diff options
author | Maulik V Vaghela <maulik.v.vaghela@intel.com> | 2018-06-13 14:09:22 +0530 |
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committer | Subrata Banik <subrata.banik@intel.com> | 2018-06-30 03:39:07 +0000 |
commit | a6b3b4dd8f52cf488263253eeac040574432cee2 (patch) | |
tree | 897a2e0129e686cb3d40a5e19501446f2f3bdefb /Documentation | |
parent | d426c54c2703743b60ebd49357a21b958f33c303 (diff) |
Documentation/soc/intel: Add common code design document
Add common code design document support Intel SoCs such as Skylake,
Cannonlake and Apollolake onwards.
Documented items:
*Introduction
*Design Principle
*Common code development and status
*Common code structure
*Benifits
Change-Id: I5ade390cfb41c72f812d5cc4e00e67a5964721de
Signed-off-by: Maulik V Vaghela <maulik.v.vaghela@intel.com>
Reviewed-on: https://review.coreboot.org/27087
Tested-by: build bot (Jenkins) <no-reply@coreboot.org>
Reviewed-by: Patrick Rudolph <siro@das-labor.org>
Reviewed-by: Philipp Deppenwiese <zaolin.daisuki@gmail.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'Documentation')
-rw-r--r-- | Documentation/soc/intel/code_development_model/code_development_model.md | 101 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | Documentation/soc/intel/code_development_model/coreboot_common_code_design.png | bin | 0 -> 368214 bytes |
2 files changed, 101 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/Documentation/soc/intel/code_development_model/code_development_model.md b/Documentation/soc/intel/code_development_model/code_development_model.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..509b8ad3c8 --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/soc/intel/code_development_model/code_development_model.md @@ -0,0 +1,101 @@ +# Intel common code development strategy + +## Introduction + +This document captures the development strategy for Intel SOC code development +of coreboot. As Intel keeps advancing hardware development and as new generation +SoCs are developed, we need to add support for these SOCs into coreboot. + +We add this support inside the “soc/intel/soc_name” folder. This folder contains +all the files which are related to a particular SoC. + +While there might be still duplicated code lying across SoCs, this document +captures our efforts of putting as much code into shared directories across all +Intel SoCs and of what can't be put into common code due to the possibility of +future changes. + +## Design principal + +Any Intel coreboot project can be split into 3 parts: +1. SoC = contains all the IP/component initialization code +2. Mainboard = OEM/Reference boards, build based on underlying SoC support +3. FSP = Intel firmware support package to abstract all restricted SoC registers +from the open source code. + +Historically, we used to copy "X-1" generation SoC code into "X" new SoC while +adding support for the new SoC. This resulted in having duplicated +initialization code in both projects. This method increased redundant code +across multiple SoCs and also it increased overhead for reviewers and +maintainers. + +To solve this issue, we started following the converged IP model. The Intel +silicon team uses the same IP/controller across various Intel SoCs. For example, +the LPSS based UART controller is the same across all SoC products. Thus the +"converged IP model" was propsed as the new firmware development model to create +a common IP library across multiple SoC products and create BIOS/firmware for +future SoCs. This will make development much simpler by using those common APIs +based on the different configurations. + +## Common Code Development and Status + +Intel's proposed "converged IP model", also called as "common code phase 1.0", +has reduced the number of lines of code in a single SoC folder by over 50%. + +We continue to analyze the code to see what can still be moved to common and try +to reduce the footprint of the code in each SoC folder. With the current Intel +SoC development model,the PCH has been made into a separate component for the +big core SoCs. Intel hardware design has started following the model where the +same PCH is used across multiple SoCs, which gives us an opportunity to make +code more common across SoCs which use the same PCH. As part of this idea, +common code phase 1.1 has emerged and we will try to create PCH binding for SoCs +and thus further reduce the footprint of SoC code. + +Common code phase 1.1 will make code more modular for big core SoCs but there +is still some scope to make code flow common across small core and big core +SoCs. We will take this up as a part of common code phase 2.0 and make code flow +common across small core and big core SoCs which will again help us to reduce +the footprint of code as well as have a more unified code flow for all Intel +SoCs. + +Here's a table which summarizes common code phase and status: +```eval_rst ++----------------+---------------------------------------------+--------------+ +| Common code | summary | status | +| phase | | | ++================+=============================================+==============+ +| 1.0 |follow "converged IP model" as described |Majority of | +| |above and create common IP code which can be |the code is | +| |used across multiple socs |common now. | +| | |A few patches | +| | |are in review | ++----------------+---------------------------------------------+--------------+ +| 1.1 |Create PCH binding for big core SoCs. SoCs |In development| +| |having same PCH can use common code. |Base patch | +| | |merged | ++----------------+---------------------------------------------+--------------+ +| 2.0 |Use common stage files (bootblock, romstage) |In development| +| |across small core and big core SoCs. This | | +| |will unify flow for all Intel SoCs. | | ++----------------+---------------------------------------------+--------------+ +``` +## Common code structure + +Code design after common code in coreboot will look as follows: + +**coreboot common code structure** +![coreboot_common_code_structure][coreboot_common_code_design] + +[coreboot_common_code_design]: coreboot_common_code_design.png + +There will be still some duplicated files left in each SOC folder and we may +copy across a SOC as a base but these files are subject to change as +development continues. + +## Benefits + +1. coreboot will have less redundant code which is spread across multiple SOCs +as of now. +2. Design will be easier to understand by the community since code flow will be +the same for all the Intel SoCs. +3. Since we are aligning the software code design with the hardware philosophy, +it will be easier to map why each change was done in code/SOC. diff --git a/Documentation/soc/intel/code_development_model/coreboot_common_code_design.png b/Documentation/soc/intel/code_development_model/coreboot_common_code_design.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000000..b5370ef54b --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/soc/intel/code_development_model/coreboot_common_code_design.png |