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| 1 | +.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 |
| 2 | +
|
| 3 | +=============================================== |
| 4 | +RISC-V Kernel Boot Requirements and Constraints |
| 5 | +=============================================== |
| 6 | + |
| 7 | +:Author: Alexandre Ghiti <alexghiti@rivosinc.com> |
| 8 | +:Date: 23 May 2023 |
| 9 | + |
| 10 | +This document describes what the RISC-V kernel expects from bootloaders and |
| 11 | +firmware, and also the constraints that any developer must have in mind when |
| 12 | +touching the early boot process. For the purposes of this document, the |
| 13 | +``early boot process`` refers to any code that runs before the final virtual |
| 14 | +mapping is set up. |
| 15 | + |
| 16 | +Pre-kernel Requirements and Constraints |
| 17 | +======================================= |
| 18 | + |
| 19 | +The RISC-V kernel expects the following of bootloaders and platform firmware: |
| 20 | + |
| 21 | +Register state |
| 22 | +-------------- |
| 23 | + |
| 24 | +The RISC-V kernel expects: |
| 25 | + |
| 26 | + * ``$a0`` to contain the hartid of the current core. |
| 27 | + * ``$a1`` to contain the address of the devicetree in memory. |
| 28 | + |
| 29 | +CSR state |
| 30 | +--------- |
| 31 | + |
| 32 | +The RISC-V kernel expects: |
| 33 | + |
| 34 | + * ``$satp = 0``: the MMU, if present, must be disabled. |
| 35 | + |
| 36 | +Reserved memory for resident firmware |
| 37 | +------------------------------------- |
| 38 | + |
| 39 | +The RISC-V kernel must not map any resident memory, or memory protected with |
| 40 | +PMPs, in the direct mapping, so the firmware must correctly mark those regions |
| 41 | +as per the devicetree specification and/or the UEFI specification. |
| 42 | + |
| 43 | +Kernel location |
| 44 | +--------------- |
| 45 | + |
| 46 | +The RISC-V kernel expects to be placed at a PMD boundary (2MB aligned for rv64 |
| 47 | +and 4MB aligned for rv32). Note that the EFI stub will physically relocate the |
| 48 | +kernel if that's not the case. |
| 49 | + |
| 50 | +Hardware description |
| 51 | +-------------------- |
| 52 | + |
| 53 | +The firmware can pass either a devicetree or ACPI tables to the RISC-V kernel. |
| 54 | + |
| 55 | +The devicetree is either passed directly to the kernel from the previous stage |
| 56 | +using the ``$a1`` register, or when booting with UEFI, it can be passed using the |
| 57 | +EFI configuration table. |
| 58 | + |
| 59 | +The ACPI tables are passed to the kernel using the EFI configuration table. In |
| 60 | +this case, a tiny devicetree is still created by the EFI stub. Please refer to |
| 61 | +"EFI stub and devicetree" section below for details about this devicetree. |
| 62 | + |
| 63 | +Kernel entry |
| 64 | +------------ |
| 65 | + |
| 66 | +On SMP systems, there are 2 methods to enter the kernel: |
| 67 | + |
| 68 | +- ``RISCV_BOOT_SPINWAIT``: the firmware releases all harts in the kernel, one hart |
| 69 | + wins a lottery and executes the early boot code while the other harts are |
| 70 | + parked waiting for the initialization to finish. This method is mostly used to |
| 71 | + support older firmwares without SBI HSM extension and M-mode RISC-V kernel. |
| 72 | +- ``Ordered booting``: the firmware releases only one hart that will execute the |
| 73 | + initialization phase and then will start all other harts using the SBI HSM |
| 74 | + extension. The ordered booting method is the preferred booting method for |
| 75 | + booting the RISC-V kernel because it can support CPU hotplug and kexec. |
| 76 | + |
| 77 | +UEFI |
| 78 | +---- |
| 79 | + |
| 80 | +UEFI memory map |
| 81 | +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| 82 | + |
| 83 | +When booting with UEFI, the RISC-V kernel will use only the EFI memory map to |
| 84 | +populate the system memory. |
| 85 | + |
| 86 | +The UEFI firmware must parse the subnodes of the ``/reserved-memory`` devicetree |
| 87 | +node and abide by the devicetree specification to convert the attributes of |
| 88 | +those subnodes (``no-map`` and ``reusable``) into their correct EFI equivalent |
| 89 | +(refer to section "3.5.4 /reserved-memory and UEFI" of the devicetree |
| 90 | +specification v0.4-rc1). |
| 91 | + |
| 92 | +RISCV_EFI_BOOT_PROTOCOL |
| 93 | +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| 94 | + |
| 95 | +When booting with UEFI, the EFI stub requires the boot hartid in order to pass |
| 96 | +it to the RISC-V kernel in ``$a1``. The EFI stub retrieves the boot hartid using |
| 97 | +one of the following methods: |
| 98 | + |
| 99 | +- ``RISCV_EFI_BOOT_PROTOCOL`` (**preferred**). |
| 100 | +- ``boot-hartid`` devicetree subnode (**deprecated**). |
| 101 | + |
| 102 | +Any new firmware must implement ``RISCV_EFI_BOOT_PROTOCOL`` as the devicetree |
| 103 | +based approach is deprecated now. |
| 104 | + |
| 105 | +Early Boot Requirements and Constraints |
| 106 | +======================================= |
| 107 | + |
| 108 | +The RISC-V kernel's early boot process operates under the following constraints: |
| 109 | + |
| 110 | +EFI stub and devicetree |
| 111 | +----------------------- |
| 112 | + |
| 113 | +When booting with UEFI, the devicetree is supplemented (or created) by the EFI |
| 114 | +stub with the same parameters as arm64 which are described at the paragraph |
| 115 | +"UEFI kernel support on ARM" in Documentation/arch/arm/uefi.rst. |
| 116 | + |
| 117 | +Virtual mapping installation |
| 118 | +---------------------------- |
| 119 | + |
| 120 | +The installation of the virtual mapping is done in 2 steps in the RISC-V kernel: |
| 121 | + |
| 122 | +1. ``setup_vm()`` installs a temporary kernel mapping in ``early_pg_dir`` which |
| 123 | + allows discovery of the system memory. Only the kernel text/data are mapped |
| 124 | + at this point. When establishing this mapping, no allocation can be done |
| 125 | + (since the system memory is not known yet), so ``early_pg_dir`` page table is |
| 126 | + statically allocated (using only one table for each level). |
| 127 | + |
| 128 | +2. ``setup_vm_final()`` creates the final kernel mapping in ``swapper_pg_dir`` |
| 129 | + and takes advantage of the discovered system memory to create the linear |
| 130 | + mapping. When establishing this mapping, the kernel can allocate memory but |
| 131 | + cannot access it directly (since the direct mapping is not present yet), so |
| 132 | + it uses temporary mappings in the fixmap region to be able to access the |
| 133 | + newly allocated page table levels. |
| 134 | + |
| 135 | +For ``virt_to_phys()`` and ``phys_to_virt()`` to be able to correctly convert |
| 136 | +direct mapping addresses to physical addresses, they need to know the start of |
| 137 | +the DRAM. This happens after step 1, right before step 2 installs the direct |
| 138 | +mapping (see ``setup_bootmem()`` function in arch/riscv/mm/init.c). Any usage of |
| 139 | +those macros before the final virtual mapping is installed must be carefully |
| 140 | +examined. |
| 141 | + |
| 142 | +Devicetree mapping via fixmap |
| 143 | +----------------------------- |
| 144 | + |
| 145 | +As the ``reserved_mem`` array is initialized with virtual addresses established |
| 146 | +by ``setup_vm()``, and used with the mapping established by |
| 147 | +``setup_vm_final()``, the RISC-V kernel uses the fixmap region to map the |
| 148 | +devicetree. This ensures that the devicetree remains accessible by both virtual |
| 149 | +mappings. |
| 150 | + |
| 151 | +Pre-MMU execution |
| 152 | +----------------- |
| 153 | + |
| 154 | +A few pieces of code need to run before even the first virtual mapping is |
| 155 | +established. These are the installation of the first virtual mapping itself, |
| 156 | +patching of early alternatives and the early parsing of the kernel command line. |
| 157 | +That code must be very carefully compiled as: |
| 158 | + |
| 159 | +- ``-fno-pie``: This is needed for relocatable kernels which use ``-fPIE``, |
| 160 | + since otherwise, any access to a global symbol would go through the GOT which |
| 161 | + is only relocated virtually. |
| 162 | +- ``-mcmodel=medany``: Any access to a global symbol must be PC-relative to |
| 163 | + avoid any relocations to happen before the MMU is setup. |
| 164 | +- *all* instrumentation must also be disabled (that includes KASAN, ftrace and |
| 165 | + others). |
| 166 | + |
| 167 | +As using a symbol from a different compilation unit requires this unit to be |
| 168 | +compiled with those flags, we advise, as much as possible, not to use external |
| 169 | +symbols. |
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