/* * ARM TrustZone peripheral protection controller emulation * * Copyright (c) 2018 Linaro Limited * Written by Peter Maydell * * This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify * it under the terms of the GNU General Public License version 2 or * (at your option) any later version. */ /* This is a model of the TrustZone peripheral protection controller (PPC). * It is documented in the ARM CoreLink SIE-200 System IP for Embedded TRM * (DDI 0571G): * https://developer.arm.com/products/architecture/m-profile/docs/ddi0571/g * * The PPC sits in front of peripherals and allows secure software to * configure it to either pass through or reject transactions. * Rejected transactions may be configured to either be aborted, or to * behave as RAZ/WI. An interrupt can be signalled for a rejected transaction. * * The PPC has no register interface -- it is configured purely by a * collection of input signals from other hardware in the system. Typically * they are either hardwired or exposed in an ad-hoc register interface by * the SoC that uses the PPC. * * This QEMU model can be used to model either the AHB5 or APB4 TZ PPC, * since the only difference between them is that the AHB version has a * "default" port which has no security checks applied. In QEMU the default * port can be emulated simply by wiring its downstream devices directly * into the parent address space, since the PPC does not need to intercept * transactions there. * * In the hardware, selection of which downstream port to use is done by * the user's decode logic asserting one of the hsel[] signals. In QEMU, * we provide 16 MMIO regions, one per port, and the user maps these into * the desired addresses to implement the address decode. * * QEMU interface: * + sysbus MMIO regions 0..15: MemoryRegions defining the upstream end * of each of the 16 ports of the PPC. When a port is unused (i.e. no * downstream MemoryRegion is connected to it) at the end of the 0..15 * range then no sysbus MMIO region is created for its upstream. When an * unused port lies in the middle of the range with other used ports at * higher port numbers, a dummy MMIO region is created to ensure that * port N's upstream is always sysbus MMIO region N. Dummy regions should * not be mapped, and will assert if any access is made to them. * + Property "port[0..15]": MemoryRegion defining the downstream device(s) * for each of the 16 ports of the PPC * + Named GPIO inputs "cfg_nonsec[0..15]": set to 1 if the port should be * accessible to NonSecure transactions * + Named GPIO inputs "cfg_ap[0..15]": set to 1 if the port should be * accessible to non-privileged transactions * + Named GPIO input "cfg_sec_resp": set to 1 if a rejected transaction should * result in a transaction error, or 0 for the transaction to RAZ/WI * + Named GPIO input "irq_enable": set to 1 to enable interrupts * + Named GPIO input "irq_clear": set to 1 to clear a pending interrupt * + Named GPIO output "irq": set for a transaction-failed interrupt * + Property "NONSEC_MASK": if a bit is set in this mask then accesses to * the associated port do not have the TZ security check performed. (This * corresponds to the hardware allowing this to be set as a Verilog * parameter.) */ #ifndef TZ_PPC_H #define TZ_PPC_H #include "hw/sysbus.h" #include "qom/object.h" #define TYPE_TZ_PPC "tz-ppc" OBJECT_DECLARE_SIMPLE_TYPE(TZPPC, TZ_PPC) #define TZ_NUM_PORTS 16 typedef struct TZPPCPort { TZPPC *ppc; MemoryRegion upstream; AddressSpace downstream_as; MemoryRegion *downstream; } TZPPCPort; struct TZPPC { /*< private >*/ SysBusDevice parent_obj; /*< public >*/ /* State: these just track the values of our input signals */ bool cfg_nonsec[TZ_NUM_PORTS]; bool cfg_ap[TZ_NUM_PORTS]; bool cfg_sec_resp; bool irq_enable; bool irq_clear; /* State: are we asserting irq ? */ bool irq_status; qemu_irq irq; /* Properties */ uint32_t nonsec_mask; TZPPCPort port[TZ_NUM_PORTS]; }; #endif