1Context Management Library 2************************** 3 4This document provides an overview of the Context Management library implementation 5in Trusted Firmware-A (TF-A). It enumerates and describes the APIs implemented 6and their accessibility from other components at EL3. 7 8Overview 9======== 10 11Arm TrustZone architecture facilitates hardware-enforced isolation between 12software running in various security states (Secure/Non-Secure/Realm). 13The general-purpose registers, most of the system registers and vector registers 14are not banked per world. When moving between the security states it is the 15responsibility of the secure monitor software (BL31(AArch64) / BL32(Aarch32)) 16in TF-A, not the hardware, to save and restore register state. 17Refer to `Trustzone for AArch64`_ for more details. 18 19EL3 Runtime Firmware, also termed as secure monitor firmware, is integrated 20with a context management library to handle the context of the CPU, managing the 21saving and restoring of register states across the worlds. 22 23TF-A Context 24============ 25 26In TF-A, the context is represented as a data structure used by the EL3 firmware 27to preserve the state of the CPU at the next lower exception level (EL) in a given 28security state and save enough EL3 metadata to be able to return to that exception 29level and security state. The memory for the context data structures are allocated 30in BSS section of EL3 firmware. 31 32In a trusted system at any instance, a given CPU could be executing in one of the 33security states (Non-Secure, Secure, Realm). Each world must have its 34configuration of system registers independent of other security states to access 35and execute any of the architectural features. 36 37If the CPU switches across security states (for example: from Non-secure to Secure 38or vice versa), the register contents, especially the ones that are not banked 39(EL2/EL1, vector, general-purpose registers), will be overwritten, as the software 40running in either state has the privileges to access them. Additionally, some of 41the architectural features enabled in the former security state will be unconditionally 42accessible in the latter security state as well. This can be a major concern when 43dealing with security-specific bits, as they need to be explicitly enabled or 44disabled in each state to prevent data leakage across the worlds. 45 46In general, an ideal trusted system should have Secure world-specific configurations 47that are not influenced by Normal World operations. Therefore, for each CPU, we 48need to maintain world-specific context to ensure that register entries from one 49world do not leak or impact the execution of the CPU in other worlds. 50This will help ensure the integrity and security of the system, preventing any 51unauthorized access or data corruption between the different security states. 52 53Design 54====== 55 56The Context Management library in TF-A is designed to cover all the requirements 57for maintaining world-specific context essential for a trusted system. 58This includes implementing CPU context initialization and management routines, 59as well as other helper APIs that are required by dispatcher components in EL3 60firmware, which are collectively referred to as CPU Context Management. 61The APIs and their usecases are listed in detail under the :ref:`Library APIs` 62section. 63 64Originally, the Context Management library in TF-A was designed to cater for a 65two-world system, comprising of Non-Secure and Secure Worlds. In this case, the 66EL3 Firmware is assumed to be running in Secure World. 67With introduction of Realm Management Extension (RME), from Armv9.2 a system 68can have four distinct worlds (Non-Secure, Secure, Realm, Root). 69RME isolates EL3 from all other Security states and moves it into its own security 70state called root. EL3 firmware now runs at Root World and thereby is 71trusted from software in Non-secure, Secure, and Realm states. 72Refer to `Security States with RME`_ for more details. 73 74Key principles followed in designing the context management library : 75 761. **EL3 should only initialize immediate used lower EL** 77 78Context Management library running at EL3 should only initialize and monitor the 79immediate used lower EL. This implies that, when S-EL2 is present in the system, 80EL3 should initialise and monitor S-EL2 registers only. S-EL1 registers should 81not be the concern of EL3 while S-EL2 is in place. In systems where S-EL2 is 82absent, S-EL1 registers should be initialised from EL3. 83 842. **Decentralized model for context management** 85 86Each world (Non-Secure, Secure, and Realm) should have their separate component 87in EL3 responsible for their respective world context management. 88Both the Secure and Realm world have associated dispatcher components in EL3 89firmware to allow management of the respective worlds. For the Non-Secure world, 90PSCI Library (BL31)/context management library provides routines to help 91initialize the Non-Secure world context. 92 933. **Flexibility for Dispatchers to select desired feature set to save and restore** 94 95Each feature is supported with a helper function ``is_feature_supported(void)``, 96to detect its presence at runtime. This helps dispatchers to select the desired 97feature set, and thereby save and restore the configuration associated with them. 98 994. **Dynamic discovery of Feature enablement by EL3** 100 101TF-A supports four states for feature enablement at EL3, to make them available 102for lower exception levels. 103 104.. code:: c 105 106 #define FEAT_STATE_DISABLED 0 107 #define FEAT_STATE_ENABLED 1 108 #define FEAT_STATE_CHECK 2 109 #define FEAT_STATE_CHECK_ASYMMETRIC 3 110 111A pattern is established for feature enablement behavior. 112Each feature must support the 3 possible values with rigid semantics. 113 114- **FEAT_STATE_DISABLED** - all code relating to this feature is always skipped. 115 Firmware is unaware of this feature. 116 117- **FEAT_STATE_ALWAYS** - all code relating to this feature is always executed. 118 Firmware expects this feature to be present in hardware. 119 120- **FEAT_STATE_CHECK** - same as ``FEAT_STATE_ALWAYS`` except that the feature's 121 existence will be checked at runtime. Default on dynamic platforms (example: FVP). 122 123- **FEAT_STATE_CHECK_ASYMMETRIC** - same as ``FEAT_STATE_CHECK`` except that the feature's 124 existence is asymmetric across cores, which requires the feature existence is checked 125 during warmboot path also. Note that only limited number of features can be asymmetric. 126 127 .. note:: 128 Only limited number of features can be ``FEAT_STATE_CHECK_ASYMMETRIC`` this is due to 129 the fact that Operating systems are designed for SMP systems. 130 There are no clear guidelines what kind of mismatch is allowed but following pointers 131 can help making a decision 132 133 - All mandatory features must be symmetric. 134 - Any feature that impacts the generation of page tables must be symmetric. 135 - Any feature access which does not trap to EL3 should be symmetric. 136 - Features related with profiling, debug and trace could be asymmetric 137 - Migration of vCPU/tasks between CPUs should not cause an error 138 139 Whenever there is asymmetric feature support is added for a feature TF-A need to add 140 feature specific code in context management code. 141 142 .. note:: 143 ``FEAT_RAS`` is an exception here, as it impacts the execution of EL3 and 144 it is essential to know its presence at compile time. Refer to ``ENABLE_FEAT`` 145 macro under :ref:`Build Options` section for more details. 146 147Code Structure 148============== 149 150`lib/el3_runtime/(aarch32/aarch64)`_ - Context library code directory. 151 152Source Files 153~~~~~~~~~~~~ 154 155#. ``context_mgmt.c`` : consists of core functions that setup, save and restore 156 context for different security states alongside high level feature enablement 157 APIs for individual worlds. 158 159#. ``cpu_data_array.c`` : contains per_cpu_data structure instantiation. 160 161#. ``context.S`` : consists of functions that save and restore some of the context 162 structure members in assembly code. 163 164#. ``cpu_data.S`` : consists of helper functions to initialise per_cpu_data pointers. 165 166#. ``el3_common_macros.S`` : consists of macros to facilitate actions to be performed 167 during cold and warmboot and el3 registers initialisation in assembly code. 168 169Header Files 170~~~~~~~~~~~~ 171 172#. ``context_mgmt.h`` : contains the public interface to Context Management Library. 173 174#. ``context.h`` : contains the helper macros and definitions for context entries. 175 176#. ``cpu_data.h`` : contains the public interface to Per CPU data structure. 177 178#. ``context_debug.h`` : contains public interface to report context memory 179 utilisation across the security states. 180 181#. ``context_el2.h`` : internal header consisting of helper macros to access EL2 182 context entries. Used by ``context.h``. 183 184Apart from these files, we have some context related source files under ``BL1`` 185and ``BL31`` directory. ``bl1_context_mgmt.c`` ``bl31_context_mgmt.c`` 186 187Bootloader Images utilizing Context Management Library 188====================================================== 189 190+-------------------------------------------+-----------------------------+ 191| Bootloader | Context Management Library | 192+-------------------------------------------+-----------------------------+ 193| BL1 | Yes | 194+-------------------------------------------+-----------------------------+ 195| BL2 | No | 196+-------------------------------------------+-----------------------------+ 197| BL31 (Aarch64- EL3runtime firmware) | Yes | 198+-------------------------------------------+-----------------------------+ 199| BL32 (Aarch32- EL3runtime firmware) | Yes | 200+-------------------------------------------+-----------------------------+ 201 202CPU Data Structure 203================== 204For a given system, depending on the CPU count, the platform statically 205allocates memory for the CPU data structure. 206 207.. code:: c 208 209 /* The per_cpu_ptr_cache_t space allocation */ 210 cpu_data_t percpu_data[PLATFORM_CORE_COUNT]; 211 212This CPU data structure has a member element with an array of pointers to hold 213the Non-Secure, Realm and Secure security state context structures as listed below. 214 215.. code:: c 216 217 typedef struct cpu_data { 218 #ifdef __aarch64__ 219 void *cpu_context[CPU_DATA_CONTEXT_NUM]; 220 #endif 221 222 .... 223 .... 224 225 }cpu_data_t; 226 227|CPU Data Structure| 228 229At runtime, ``cpu_context[CPU_DATA_CONTEXT_NUM]`` array will be intitialised with 230the Secure, Non-Secure and Realm context structure addresses to ensure proper 231handling of the register state. 232See :ref:`Library APIs` section for more details. 233 234CPU Context and Memory allocation 235================================= 236 237CPU Context 238~~~~~~~~~~~ 239The members of the context structure used by the EL3 firmware to preserve the 240state of CPU across exception levels for a given security state are listed below. 241 242.. code:: c 243 244 typedef struct cpu_context { 245 gp_regs_t gpregs_ctx; 246 el3_state_t el3state_ctx; 247 248 cve_2018_3639_t cve_2018_3639_ctx; 249 250 #if ERRATA_SPECULATIVE_AT 251 errata_speculative_at_t errata_speculative_at_ctx; 252 #endif 253 254 #if CTX_INCLUDE_PAUTH_REGS 255 pauth_t pauth_ctx; 256 #endif 257 258 #if (CTX_INCLUDE_EL2_REGS && IMAGE_BL31) 259 el2_sysregs_t el2_sysregs_ctx; 260 #else 261 el1_sysregs_t el1_sysregs_ctx; 262 #endif 263 } cpu_context_t; 264 265Context Memory Allocation 266~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 267 268CPUs maintain their context per world. The individual context memory allocation 269for each CPU per world is allocated by the world-specific dispatcher components 270at compile time as shown below. 271 272|Context memory allocation| 273 274NS-Context Memory 275~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 276It's important to note that the Normal world doesn't possess the dispatcher 277component found in the Secure and Realm worlds. Instead, the PSCI library at EL3 278handles memory allocation for ``Non-Secure`` world context for all CPUs. 279 280.. code:: c 281 282 static cpu_context_t psci_ns_context[PLATFORM_CORE_COUNT]; 283 284Secure-Context Memory 285~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 286Secure World dispatcher (such as SPMD) at EL3 allocates the memory for ``Secure`` 287world context of all CPUs. 288 289.. code:: c 290 291 static spmd_spm_core_context_t spm_core_context[PLATFORM_CORE_COUNT]; 292 293Realm-Context Memory 294~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 295Realm World dispatcher (RMMD) at EL3 allocates the memory for ``Realm`` world 296context of all CPUs. 297 298.. code:: c 299 300 rmmd_rmm_context_t rmm_context[PLATFORM_CORE_COUNT]; 301 302To summarize, the world-specific context structures are synchronized with 303per-CPU data structures, which means that each CPU will have an array of pointers 304to individual worlds. The figure below illustrates the same. 305 306|CPU Context Memory Configuration| 307 308Context Setup/Initialization 309============================ 310 311The CPU has been assigned context structures for every security state, which include 312Non-Secure, Secure and Realm. It is crucial to initialize each of these structures 313during the bootup of every CPU before they enter any security state for the 314first time. This section explains the specifics of how the initialization of 315every CPU context takes place during both cold and warm boot paths. 316 317Context Setup during Cold boot 318~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 319The cold boot path is mainly executed by the primary CPU, other than essential 320CPU initialization executed by all CPUs. After executing BL1 and BL2, the Primary 321CPU jumps to the BL31 image for runtime services initialization. 322During this process, the per_cpu_data structure gets initialized with statically 323allocated world-specific context memory. 324 325Later in the cold boot sequence, the BL31 image at EL3 checks for the presence 326of a Secure world image at S-EL2. If detected, it invokes the secure context 327initialization sequence under SPMD. Additionally, based on RME enablement, 328the Realm context gets initialized from the RMMD at EL3. Finally, before exiting 329to the normal world, the Non-Secure context gets initialized via the context 330management library. At this stage, all Primary CPU contexts are initialized 331and the CPU exits EL3 to enter the Normal world. 332 333|Context Init ColdBoot| 334 335.. note:: 336 The figure above illustrates a scenario on FVP for one of the build 337 configurations with TFTF component at NS-EL2. 338 339Context Setup during Warmboot 340~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 341 342During a warm boot sequence, the primary CPU is responsible for powering on the 343secondary CPUs. Refer to :ref:`CPU Reset` and :ref:`Firmware Design` sections for 344more details on the warm boot. 345 346|Context Init WarmBoot| 347 348The primary CPU initializes the Non-Secure context for the secondary CPU while 349restoring re-entry information for the Non-Secure world. 350It initialises via ``cm_init_context_by_index(target_idx, ep )``. 351 352``psci_warmboot_entrypoint()`` is the warm boot entrypoint procedure. 353During the warm bootup process, secondary CPUs have their secure context 354initialized through SPMD at EL3. Upon successful SP initialization, the SPD 355power management operations become shared with the PSCI library. During this 356process, the SPMD duly registers its handlers with the PSCI library. 357 358.. code:: c 359 360 file: psci_common.c 361 const spd_pm_ops_t *psci_spd_pm; 362 363 file: spmd_pm.c 364 const spd_pm_ops_t spmd_pm = { 365 .svc_on_finish = spmd_cpu_on_finish_handler, 366 .svc_off = spmd_cpu_off_handler 367 } 368 369Secondary CPUs during their bootup in the ``psci_cpu_on_finish()`` routine get 370their secure context initialised via the registered SPMD handler 371``spmd_cpu_on_finish_handler()`` at EL3. 372The figure above illustrates the same with reference of Primary CPU running at 373NS-EL2. 374 375.. _Library APIs: 376 377Library APIs 378============ 379 380The public APIs and types can be found in ``include/lib/el3_runtime/context_management.h`` 381and this section is intended to provide additional details and clarifications. 382 383Context Initialization for Individual Worlds 384~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 385The library implements high level APIs for the CPUs in setting up their individual 386context for each world (Non-Secure, Secure and Realm). 387 388.. c:function:: static void setup_context_common(cpu_context_t *ctx, const entry_point_info_t *ep); 389 390This function is responsible for the general context initialization that applies 391to all worlds. It will be invoked first, before calling the individual 392world-specific context setup APIs. 393 394.. c:function:: static void setup_ns_context(cpu_context_t *ctx, const struct entry_point_info *ep); 395.. c:function:: static void setup_realm_context(cpu_context_t *ctx, const struct entry_point_info *ep); 396.. c:function:: static void setup_secure_context(cpu_context_t *ctx, const struct entry_point_info *ep); 397 398Depending on the security state that the CPU needs to enter, the respective 399world-specific context setup handlers listed above will be invoked once per-CPU 400to set up the context for their execution. 401 402.. c:function:: void cm_manage_extensions_el3(void) 403 404This function initializes all EL3 registers whose values do not change during the 405lifetime of EL3 runtime firmware. It is invoked from each CPU via the cold boot 406path ``bl31_main()`` and in the WarmBoot entry path ``void psci_warmboot_entrypoint()``. 407 408Runtime Save and Restore of Registers 409~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 410 411EL1 Registers 412------------- 413 414.. c:function:: void cm_el1_sysregs_context_save(uint32_t security_state); 415.. c:function:: void cm_el1_sysregs_context_restore(uint32_t security_state); 416 417These functions are utilized by the world-specific dispatcher components running 418at EL3 to facilitate the saving and restoration of the EL1 system registers 419during a world switch. 420 421EL2 Registers 422------------- 423 424.. c:function:: void cm_el2_sysregs_context_save(uint32_t security_state); 425.. c:function:: void cm_el2_sysregs_context_restore(uint32_t security_state); 426 427These functions are utilized by the world-specific dispatcher components running 428at EL3 to facilitate the saving and restoration of the EL2 system registers 429during a world switch. 430 431Pauth Registers 432--------------- 433 434Pointer Authentication feature is enabled by default for Non-Secure world and 435disabled for Secure and Realm worlds. In this case, we don't need to explicitly 436save and restore the Pauth registers during world switch. 437However, ``CTX_INCLUDE_PAUTH_REGS`` flag is explicitly used to enable Pauth for 438lower exception levels of Secure and Realm worlds. In this scenario, we save the 439general purpose and Pauth registers while we enter EL3 from lower ELs via 440``prepare_el3_entry`` and restore them back while we exit EL3 to lower ELs 441via ``el3_exit``. 442 443.. code:: c 444 445 .macro save_gp_pmcr_pauth_regs 446 func restore_gp_pmcr_pauth_regs 447 448Feature Enablement for Individual Worlds 449~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 450 451.. c:function:: static void manage_extensions_nonsecure(cpu_context_t *ctx); 452.. c:function:: static void manage_extensions_secure(cpu_context_t *ctx); 453.. c:function:: static void manage_extensions_realm(cpu_context_t *ctx) 454 455Functions that allow the enabling and disabling of architectural features for 456each security state. These functions are invoked from the top-level setup APIs 457during context initialization. 458 459Further, a pattern is established for feature enablement code (AArch64). 460Each feature implements following APIs as applicable: 461Note: (``xxx`` is the name of the feature in the APIs) 462 463- ``is_feat_xxx_supported()`` and ``is_feat_xxx_present()`` - mandatory for all features. 464 465- ``xxx_enable(cpu_context * )`` and ``xxx_disable(cpu_context * )`` - optional 466 functions to enable the feature for the passed context only. To be called in 467 the respective world's setup_context to select behaviour. 468 469- ``xxx_init_el3()`` - optional function to enable the feature in-place in any EL3 470 registers that are never context switched. The values they write must never 471 change, otherwise the functions mentioned in previous point should be used. 472 Invoked from ``cm_manage_extensions_el3()``. 473 474- ``xxx_init_el2_unused()`` - optional function to enable the feature in-place 475 in any EL2 registers that are necessary for execution in EL1 with no EL2 present. 476 477The above mentioned rules, followed for ``FEAT_SME`` is shown below: 478 479.. code:: c 480 481 void sme_enable(cpu_context_t *context); 482 void sme_init_el3(void); 483 void sme_init_el2_unused(void); 484 void sme_disable(cpu_context_t *context); 485 486Per-world Context 487================= 488 489Apart from the CPU context structure, we have another structure to manage some 490of the EL3 system registers whose values are identical across all the CPUs 491referred to as ``per_world_context_t``. 492The Per-world context structure is intended for managing EL3 system registers with 493identical values across all CPUs, requiring only a singular context entry for each 494individual world. This structure operates independently of the CPU context 495structure and is intended to manage specific EL3 registers. 496 497.. code-block:: c 498 499 typedef struct per_world_context { 500 uint64_t ctx_cptr_el3; 501 uint64_t ctx_zcr_el3; 502 uint64_t ctx_mpam3_el3; 503 } per_world_context_t; 504 505These functions facilitate the activation of architectural extensions that possess 506identical values across all cores for the individual Non-secure, Secure, and 507Realm worlds. 508 509Root-Context (EL3-Execution-Context) 510==================================== 511 512EL3/Root Context is the execution environment while the CPU is running at EL3. 513 514Previously, while the CPU is in execution at EL3, the system registers persist 515with the values of the incoming world. This implies that if the CPU is entering 516EL3 from NS world, the EL1 and EL2 system registers which might be modified in 517lower exception levels NS(EL2/EL1) will carry forward those values to EL3. 518Further the EL3 registers also hold on to the values configured for Non-secure 519world, written during the previous ERET from EL3 to NS(EL2/EL1). 520Same policy is followed with respect to other worlds (Secure/Realm) depending on 521the system configuration. 522 523The firmware at EL3 has traditionally operated within the context of the incoming 524world (Secure/Non-Secure/Realm). This becomes problematic in scenarios where the 525EL3/Root world must explicitly use architectural features that depend on system 526registers configured for lower exception levels. 527A good example of this is the PAuth regs. The Root world would need to program 528its own PAuth Keys while executing in EL3 and this needs to be restored in entry 529to EL3 from any world. 530Therefore, Root world should maintain its own distinct settings to access 531features for its own execution at EL3. 532 533Register values which are currently known to be of importance during EL3 execution, 534is referred to as the EL3/Root context. 535This includes ( MDCR_EL3.SDD, SCR_EL3.{EA, SIF}, PMCR_EL0.DP, PSTATE.DIT) 536EL3 Context ensures, CPU executes under fixed EL3 system register settings 537which is not affected by settings of other worlds. 538 539Root Context needs to be setup as early as possible before we try and access/modify 540architectural features at EL3. Its a simple restore operation ``setup_el3_execution_context`` 541that overwrites the selected bits listed above. EL3 never changes its mind about 542what those values should be, sets it as required for EL3. Henceforth, a Root 543context save operation is not required. 544 545The figure below illustrates the same with NS-world as a reference while entering 546EL3. 547 548|Root Context Sequence| 549 550.. code:: c 551 552 # EL3/Root_Context routine 553 .macro setup_el3_execution_context 554 555EL3 execution context needs to setup at both boot time (cold and warm boot) 556entrypaths and at all the possible exception handlers routing to EL3 at runtime. 557 558*Copyright (c) 2024, Arm Limited and Contributors. All rights reserved.* 559 560.. |Context Memory Allocation| image:: ../resources/diagrams/context_memory_allocation.png 561.. |CPU Context Memory Configuration| image:: ../resources/diagrams/cpu_data_config_context_memory.png 562.. |CPU Data Structure| image:: ../resources/diagrams/percpu-data-struct.png 563.. |Context Init ColdBoot| image:: ../resources/diagrams/context_init_coldboot.png 564.. |Context Init WarmBoot| image:: ../resources/diagrams/context_init_warmboot.png 565.. |Root Context Sequence| image:: ../resources/diagrams/root_context_sequence.png 566.. _Trustzone for AArch64: https://developer.arm.com/documentation/102418/0101/TrustZone-in-the-processor/Switching-between-Security-states 567.. _Security States with RME: https://developer.arm.com/documentation/den0126/0100/Security-states 568.. _lib/el3_runtime/(aarch32/aarch64): https://git.trustedfirmware.org/TF-A/trusted-firmware-a.git/tree/lib/el3_runtime 569