the attributes
* was re-purposed for output address bits. The SH attribute in
* that case comes from TCR_ELx, which we extracted earlier.
*/
if (param.ds) {
cacheattrs->shareability = param.sh;
} else {
cacheattrs->shareability = extract32(attrs, 6, 2);
}
*phys_ptr = descaddr;
*page_size_ptr = page_size;
return false;
do_fault:
fi->type = fault_type;
fi->level = level;
/* Tag the error as S2 for failed S1 PTW at S2 or ordinary S2. */
fi->stage2 = fi->s1ptw || (mmu_idx == ARMMMUIdx_Stage2 ||
mmu_idx == ARMMMUIdx_Stage2_S);
fi->s1ns = mmu_idx == ARMMMUIdx_Stage2;
return true;
}
static inline void get_phys_addr_pmsav7_default(CPUARMState *env,
ARMMMUIdx mmu_idx,
int32_t address, int *prot)
{
if (!arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_M)) {
*prot = PAGE_READ | PAGE_WRITE;
switch (address) {
case 0xF0000000 ... 0xFFFFFFFF:
if (regime_sctlr(env, mmu_idx) & SCTLR_V) {
/* hivecs execing is ok */
*prot |= PAGE_EXEC;
}
break;
case 0x00000000 ... 0x7FFFFFFF:
*prot |= PAGE_EXEC;
break;
}
} else {
/* Default system address map for M profile cores.
* The architecture specifies which regions are execute-never;
* at the MPU level no other checks are defined.
*/
switch (address) {
case 0x00000000 ... 0x1fffffff: /* ROM */
case 0x20000000 ... 0x3fffffff: /* SRAM */
case 0x60000000 ... 0x7fffffff: /* RAM */
case 0x80000000 ... 0x9fffffff: /* RAM */
*prot = PAGE_READ | PAGE_WRITE | PAGE_EXEC;
break;
case 0x40000000 ... 0x5fffffff: /* Peripheral */
case 0xa0000000 ... 0xbfffffff: /* Device */
case 0xc0000000 ... 0xdfffffff: /* Device */
case 0xe0000000 ... 0xffffffff: /* System */
*prot = PAGE_READ | PAGE_WRITE;
break;
default:
g_assert_not_reached();
}
}
}
static bool pmsav7_use_background_region(ARMCPU *cpu,
ARMMMUIdx mmu_idx, bool is_user)
{
/* Return true if we should use the default memory map as a
* "background" region if there are no hits against any MPU regions.
*/
CPUARMState *env = &cpu->env;
if (is_user) {
return false;
}
if (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_M)) {
return env->v7m.mpu_ctrl[regime_is_secure(env, mmu_idx)]
& R_V7M_MPU_CTRL_PRIVDEFENA_MASK;
} else {
return regime_sctlr(env, mmu_idx) & SCTLR_BR;
}
}
static inline bool m_is_ppb_region(CPUARMState *env, uint32_t address)
{
/* True if address is in the M profile PPB region 0xe0000000 - 0xe00fffff */
return arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_M) &&
extract32(address, 20, 12) == 0xe00;
}
static inline bool m_is_system_region(CPUARMState *env, uint32_t address)
{
/* True if address is in the M profile system region
* 0xe0000000 - 0xffffffff
*/
return arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_M) && extract32(address, 29, 3) == 0x7;
}
static bool get_phys_addr_pmsav7(CPUARMState *env, uint32_t address,
MMUAccessType access_type, ARMMMUIdx mmu_idx,
hwaddr *phys_ptr, int *prot,
target_ulong *page_size,
ARMMMUFaultInfo *fi)
{
ARMCPU *cpu = env_archcpu(env);
int n;
bool is_user = regime_is_user(env, mmu_idx);
*phys_ptr = address;
*page_size = TARGET_PAGE_SIZE;
*prot = 0;
if (regime_translation_disabled(env, mmu_idx) ||
m_is_ppb_region(env, address)) {
/* MPU disabled or M profile PPB access: use default memory map.
* The other case which uses the default memory map in the
* v7M ARM ARM pseudocode is exception vector reads from the vector
* table. In QEMU those accesses are done in arm_v7m_load_vector(),
* which always does a direct read using address_space_ldl(), rather
* than going via this function, so we don't need to check that here.
*/
get_phys_addr_pmsav7_default(env, mmu_idx, address, prot);
} else { /* MPU enabled */
for (n = (int)cpu->pmsav7_dregion - 1; n >= 0; n--) {
/* region search */
uint32_t base = env->pmsav7.drbar[n];
uint32_t rsize = extract32(env->pmsav7.drsr[n], 1, 5);
uint32_t rmask;
bool srdis = false;
if (!(env->pmsav7.drsr[n] & 0x1)) {
continue;
}
if (!rsize) {
qemu_log_mask(LOG_GUEST_ERROR,
"DRSR[%d]: Rsize field cannot be 0\n", n);
continue;
}
rsize++;
rmask = (1ull << rsize) - 1;
if (base & rmask) {
qemu_log_mask(LOG_GUEST_ERROR,
"DRBAR[%d]: 0x%" PRIx32 " misaligned "
"to DRSR region size, mask = 0x%" PRIx32 "\n",
n, base, rmask);
continue;
}
if (address < base || address > base + rmask) {
/*
* Address not in this region. We must check whether the
* region covers addresses in the same page as our address.
* In that case we must not report a size that covers the
* whole page for a subsequent hit against a different MPU
* region or the background region, because it would result in
* incorrect TLB hits for subsequent accesses to addresses that
* are in this MPU region.
*/
if (ranges_overlap(base, rmask,
address & TARGET_PAGE_MASK,
TARGET_PAGE_SIZE)) {
*page_size = 1;
}
continue;
}
/* Region matched */
if (rsize >= 8) { /* no subregions for regions < 256 bytes */
int i, snd;
uint32_t srdis_mask;
rsize -= 3; /* sub region size (power of 2) */
snd = ((address - base) >> rsize) & 0x7;
srdis = extract32(env->pmsav7.drsr[n], snd + 8, 1);
srdis_mask = srdis ? 0x3 : 0x0;
for (i = 2; i <= 8 && rsize < TARGET_PAGE_BITS; i *= 2) {
/* This will check in groups of 2, 4 and then 8, whether
* the subregion bits are consistent. rsize is incremented
* back up to give the region size, considering consistent
* adjacent subregions as one region. Stop testing if rsize
* is already big enough for an entire QEMU page.
*/
int snd_rounded = snd & ~(i - 1);
uint32_t srdis_multi = extract32(env->pmsav7.drsr[n],
snd_rounded + 8, i);
if (srdis_mask ^ srdis_multi) {
break;
}
srdis_mask = (srdis_mask << i) | srdis_mask;
rsize++;
}
}
if (srdis) {
continue;
}
if (rsize < TARGET_PAGE_BITS) {
*page_size = 1 << rsize;
}
break;
}
if (n == -1) { /* no hits */
if (!pmsav7_use_background_region(cpu, mmu_idx, is_user)) {
/* background fault */
fi->type = ARMFault_Background;
return true;
}
get_phys_addr_pmsav7_default(env, mmu_idx, address, prot);
} else { /* a MPU hit! */
uint32_t ap = extract32(env->pmsav7.dracr[n], 8, 3);
uint32_t xn = extract32(env->pmsav7.dracr[n], 12, 1);
if (m_is_system_region(env, address)) {
/* System space is always execute never */
xn = 1;
}
if (is_user) { /* User mode AP bit decoding */
switch (ap) {
case 0:
case 1:
case 5:
break; /* no access */
case 3:
*prot |= PAGE_WRITE;
/* fall through */
case 2:
case 6:
*prot |= PAGE_READ | PAGE_EXEC;
break;
case 7:
/* for v7M, same as 6; for R profile a reserved value */
if (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_M)) {
*prot |= PAGE_READ | PAGE_EXEC;
break;
}
/* fall through */
default:
qemu_log_mask(LOG_GUEST_ERROR,
"DRACR[%d]: Bad value for AP bits: 0x%"
PRIx32 "\n", n, ap);
}
} else { /* Priv. mode AP bits decoding */
switch (ap) {
case 0:
break; /* no access */
case 1:
case 2:
case 3:
*prot |= PAGE_WRITE;
/* fall through */
case 5:
case 6:
*prot |= PAGE_READ | PAGE_EXEC;
break;
case 7:
/* for v7M, same as 6; for R profile a reserved value */
if (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_M)) {
*prot |= PAGE_READ | PAGE_EXEC;
break;
}
/* fall through */
default:
qemu_log_mask(LOG_GUEST_ERROR,
"DRACR[%d]: Bad value for AP bits: 0x%"
PRIx32 "\n", n, ap);
}
}
/* execute never */
if (xn) {
*prot &= ~PAGE_EXEC;
}
}
}
fi->type = ARMFault_Permission;
fi->level = 1;
return !(*prot & (1 << access_type));
}
target/arm: Implement security attribute lookups for memory accesses Implement the security attribute lookups for memory accesses in the get_phys_addr() functions, causing these to generate various kinds of SecureFault for bad accesses. The major subtlety in this code relates to handling of the case when the security attributes the SAU assigns to the address don't match the current security state of the CPU. In the ARM ARM pseudocode for validating instruction accesses, the security attributes of the address determine whether the Secure or NonSecure MPU state is used. At face value, handling this would require us to encode the relevant bits of state into mmu_idx for both S and NS at once, which would result in our needing 16 mmu indexes. Fortunately we don't actually need to do this because a mismatch between address attributes and CPU state means either: * some kind of fault (usually a SecureFault, but in theory perhaps a UserFault for unaligned access to Device memory) * execution of the SG instruction in NS state from a Secure & NonSecure code region The purpose of SG is simply to flip the CPU into Secure state, so we can handle it by emulating execution of that instruction directly in arm_v7m_cpu_do_interrupt(), which means we can treat all the mismatch cases as "throw an exception" and we don't need to encode the state of the other MPU bank into our mmu_idx values. This commit doesn't include the actual emulation of SG; it also doesn't include implementation of the IDAU, which is a per-board way to specify hard-coded memory attributes for addresses, which override the CPU-internal SAU if they specify a more secure setting than the SAU is programmed to. Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org> Message-id: 1506092407-26985-15-git-send-email-peter.maydell@linaro.org
2017-10-06 17:46:49 +02:00
static bool v8m_is_sau_exempt(CPUARMState *env,
uint32_t address, MMUAccessType access_type)
{
/* The architecture specifies that certain address ranges are
* exempt from v8M SAU/IDAU checks.
*/
return
(access_type == MMU_INST_FETCH && m_is_system_region(env, address)) ||
(address >= 0xe0000000 && address <= 0xe0002fff) ||
(address >= 0xe000e000 && address <= 0xe000efff) ||
(address >= 0xe002e000 && address <= 0xe002efff) ||
(address >= 0xe0040000 && address <= 0xe0041fff) ||
(address >= 0xe00ff000 && address <= 0xe00fffff);
}
void v8m_security_lookup(CPUARMState *env, uint32_t address,
target/arm: Implement security attribute lookups for memory accesses Implement the security attribute lookups for memory accesses in the get_phys_addr() functions, causing these to generate various kinds of SecureFault for bad accesses. The major subtlety in this code relates to handling of the case when the security attributes the SAU assigns to the address don't match the current security state of the CPU. In the ARM ARM pseudocode for validating instruction accesses, the security attributes of the address determine whether the Secure or NonSecure MPU state is used. At face value, handling this would require us to encode the relevant bits of state into mmu_idx for both S and NS at once, which would result in our needing 16 mmu indexes. Fortunately we don't actually need to do this because a mismatch between address attributes and CPU state means either: * some kind of fault (usually a SecureFault, but in theory perhaps a UserFault for unaligned access to Device memory) * execution of the SG instruction in NS state from a Secure & NonSecure code region The purpose of SG is simply to flip the CPU into Secure state, so we can handle it by emulating execution of that instruction directly in arm_v7m_cpu_do_interrupt(), which means we can treat all the mismatch cases as "throw an exception" and we don't need to encode the state of the other MPU bank into our mmu_idx values. This commit doesn't include the actual emulation of SG; it also doesn't include implementation of the IDAU, which is a per-board way to specify hard-coded memory attributes for addresses, which override the CPU-internal SAU if they specify a more secure setting than the SAU is programmed to. Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org> Message-id: 1506092407-26985-15-git-send-email-peter.maydell@linaro.org
2017-10-06 17:46:49 +02:00
MMUAccessType access_type, ARMMMUIdx mmu_idx,
V8M_SAttributes *sattrs)
{
/* Look up the security attributes for this address. Compare the
* pseudocode SecurityCheck() function.
* We assume the caller has zero-initialized *sattrs.
*/
ARMCPU *cpu = env_archcpu(env);
target/arm: Implement security attribute lookups for memory accesses Implement the security attribute lookups for memory accesses in the get_phys_addr() functions, causing these to generate various kinds of SecureFault for bad accesses. The major subtlety in this code relates to handling of the case when the security attributes the SAU assigns to the address don't match the current security state of the CPU. In the ARM ARM pseudocode for validating instruction accesses, the security attributes of the address determine whether the Secure or NonSecure MPU state is used. At face value, handling this would require us to encode the relevant bits of state into mmu_idx for both S and NS at once, which would result in our needing 16 mmu indexes. Fortunately we don't actually need to do this because a mismatch between address attributes and CPU state means either: * some kind of fault (usually a SecureFault, but in theory perhaps a UserFault for unaligned access to Device memory) * execution of the SG instruction in NS state from a Secure & NonSecure code region The purpose of SG is simply to flip the CPU into Secure state, so we can handle it by emulating execution of that instruction directly in arm_v7m_cpu_do_interrupt(), which means we can treat all the mismatch cases as "throw an exception" and we don't need to encode the state of the other MPU bank into our mmu_idx values. This commit doesn't include the actual emulation of SG; it also doesn't include implementation of the IDAU, which is a per-board way to specify hard-coded memory attributes for addresses, which override the CPU-internal SAU if they specify a more secure setting than the SAU is programmed to. Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org> Message-id: 1506092407-26985-15-git-send-email-peter.maydell@linaro.org
2017-10-06 17:46:49 +02:00
int r;
bool idau_exempt = false, idau_ns = true, idau_nsc = true;
int idau_region = IREGION_NOTVALID;
target/arm: Handle small regions in get_phys_addr_pmsav8() Allow ARMv8M to handle small MPU and SAU region sizes, by making get_phys_add_pmsav8() set the page size to the 1 if the MPU or SAU region covers less than a TARGET_PAGE_SIZE. We choose to use a size of 1 because it makes no difference to the core code, and avoids having to track both the base and limit for SAU and MPU and then convert into an artificially restricted "page size" that the core code will then ignore. Since the core TCG code can't handle execution from small MPU regions, we strip the exec permission from them so that any execution attempts will cause an MPU exception, rather than allowing it to end up with a cpu_abort() in get_page_addr_code(). (The previous code's intention was to make any small page be treated as having no permissions, but unfortunately errors in the implementation meant that it didn't behave that way. It's possible that some binaries using small regions were accidentally working with our old behaviour and won't now.) We also retain an existing bug, where we ignored the possibility that the SAU region might not cover the entire page, in the case of executable regions. This is necessary because some currently-working guest code images rely on being able to execute from addresses which are covered by a page-sized MPU region but a smaller SAU region. We can remove this workaround if we ever support execution from small regions. Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org> Message-id: 20180620130619.11362-4-peter.maydell@linaro.org
2018-06-26 18:50:42 +02:00
uint32_t addr_page_base = address & TARGET_PAGE_MASK;
uint32_t addr_page_limit = addr_page_base + (TARGET_PAGE_SIZE - 1);
target/arm: Implement security attribute lookups for memory accesses Implement the security attribute lookups for memory accesses in the get_phys_addr() functions, causing these to generate various kinds of SecureFault for bad accesses. The major subtlety in this code relates to handling of the case when the security attributes the SAU assigns to the address don't match the current security state of the CPU. In the ARM ARM pseudocode for validating instruction accesses, the security attributes of the address determine whether the Secure or NonSecure MPU state is used. At face value, handling this would require us to encode the relevant bits of state into mmu_idx for both S and NS at once, which would result in our needing 16 mmu indexes. Fortunately we don't actually need to do this because a mismatch between address attributes and CPU state means either: * some kind of fault (usually a SecureFault, but in theory perhaps a UserFault for unaligned access to Device memory) * execution of the SG instruction in NS state from a Secure & NonSecure code region The purpose of SG is simply to flip the CPU into Secure state, so we can handle it by emulating execution of that instruction directly in arm_v7m_cpu_do_interrupt(), which means we can treat all the mismatch cases as "throw an exception" and we don't need to encode the state of the other MPU bank into our mmu_idx values. This commit doesn't include the actual emulation of SG; it also doesn't include implementation of the IDAU, which is a per-board way to specify hard-coded memory attributes for addresses, which override the CPU-internal SAU if they specify a more secure setting than the SAU is programmed to. Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org> Message-id: 1506092407-26985-15-git-send-email-peter.maydell@linaro.org
2017-10-06 17:46:49 +02:00
if (cpu->idau) {
IDAUInterfaceClass *iic = IDAU_INTERFACE_GET_CLASS(cpu->idau);
IDAUInterface *ii = IDAU_INTERFACE(cpu->idau);
iic->check(ii, address, &idau_region, &idau_exempt, &idau_ns,
&idau_nsc);
}
target/arm: Implement security attribute lookups for memory accesses Implement the security attribute lookups for memory accesses in the get_phys_addr() functions, causing these to generate various kinds of SecureFault for bad accesses. The major subtlety in this code relates to handling of the case when the security attributes the SAU assigns to the address don't match the current security state of the CPU. In the ARM ARM pseudocode for validating instruction accesses, the security attributes of the address determine whether the Secure or NonSecure MPU state is used. At face value, handling this would require us to encode the relevant bits of state into mmu_idx for both S and NS at once, which would result in our needing 16 mmu indexes. Fortunately we don't actually need to do this because a mismatch between address attributes and CPU state means either: * some kind of fault (usually a SecureFault, but in theory perhaps a UserFault for unaligned access to Device memory) * execution of the SG instruction in NS state from a Secure & NonSecure code region The purpose of SG is simply to flip the CPU into Secure state, so we can handle it by emulating execution of that instruction directly in arm_v7m_cpu_do_interrupt(), which means we can treat all the mismatch cases as "throw an exception" and we don't need to encode the state of the other MPU bank into our mmu_idx values. This commit doesn't include the actual emulation of SG; it also doesn't include implementation of the IDAU, which is a per-board way to specify hard-coded memory attributes for addresses, which override the CPU-internal SAU if they specify a more secure setting than the SAU is programmed to. Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org> Message-id: 1506092407-26985-15-git-send-email-peter.maydell@linaro.org
2017-10-06 17:46:49 +02:00
if (access_type == MMU_INST_FETCH && extract32(address, 28, 4) == 0xf) {
/* 0xf0000000..0xffffffff is always S for insn fetches */
return;
}
if (idau_exempt || v8m_is_sau_exempt(env, address, access_type)) {
target/arm: Implement security attribute lookups for memory accesses Implement the security attribute lookups for memory accesses in the get_phys_addr() functions, causing these to generate various kinds of SecureFault for bad accesses. The major subtlety in this code relates to handling of the case when the security attributes the SAU assigns to the address don't match the current security state of the CPU. In the ARM ARM pseudocode for validating instruction accesses, the security attributes of the address determine whether the Secure or NonSecure MPU state is used. At face value, handling this would require us to encode the relevant bits of state into mmu_idx for both S and NS at once, which would result in our needing 16 mmu indexes. Fortunately we don't actually need to do this because a mismatch between address attributes and CPU state means either: * some kind of fault (usually a SecureFault, but in theory perhaps a UserFault for unaligned access to Device memory) * execution of the SG instruction in NS state from a Secure & NonSecure code region The purpose of SG is simply to flip the CPU into Secure state, so we can handle it by emulating execution of that instruction directly in arm_v7m_cpu_do_interrupt(), which means we can treat all the mismatch cases as "throw an exception" and we don't need to encode the state of the other MPU bank into our mmu_idx values. This commit doesn't include the actual emulation of SG; it also doesn't include implementation of the IDAU, which is a per-board way to specify hard-coded memory attributes for addresses, which override the CPU-internal SAU if they specify a more secure setting than the SAU is programmed to. Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org> Message-id: 1506092407-26985-15-git-send-email-peter.maydell@linaro.org
2017-10-06 17:46:49 +02:00
sattrs->ns = !regime_is_secure(env, mmu_idx);
return;
}
if (idau_region != IREGION_NOTVALID) {
sattrs->irvalid = true;
sattrs->iregion = idau_region;
}
target/arm: Implement security attribute lookups for memory accesses Implement the security attribute lookups for memory accesses in the get_phys_addr() functions, causing these to generate various kinds of SecureFault for bad accesses. The major subtlety in this code relates to handling of the case when the security attributes the SAU assigns to the address don't match the current security state of the CPU. In the ARM ARM pseudocode for validating instruction accesses, the security attributes of the address determine whether the Secure or NonSecure MPU state is used. At face value, handling this would require us to encode the relevant bits of state into mmu_idx for both S and NS at once, which would result in our needing 16 mmu indexes. Fortunately we don't actually need to do this because a mismatch between address attributes and CPU state means either: * some kind of fault (usually a SecureFault, but in theory perhaps a UserFault for unaligned access to Device memory) * execution of the SG instruction in NS state from a Secure & NonSecure code region The purpose of SG is simply to flip the CPU into Secure state, so we can handle it by emulating execution of that instruction directly in arm_v7m_cpu_do_interrupt(), which means we can treat all the mismatch cases as "throw an exception" and we don't need to encode the state of the other MPU bank into our mmu_idx values. This commit doesn't include the actual emulation of SG; it also doesn't include implementation of the IDAU, which is a per-board way to specify hard-coded memory attributes for addresses, which override the CPU-internal SAU if they specify a more secure setting than the SAU is programmed to. Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org> Message-id: 1506092407-26985-15-git-send-email-peter.maydell@linaro.org
2017-10-06 17:46:49 +02:00
switch (env->sau.ctrl & 3) {
case 0: /* SAU.ENABLE == 0, SAU.ALLNS == 0 */
break;
case 2: /* SAU.ENABLE == 0, SAU.ALLNS == 1 */
sattrs->ns = true;
break;
default: /* SAU.ENABLE == 1 */
for (r = 0; r < cpu->sau_sregion; r++) {
if (env->sau.rlar[r] & 1) {
uint32_t base = env->sau.rbar[r] & ~0x1f;
uint32_t limit = env->sau.rlar[r] | 0x1f;
if (base <= address && limit >= address) {
target/arm: Handle small regions in get_phys_addr_pmsav8() Allow ARMv8M to handle small MPU and SAU region sizes, by making get_phys_add_pmsav8() set the page size to the 1 if the MPU or SAU region covers less than a TARGET_PAGE_SIZE. We choose to use a size of 1 because it makes no difference to the core code, and avoids having to track both the base and limit for SAU and MPU and then convert into an artificially restricted "page size" that the core code will then ignore. Since the core TCG code can't handle execution from small MPU regions, we strip the exec permission from them so that any execution attempts will cause an MPU exception, rather than allowing it to end up with a cpu_abort() in get_page_addr_code(). (The previous code's intention was to make any small page be treated as having no permissions, but unfortunately errors in the implementation meant that it didn't behave that way. It's possible that some binaries using small regions were accidentally working with our old behaviour and won't now.) We also retain an existing bug, where we ignored the possibility that the SAU region might not cover the entire page, in the case of executable regions. This is necessary because some currently-working guest code images rely on being able to execute from addresses which are covered by a page-sized MPU region but a smaller SAU region. We can remove this workaround if we ever support execution from small regions. Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org> Message-id: 20180620130619.11362-4-peter.maydell@linaro.org
2018-06-26 18:50:42 +02:00
if (base > addr_page_base || limit < addr_page_limit) {
sattrs->subpage = true;
}
target/arm: Implement security attribute lookups for memory accesses Implement the security attribute lookups for memory accesses in the get_phys_addr() functions, causing these to generate various kinds of SecureFault for bad accesses. The major subtlety in this code relates to handling of the case when the security attributes the SAU assigns to the address don't match the current security state of the CPU. In the ARM ARM pseudocode for validating instruction accesses, the security attributes of the address determine whether the Secure or NonSecure MPU state is used. At face value, handling this would require us to encode the relevant bits of state into mmu_idx for both S and NS at once, which would result in our needing 16 mmu indexes. Fortunately we don't actually need to do this because a mismatch between address attributes and CPU state means either: * some kind of fault (usually a SecureFault, but in theory perhaps a UserFault for unaligned access to Device memory) * execution of the SG instruction in NS state from a Secure & NonSecure code region The purpose of SG is simply to flip the CPU into Secure state, so we can handle it by emulating execution of that instruction directly in arm_v7m_cpu_do_interrupt(), which means we can treat all the mismatch cases as "throw an exception" and we don't need to encode the state of the other MPU bank into our mmu_idx values. This commit doesn't include the actual emulation of SG; it also doesn't include implementation of the IDAU, which is a per-board way to specify hard-coded memory attributes for addresses, which override the CPU-internal SAU if they specify a more secure setting than the SAU is programmed to. Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org> Message-id: 1506092407-26985-15-git-send-email-peter.maydell@linaro.org
2017-10-06 17:46:49 +02:00
if (sattrs->srvalid) {
/* If we hit in more than one region then we must report
* as Secure, not NS-Callable, with no valid region
* number info.
*/
sattrs->ns = false;
sattrs->nsc = false;
sattrs->sregion = 0;
sattrs->srvalid = false;
break;
} else {
if (env->sau.rlar[r] & 2) {
sattrs->nsc = true;
} else {
sattrs->ns = true;
}
sattrs->srvalid = true;
sattrs->sregion = r;
}
} else {
/*
* Address not in this region. We must check whether the
* region covers addresses in the same page as our address.
* In that case we must not report a size that covers the
* whole page for a subsequent hit against a different MPU
* region or the background region, because it would result
* in incorrect TLB hits for subsequent accesses to
* addresses that are in this MPU region.
*/
if (limit >= base &&
ranges_overlap(base, limit - base + 1,
addr_page_base,
TARGET_PAGE_SIZE)) {
sattrs->subpage = true;
}
target/arm: Implement security attribute lookups for memory accesses Implement the security attribute lookups for memory accesses in the get_phys_addr() functions, causing these to generate various kinds of SecureFault for bad accesses. The major subtlety in this code relates to handling of the case when the security attributes the SAU assigns to the address don't match the current security state of the CPU. In the ARM ARM pseudocode for validating instruction accesses, the security attributes of the address determine whether the Secure or NonSecure MPU state is used. At face value, handling this would require us to encode the relevant bits of state into mmu_idx for both S and NS at once, which would result in our needing 16 mmu indexes. Fortunately we don't actually need to do this because a mismatch between address attributes and CPU state means either: * some kind of fault (usually a SecureFault, but in theory perhaps a UserFault for unaligned access to Device memory) * execution of the SG instruction in NS state from a Secure & NonSecure code region The purpose of SG is simply to flip the CPU into Secure state, so we can handle it by emulating execution of that instruction directly in arm_v7m_cpu_do_interrupt(), which means we can treat all the mismatch cases as "throw an exception" and we don't need to encode the state of the other MPU bank into our mmu_idx values. This commit doesn't include the actual emulation of SG; it also doesn't include implementation of the IDAU, which is a per-board way to specify hard-coded memory attributes for addresses, which override the CPU-internal SAU if they specify a more secure setting than the SAU is programmed to. Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org> Message-id: 1506092407-26985-15-git-send-email-peter.maydell@linaro.org
2017-10-06 17:46:49 +02:00
}
}
}
break;
}
target/arm: Implement security attribute lookups for memory accesses Implement the security attribute lookups for memory accesses in the get_phys_addr() functions, causing these to generate various kinds of SecureFault for bad accesses. The major subtlety in this code relates to handling of the case when the security attributes the SAU assigns to the address don't match the current security state of the CPU. In the ARM ARM pseudocode for validating instruction accesses, the security attributes of the address determine whether the Secure or NonSecure MPU state is used. At face value, handling this would require us to encode the relevant bits of state into mmu_idx for both S and NS at once, which would result in our needing 16 mmu indexes. Fortunately we don't actually need to do this because a mismatch between address attributes and CPU state means either: * some kind of fault (usually a SecureFault, but in theory perhaps a UserFault for unaligned access to Device memory) * execution of the SG instruction in NS state from a Secure & NonSecure code region The purpose of SG is simply to flip the CPU into Secure state, so we can handle it by emulating execution of that instruction directly in arm_v7m_cpu_do_interrupt(), which means we can treat all the mismatch cases as "throw an exception" and we don't need to encode the state of the other MPU bank into our mmu_idx values. This commit doesn't include the actual emulation of SG; it also doesn't include implementation of the IDAU, which is a per-board way to specify hard-coded memory attributes for addresses, which override the CPU-internal SAU if they specify a more secure setting than the SAU is programmed to. Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org> Message-id: 1506092407-26985-15-git-send-email-peter.maydell@linaro.org
2017-10-06 17:46:49 +02:00
/*
* The IDAU will override the SAU lookup results if it specifies
* higher security than the SAU does.
*/
if (!idau_ns) {
if (sattrs->ns || (!idau_nsc && sattrs->nsc)) {
sattrs->ns = false;
sattrs->nsc = idau_nsc;
}
target/arm: Implement security attribute lookups for memory accesses Implement the security attribute lookups for memory accesses in the get_phys_addr() functions, causing these to generate various kinds of SecureFault for bad accesses. The major subtlety in this code relates to handling of the case when the security attributes the SAU assigns to the address don't match the current security state of the CPU. In the ARM ARM pseudocode for validating instruction accesses, the security attributes of the address determine whether the Secure or NonSecure MPU state is used. At face value, handling this would require us to encode the relevant bits of state into mmu_idx for both S and NS at once, which would result in our needing 16 mmu indexes. Fortunately we don't actually need to do this because a mismatch between address attributes and CPU state means either: * some kind of fault (usually a SecureFault, but in theory perhaps a UserFault for unaligned access to Device memory) * execution of the SG instruction in NS state from a Secure & NonSecure code region The purpose of SG is simply to flip the CPU into Secure state, so we can handle it by emulating execution of that instruction directly in arm_v7m_cpu_do_interrupt(), which means we can treat all the mismatch cases as "throw an exception" and we don't need to encode the state of the other MPU bank into our mmu_idx values. This commit doesn't include the actual emulation of SG; it also doesn't include implementation of the IDAU, which is a per-board way to specify hard-coded memory attributes for addresses, which override the CPU-internal SAU if they specify a more secure setting than the SAU is programmed to. Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org> Message-id: 1506092407-26985-15-git-send-email-peter.maydell@linaro.org
2017-10-06 17:46:49 +02:00
}
}
bool pmsav8_mpu_lookup(CPUARMState *env, uint32_t address,
MMUAccessType access_type, ARMMMUIdx mmu_idx,
hwaddr *phys_ptr, MemTxAttrs *txattrs,
target/arm: Handle small regions in get_phys_addr_pmsav8() Allow ARMv8M to handle small MPU and SAU region sizes, by making get_phys_add_pmsav8() set the page size to the 1 if the MPU or SAU region covers less than a TARGET_PAGE_SIZE. We choose to use a size of 1 because it makes no difference to the core code, and avoids having to track both the base and limit for SAU and MPU and then convert into an artificially restricted "page size" that the core code will then ignore. Since the core TCG code can't handle execution from small MPU regions, we strip the exec permission from them so that any execution attempts will cause an MPU exception, rather than allowing it to end up with a cpu_abort() in get_page_addr_code(). (The previous code's intention was to make any small page be treated as having no permissions, but unfortunately errors in the implementation meant that it didn't behave that way. It's possible that some binaries using small regions were accidentally working with our old behaviour and won't now.) We also retain an existing bug, where we ignored the possibility that the SAU region might not cover the entire page, in the case of executable regions. This is necessary because some currently-working guest code images rely on being able to execute from addresses which are covered by a page-sized MPU region but a smaller SAU region. We can remove this workaround if we ever support execution from small regions. Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org> Message-id: 20180620130619.11362-4-peter.maydell@linaro.org
2018-06-26 18:50:42 +02:00
int *prot, bool *is_subpage,
ARMMMUFaultInfo *fi, uint32_t *mregion)
{
/* Perform a PMSAv8 MPU lookup (without also doing the SAU check
* that a full phys-to-virt translation does).
* mregion is (if not NULL) set to the region number which matched,
* or -1 if no region number is returned (MPU off, address did not
* hit a region, address hit in multiple regions).
target/arm: Handle small regions in get_phys_addr_pmsav8() Allow ARMv8M to handle small MPU and SAU region sizes, by making get_phys_add_pmsav8() set the page size to the 1 if the MPU or SAU region covers less than a TARGET_PAGE_SIZE. We choose to use a size of 1 because it makes no difference to the core code, and avoids having to track both the base and limit for SAU and MPU and then convert into an artificially restricted "page size" that the core code will then ignore. Since the core TCG code can't handle execution from small MPU regions, we strip the exec permission from them so that any execution attempts will cause an MPU exception, rather than allowing it to end up with a cpu_abort() in get_page_addr_code(). (The previous code's intention was to make any small page be treated as having no permissions, but unfortunately errors in the implementation meant that it didn't behave that way. It's possible that some binaries using small regions were accidentally working with our old behaviour and won't now.) We also retain an existing bug, where we ignored the possibility that the SAU region might not cover the entire page, in the case of executable regions. This is necessary because some currently-working guest code images rely on being able to execute from addresses which are covered by a page-sized MPU region but a smaller SAU region. We can remove this workaround if we ever support execution from small regions. Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org> Message-id: 20180620130619.11362-4-peter.maydell@linaro.org
2018-06-26 18:50:42 +02:00
* We set is_subpage to true if the region hit doesn't cover the
* entire TARGET_PAGE the address is within.
*/
ARMCPU *cpu = env_archcpu(env);
bool is_user = regime_is_user(env, mmu_idx);
uint32_t secure = regime_is_secure(env, mmu_idx);
int n;
int matchregion = -1;
bool hit = false;
target/arm: Handle small regions in get_phys_addr_pmsav8() Allow ARMv8M to handle small MPU and SAU region sizes, by making get_phys_add_pmsav8() set the page size to the 1 if the MPU or SAU region covers less than a TARGET_PAGE_SIZE. We choose to use a size of 1 because it makes no difference to the core code, and avoids having to track both the base and limit for SAU and MPU and then convert into an artificially restricted "page size" that the core code will then ignore. Since the core TCG code can't handle execution from small MPU regions, we strip the exec permission from them so that any execution attempts will cause an MPU exception, rather than allowing it to end up with a cpu_abort() in get_page_addr_code(). (The previous code's intention was to make any small page be treated as having no permissions, but unfortunately errors in the implementation meant that it didn't behave that way. It's possible that some binaries using small regions were accidentally working with our old behaviour and won't now.) We also retain an existing bug, where we ignored the possibility that the SAU region might not cover the entire page, in the case of executable regions. This is necessary because some currently-working guest code images rely on being able to execute from addresses which are covered by a page-sized MPU region but a smaller SAU region. We can remove this workaround if we ever support execution from small regions. Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org> Message-id: 20180620130619.11362-4-peter.maydell@linaro.org
2018-06-26 18:50:42 +02:00
uint32_t addr_page_base = address & TARGET_PAGE_MASK;
uint32_t addr_page_limit = addr_page_base + (TARGET_PAGE_SIZE - 1);
target/arm: Handle small regions in get_phys_addr_pmsav8() Allow ARMv8M to handle small MPU and SAU region sizes, by making get_phys_add_pmsav8() set the page size to the 1 if the MPU or SAU region covers less than a TARGET_PAGE_SIZE. We choose to use a size of 1 because it makes no difference to the core code, and avoids having to track both the base and limit for SAU and MPU and then convert into an artificially restricted "page size" that the core code will then ignore. Since the core TCG code can't handle execution from small MPU regions, we strip the exec permission from them so that any execution attempts will cause an MPU exception, rather than allowing it to end up with a cpu_abort() in get_page_addr_code(). (The previous code's intention was to make any small page be treated as having no permissions, but unfortunately errors in the implementation meant that it didn't behave that way. It's possible that some binaries using small regions were accidentally working with our old behaviour and won't now.) We also retain an existing bug, where we ignored the possibility that the SAU region might not cover the entire page, in the case of executable regions. This is necessary because some currently-working guest code images rely on being able to execute from addresses which are covered by a page-sized MPU region but a smaller SAU region. We can remove this workaround if we ever support execution from small regions. Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org> Message-id: 20180620130619.11362-4-peter.maydell@linaro.org
2018-06-26 18:50:42 +02:00
*is_subpage = false;
*phys_ptr = address;
*prot = 0;
if (mregion) {
*mregion = -1;
target/arm: Implement security attribute lookups for memory accesses Implement the security attribute lookups for memory accesses in the get_phys_addr() functions, causing these to generate various kinds of SecureFault for bad accesses. The major subtlety in this code relates to handling of the case when the security attributes the SAU assigns to the address don't match the current security state of the CPU. In the ARM ARM pseudocode for validating instruction accesses, the security attributes of the address determine whether the Secure or NonSecure MPU state is used. At face value, handling this would require us to encode the relevant bits of state into mmu_idx for both S and NS at once, which would result in our needing 16 mmu indexes. Fortunately we don't actually need to do this because a mismatch between address attributes and CPU state means either: * some kind of fault (usually a SecureFault, but in theory perhaps a UserFault for unaligned access to Device memory) * execution of the SG instruction in NS state from a Secure & NonSecure code region The purpose of SG is simply to flip the CPU into Secure state, so we can handle it by emulating execution of that instruction directly in arm_v7m_cpu_do_interrupt(), which means we can treat all the mismatch cases as "throw an exception" and we don't need to encode the state of the other MPU bank into our mmu_idx values. This commit doesn't include the actual emulation of SG; it also doesn't include implementation of the IDAU, which is a per-board way to specify hard-coded memory attributes for addresses, which override the CPU-internal SAU if they specify a more secure setting than the SAU is programmed to. Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org> Message-id: 1506092407-26985-15-git-send-email-peter.maydell@linaro.org
2017-10-06 17:46:49 +02:00
}
/* Unlike the ARM ARM pseudocode, we don't need to check whether this
* was an exception vector read from the vector table (which is always
* done using the default system address map), because those accesses
* are done in arm_v7m_load_vector(), which always does a direct
* read using address_space_ldl(), rather than going via this function.
*/
if (regime_translation_disabled(env, mmu_idx)) { /* MPU disabled */
hit = true;
} else if (m_is_ppb_region(env, address)) {
hit = true;
} else {
if (pmsav7_use_background_region(cpu, mmu_idx, is_user)) {
hit = true;
}
for (n = (int)cpu->pmsav7_dregion - 1; n >= 0; n--) {
/* region search */
/* Note that the base address is bits [31:5] from the register
* with bits [4:0] all zeroes, but the limit address is bits
* [31:5] from the register with bits [4:0] all ones.
*/
uint32_t base = env->pmsav8.rbar[secure][n] & ~0x1f;
uint32_t limit = env->pmsav8.rlar[secure][n] | 0x1f;
if (!(env->pmsav8.rlar[secure][n] & 0x1)) {
/* Region disabled */
continue;
}
if (address < base || address > limit) {
/*
* Address not in this region. We must check whether the
* region covers addresses in the same page as our address.
* In that case we must not report a size that covers the
* whole page for a subsequent hit against a different MPU
* region or the background region, because it would result in
* incorrect TLB hits for subsequent accesses to addresses that
* are in this MPU region.
*/
if (limit >= base &&
ranges_overlap(base, limit - base + 1,
addr_page_base,
TARGET_PAGE_SIZE)) {
*is_subpage = true;
}
continue;
}
target/arm: Handle small regions in get_phys_addr_pmsav8() Allow ARMv8M to handle small MPU and SAU region sizes, by making get_phys_add_pmsav8() set the page size to the 1 if the MPU or SAU region covers less than a TARGET_PAGE_SIZE. We choose to use a size of 1 because it makes no difference to the core code, and avoids having to track both the base and limit for SAU and MPU and then convert into an artificially restricted "page size" that the core code will then ignore. Since the core TCG code can't handle execution from small MPU regions, we strip the exec permission from them so that any execution attempts will cause an MPU exception, rather than allowing it to end up with a cpu_abort() in get_page_addr_code(). (The previous code's intention was to make any small page be treated as having no permissions, but unfortunately errors in the implementation meant that it didn't behave that way. It's possible that some binaries using small regions were accidentally working with our old behaviour and won't now.) We also retain an existing bug, where we ignored the possibility that the SAU region might not cover the entire page, in the case of executable regions. This is necessary because some currently-working guest code images rely on being able to execute from addresses which are covered by a page-sized MPU region but a smaller SAU region. We can remove this workaround if we ever support execution from small regions. Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org> Message-id: 20180620130619.11362-4-peter.maydell@linaro.org
2018-06-26 18:50:42 +02:00
if (base > addr_page_base || limit < addr_page_limit) {
*is_subpage = true;
}
if (matchregion != -1) {
/* Multiple regions match -- always a failure (unlike
* PMSAv7 where highest-numbered-region wins)
*/
fi->type = ARMFault_Permission;
fi->level = 1;
return true;
}
matchregion = n;
hit = true;
}
}
if (!hit) {
/* background fault */
fi->type = ARMFault_Background;
return true;
}
if (matchregion == -1) {
/* hit using the background region */
get_phys_addr_pmsav7_default(env, mmu_idx, address, prot);
} else {
uint32_t ap = extract32(env->pmsav8.rbar[secure][matchregion], 1, 2);
uint32_t xn = extract32(env->pmsav8.rbar[secure][matchregion], 0, 1);
bool pxn = false;
if (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_V8_1M)) {
pxn = extract32(env->pmsav8.rlar[secure][matchregion], 4, 1);
}
if (m_is_system_region(env, address)) {
/* System space is always execute never */
xn = 1;
}
*prot = simple_ap_to_rw_prot(env, mmu_idx, ap);
if (*prot && !xn && !(pxn && !is_user)) {
*prot |= PAGE_EXEC;
}
/* We don't need to look the attribute up in the MAIR0/MAIR1
* registers because that only tells us about cacheability.
*/
if (mregion) {
*mregion = matchregion;
}
}
fi->type = ARMFault_Permission;
fi->level = 1;
return !(*prot & (1 << access_type));
}
static bool get_phys_addr_pmsav8(CPUARMState *env, uint32_t address,
MMUAccessType access_type, ARMMMUIdx mmu_idx,
hwaddr *phys_ptr, MemTxAttrs *txattrs,
target/arm: Handle small regions in get_phys_addr_pmsav8() Allow ARMv8M to handle small MPU and SAU region sizes, by making get_phys_add_pmsav8() set the page size to the 1 if the MPU or SAU region covers less than a TARGET_PAGE_SIZE. We choose to use a size of 1 because it makes no difference to the core code, and avoids having to track both the base and limit for SAU and MPU and then convert into an artificially restricted "page size" that the core code will then ignore. Since the core TCG code can't handle execution from small MPU regions, we strip the exec permission from them so that any execution attempts will cause an MPU exception, rather than allowing it to end up with a cpu_abort() in get_page_addr_code(). (The previous code's intention was to make any small page be treated as having no permissions, but unfortunately errors in the implementation meant that it didn't behave that way. It's possible that some binaries using small regions were accidentally working with our old behaviour and won't now.) We also retain an existing bug, where we ignored the possibility that the SAU region might not cover the entire page, in the case of executable regions. This is necessary because some currently-working guest code images rely on being able to execute from addresses which are covered by a page-sized MPU region but a smaller SAU region. We can remove this workaround if we ever support execution from small regions. Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org> Message-id: 20180620130619.11362-4-peter.maydell@linaro.org
2018-06-26 18:50:42 +02:00
int *prot, target_ulong *page_size,
ARMMMUFaultInfo *fi)
{
uint32_t secure = regime_is_secure(env, mmu_idx);
V8M_SAttributes sattrs = {};
target/arm: Handle small regions in get_phys_addr_pmsav8() Allow ARMv8M to handle small MPU and SAU region sizes, by making get_phys_add_pmsav8() set the page size to the 1 if the MPU or SAU region covers less than a TARGET_PAGE_SIZE. We choose to use a size of 1 because it makes no difference to the core code, and avoids having to track both the base and limit for SAU and MPU and then convert into an artificially restricted "page size" that the core code will then ignore. Since the core TCG code can't handle execution from small MPU regions, we strip the exec permission from them so that any execution attempts will cause an MPU exception, rather than allowing it to end up with a cpu_abort() in get_page_addr_code(). (The previous code's intention was to make any small page be treated as having no permissions, but unfortunately errors in the implementation meant that it didn't behave that way. It's possible that some binaries using small regions were accidentally working with our old behaviour and won't now.) We also retain an existing bug, where we ignored the possibility that the SAU region might not cover the entire page, in the case of executable regions. This is necessary because some currently-working guest code images rely on being able to execute from addresses which are covered by a page-sized MPU region but a smaller SAU region. We can remove this workaround if we ever support execution from small regions. Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org> Message-id: 20180620130619.11362-4-peter.maydell@linaro.org
2018-06-26 18:50:42 +02:00
bool ret;
bool mpu_is_subpage;
if (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_M_SECURITY)) {
v8m_security_lookup(env, address, access_type, mmu_idx, &sattrs);
if (access_type == MMU_INST_FETCH) {
/* Instruction fetches always use the MMU bank and the
* transaction attribute determined by the fetch address,
* regardless of CPU state. This is painful for QEMU
* to handle, because it would mean we need to encode
* into the mmu_idx not just the (user, negpri) information
* for the current security state but also that for the
* other security state, which would balloon the number
* of mmu_idx values needed alarmingly.
* Fortunately we can avoid this because it's not actually
* possible to arbitrarily execute code from memory with
* the wrong security attribute: it will always generate
* an exception of some kind or another, apart from the
* special case of an NS CPU executing an SG instruction
* in S&NSC memory. So we always just fail the translation
* here and sort things out in the exception handler
* (including possibly emulating an SG instruction).
*/
if (sattrs.ns != !secure) {
if (sattrs.nsc) {
fi->type = ARMFault_QEMU_NSCExec;
} else {
fi->type = ARMFault_QEMU_SFault;
}
target/arm: Handle small regions in get_phys_addr_pmsav8() Allow ARMv8M to handle small MPU and SAU region sizes, by making get_phys_add_pmsav8() set the page size to the 1 if the MPU or SAU region covers less than a TARGET_PAGE_SIZE. We choose to use a size of 1 because it makes no difference to the core code, and avoids having to track both the base and limit for SAU and MPU and then convert into an artificially restricted "page size" that the core code will then ignore. Since the core TCG code can't handle execution from small MPU regions, we strip the exec permission from them so that any execution attempts will cause an MPU exception, rather than allowing it to end up with a cpu_abort() in get_page_addr_code(). (The previous code's intention was to make any small page be treated as having no permissions, but unfortunately errors in the implementation meant that it didn't behave that way. It's possible that some binaries using small regions were accidentally working with our old behaviour and won't now.) We also retain an existing bug, where we ignored the possibility that the SAU region might not cover the entire page, in the case of executable regions. This is necessary because some currently-working guest code images rely on being able to execute from addresses which are covered by a page-sized MPU region but a smaller SAU region. We can remove this workaround if we ever support execution from small regions. Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org> Message-id: 20180620130619.11362-4-peter.maydell@linaro.org
2018-06-26 18:50:42 +02:00
*page_size = sattrs.subpage ? 1 : TARGET_PAGE_SIZE;
*phys_ptr = address;
*prot = 0;
return true;
}
} else {
/* For data accesses we always use the MMU bank indicated
* by the current CPU state, but the security attributes
* might downgrade a secure access to nonsecure.
*/
if (sattrs.ns) {
txattrs->secure = false;
} else if (!secure) {
/* NS access to S memory must fault.
* Architecturally we should first check whether the
* MPU information for this address indicates that we
* are doing an unaligned access to Device memory, which
* should generate a UsageFault instead. QEMU does not
* currently check for that kind of unaligned access though.
* If we added it we would need to do so as a special case
* for M_FAKE_FSR_SFAULT in arm_v7m_cpu_do_interrupt().
*/
fi->type = ARMFault_QEMU_SFault;
target/arm: Handle small regions in get_phys_addr_pmsav8() Allow ARMv8M to handle small MPU and SAU region sizes, by making get_phys_add_pmsav8() set the page size to the 1 if the MPU or SAU region covers less than a TARGET_PAGE_SIZE. We choose to use a size of 1 because it makes no difference to the core code, and avoids having to track both the base and limit for SAU and MPU and then convert into an artificially restricted "page size" that the core code will then ignore. Since the core TCG code can't handle execution from small MPU regions, we strip the exec permission from them so that any execution attempts will cause an MPU exception, rather than allowing it to end up with a cpu_abort() in get_page_addr_code(). (The previous code's intention was to make any small page be treated as having no permissions, but unfortunately errors in the implementation meant that it didn't behave that way. It's possible that some binaries using small regions were accidentally working with our old behaviour and won't now.) We also retain an existing bug, where we ignored the possibility that the SAU region might not cover the entire page, in the case of executable regions. This is necessary because some currently-working guest code images rely on being able to execute from addresses which are covered by a page-sized MPU region but a smaller SAU region. We can remove this workaround if we ever support execution from small regions. Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org> Message-id: 20180620130619.11362-4-peter.maydell@linaro.org
2018-06-26 18:50:42 +02:00
*page_size = sattrs.subpage ? 1 : TARGET_PAGE_SIZE;
*phys_ptr = address;
*prot = 0;
return true;
}
}
}
target/arm: Handle small regions in get_phys_addr_pmsav8() Allow ARMv8M to handle small MPU and SAU region sizes, by making get_phys_add_pmsav8() set the page size to the 1 if the MPU or SAU region covers less than a TARGET_PAGE_SIZE. We choose to use a size of 1 because it makes no difference to the core code, and avoids having to track both the base and limit for SAU and MPU and then convert into an artificially restricted "page size" that the core code will then ignore. Since the core TCG code can't handle execution from small MPU regions, we strip the exec permission from them so that any execution attempts will cause an MPU exception, rather than allowing it to end up with a cpu_abort() in get_page_addr_code(). (The previous code's intention was to make any small page be treated as having no permissions, but unfortunately errors in the implementation meant that it didn't behave that way. It's possible that some binaries using small regions were accidentally working with our old behaviour and won't now.) We also retain an existing bug, where we ignored the possibility that the SAU region might not cover the entire page, in the case of executable regions. This is necessary because some currently-working guest code images rely on being able to execute from addresses which are covered by a page-sized MPU region but a smaller SAU region. We can remove this workaround if we ever support execution from small regions. Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org> Message-id: 20180620130619.11362-4-peter.maydell@linaro.org
2018-06-26 18:50:42 +02:00
ret = pmsav8_mpu_lookup(env, address, access_type, mmu_idx, phys_ptr,
txattrs, prot, &mpu_is_subpage, fi, NULL);
*page_size = sattrs.subpage || mpu_is_subpage ? 1 : TARGET_PAGE_SIZE;
return ret;
}
static bool get_phys_addr_pmsav5(CPUARMState *env, uint32_t address,
MMUAccessType access_type, ARMMMUIdx mmu_idx,
hwaddr *phys_ptr, int *prot,
ARMMMUFaultInfo *fi)
{
int n;
uint32_t mask;
uint32_t base;
bool is_user = regime_is_user(env, mmu_idx);
if (regime_translation_disabled(env, mmu_idx)) {
/* MPU disabled. */
*phys_ptr = address;
*prot = PAGE_READ | PAGE_WRITE | PAGE_EXEC;
return false;
}
*phys_ptr = address;
for (n = 7; n >= 0; n--) {
base = env->cp15.c6_region[n];
if ((base & 1) == 0) {
continue;
}
mask = 1 << ((base >> 1) & 0x1f);
/* Keep this shift separate from the above to avoid an
(undefined) << 32. */
mask = (mask << 1) - 1;
if (((base ^ address) & ~mask) == 0) {
break;
}
}
if (n < 0) {
fi->type = ARMFault_Background;
return true;
}
if (access_type == MMU_INST_FETCH) {
mask = env->cp15.pmsav5_insn_ap;
} else {
mask = env->cp15.pmsav5_data_ap;
}
mask = (mask >> (n * 4)) & 0xf;
switch (mask) {
case 0:
fi->type = ARMFault_Permission;
fi->level = 1;
return true;
case 1:
if (is_user) {
fi->type = ARMFault_Permission;
fi->level = 1;
return true;
}
*prot = PAGE_READ | PAGE_WRITE;
break;
case 2:
*prot = PAGE_READ;
if (!is_user) {
*prot |= PAGE_WRITE;
}
break;
case 3:
*prot = PAGE_READ | PAGE_WRITE;
break;
case 5:
if (is_user) {
fi->type = ARMFault_Permission;
fi->level = 1;
return true;
}
*prot = PAGE_READ;
break;
case 6:
*prot = PAGE_READ;
break;
default:
/* Bad permission. */
fi->type = ARMFault_Permission;
fi->level = 1;
return true;
}
*prot |= PAGE_EXEC;
return false;
}
/* Combine either inner or outer cacheability attributes for normal
* memory, according to table D4-42 and pseudocode procedure
* CombineS1S2AttrHints() of ARM DDI 0487B.b (the ARMv8 ARM).
*
* NB: only stage 1 includes allocation hints (RW bits), leading to
* some asymmetry.
*/
static uint8_t combine_cacheattr_nibble(uint8_t s1, uint8_t s2)
{
if (s1 == 4 || s2 == 4) {
/* non-cacheable has precedence */
return 4;
} else if (extract32(s1, 2, 2) == 0 || extract32(s1, 2, 2) == 2) {
/* stage 1 write-through takes precedence */
return s1;
} else if (extract32(s2, 2, 2) == 2) {
/* stage 2 write-through takes precedence, but the allocation hint
* is still taken from stage 1
*/
return (2 << 2) | extract32(s1, 0, 2);
} else { /* write-back */
return s1;
}
}
/*
* Combine the memory type and cacheability attributes of
* s1 and s2 for the HCR_EL2.FWB == 0 case, returning the
* combined attributes in MAIR_EL1 format.
*/
static uint8_t combined_attrs_nofwb(CPUARMState *env,
ARMCacheAttrs s1, ARMCacheAttrs s2)
{
uint8_t s1lo, s2lo, s1hi, s2hi, s2_mair_attrs, ret_attrs;
s2_mair_attrs = convert_stage2_attrs(env, s2.attrs);
s1lo = extract32(s1.attrs, 0, 4);
s2lo = extract32(s2_mair_attrs, 0, 4);
s1hi = extract32(s1.attrs, 4, 4);
s2hi = extract32(s2_mair_attrs, 4, 4);
/* Combine memory type and cacheability attributes */
if (s1hi == 0 || s2hi == 0) {
/* Device has precedence over normal */
if (s1lo == 0 || s2lo == 0) {
/* nGnRnE has precedence over anything */
ret_attrs = 0;
} else if (s1lo == 4 || s2lo == 4) {
/* non-Reordering has precedence over Reordering */
ret_attrs = 4; /* nGnRE */
} else if (s1lo == 8 || s2lo == 8) {
/* non-Gathering has precedence over Gathering */
ret_attrs = 8; /* nGRE */
} else {
ret_attrs = 0xc; /* GRE */
}
} else { /* Normal memory */
/* Outer/inner cacheability combine independently */
ret_attrs = combine_cacheattr_nibble(s1hi, s2hi) << 4
| combine_cacheattr_nibble(s1lo, s2lo);
}
return ret_attrs;
}
static uint8_t force_cacheattr_nibble_wb(uint8_t attr)
{
/*
* Given the 4 bits specifying the outer or inner cacheability
* in MAIR format, return a value specifying Normal Write-Back,
* with the allocation and transient hints taken from the input
* if the input specified some kind of cacheable attribute.
*/
if (attr == 0 || attr == 4) {
/*
* 0 == an UNPREDICTABLE encoding
* 4 == Non-cacheable
* Either way, force Write-Back RW allocate non-transient
*/
return 0xf;
}
/* Change WriteThrough to WriteBack, keep allocation and transient hints */
return attr | 4;
}
/*
* Combine the memory type and cacheability attributes of
* s1 and s2 for the HCR_EL2.FWB == 1 case, returning the
* combined attributes in MAIR_EL1 format.
*/
static uint8_t combined_attrs_fwb(CPUARMState *env,
ARMCacheAttrs s1, ARMCacheAttrs s2)
{
switch (s2.attrs) {
case 7:
/* Use stage 1 attributes */
return s1.attrs;
case 6:
/*
* Force Normal Write-Back. Note that if S1 is Normal cacheable
* then we take the allocation hints from it; otherwise it is
* RW allocate, non-transient.
*/
if ((s1.attrs & 0xf0) == 0) {
/* S1 is Device */
return 0xff;
}
/* Need to check the Inner and Outer nibbles separately */
return force_cacheattr_nibble_wb(s1.attrs & 0xf) |
force_cacheattr_nibble_wb(s1.attrs >> 4) << 4;
case 5:
/* If S1 attrs are Device, use them; otherwise Normal Non-cacheable */
if ((s1.attrs & 0xf0) == 0) {
return s1.attrs;
}
return 0x44;
case 0 ... 3:
/* Force Device, of subtype specified by S2 */
return s2.attrs << 2;
default:
/*
* RESERVED values (including RES0 descriptor bit [5] being nonzero);
* arbitrarily force Device.
*/
return 0;
}
}
/* Combine S1 and S2 cacheability/shareability attributes, per D4.5.4
* and CombineS1S2Desc()
*
target/arm: Postpone interpretation of stage 2 descriptor attribute bits In the original Arm v8 two-stage translation, both stage 1 and stage 2 specify memory attributes (memory type, cacheability, shareability); these are then combined to produce the overall memory attributes for the whole stage 1+2 access. In QEMU we implement this by having get_phys_addr() fill in an ARMCacheAttrs struct, and we convert both the stage 1 and stage 2 attribute bit formats to the same encoding (an 8-bit attribute value matching the MAIR_EL1 fields, plus a 2-bit shareability value). The new FEAT_S2FWB feature allows the guest to enable a different interpretation of the attribute bits in the stage 2 descriptors. These bits can now be used to control details of how the stage 1 and 2 attributes should be combined (for instance they can say "always use the stage 1 attributes" or "ignore the stage 1 attributes and always be Device memory"). This means we need to pass the raw bit information for stage 2 down to the function which combines the stage 1 and stage 2 information. Add a field to ARMCacheAttrs that indicates whether the attrs field should be interpreted as MAIR format, or as the raw stage 2 attribute bits from the descriptor, and store the appropriate values when filling in cacheattrs. We only need to interpret the attrs field in a few places: * in do_ats_write(), where we know to expect a MAIR value (there is no ATS instruction to do a stage-2-only walk) * in S1_ptw_translate(), where we want to know whether the combined S1 + S2 attributes indicate Device memory that should provoke a fault * in combine_cacheattrs(), which does the S1 + S2 combining Update those places accordingly. Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org> Message-id: 20220505183950.2781801-2-peter.maydell@linaro.org
2022-05-05 20:39:47 +02:00
* @env: CPUARMState
* @s1: Attributes from stage 1 walk
* @s2: Attributes from stage 2 walk
*/
target/arm: Postpone interpretation of stage 2 descriptor attribute bits In the original Arm v8 two-stage translation, both stage 1 and stage 2 specify memory attributes (memory type, cacheability, shareability); these are then combined to produce the overall memory attributes for the whole stage 1+2 access. In QEMU we implement this by having get_phys_addr() fill in an ARMCacheAttrs struct, and we convert both the stage 1 and stage 2 attribute bit formats to the same encoding (an 8-bit attribute value matching the MAIR_EL1 fields, plus a 2-bit shareability value). The new FEAT_S2FWB feature allows the guest to enable a different interpretation of the attribute bits in the stage 2 descriptors. These bits can now be used to control details of how the stage 1 and 2 attributes should be combined (for instance they can say "always use the stage 1 attributes" or "ignore the stage 1 attributes and always be Device memory"). This means we need to pass the raw bit information for stage 2 down to the function which combines the stage 1 and stage 2 information. Add a field to ARMCacheAttrs that indicates whether the attrs field should be interpreted as MAIR format, or as the raw stage 2 attribute bits from the descriptor, and store the appropriate values when filling in cacheattrs. We only need to interpret the attrs field in a few places: * in do_ats_write(), where we know to expect a MAIR value (there is no ATS instruction to do a stage-2-only walk) * in S1_ptw_translate(), where we want to know whether the combined S1 + S2 attributes indicate Device memory that should provoke a fault * in combine_cacheattrs(), which does the S1 + S2 combining Update those places accordingly. Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org> Message-id: 20220505183950.2781801-2-peter.maydell@linaro.org
2022-05-05 20:39:47 +02:00
static ARMCacheAttrs combine_cacheattrs(CPUARMState *env,
ARMCacheAttrs s1, ARMCacheAttrs s2)
{
ARMCacheAttrs ret;
bool tagged = false;
target/arm: Postpone interpretation of stage 2 descriptor attribute bits In the original Arm v8 two-stage translation, both stage 1 and stage 2 specify memory attributes (memory type, cacheability, shareability); these are then combined to produce the overall memory attributes for the whole stage 1+2 access. In QEMU we implement this by having get_phys_addr() fill in an ARMCacheAttrs struct, and we convert both the stage 1 and stage 2 attribute bit formats to the same encoding (an 8-bit attribute value matching the MAIR_EL1 fields, plus a 2-bit shareability value). The new FEAT_S2FWB feature allows the guest to enable a different interpretation of the attribute bits in the stage 2 descriptors. These bits can now be used to control details of how the stage 1 and 2 attributes should be combined (for instance they can say "always use the stage 1 attributes" or "ignore the stage 1 attributes and always be Device memory"). This means we need to pass the raw bit information for stage 2 down to the function which combines the stage 1 and stage 2 information. Add a field to ARMCacheAttrs that indicates whether the attrs field should be interpreted as MAIR format, or as the raw stage 2 attribute bits from the descriptor, and store the appropriate values when filling in cacheattrs. We only need to interpret the attrs field in a few places: * in do_ats_write(), where we know to expect a MAIR value (there is no ATS instruction to do a stage-2-only walk) * in S1_ptw_translate(), where we want to know whether the combined S1 + S2 attributes indicate Device memory that should provoke a fault * in combine_cacheattrs(), which does the S1 + S2 combining Update those places accordingly. Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org> Message-id: 20220505183950.2781801-2-peter.maydell@linaro.org
2022-05-05 20:39:47 +02:00
assert(s2.is_s2_format && !s1.is_s2_format);
ret.is_s2_format = false;
if (s1.attrs == 0xf0) {
tagged = true;
s1.attrs = 0xff;
}
/* Combine shareability attributes (table D4-43) */
if (s1.shareability == 2 || s2.shareability == 2) {
/* if either are outer-shareable, the result is outer-shareable */
ret.shareability = 2;
} else if (s1.shareability == 3 || s2.shareability == 3) {
/* if either are inner-shareable, the result is inner-shareable */
ret.shareability = 3;
} else {
/* both non-shareable */
ret.shareability = 0;
}
/* Combine memory type and cacheability attributes */
if (arm_hcr_el2_eff(env) & HCR_FWB) {
ret.attrs = combined_attrs_fwb(env, s1, s2);
} else {
ret.attrs = combined_attrs_nofwb(env, s1, s2);
}
/*
* Any location for which the resultant memory type is any
* type of Device memory is always treated as Outer Shareable.
* Any location for which the resultant memory type is Normal
* Inner Non-cacheable, Outer Non-cacheable is always treated
* as Outer Shareable.
* TODO: FEAT_XS adds another value (0x40) also meaning iNCoNC
*/
if ((ret.attrs & 0xf0) == 0 || ret.attrs == 0x44) {
ret.shareability = 2;
}
/* TODO: CombineS1S2Desc does not consider transient, only WB, RWA. */
if (tagged && ret.attrs == 0xff) {
ret.attrs = 0xf0;
}
return ret;
}
/* get_phys_addr - get the physical address for this virtual address
*
* Find the physical address corresponding to the given virtual address,
* by doing a translation table walk on MMU based systems or using the
* MPU state on MPU based systems.
*
* Returns false if the translation was successful. Otherwise, phys_ptr, attrs,
* prot and page_size may not be filled in, and the populated fsr value provides
* information on why the translation aborted, in the format of a
* DFSR/IFSR fault register, with the following caveats:
* * we honour the short vs long DFSR format differences.
* * the WnR bit is never set (the caller must do this).
* * for PSMAv5 based systems we don't bother to return a full FSR format
* value.
*
* @env: CPUARMState
* @address: virtual address to get physical address for
* @access_type: 0 for read, 1 for write, 2 for execute
* @mmu_idx: MMU index indicating required translation regime
* @phys_ptr: set to the physical address corresponding to the virtual address
* @attrs: set to the memory transaction attributes to use
* @prot: set to the permissions for the page containing phys_ptr
* @page_size: set to the size of the page containing phys_ptr
* @fi: set to fault info if the translation fails
* @cacheattrs: (if non-NULL) set to the cacheability/shareability attributes
*/
bool get_phys_addr(CPUARMState *env, target_ulong address,
MMUAccessType access_type, ARMMMUIdx mmu_idx,
hwaddr *phys_ptr, MemTxAttrs *attrs, int *prot,
target_ulong *page_size,
ARMMMUFaultInfo *fi, ARMCacheAttrs *cacheattrs)
{
ARMMMUIdx s1_mmu_idx = stage_1_mmu_idx(mmu_idx);
if (mmu_idx != s1_mmu_idx) {
/* Call ourselves recursively to do the stage 1 and then stage 2
* translations if mmu_idx is a two-stage regime.
*/
if (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_EL2)) {
hwaddr ipa;
int s2_prot;
int ret;
bool ipa_secure;
ARMCacheAttrs cacheattrs2 = {};
ARMMMUIdx s2_mmu_idx;
bool is_el0;
ret = get_phys_addr(env, address, access_type, s1_mmu_idx, &ipa,
attrs, prot, page_size, fi, cacheattrs);
/* If S1 fails or S2 is disabled, return early. */
if (ret || regime_translation_disabled(env, ARMMMUIdx_Stage2)) {
*phys_ptr = ipa;
return ret;
}
ipa_secure = attrs->secure;
if (arm_is_secure_below_el3(env)) {
if (ipa_secure) {
attrs->secure = !(env->cp15.vstcr_el2.raw_tcr & VSTCR_SW);
} else {
attrs->secure = !(env->cp15.vtcr_el2.raw_tcr & VTCR_NSW);
}
} else {
assert(!ipa_secure);
}
s2_mmu_idx = attrs->secure ? ARMMMUIdx_Stage2_S : ARMMMUIdx_Stage2;
is_el0 = mmu_idx == ARMMMUIdx_E10_0 || mmu_idx == ARMMMUIdx_SE10_0;
/* S1 is done. Now do S2 translation. */
ret = get_phys_addr_lpae(env, ipa, access_type, s2_mmu_idx, is_el0,
phys_ptr, attrs, &s2_prot,
page_size, fi, &cacheattrs2);
fi->s2addr = ipa;
/* Combine the S1 and S2 perms. */
*prot &= s2_prot;
/* If S2 fails, return early. */
if (ret) {
return ret;
}
/* Combine the S1 and S2 cache attributes. */
if (arm_hcr_el2_eff(env) & HCR_DC) {
/*
* HCR.DC forces the first stage attributes to
* Normal Non-Shareable,
* Inner Write-Back Read-Allocate Write-Allocate,
* Outer Write-Back Read-Allocate Write-Allocate.
* Do not overwrite Tagged within attrs.
*/
if (cacheattrs->attrs != 0xf0) {
cacheattrs->attrs = 0xff;
}
cacheattrs->shareability = 0;
}
target/arm: Postpone interpretation of stage 2 descriptor attribute bits In the original Arm v8 two-stage translation, both stage 1 and stage 2 specify memory attributes (memory type, cacheability, shareability); these are then combined to produce the overall memory attributes for the whole stage 1+2 access. In QEMU we implement this by having get_phys_addr() fill in an ARMCacheAttrs struct, and we convert both the stage 1 and stage 2 attribute bit formats to the same encoding (an 8-bit attribute value matching the MAIR_EL1 fields, plus a 2-bit shareability value). The new FEAT_S2FWB feature allows the guest to enable a different interpretation of the attribute bits in the stage 2 descriptors. These bits can now be used to control details of how the stage 1 and 2 attributes should be combined (for instance they can say "always use the stage 1 attributes" or "ignore the stage 1 attributes and always be Device memory"). This means we need to pass the raw bit information for stage 2 down to the function which combines the stage 1 and stage 2 information. Add a field to ARMCacheAttrs that indicates whether the attrs field should be interpreted as MAIR format, or as the raw stage 2 attribute bits from the descriptor, and store the appropriate values when filling in cacheattrs. We only need to interpret the attrs field in a few places: * in do_ats_write(), where we know to expect a MAIR value (there is no ATS instruction to do a stage-2-only walk) * in S1_ptw_translate(), where we want to know whether the combined S1 + S2 attributes indicate Device memory that should provoke a fault * in combine_cacheattrs(), which does the S1 + S2 combining Update those places accordingly. Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org> Message-id: 20220505183950.2781801-2-peter.maydell@linaro.org
2022-05-05 20:39:47 +02:00
*cacheattrs = combine_cacheattrs(env, *cacheattrs, cacheattrs2);
/* Check if IPA translates to secure or non-secure PA space. */
if (arm_is_secure_below_el3(env)) {
if (ipa_secure) {
attrs->secure =
!(env->cp15.vstcr_el2.raw_tcr & (VSTCR_SA | VSTCR_SW));
} else {
attrs->secure =
!((env->cp15.vtcr_el2.raw_tcr & (VTCR_NSA | VTCR_NSW))
|| (env->cp15.vstcr_el2.raw_tcr & (VSTCR_SA | VSTCR_SW)));
}
}
return 0;
} else {
/*
* For non-EL2 CPUs a stage1+stage2 translation is just stage 1.
*/
mmu_idx = stage_1_mmu_idx(mmu_idx);
}
}
/* The page table entries may downgrade secure to non-secure, but
* cannot upgrade an non-secure translation regime's attributes
* to secure.
*/
attrs->secure = regime_is_secure(env, mmu_idx);
attrs->user = regime_is_user(env, mmu_idx);
/* Fast Context Switch Extension. This doesn't exist at all in v8.
* In v7 and earlier it affects all stage 1 translations.
*/
if (address < 0x02000000 && mmu_idx != ARMMMUIdx_Stage2
&& !arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_V8)) {
if (regime_el(env, mmu_idx) == 3) {
address += env->cp15.fcseidr_s;
} else {
address += env->cp15.fcseidr_ns;
}
}
if (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_PMSA)) {
bool ret;
*page_size = TARGET_PAGE_SIZE;
if (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_V8)) {
/* PMSAv8 */
ret = get_phys_addr_pmsav8(env, address, access_type, mmu_idx,
target/arm: Handle small regions in get_phys_addr_pmsav8() Allow ARMv8M to handle small MPU and SAU region sizes, by making get_phys_add_pmsav8() set the page size to the 1 if the MPU or SAU region covers less than a TARGET_PAGE_SIZE. We choose to use a size of 1 because it makes no difference to the core code, and avoids having to track both the base and limit for SAU and MPU and then convert into an artificially restricted "page size" that the core code will then ignore. Since the core TCG code can't handle execution from small MPU regions, we strip the exec permission from them so that any execution attempts will cause an MPU exception, rather than allowing it to end up with a cpu_abort() in get_page_addr_code(). (The previous code's intention was to make any small page be treated as having no permissions, but unfortunately errors in the implementation meant that it didn't behave that way. It's possible that some binaries using small regions were accidentally working with our old behaviour and won't now.) We also retain an existing bug, where we ignored the possibility that the SAU region might not cover the entire page, in the case of executable regions. This is necessary because some currently-working guest code images rely on being able to execute from addresses which are covered by a page-sized MPU region but a smaller SAU region. We can remove this workaround if we ever support execution from small regions. Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org> Message-id: 20180620130619.11362-4-peter.maydell@linaro.org
2018-06-26 18:50:42 +02:00
phys_ptr, attrs, prot, page_size, fi);
} else if (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_V7)) {
/* PMSAv7 */
ret = get_phys_addr_pmsav7(env, address, access_type, mmu_idx,
phys_ptr, prot, page_size, fi);
} else {
/* Pre-v7 MPU */
ret = get_phys_addr_pmsav5(env, address, access_type, mmu_idx,
phys_ptr, prot, fi);
}
qemu_log_mask(CPU_LOG_MMU, "PMSA MPU lookup for %s at 0x%08" PRIx32
" mmu_idx %u -> %s (prot %c%c%c)\n",
access_type == MMU_DATA_LOAD ? "reading" :
(access_type == MMU_DATA_STORE ? "writing" : "execute"),
(uint32_t)address, mmu_idx,
ret ? "Miss" : "Hit",
*prot & PAGE_READ ? 'r' : '-',
*prot & PAGE_WRITE ? 'w' : '-',
*prot & PAGE_EXEC ? 'x' : '-');
return ret;
}
/* Definitely a real MMU, not an MPU */
if (regime_translation_disabled(env, mmu_idx)) {
uint64_t hcr;
uint8_t memattr;
/*
* MMU disabled. S1 addresses within aa64 translation regimes are
* still checked for bounds -- see AArch64.TranslateAddressS1Off.
*/
if (mmu_idx != ARMMMUIdx_Stage2 && mmu_idx != ARMMMUIdx_Stage2_S) {
int r_el = regime_el(env, mmu_idx);
if (arm_el_is_aa64(env, r_el)) {
int pamax = arm_pamax(env_archcpu(env));
uint64_t tcr = env->cp15.tcr_el[r_el].raw_tcr;
int addrtop, tbi;
tbi = aa64_va_parameter_tbi(tcr, mmu_idx);
if (access_type == MMU_INST_FETCH) {
tbi &= ~aa64_va_parameter_tbid(tcr, mmu_idx);
}
tbi = (tbi >> extract64(address, 55, 1)) & 1;
addrtop = (tbi ? 55 : 63);
if (extract64(address, pamax, addrtop - pamax + 1) != 0) {
fi->type = ARMFault_AddressSize;
fi->level = 0;
fi->stage2 = false;
return 1;
}
/*
* When TBI is disabled, we've just validated that all of the
* bits above PAMax are zero, so logically we only need to
* clear the top byte for TBI. But it's clearer to follow
* the pseudocode set of addrdesc.paddress.
*/
address = extract64(address, 0, 52);
}
}
*phys_ptr = address;
*prot = PAGE_READ | PAGE_WRITE | PAGE_EXEC;
*page_size = TARGET_PAGE_SIZE;
/* Fill in cacheattr a-la AArch64.TranslateAddressS1Off. */
hcr = arm_hcr_el2_eff(env);
cacheattrs->shareability = 0;
target/arm: Postpone interpretation of stage 2 descriptor attribute bits In the original Arm v8 two-stage translation, both stage 1 and stage 2 specify memory attributes (memory type, cacheability, shareability); these are then combined to produce the overall memory attributes for the whole stage 1+2 access. In QEMU we implement this by having get_phys_addr() fill in an ARMCacheAttrs struct, and we convert both the stage 1 and stage 2 attribute bit formats to the same encoding (an 8-bit attribute value matching the MAIR_EL1 fields, plus a 2-bit shareability value). The new FEAT_S2FWB feature allows the guest to enable a different interpretation of the attribute bits in the stage 2 descriptors. These bits can now be used to control details of how the stage 1 and 2 attributes should be combined (for instance they can say "always use the stage 1 attributes" or "ignore the stage 1 attributes and always be Device memory"). This means we need to pass the raw bit information for stage 2 down to the function which combines the stage 1 and stage 2 information. Add a field to ARMCacheAttrs that indicates whether the attrs field should be interpreted as MAIR format, or as the raw stage 2 attribute bits from the descriptor, and store the appropriate values when filling in cacheattrs. We only need to interpret the attrs field in a few places: * in do_ats_write(), where we know to expect a MAIR value (there is no ATS instruction to do a stage-2-only walk) * in S1_ptw_translate(), where we want to know whether the combined S1 + S2 attributes indicate Device memory that should provoke a fault * in combine_cacheattrs(), which does the S1 + S2 combining Update those places accordingly. Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org> Message-id: 20220505183950.2781801-2-peter.maydell@linaro.org
2022-05-05 20:39:47 +02:00
cacheattrs->is_s2_format = false;
if (hcr & HCR_DC) {
if (hcr & HCR_DCT) {
memattr = 0xf0; /* Tagged, Normal, WB, RWA */
} else {
memattr = 0xff; /* Normal, WB, RWA */
}
} else if (access_type == MMU_INST_FETCH) {
if (regime_sctlr(env, mmu_idx) & SCTLR_I) {
memattr = 0xee; /* Normal, WT, RA, NT */
} else {
memattr = 0x44; /* Normal, NC, No */
}
cacheattrs->shareability = 2; /* outer sharable */
} else {
memattr = 0x00; /* Device, nGnRnE */
}
cacheattrs->attrs = memattr;
return 0;
}
if (regime_using_lpae_format(env, mmu_idx)) {
return get_phys_addr_lpae(env, address, access_type, mmu_idx, false,
phys_ptr, attrs, prot, page_size,
fi, cacheattrs);
} else if (regime_sctlr(env, mmu_idx) & SCTLR_XP) {
return get_phys_addr_v6(env, address, access_type, mmu_idx,
phys_ptr, attrs, prot, page_size, fi);
} else {
return get_phys_addr_v5(env, address, access_type, mmu_idx,
phys_ptr, prot, page_size, fi);
}
}
hwaddr arm_cpu_get_phys_page_attrs_debug(CPUState *cs, vaddr addr,
MemTxAttrs *attrs)
{
ARMCPU *cpu = ARM_CPU(cs);
CPUARMState *env = &cpu->env;
hwaddr phys_addr;
target_ulong page_size;
int prot;
bool ret;
ARMMMUFaultInfo fi = {};
ARMMMUIdx mmu_idx = arm_mmu_idx(env);
ARMCacheAttrs cacheattrs = {};
*attrs = (MemTxAttrs) {};
ret = get_phys_addr(env, addr, MMU_DATA_LOAD, mmu_idx, &phys_addr,
attrs, &prot, &page_size, &fi, &cacheattrs);
if (ret) {
return -1;
}
return phys_addr;
}
#endif
/* Note that signed overflow is undefined in C. The following routines are
careful to use unsigned types where modulo arithmetic is required.
Failure to do so _will_ break on newer gcc. */
/* Signed saturating arithmetic. */
/* Perform 16-bit signed saturating addition. */
static inline uint16_t add16_sat(uint16_t a, uint16_t b)
{
uint16_t res;
res = a + b;
if (((res ^ a) & 0x8000) && !((a ^ b) & 0x8000)) {
if (a & 0x8000)
res = 0x8000;
else
res = 0x7fff;
}
return res;
}
/* Perform 8-bit signed saturating addition. */
static inline uint8_t add8_sat(uint8_t a, uint8_t b)
{
uint8_t res;
res = a + b;
if (((res ^ a) & 0x80) && !((a ^ b) & 0x80)) {
if (a & 0x80)
res = 0x80;
else
res = 0x7f;
}
return res;
}
/* Perform 16-bit signed saturating subtraction. */
static inline uint16_t sub16_sat(uint16_t a, uint16_t b)
{
uint16_t res;
res = a - b;
if (((res ^ a) & 0x8000) && ((a ^ b) & 0x8000)) {
if (a & 0x8000)
res = 0x8000;
else
res = 0x7fff;
}
return res;
}
/* Perform 8-bit signed saturating subtraction. */
static inline uint8_t sub8_sat(uint8_t a, uint8_t b)
{
uint8_t res;
res = a - b;
if (((res ^ a) & 0x80) && ((a ^ b) & 0x80)) {
if (a & 0x80)
res = 0x80;
else
res = 0x7f;
}
return res;
}
#define ADD16(a, b, n) RESULT(add16_sat(a, b), n, 16);
#define SUB16(a, b, n) RESULT(sub16_sat(a, b), n, 16);
#define ADD8(a, b, n) RESULT(add8_sat(a, b), n, 8);
#define SUB8(a, b, n) RESULT(sub8_sat(a, b), n, 8);
#define PFX q
#include "op_addsub.h"
/* Unsigned saturating arithmetic. */
static inline uint16_t add16_usat(uint16_t a, uint16_t b)
{
uint16_t res;
res = a + b;
if (res < a)
res = 0xffff;
return res;
}
static inline uint16_t sub16_usat(uint16_t a, uint16_t b)
{
if (a > b)
return a - b;
else
return 0;
}
static inline uint8_t add8_usat(uint8_t a, uint8_t b)
{
uint8_t res;
res = a + b;
if (res < a)
res = 0xff;
return res;
}
static inline uint8_t sub8_usat(uint8_t a, uint8_t b)
{
if (a > b)
return a - b;
else
return 0;
}
#define ADD16(a, b, n) RESULT(add16_usat(a, b), n, 16);
#define SUB16(a, b, n) RESULT(sub16_usat(a, b), n, 16);
#define ADD8(a, b, n) RESULT(add8_usat(a, b), n, 8);
#define SUB8(a, b, n) RESULT(sub8_usat(a, b), n, 8);
#define PFX uq
#include "op_addsub.h"
/* Signed modulo arithmetic. */
#define SARITH16(a, b, n, op) do { \
int32_t sum; \
sum = (int32_t)(int16_t)(a) op (int32_t)(int16_t)(b); \
RESULT(sum, n, 16); \
if (sum >= 0) \
ge |= 3 << (n * 2); \
} while(0)
#define SARITH8(a, b, n, op) do { \
int32_t sum; \
sum = (int32_t)(int8_t)(a) op (int32_t)(int8_t)(b); \
RESULT(sum, n, 8); \
if (sum >= 0) \
ge |= 1 << n; \
} while(0)
#define ADD16(a, b, n) SARITH16(a, b, n, +)
#define SUB16(a, b, n) SARITH16(a, b, n, -)
#define ADD8(a, b, n) SARITH8(a, b, n, +)
#define SUB8(a, b, n) SARITH8(a, b, n, -)
#define PFX s
#define ARITH_GE
#include "op_addsub.h"
/* Unsigned modulo arithmetic. */
#define ADD16(a, b, n) do { \
uint32_t sum; \
sum = (uint32_t)(uint16_t)(a) + (uint32_t)(uint16_t)(b); \
RESULT(sum, n, 16); \
if ((sum >> 16) == 1) \
ge |= 3 << (n * 2); \
} while(0)
#define ADD8(a, b, n) do { \
uint32_t sum; \
sum = (uint32_t)(uint8_t)(a) + (uint32_t)(uint8_t)(b); \
RESULT(sum, n, 8); \
if ((sum >> 8) == 1) \
ge |= 1 << n; \
} while(0)
#define SUB16(a, b, n) do { \
uint32_t sum; \
sum = (uint32_t)(uint16_t)(a) - (uint32_t)(uint16_t)(b); \
RESULT(sum, n, 16); \
if ((sum >> 16) == 0) \
ge |= 3 << (n * 2); \
} while(0)
#define SUB8(a, b, n) do { \
uint32_t sum; \
sum = (uint32_t)(uint8_t)(a) - (uint32_t)(uint8_t)(b); \
RESULT(sum, n, 8); \
if ((sum >> 8) == 0) \
ge |= 1 << n; \
} while(0)
#define PFX u
#define ARITH_GE
#include "op_addsub.h"
/* Halved signed arithmetic. */
#define ADD16(a, b, n) \
RESULT(((int32_t)(int16_t)(a) + (int32_t)(int16_t)(b)) >> 1, n, 16)
#define SUB16(a, b, n) \
RESULT(((int32_t)(int16_t)(a) - (int32_t)(int16_t)(b)) >> 1, n, 16)
#define ADD8(a, b, n) \
RESULT(((int32_t)(int8_t)(a) + (int32_t)(int8_t)(b)) >> 1, n, 8)
#define SUB8(a, b, n) \
RESULT(((int32_t)(int8_t)(a) - (int32_t)(int8_t)(b)) >> 1, n, 8)
#define PFX sh
#include "op_addsub.h"
/* Halved unsigned arithmetic. */
#define ADD16(a, b, n) \
RESULT(((uint32_t)(uint16_t)(a) + (uint32_t)(uint16_t)(b)) >> 1, n, 16)
#define SUB16(a, b, n) \
RESULT(((uint32_t)(uint16_t)(a) - (uint32_t)(uint16_t)(b)) >> 1, n, 16)
#define ADD8(a, b, n) \
RESULT(((uint32_t)(uint8_t)(a) + (uint32_t)(uint8_t)(b)) >> 1, n, 8)
#define SUB8(a, b, n) \
RESULT(((uint32_t)(uint8_t)(a) - (uint32_t)(uint8_t)(b)) >> 1, n, 8)
#define PFX uh
#include "op_addsub.h"
static inline uint8_t do_usad(uint8_t a, uint8_t b)
{
if (a > b)
return a - b;
else
return b - a;
}
/* Unsigned sum of absolute byte differences. */
uint32_t HELPER(usad8)(uint32_t a, uint32_t b)
{
uint32_t sum;
sum = do_usad(a, b);
sum += do_usad(a >> 8, b >> 8);
sum += do_usad(a >> 16, b >> 16);
sum += do_usad(a >> 24, b >> 24);
return sum;
}
/* For ARMv6 SEL instruction. */
uint32_t HELPER(sel_flags)(uint32_t flags, uint32_t a, uint32_t b)
{
uint32_t mask;
mask = 0;
if (flags & 1)
mask |= 0xff;
if (flags & 2)
mask |= 0xff00;
if (flags & 4)
mask |= 0xff0000;
if (flags & 8)
mask |= 0xff000000;
return (a & mask) | (b & ~mask);
}
/* CRC helpers.
* The upper bytes of val (above the number specified by 'bytes') must have
* been zeroed out by the caller.
*/
uint32_t HELPER(crc32)(uint32_t acc, uint32_t val, uint32_t bytes)
{
uint8_t buf[4];
stl_le_p(buf, val);
/* zlib crc32 converts the accumulator and output to one's complement. */
return crc32(acc ^ 0xffffffff, buf, bytes) ^ 0xffffffff;
}
uint32_t HELPER(crc32c)(uint32_t acc, uint32_t val, uint32_t bytes)
{
uint8_t buf[4];
stl_le_p(buf, val);
/* Linux crc32c converts the output to one's complement. */
return crc32c(acc, buf, bytes) ^ 0xffffffff;
}
/* Return the exception level to which FP-disabled exceptions should
* be taken, or 0 if FP is enabled.
*/
int fp_exception_el(CPUARMState *env, int cur_el)
{
#ifndef CONFIG_USER_ONLY
uint64_t hcr_el2;
/* CPACR and the CPTR registers don't exist before v6, so FP is
* always accessible
*/
if (!arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_V6)) {
return 0;
}
if (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_M)) {
/* CPACR can cause a NOCP UsageFault taken to current security state */
if (!v7m_cpacr_pass(env, env->v7m.secure, cur_el != 0)) {
return 1;
}
if (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_M_SECURITY) && !env->v7m.secure) {
if (!extract32(env->v7m.nsacr, 10, 1)) {
/* FP insns cause a NOCP UsageFault taken to Secure */
return 3;
}
}
return 0;
}
hcr_el2 = arm_hcr_el2_eff(env);
/* The CPACR controls traps to EL1, or PL1 if we're 32 bit:
* 0, 2 : trap EL0 and EL1/PL1 accesses
* 1 : trap only EL0 accesses
* 3 : trap no accesses
* This register is ignored if E2H+TGE are both set.
*/
if ((hcr_el2 & (HCR_E2H | HCR_TGE)) != (HCR_E2H | HCR_TGE)) {
int fpen = FIELD_EX64(env->cp15.cpacr_el1, CPACR_EL1, FPEN);
switch (fpen) {
case 0:
case 2:
if (cur_el == 0 || cur_el == 1) {
/* Trap to PL1, which might be EL1 or EL3 */
if (arm_is_secure(env) && !arm_el_is_aa64(env, 3)) {
return 3;
}
return 1;
}
if (cur_el == 3 && !is_a64(env)) {
/* Secure PL1 running at EL3 */
return 3;
}
break;
case 1:
if (cur_el == 0) {
return 1;
}
break;
case 3:
break;
}
}
/*
* The NSACR allows A-profile AArch32 EL3 and M-profile secure mode
* to control non-secure access to the FPU. It doesn't have any
* effect if EL3 is AArch64 or if EL3 doesn't exist at all.
*/
if ((arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_EL3) && !arm_el_is_aa64(env, 3) &&
cur_el <= 2 && !arm_is_secure_below_el3(env))) {
if (!extract32(env->cp15.nsacr, 10, 1)) {
/* FP insns act as UNDEF */
return cur_el == 2 ? 2 : 1;
}
}
/*
* CPTR_EL2 is present in v7VE or v8, and changes format
* with HCR_EL2.E2H (regardless of TGE).
*/
if (cur_el <= 2) {
if (hcr_el2 & HCR_E2H) {
switch (FIELD_EX64(env->cp15.cptr_el[2], CPTR_EL2, FPEN)) {
case 1:
if (cur_el != 0 || !(hcr_el2 & HCR_TGE)) {
break;
}
/* fall through */
case 0:
case 2:
return 2;
}
} else if (arm_is_el2_enabled(env)) {
if (FIELD_EX64(env->cp15.cptr_el[2], CPTR_EL2, TFP)) {
return 2;
}
}
}
/* CPTR_EL3 : present in v8 */
if (FIELD_EX64(env->cp15.cptr_el[3], CPTR_EL3, TFP)) {
/* Trap all FP ops to EL3 */
return 3;
}
#endif
return 0;
}
/* Return the exception level we're running at if this is our mmu_idx */
int arm_mmu_idx_to_el(ARMMMUIdx mmu_idx)
{
if (mmu_idx & ARM_MMU_IDX_M) {
return mmu_idx & ARM_MMU_IDX_M_PRIV;
}
switch (mmu_idx) {
case ARMMMUIdx_E10_0:
case ARMMMUIdx_E20_0:
case ARMMMUIdx_SE10_0:
case ARMMMUIdx_SE20_0:
return 0;
case ARMMMUIdx_E10_1:
case ARMMMUIdx_E10_1_PAN:
case ARMMMUIdx_SE10_1:
case ARMMMUIdx_SE10_1_PAN:
return 1;
case ARMMMUIdx_E2:
case ARMMMUIdx_E20_2:
case ARMMMUIdx_E20_2_PAN:
case ARMMMUIdx_SE2:
case ARMMMUIdx_SE20_2:
case ARMMMUIdx_SE20_2_PAN:
return 2;
case ARMMMUIdx_SE3:
return 3;
default:
g_assert_not_reached();
}
}
#ifndef CONFIG_TCG
ARMMMUIdx arm_v7m_mmu_idx_for_secstate(CPUARMState *env, bool secstate)
{
g_assert_not_reached();
}
#endif
ARMMMUIdx arm_mmu_idx_el(CPUARMState *env, int el)
{
ARMMMUIdx idx;
uint64_t hcr;
if (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_M)) {
return arm_v7m_mmu_idx_for_secstate(env, env->v7m.secure);
}
/* See ARM pseudo-function ELIsInHost. */
switch (el) {
case 0:
hcr = arm_hcr_el2_eff(env);
if ((hcr & (HCR_E2H | HCR_TGE)) == (HCR_E2H | HCR_TGE)) {
idx = ARMMMUIdx_E20_0;
} else {
idx = ARMMMUIdx_E10_0;
}
break;
case 1:
if (env->pstate & PSTATE_PAN) {
idx = ARMMMUIdx_E10_1_PAN;
} else {
idx = ARMMMUIdx_E10_1;
}
break;
case 2:
/* Note that TGE does not apply at EL2. */
if (arm_hcr_el2_eff(env) & HCR_E2H) {
if (env->pstate & PSTATE_PAN) {
idx = ARMMMUIdx_E20_2_PAN;
} else {
idx = ARMMMUIdx_E20_2;
}
} else {
idx = ARMMMUIdx_E2;
}
break;
case 3:
return ARMMMUIdx_SE3;
default:
g_assert_not_reached();
}
if (arm_is_secure_below_el3(env)) {
idx &= ~ARM_MMU_IDX_A_NS;
}
return idx;
}
ARMMMUIdx arm_mmu_idx(CPUARMState *env)
{
return arm_mmu_idx_el(env, arm_current_el(env));
}
#ifndef CONFIG_USER_ONLY
ARMMMUIdx arm_stage1_mmu_idx(CPUARMState *env)
{
return stage_1_mmu_idx(arm_mmu_idx(env));
}
#endif
static CPUARMTBFlags rebuild_hflags_common(CPUARMState *env, int fp_el,
ARMMMUIdx mmu_idx,
CPUARMTBFlags flags)
{
DP_TBFLAG_ANY(flags, FPEXC_EL, fp_el);
DP_TBFLAG_ANY(flags, MMUIDX, arm_to_core_mmu_idx(mmu_idx));
if (arm_singlestep_active(env)) {
DP_TBFLAG_ANY(flags, SS_ACTIVE, 1);
}
return flags;
}
static CPUARMTBFlags rebuild_hflags_common_32(CPUARMState *env, int fp_el,
ARMMMUIdx mmu_idx,
CPUARMTBFlags flags)
{
bool sctlr_b = arm_sctlr_b(env);
if (sctlr_b) {
DP_TBFLAG_A32(flags, SCTLR__B, 1);
}
if (arm_cpu_data_is_big_endian_a32(env, sctlr_b)) {
DP_TBFLAG_ANY(flags, BE_DATA, 1);
}
DP_TBFLAG_A32(flags, NS, !access_secure_reg(env));
return rebuild_hflags_common(env, fp_el, mmu_idx, flags);
}
static CPUARMTBFlags rebuild_hflags_m32(CPUARMState *env, int fp_el,
ARMMMUIdx mmu_idx)
{
CPUARMTBFlags flags = {};
uint32_t ccr = env->v7m.ccr[env->v7m.secure];
/* Without HaveMainExt, CCR.UNALIGN_TRP is RES1. */
if (ccr & R_V7M_CCR_UNALIGN_TRP_MASK) {
DP_TBFLAG_ANY(flags, ALIGN_MEM, 1);
}
if (arm_v7m_is_handler_mode(env)) {
DP_TBFLAG_M32(flags, HANDLER, 1);
}
/*
* v8M always applies stack limit checks unless CCR.STKOFHFNMIGN
* is suppressing them because the requested execution priority
* is less than 0.
*/
if (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_V8) &&
!((mmu_idx & ARM_MMU_IDX_M_NEGPRI) &&
(ccr & R_V7M_CCR_STKOFHFNMIGN_MASK))) {
DP_TBFLAG_M32(flags, STACKCHECK, 1);
}
return rebuild_hflags_common_32(env, fp_el, mmu_idx, flags);
}
static CPUARMTBFlags rebuild_hflags_aprofile(CPUARMState *env)
{
CPUARMTBFlags flags = {};
DP_TBFLAG_ANY(flags, DEBUG_TARGET_EL, arm_debug_target_el(env));
return flags;
}
static CPUARMTBFlags rebuild_hflags_a32(CPUARMState *env, int fp_el,
ARMMMUIdx mmu_idx)
{
CPUARMTBFlags flags = rebuild_hflags_aprofile(env);
int el = arm_current_el(env);
if (arm_sctlr(env, el) & SCTLR_A) {
DP_TBFLAG_ANY(flags, ALIGN_MEM, 1);
}
if (arm_el_is_aa64(env, 1)) {
DP_TBFLAG_A32(flags, VFPEN, 1);
}
if (el < 2 && env->cp15.hstr_el2 &&
(arm_hcr_el2_eff(env) & (HCR_E2H | HCR_TGE)) != (HCR_E2H | HCR_TGE)) {
DP_TBFLAG_A32(flags, HSTR_ACTIVE, 1);
}
if (env->uncached_cpsr & CPSR_IL) {
DP_TBFLAG_ANY(flags, PSTATE__IL, 1);
}
return rebuild_hflags_common_32(env, fp_el, mmu_idx, flags);
}
static CPUARMTBFlags rebuild_hflags_a64(CPUARMState *env, int el, int fp_el,
ARMMMUIdx mmu_idx)
{
CPUARMTBFlags flags = rebuild_hflags_aprofile(env);
ARMMMUIdx stage1 = stage_1_mmu_idx(mmu_idx);
uint64_t tcr = regime_tcr(env, mmu_idx)->raw_tcr;
uint64_t sctlr;
int tbii, tbid;
DP_TBFLAG_ANY(flags, AARCH64_STATE, 1);
/* Get control bits for tagged addresses. */
tbid = aa64_va_parameter_tbi(tcr, mmu_idx);
tbii = tbid & ~aa64_va_parameter_tbid(tcr, mmu_idx);
DP_TBFLAG_A64(flags, TBII, tbii);
DP_TBFLAG_A64(flags, TBID, tbid);
if (cpu_isar_feature(aa64_sve, env_archcpu(env))) {
int sve_el = sve_exception_el(env, el);
uint32_t zcr_len;
/*
* If SVE is disabled, but FP is enabled,
* then the effective len is 0.
*/
if (sve_el != 0 && fp_el == 0) {
zcr_len = 0;
} else {
zcr_len = sve_zcr_len_for_el(env, el);
}
DP_TBFLAG_A64(flags, SVEEXC_EL, sve_el);
DP_TBFLAG_A64(flags, ZCR_LEN, zcr_len);
}
sctlr = regime_sctlr(env, stage1);
if (sctlr & SCTLR_A) {
DP_TBFLAG_ANY(flags, ALIGN_MEM, 1);
}
if (arm_cpu_data_is_big_endian_a64(el, sctlr)) {
DP_TBFLAG_ANY(flags, BE_DATA, 1);
}
if (cpu_isar_feature(aa64_pauth, env_archcpu(env))) {
/*
* In order to save space in flags, we record only whether
* pauth is "inactive", meaning all insns are implemented as
* a nop, or "active" when some action must be performed.
* The decision of which action to take is left to a helper.
*/
if (sctlr & (SCTLR_EnIA | SCTLR_EnIB | SCTLR_EnDA | SCTLR_EnDB)) {
DP_TBFLAG_A64(flags, PAUTH_ACTIVE, 1);
}
}
if (cpu_isar_feature(aa64_bti, env_archcpu(env))) {
/* Note that SCTLR_EL[23].BT == SCTLR_BT1. */
if (sctlr & (el == 0 ? SCTLR_BT0 : SCTLR_BT1)) {
DP_TBFLAG_A64(flags, BT, 1);
}
}
/* Compute the condition for using AccType_UNPRIV for LDTR et al. */
if (!(env->pstate & PSTATE_UAO)) {
switch (mmu_idx) {
case ARMMMUIdx_E10_1:
case ARMMMUIdx_E10_1_PAN:
case ARMMMUIdx_SE10_1:
case ARMMMUIdx_SE10_1_PAN:
/* TODO: ARMv8.3-NV */
DP_TBFLAG_A64(flags, UNPRIV, 1);
break;
case ARMMMUIdx_E20_2:
case ARMMMUIdx_E20_2_PAN:
case ARMMMUIdx_SE20_2:
case ARMMMUIdx_SE20_2_PAN:
/*
* Note that EL20_2 is gated by HCR_EL2.E2H == 1, but EL20_0 is
* gated by HCR_EL2.<E2H,TGE> == '11', and so is LDTR.
*/
if (env->cp15.hcr_el2 & HCR_TGE) {
DP_TBFLAG_A64(flags, UNPRIV, 1);
}
break;
default:
break;
}
}
if (env->pstate & PSTATE_IL) {
DP_TBFLAG_ANY(flags, PSTATE__IL, 1);
}
if (cpu_isar_feature(aa64_mte, env_archcpu(env))) {
/*
* Set MTE_ACTIVE if any access may be Checked, and leave clear
* if all accesses must be Unchecked:
* 1) If no TBI, then there are no tags in the address to check,
* 2) If Tag Check Override, then all accesses are Unchecked,
* 3) If Tag Check Fail == 0, then Checked access have no effect,
* 4) If no Allocation Tag Access, then all accesses are Unchecked.
*/
if (allocation_tag_access_enabled(env, el, sctlr)) {
DP_TBFLAG_A64(flags, ATA, 1);
if (tbid
&& !(env->pstate & PSTATE_TCO)
&& (sctlr & (el == 0 ? SCTLR_TCF0 : SCTLR_TCF))) {
DP_TBFLAG_A64(flags, MTE_ACTIVE, 1);
}
}
/* And again for unprivileged accesses, if required. */
if (EX_TBFLAG_A64(flags, UNPRIV)
&& tbid
&& !(env->pstate & PSTATE_TCO)
&& (sctlr & SCTLR_TCF0)
&& allocation_tag_access_enabled(env, 0, sctlr)) {
DP_TBFLAG_A64(flags, MTE0_ACTIVE, 1);
}
/* Cache TCMA as well as TBI. */
DP_TBFLAG_A64(flags, TCMA, aa64_va_parameter_tcma(tcr, mmu_idx));
}
return rebuild_hflags_common(env, fp_el, mmu_idx, flags);
}
static CPUARMTBFlags rebuild_hflags_internal(CPUARMState *env)
{
int el = arm_current_el(env);
int fp_el = fp_exception_el(env, el);
ARMMMUIdx mmu_idx = arm_mmu_idx_el(env, el);
if (is_a64(env)) {
return rebuild_hflags_a64(env, el, fp_el, mmu_idx);
} else if (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_M)) {
return rebuild_hflags_m32(env, fp_el, mmu_idx);
} else {
return rebuild_hflags_a32(env, fp_el, mmu_idx);
}
}
void arm_rebuild_hflags(CPUARMState *env)
{
env->hflags = rebuild_hflags_internal(env);
}
/*
* If we have triggered a EL state change we can't rely on the
* translator having passed it to us, we need to recompute.
*/
void HELPER(rebuild_hflags_m32_newel)(CPUARMState *env)
{
int el = arm_current_el(env);
int fp_el = fp_exception_el(env, el);
ARMMMUIdx mmu_idx = arm_mmu_idx_el(env, el);
env->hflags = rebuild_hflags_m32(env, fp_el, mmu_idx);
}
void HELPER(rebuild_hflags_m32)(CPUARMState *env, int el)
{
int fp_el = fp_exception_el(env, el);
ARMMMUIdx mmu_idx = arm_mmu_idx_el(env, el);
env->hflags = rebuild_hflags_m32(env, fp_el, mmu_idx);
}
/*
* If we have triggered a EL state change we can't rely on the
* translator having passed it to us, we need to recompute.
*/
void HELPER(rebuild_hflags_a32_newel)(CPUARMState *env)
{
int el = arm_current_el(env);
int fp_el = fp_exception_el(env, el);
ARMMMUIdx mmu_idx = arm_mmu_idx_el(env, el);
env->hflags = rebuild_hflags_a32(env, fp_el, mmu_idx);
}
void HELPER(rebuild_hflags_a32)(CPUARMState *env, int el)
{
int fp_el = fp_exception_el(env, el);
ARMMMUIdx mmu_idx = arm_mmu_idx_el(env, el);
env->hflags = rebuild_hflags_a32(env, fp_el, mmu_idx);
}
void HELPER(rebuild_hflags_a64)(CPUARMState *env, int el)
{
int fp_el = fp_exception_el(env, el);
ARMMMUIdx mmu_idx = arm_mmu_idx_el(env, el);
env->hflags = rebuild_hflags_a64(env, el, fp_el, mmu_idx);
}
static inline void assert_hflags_rebuild_correctly(CPUARMState *env)
{
#ifdef CONFIG_DEBUG_TCG
CPUARMTBFlags c = env->hflags;
CPUARMTBFlags r = rebuild_hflags_internal(env);
if (unlikely(c.flags != r.flags || c.flags2 != r.flags2)) {
fprintf(stderr, "TCG hflags mismatch "
"(current:(0x%08x,0x" TARGET_FMT_lx ")"
" rebuilt:(0x%08x,0x" TARGET_FMT_lx ")\n",
c.flags, c.flags2, r.flags, r.flags2);
abort();
}
#endif
}
static bool mve_no_pred(CPUARMState *env)
{
/*
* Return true if there is definitely no predication of MVE
* instructions by VPR or LTPSIZE. (Returning false even if there
* isn't any predication is OK; generated code will just be
* a little worse.)
* If the CPU does not implement MVE then this TB flag is always 0.
*
* NOTE: if you change this logic, the "recalculate s->mve_no_pred"
* logic in gen_update_fp_context() needs to be updated to match.
*
* We do not include the effect of the ECI bits here -- they are
* tracked in other TB flags. This simplifies the logic for
* "when did we emit code that changes the MVE_NO_PRED TB flag
* and thus need to end the TB?".
*/
if (cpu_isar_feature(aa32_mve, env_archcpu(env))) {
return false;
}
if (env->v7m.vpr) {
return false;
}
if (env->v7m.ltpsize < 4) {
return false;
}
return true;
}
void cpu_get_tb_cpu_state(CPUARMState *env, target_ulong *pc,
target_ulong *cs_base, uint32_t *pflags)
{
CPUARMTBFlags flags;
assert_hflags_rebuild_correctly(env);
flags = env->hflags;
if (EX_TBFLAG_ANY(flags, AARCH64_STATE)) {
*pc = env->pc;
if (cpu_isar_feature(aa64_bti, env_archcpu(env))) {
DP_TBFLAG_A64(flags, BTYPE, env->btype);
}
} else {
*pc = env->regs[15];
if (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_M)) {
if (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_M_SECURITY) &&
FIELD_EX32(env->v7m.fpccr[M_REG_S], V7M_FPCCR, S)
!= env->v7m.secure) {
DP_TBFLAG_M32(flags, FPCCR_S_WRONG, 1);
}
if ((env->v7m.fpccr[env->v7m.secure] & R_V7M_FPCCR_ASPEN_MASK) &&
(!(env->v7m.control[M_REG_S] & R_V7M_CONTROL_FPCA_MASK) ||
(env->v7m.secure &&
!(env->v7m.control[M_REG_S] & R_V7M_CONTROL_SFPA_MASK)))) {
/*
* ASPEN is set, but FPCA/SFPA indicate that there is no
* active FP context; we must create a new FP context before
* executing any FP insn.
*/
DP_TBFLAG_M32(flags, NEW_FP_CTXT_NEEDED, 1);
}
bool is_secure = env->v7m.fpccr[M_REG_S] & R_V7M_FPCCR_S_MASK;
if (env->v7m.fpccr[is_secure] & R_V7M_FPCCR_LSPACT_MASK) {
DP_TBFLAG_M32(flags, LSPACT, 1);
}
if (mve_no_pred(env)) {
DP_TBFLAG_M32(flags, MVE_NO_PRED, 1);
}
} else {
/*
* Note that XSCALE_CPAR shares bits with VECSTRIDE.
* Note that VECLEN+VECSTRIDE are RES0 for M-profile.
*/
if (arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_XSCALE)) {
DP_TBFLAG_A32(flags, XSCALE_CPAR, env->cp15.c15_cpar);
} else {
DP_TBFLAG_A32(flags, VECLEN, env->vfp.vec_len);
DP_TBFLAG_A32(flags, VECSTRIDE, env->vfp.vec_stride);
}
if (env->vfp.xregs[ARM_VFP_FPEXC] & (1 << 30)) {
DP_TBFLAG_A32(flags, VFPEN, 1);
}
}
DP_TBFLAG_AM32(flags, THUMB, env->thumb);
DP_TBFLAG_AM32(flags, CONDEXEC, env->condexec_bits);
}
/*
* The SS_ACTIVE and PSTATE_SS bits correspond to the state machine
* states defined in the ARM ARM for software singlestep:
* SS_ACTIVE PSTATE.SS State
* 0 x Inactive (the TB flag for SS is always 0)
* 1 0 Active-pending
* 1 1 Active-not-pending
* SS_ACTIVE is set in hflags; PSTATE__SS is computed every TB.
*/
if (EX_TBFLAG_ANY(flags, SS_ACTIVE) && (env->pstate & PSTATE_SS)) {
DP_TBFLAG_ANY(flags, PSTATE__SS, 1);
}
*pflags = flags.flags;
*cs_base = flags.flags2;
}
#ifdef TARGET_AARCH64
/*
* The manual says that when SVE is enabled and VQ is widened the
* implementation is allowed to zero the previously inaccessible
* portion of the registers. The corollary to that is that when
* SVE is enabled and VQ is narrowed we are also allowed to zero
* the now inaccessible portion of the registers.
*
* The intent of this is that no predicate bit beyond VQ is ever set.
* Which means that some operations on predicate registers themselves
* may operate on full uint64_t or even unrolled across the maximum
* uint64_t[4]. Performing 4 bits of host arithmetic unconditionally
* may well be cheaper than conditionals to restrict the operation
* to the relevant portion of a uint16_t[16].
*/
void aarch64_sve_narrow_vq(CPUARMState *env, unsigned vq)
{
int i, j;
uint64_t pmask;
assert(vq >= 1 && vq <= ARM_MAX_VQ);
assert(vq <= env_archcpu(env)->sve_max_vq);
/* Zap the high bits of the zregs. */
for (i = 0; i < 32; i++) {
memset(&env->vfp.zregs[i].d[2 * vq], 0, 16 * (ARM_MAX_VQ - vq));
}
/* Zap the high bits of the pregs and ffr. */
pmask = 0;
if (vq & 3) {
pmask = ~(-1ULL << (16 * (vq & 3)));
}
for (j = vq / 4; j < ARM_MAX_VQ / 4; j++) {
for (i = 0; i < 17; ++i) {
env->vfp.pregs[i].p[j] &= pmask;
}
pmask = 0;
}
}
/*
* Notice a change in SVE vector size when changing EL.
*/
void aarch64_sve_change_el(CPUARMState *env, int old_el,
int new_el, bool el0_a64)
{
ARMCPU *cpu = env_archcpu(env);
int old_len, new_len;
bool old_a64, new_a64;
/* Nothing to do if no SVE. */
if (!cpu_isar_feature(aa64_sve, cpu)) {
return;
}
/* Nothing to do if FP is disabled in either EL. */
if (fp_exception_el(env, old_el) || fp_exception_el(env, new_el)) {
return;
}
/*
* DDI0584A.d sec 3.2: "If SVE instructions are disabled or trapped
* at ELx, or not available because the EL is in AArch32 state, then
* for all purposes other than a direct read, the ZCR_ELx.LEN field
* has an effective value of 0".
*
* Consider EL2 (aa64, vq=4) -> EL0 (aa32) -> EL1 (aa64, vq=0).
* If we ignore aa32 state, we would fail to see the vq4->vq0 transition
* from EL2->EL1. Thus we go ahead and narrow when entering aa32 so that
* we already have the correct register contents when encountering the
* vq0->vq0 transition between EL0->EL1.
*/
old_a64 = old_el ? arm_el_is_aa64(env, old_el) : el0_a64;
old_len = (old_a64 && !sve_exception_el(env, old_el)
? sve_zcr_len_for_el(env, old_el) : 0);
new_a64 = new_el ? arm_el_is_aa64(env, new_el) : el0_a64;
new_len = (new_a64 && !sve_exception_el(env, new_el)
? sve_zcr_len_for_el(env, new_el) : 0);
/* When changing vector length, clear inaccessible state. */
if (new_len < old_len) {
aarch64_sve_narrow_vq(env, new_len + 1);
}
}
#endif