/* * This file is part of the coreboot project. * * Copyright 2013 Google Inc. * * This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify * it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by * the Free Software Foundation; version 2 of the License. * * This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, * but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of * MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the * GNU General Public License for more details. * * You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License * along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software * Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin St, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA */ #include #include /* This driver serves as a CBFS media source. */ #include #include #include #include #include #include #include /* This allows USB A-A firmware upload from a compatible host in four parts: * The first two are the bare BL1 and the Coreboot boot block, which are just * written to their respective loading addresses. These transfers are initiated * by the IROM / BL1, so this code has nothing to do with them. * * The third transfer is a valid CBFS image that contains only the romstage, * and must be small enough to fit into the PRE_RAM CBFS cache in * IRAM. It is loaded when this function gets called in the boot block, and * the normal CBFS code extracts the romstage from it. * * The fourth transfer is also a CBFS image, but can be of arbitrary size and * should contain all available stages/payloads/etc. It is loaded when this * function is called a second time at the end of the romstage, and copied to * the romstage/ramstage CBFS cache in DRAM. It will reside there for the * rest of the firmware's lifetime and all subsequent stages (which will not * have __PRE_RAM__ defined) can just directly reference it there. */ static int usb_cbfs_open(struct cbfs_media *media) { #ifdef __PRE_RAM__ static int first_run = 1; int (*irom_load_usb)(void) = *irom_load_image_from_usb_ptr; if (!first_run) return 0; if (!irom_load_usb()) { printk(BIOS_EMERG, "Unable to load CBFS image via USB!\n"); return -1; } /* * We need to trust the host/irom to copy the image to our * _cbfs_cache address... there is no way to control or even * check the transfer size or target address from our side. */ printk(BIOS_DEBUG, "USB A-A transfer successful, CBFS image should now" " be at %p\n", _cbfs_cache); first_run = 0; #endif return 0; } /* * SDMMC works very similar to USB A-A: we copy the CBFS image into memory * and read it from there. While SDMMC would also allow direct block by block * on-demand reading, we might run into problems if we call back into the IROM * in very late boot stages (e.g. after initializing/changing MMC clocks)... so * this seems like a safer approach. It also makes it easy to pass our image * down to payloads. */ static int sdmmc_cbfs_open(struct cbfs_media *media) { #ifdef __PRE_RAM__ /* * In the bootblock, we just copy the small part that fits in the buffer * and hope that it's enough (since the romstage is currently always the * first component in the image, this should work out). In the romstage, * we copy until our cache is full (currently 12M) to avoid the pain of * figuring out the true image size from in here. Since this is mainly a * developer/debug boot mode, those shortcomings should be bearable. */ const u32 count = _cbfs_cache_size / 512; static int first_run = 1; int (*irom_load_sdmmc)(u32 start, u32 count, void *dst) = *irom_sdmmc_read_blocks_ptr; if (!first_run) return 0; if (!irom_load_sdmmc(1, count, _cbfs_cache)) { printk(BIOS_EMERG, "Unable to load CBFS image from SDMMC!\n"); return -1; } printk(BIOS_DEBUG, "SDMMC read successful, CBFS image should now be" " at %p\n", _cbfs_cache); first_run = 0; #endif return 0; } static int alternate_cbfs_close(struct cbfs_media *media) { return 0; } static size_t alternate_cbfs_read(struct cbfs_media *media, void *dest, size_t offset, size_t count) { ASSERT(offset + count < _cbfs_cache_size); memcpy(dest, _cbfs_cache + offset, count); return count; } static void *alternate_cbfs_map(struct cbfs_media *media, size_t offset, size_t count) { ASSERT(offset + count < _cbfs_cache_size); return _cbfs_cache + offset; } static void *alternate_cbfs_unmap(struct cbfs_media *media, const void *buffer) { return 0; } static int initialize_exynos_sdmmc_cbfs_media(struct cbfs_media *media) { printk(BIOS_DEBUG, "Using Exynos alternate boot mode SDMMC\n"); media->open = sdmmc_cbfs_open; media->close = alternate_cbfs_close; media->read = alternate_cbfs_read; media->map = alternate_cbfs_map; media->unmap = alternate_cbfs_unmap; return 0; } static int initialize_exynos_usb_cbfs_media(struct cbfs_media *media) { printk(BIOS_DEBUG, "Using Exynos alternate boot mode USB A-A\n"); media->open = usb_cbfs_open; media->close = alternate_cbfs_close; media->read = alternate_cbfs_read; media->map = alternate_cbfs_map; media->unmap = alternate_cbfs_unmap; return 0; } int init_default_cbfs_media(struct cbfs_media *media) { if (*iram_secondary_base == SECONDARY_BASE_BOOT_USB) return initialize_exynos_usb_cbfs_media(media); switch (exynos_power->om_stat & OM_STAT_MASK) { case OM_STAT_SDMMC: return initialize_exynos_sdmmc_cbfs_media(media); case OM_STAT_SPI: return initialize_exynos_spi_cbfs_media(media, _cbfs_cache, _cbfs_cache_size); default: printk(BIOS_EMERG, "Exynos OM_STAT value 0x%x not supported!\n", exynos_power->om_stat); return 1; } }