Skip to content

Commit e79be4b

Browse files
Alexandre GhitiJonathan Corbet
authored andcommitted
Documentation: riscv: Add early boot document
This document describes the constraints and requirements of the early boot process in a RISC-V kernel. Signed-off-by: Alexandre Ghiti <alexghiti@rivosinc.com> Reviewed-by: Björn Töpel <bjorn@rivosinc.com> Reviewed-by: Conor Dooley <conor.dooley@microchip.com> Reviewed-by: Sunil V L <sunilvl@ventanamicro.com> Reviewed-by: Andrew Jones <ajones@ventanamicro.com> Reviewed-by: Palmer Dabbelt <palmer@rivosinc.com> Reviewed-by: Atish Patra <atishp@rivosinc.com> Reviewed-by: Song Shuai <songshuaishuai@tinylab.org> Reviewed-by: Randy Dunlap <rdunlap@infradead.org> Acked-by: Palmer Dabbelt <palmer@rivosinc.com> Signed-off-by: Jonathan Corbet <corbet@lwn.net> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20230817130734.10387-2-alexghiti@rivosinc.com
1 parent b4ba5e5 commit e79be4b

File tree

3 files changed

+170
-3
lines changed

3 files changed

+170
-3
lines changed

Documentation/riscv/boot-image-header.rst

Lines changed: 0 additions & 3 deletions
Original file line numberDiff line numberDiff line change
@@ -7,9 +7,6 @@ Boot image header in RISC-V Linux
77

88
This document only describes the boot image header details for RISC-V Linux.
99

10-
TODO:
11-
Write a complete booting guide.
12-
1310
The following 64-byte header is present in decompressed Linux kernel image::
1411

1512
u32 code0; /* Executable code */

Documentation/riscv/boot.rst

Lines changed: 169 additions & 0 deletions
Original file line numberDiff line numberDiff line change
@@ -0,0 +1,169 @@
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.

Documentation/riscv/index.rst

Lines changed: 1 addition & 0 deletions
Original file line numberDiff line numberDiff line change
@@ -6,6 +6,7 @@ RISC-V architecture
66
:maxdepth: 1
77

88
acpi
9+
boot
910
boot-image-header
1011
vm-layout
1112
hwprobe

0 commit comments

Comments
 (0)