Re: [PATCH 00/31] passage: Define a standard for firmware data flow
Hi François, On Mon, 8 Nov 2021 at 09:20, François Ozog wrote: > > > > On Fri, 5 Nov 2021 at 18:17, Simon Glass wrote: >> >> ) to signal Hi François, >> >> On Fri, 5 Nov 2021 at 10:31, François Ozog wrote: >> > >> > Hi Simon, >> > >> > Le ven. 5 nov. 2021 à 17:12, Simon Glass a écrit : >> >> >> >> Hi François, >> >> >> >> On Fri, 5 Nov 2021 at 02:27, François Ozog >> >> wrote: >> >> > >> >> > >> >> > >> >> > On Fri, 5 Nov 2021 at 03:02, Simon Glass wrote: >> >> >> >> >> >> Hi François, >> >> >> >> >> >> On Tue, 2 Nov 2021 at 10:03, François Ozog >> >> >> wrote: >> >> >> > >> >> >> > Hi Simon, >> >> >> > >> >> >> > On Tue, 2 Nov 2021 at 15:59, Simon Glass wrote: >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> Hi François, >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> On Mon, 1 Nov 2021 at 02:53, François Ozog >> >> >> >> wrote: >> >> >> >> > >> >> >> >> > Hi Simon, >> >> >> >> > >> >> >> >> > this seems a great endeavor. I'd like to better understand the >> >> >> >> > scope of it. >> >> >> >> > >> >> >> >> > Is it to be used as part of what could become a U-Boot entry ABI >> >> >> >> > scheme? By that I mean giving some fixed aspects >> >> >> >> > to U-Boot entry while letting boards to have flexibility (say for >> >> >> >> > instance that the first 5 architecture ABI >> >> >> >> > parameter registers are reserved for U-Boot), and the Passage is >> >> >> >> > about specifying either those reserved registers >> >> >> >> > or one of them? >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> The goal is to provide a standard entry scheme for all firmware >> >> >> >> binaries. Whether it achieves that (or can with some mods) is up for >> >> >> >> discussion. >> >> >> >> >> >> >> > If you say >> >> >> > a) define a U-Boot entry ABI and providing a firmware-to-firmware >> >> >> > information passing facility which would be part of all firmware >> >> >> > ABIs (as the projects decide to define their own ABI) it looks good. >> >> >> > but If you say >> >> >> >> >> >> It is an ABI to be adopted by U-Boot but also other firmware. For >> >> >> example, if TF-A calls U-Boot it should use standard passage. If >> >> >> U-Boot calls TF-A or Optee it should use standard passage. >> >> >> >> >> >> > b) define a standard entry scheme (register map, processor state, >> >> >> > MMU state, SMMU state, GIC state...) that does not look realistic. >> >> >> >> >> >> No I don't mean that. This data structure could be used in any state, >> >> >> so long as the two registers are set correctly. >> >> >> >> >> >> > I think you mean a) but just want to be sure. >> >> >> >> >> >> Yes I think so. >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> Re the registers, do you think we need 5? >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> I don't :-) >> >> >> >> >> >> >> > >> >> >> >> > Thinking entry ABI, here is what I observed on Arm: >> >> >> >> > >> >> >> >> > Linux has two entry ABIs: >> >> >> >> > - plain: x0 = dtb; >> >> >> >> > command line = dtb:/chosen/bootargs; initrd = >> >> >> >> > dtb:/chosen/linux,initrd-* >> >> >> >> > - EFI: x0=handle, x1=systemtable, x30=return address; >> >> >> >> >dtb = EFI_UUID config table; initrd = >> >> >> >> > efi:> >> >> >> > image_protocol::load_options >> >> >> >> > >> >> >> >> > U-Boot (proper) has plenty of schemes: >> >> >> >> > - dtb is passed as either x0, x1, fixed memory area (Qemu which >> >> >> >> > is bad in itself), or other registers >> >> >> >> > - additional information passing: board specific register scheme, >> >> >> >> > SMC calls >> >> >> >> > - U-Boot for RPI boards implement a Linux shaped entry ABI to be >> >> >> >> > launched by Videocore firmware >> >> >> >> > >> >> >> >> > Based on all the above, I would tend to think that RPI scheme is >> >> >> >> > a good idea but also >> >> >> >> > shall not prevent additional schemes for the boards. >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> I was not actually considering Linux since I believe/assume its >> >> >> >> entry >> >> >> >> scheme is fixed and not up for discussion. >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> I also did not think about the EFI case. As I understand it we >> >> >> >> cannot >> >> >> >> touch it as it is used by UEFI today. Maybe it is even in the >> >> >> >> standard? >> >> >> > >> >> >> > It is in the spec and we are making it evolve, or its understanding >> >> >> > evolve (jurisprudence) for instance on initrd standard handling. >> >> >> >> >> >> Well perhaps we could merge it with standard passage. But EFI is not >> >> >> going to want to use a bloblist, it will want to use a HOB. >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> Really I am hoping we can start afresh...? >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> > >> >> >> >> > What about a U-Boot Arm entry ABI like: >> >> >> >> > - plain: x0=dtb, x1=, x2-x5 = , other >> >> >> >> > registers are per platform, SMC calls allowed too >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> Hmm we don't actually need the dtb as it is available in the >> >> >> >> bloblist. >> >> >> > >> >> >> > If you don't have x0=dtb, then you will not be able to use U-Boot on >> >> >> > RPI4. >> >> >> > Unless you want to red
Re: [PATCH 00/31] passage: Define a standard for firmware data flow
On Fri, 5 Nov 2021 at 18:17, Simon Glass wrote: > ) to signal Hi François, > > On Fri, 5 Nov 2021 at 10:31, François Ozog > wrote: > > > > Hi Simon, > > > > Le ven. 5 nov. 2021 à 17:12, Simon Glass a écrit : > >> > >> Hi François, > >> > >> On Fri, 5 Nov 2021 at 02:27, François Ozog > wrote: > >> > > >> > > >> > > >> > On Fri, 5 Nov 2021 at 03:02, Simon Glass wrote: > >> >> > >> >> Hi François, > >> >> > >> >> On Tue, 2 Nov 2021 at 10:03, François Ozog > wrote: > >> >> > > >> >> > Hi Simon, > >> >> > > >> >> > On Tue, 2 Nov 2021 at 15:59, Simon Glass wrote: > >> >> >> > >> >> >> Hi François, > >> >> >> > >> >> >> On Mon, 1 Nov 2021 at 02:53, François Ozog < > francois.o...@linaro.org> wrote: > >> >> >> > > >> >> >> > Hi Simon, > >> >> >> > > >> >> >> > this seems a great endeavor. I'd like to better understand the > scope of it. > >> >> >> > > >> >> >> > Is it to be used as part of what could become a U-Boot entry > ABI scheme? By that I mean giving some fixed aspects > >> >> >> > to U-Boot entry while letting boards to have flexibility (say > for instance that the first 5 architecture ABI > >> >> >> > parameter registers are reserved for U-Boot), and the Passage > is about specifying either those reserved registers > >> >> >> > or one of them? > >> >> >> > >> >> >> The goal is to provide a standard entry scheme for all firmware > >> >> >> binaries. Whether it achieves that (or can with some mods) is up > for > >> >> >> discussion. > >> >> >> > >> >> > If you say > >> >> > a) define a U-Boot entry ABI and providing a firmware-to-firmware > information passing facility which would be part of all firmware ABIs (as > the projects decide to define their own ABI) it looks good. > >> >> > but If you say > >> >> > >> >> It is an ABI to be adopted by U-Boot but also other firmware. For > >> >> example, if TF-A calls U-Boot it should use standard passage. If > >> >> U-Boot calls TF-A or Optee it should use standard passage. > >> >> > >> >> > b) define a standard entry scheme (register map, processor state, > MMU state, SMMU state, GIC state...) that does not look realistic. > >> >> > >> >> No I don't mean that. This data structure could be used in any state, > >> >> so long as the two registers are set correctly. > >> >> > >> >> > I think you mean a) but just want to be sure. > >> >> > >> >> Yes I think so. > >> >> > >> >> >> > >> >> >> Re the registers, do you think we need 5? > >> >> >> > >> >> > >> >> I don't :-) > >> >> > >> >> >> > > >> >> >> > Thinking entry ABI, here is what I observed on Arm: > >> >> >> > > >> >> >> > Linux has two entry ABIs: > >> >> >> > - plain: x0 = dtb; > >> >> >> > command line = dtb:/chosen/bootargs; initrd = > dtb:/chosen/linux,initrd-* > >> >> >> > - EFI: x0=handle, x1=systemtable, x30=return address; > >> >> >> >dtb = EFI_UUID config table; initrd = > efi: image_protocol::load_options > >> >> >> > > >> >> >> > U-Boot (proper) has plenty of schemes: > >> >> >> > - dtb is passed as either x0, x1, fixed memory area (Qemu which > is bad in itself), or other registers > >> >> >> > - additional information passing: board specific register > scheme, SMC calls > >> >> >> > - U-Boot for RPI boards implement a Linux shaped entry ABI to > be launched by Videocore firmware > >> >> >> > > >> >> >> > Based on all the above, I would tend to think that RPI scheme > is a good idea but also > >> >> >> > shall not prevent additional schemes for the boards. > >> >> >> > >> >> >> I was not actually considering Linux since I believe/assume its > entry > >> >> >> scheme is fixed and not up for discussion. > >> >> >> > >> >> >> I also did not think about the EFI case. As I understand it we > cannot > >> >> >> touch it as it is used by UEFI today. Maybe it is even in the > >> >> >> standard? > >> >> > > >> >> > It is in the spec and we are making it evolve, or its > understanding evolve (jurisprudence) for instance on initrd standard > handling. > >> >> > >> >> Well perhaps we could merge it with standard passage. But EFI is not > >> >> going to want to use a bloblist, it will want to use a HOB. > >> >> > >> >> >> > >> >> >> > >> >> >> Really I am hoping we can start afresh...? > >> >> >> > >> >> >> > > >> >> >> > What about a U-Boot Arm entry ABI like: > >> >> >> > - plain: x0=dtb, x1=, x2-x5 = , > other registers are per platform, SMC calls allowed too > >> >> >> > >> >> >> Hmm we don't actually need the dtb as it is available in the > bloblist. > >> >> > > >> >> > If you don't have x0=dtb, then you will not be able to use U-Boot > on RPI4. > >> >> > Unless you want to redo everything the RPI firmware is doing. > >> >> > >> >> That's right, RPI cannot support standard passage. It is not > >> >> open-source firmware so it isn't really relevant to this discussion. > >> >> It will just do what it does and have limited functionality, with > >> >> work-arounds to deal with the pain, as one might expect. > >> >> > >> > So you are seeing two "all-or-nothing" options: > >> > : U-Bo
Re: [PATCH 00/31] passage: Define a standard for firmware data flow
) to signal Hi François, On Fri, 5 Nov 2021 at 10:31, François Ozog wrote: > > Hi Simon, > > Le ven. 5 nov. 2021 à 17:12, Simon Glass a écrit : >> >> Hi François, >> >> On Fri, 5 Nov 2021 at 02:27, François Ozog wrote: >> > >> > >> > >> > On Fri, 5 Nov 2021 at 03:02, Simon Glass wrote: >> >> >> >> Hi François, >> >> >> >> On Tue, 2 Nov 2021 at 10:03, François Ozog >> >> wrote: >> >> > >> >> > Hi Simon, >> >> > >> >> > On Tue, 2 Nov 2021 at 15:59, Simon Glass wrote: >> >> >> >> >> >> Hi François, >> >> >> >> >> >> On Mon, 1 Nov 2021 at 02:53, François Ozog >> >> >> wrote: >> >> >> > >> >> >> > Hi Simon, >> >> >> > >> >> >> > this seems a great endeavor. I'd like to better understand the scope >> >> >> > of it. >> >> >> > >> >> >> > Is it to be used as part of what could become a U-Boot entry ABI >> >> >> > scheme? By that I mean giving some fixed aspects >> >> >> > to U-Boot entry while letting boards to have flexibility (say for >> >> >> > instance that the first 5 architecture ABI >> >> >> > parameter registers are reserved for U-Boot), and the Passage is >> >> >> > about specifying either those reserved registers >> >> >> > or one of them? >> >> >> >> >> >> The goal is to provide a standard entry scheme for all firmware >> >> >> binaries. Whether it achieves that (or can with some mods) is up for >> >> >> discussion. >> >> >> >> >> > If you say >> >> > a) define a U-Boot entry ABI and providing a firmware-to-firmware >> >> > information passing facility which would be part of all firmware ABIs >> >> > (as the projects decide to define their own ABI) it looks good. >> >> > but If you say >> >> >> >> It is an ABI to be adopted by U-Boot but also other firmware. For >> >> example, if TF-A calls U-Boot it should use standard passage. If >> >> U-Boot calls TF-A or Optee it should use standard passage. >> >> >> >> > b) define a standard entry scheme (register map, processor state, MMU >> >> > state, SMMU state, GIC state...) that does not look realistic. >> >> >> >> No I don't mean that. This data structure could be used in any state, >> >> so long as the two registers are set correctly. >> >> >> >> > I think you mean a) but just want to be sure. >> >> >> >> Yes I think so. >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> Re the registers, do you think we need 5? >> >> >> >> >> >> >> I don't :-) >> >> >> >> >> > >> >> >> > Thinking entry ABI, here is what I observed on Arm: >> >> >> > >> >> >> > Linux has two entry ABIs: >> >> >> > - plain: x0 = dtb; >> >> >> > command line = dtb:/chosen/bootargs; initrd = >> >> >> > dtb:/chosen/linux,initrd-* >> >> >> > - EFI: x0=handle, x1=systemtable, x30=return address; >> >> >> >dtb = EFI_UUID config table; initrd = >> >> >> > efi:> >> >> > image_protocol::load_options >> >> >> > >> >> >> > U-Boot (proper) has plenty of schemes: >> >> >> > - dtb is passed as either x0, x1, fixed memory area (Qemu which is >> >> >> > bad in itself), or other registers >> >> >> > - additional information passing: board specific register scheme, >> >> >> > SMC calls >> >> >> > - U-Boot for RPI boards implement a Linux shaped entry ABI to be >> >> >> > launched by Videocore firmware >> >> >> > >> >> >> > Based on all the above, I would tend to think that RPI scheme is a >> >> >> > good idea but also >> >> >> > shall not prevent additional schemes for the boards. >> >> >> >> >> >> I was not actually considering Linux since I believe/assume its entry >> >> >> scheme is fixed and not up for discussion. >> >> >> >> >> >> I also did not think about the EFI case. As I understand it we cannot >> >> >> touch it as it is used by UEFI today. Maybe it is even in the >> >> >> standard? >> >> > >> >> > It is in the spec and we are making it evolve, or its understanding >> >> > evolve (jurisprudence) for instance on initrd standard handling. >> >> >> >> Well perhaps we could merge it with standard passage. But EFI is not >> >> going to want to use a bloblist, it will want to use a HOB. >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> Really I am hoping we can start afresh...? >> >> >> >> >> >> > >> >> >> > What about a U-Boot Arm entry ABI like: >> >> >> > - plain: x0=dtb, x1=, x2-x5 = , other >> >> >> > registers are per platform, SMC calls allowed too >> >> >> >> >> >> Hmm we don't actually need the dtb as it is available in the bloblist. >> >> > >> >> > If you don't have x0=dtb, then you will not be able to use U-Boot on >> >> > RPI4. >> >> > Unless you want to redo everything the RPI firmware is doing. >> >> >> >> That's right, RPI cannot support standard passage. It is not >> >> open-source firmware so it isn't really relevant to this discussion. >> >> It will just do what it does and have limited functionality, with >> >> work-arounds to deal with the pain, as one might expect. >> >> >> > So you are seeing two "all-or-nothing" options: >> > : U-Boot entry is board specific as it is today >> > : A new form where the only parameter is a head of bloblist, >> > one of those blobs contain a DT >>
Re: [PATCH 00/31] passage: Define a standard for firmware data flow
Hi Simon, Le ven. 5 nov. 2021 à 17:12, Simon Glass a écrit : > Hi François, > > On Fri, 5 Nov 2021 at 02:27, François Ozog > wrote: > > > > > > > > On Fri, 5 Nov 2021 at 03:02, Simon Glass wrote: > >> > >> Hi François, > >> > >> On Tue, 2 Nov 2021 at 10:03, François Ozog > wrote: > >> > > >> > Hi Simon, > >> > > >> > On Tue, 2 Nov 2021 at 15:59, Simon Glass wrote: > >> >> > >> >> Hi François, > >> >> > >> >> On Mon, 1 Nov 2021 at 02:53, François Ozog > wrote: > >> >> > > >> >> > Hi Simon, > >> >> > > >> >> > this seems a great endeavor. I'd like to better understand the > scope of it. > >> >> > > >> >> > Is it to be used as part of what could become a U-Boot entry ABI > scheme? By that I mean giving some fixed aspects > >> >> > to U-Boot entry while letting boards to have flexibility (say for > instance that the first 5 architecture ABI > >> >> > parameter registers are reserved for U-Boot), and the Passage is > about specifying either those reserved registers > >> >> > or one of them? > >> >> > >> >> The goal is to provide a standard entry scheme for all firmware > >> >> binaries. Whether it achieves that (or can with some mods) is up for > >> >> discussion. > >> >> > >> > If you say > >> > a) define a U-Boot entry ABI and providing a firmware-to-firmware > information passing facility which would be part of all firmware ABIs (as > the projects decide to define their own ABI) it looks good. > >> > but If you say > >> > >> It is an ABI to be adopted by U-Boot but also other firmware. For > >> example, if TF-A calls U-Boot it should use standard passage. If > >> U-Boot calls TF-A or Optee it should use standard passage. > >> > >> > b) define a standard entry scheme (register map, processor state, MMU > state, SMMU state, GIC state...) that does not look realistic. > >> > >> No I don't mean that. This data structure could be used in any state, > >> so long as the two registers are set correctly. > >> > >> > I think you mean a) but just want to be sure. > >> > >> Yes I think so. > >> > >> >> > >> >> Re the registers, do you think we need 5? > >> >> > >> > >> I don't :-) > >> > >> >> > > >> >> > Thinking entry ABI, here is what I observed on Arm: > >> >> > > >> >> > Linux has two entry ABIs: > >> >> > - plain: x0 = dtb; > >> >> > command line = dtb:/chosen/bootargs; initrd = > dtb:/chosen/linux,initrd-* > >> >> > - EFI: x0=handle, x1=systemtable, x30=return address; > >> >> >dtb = EFI_UUID config table; initrd = > efi: image_protocol::load_options > >> >> > > >> >> > U-Boot (proper) has plenty of schemes: > >> >> > - dtb is passed as either x0, x1, fixed memory area (Qemu which is > bad in itself), or other registers > >> >> > - additional information passing: board specific register scheme, > SMC calls > >> >> > - U-Boot for RPI boards implement a Linux shaped entry ABI to be > launched by Videocore firmware > >> >> > > >> >> > Based on all the above, I would tend to think that RPI scheme is a > good idea but also > >> >> > shall not prevent additional schemes for the boards. > >> >> > >> >> I was not actually considering Linux since I believe/assume its entry > >> >> scheme is fixed and not up for discussion. > >> >> > >> >> I also did not think about the EFI case. As I understand it we cannot > >> >> touch it as it is used by UEFI today. Maybe it is even in the > >> >> standard? > >> > > >> > It is in the spec and we are making it evolve, or its understanding > evolve (jurisprudence) for instance on initrd standard handling. > >> > >> Well perhaps we could merge it with standard passage. But EFI is not > >> going to want to use a bloblist, it will want to use a HOB. > >> > >> >> > >> >> > >> >> Really I am hoping we can start afresh...? > >> >> > >> >> > > >> >> > What about a U-Boot Arm entry ABI like: > >> >> > - plain: x0=dtb, x1=, x2-x5 = , other > registers are per platform, SMC calls allowed too > >> >> > >> >> Hmm we don't actually need the dtb as it is available in the > bloblist. > >> > > >> > If you don't have x0=dtb, then you will not be able to use U-Boot on > RPI4. > >> > Unless you want to redo everything the RPI firmware is doing. > >> > >> That's right, RPI cannot support standard passage. It is not > >> open-source firmware so it isn't really relevant to this discussion. > >> It will just do what it does and have limited functionality, with > >> work-arounds to deal with the pain, as one might expect. > >> > > So you are seeing two "all-or-nothing" options: > > : U-Boot entry is board specific as it is today > > : A new form where the only parameter is a head of > bloblist, one of those blobs contain a DT > > You propose to mandate a DT for all boards make sense in that > environment. > > For RPI4, you just ignore everything the prior boot loader does because > it is not compliant. > > It's not that. It's just that it is closed-source, so not relevant to > the discussion here. They could open-source it and then we could > consider it, but it has been closed-s
Re: [PATCH 00/31] passage: Define a standard for firmware data flow
Hi François, On Fri, 5 Nov 2021 at 02:27, François Ozog wrote: > > > > On Fri, 5 Nov 2021 at 03:02, Simon Glass wrote: >> >> Hi François, >> >> On Tue, 2 Nov 2021 at 10:03, François Ozog wrote: >> > >> > Hi Simon, >> > >> > On Tue, 2 Nov 2021 at 15:59, Simon Glass wrote: >> >> >> >> Hi François, >> >> >> >> On Mon, 1 Nov 2021 at 02:53, François Ozog >> >> wrote: >> >> > >> >> > Hi Simon, >> >> > >> >> > this seems a great endeavor. I'd like to better understand the scope of >> >> > it. >> >> > >> >> > Is it to be used as part of what could become a U-Boot entry ABI >> >> > scheme? By that I mean giving some fixed aspects >> >> > to U-Boot entry while letting boards to have flexibility (say for >> >> > instance that the first 5 architecture ABI >> >> > parameter registers are reserved for U-Boot), and the Passage is about >> >> > specifying either those reserved registers >> >> > or one of them? >> >> >> >> The goal is to provide a standard entry scheme for all firmware >> >> binaries. Whether it achieves that (or can with some mods) is up for >> >> discussion. >> >> >> > If you say >> > a) define a U-Boot entry ABI and providing a firmware-to-firmware >> > information passing facility which would be part of all firmware ABIs (as >> > the projects decide to define their own ABI) it looks good. >> > but If you say >> >> It is an ABI to be adopted by U-Boot but also other firmware. For >> example, if TF-A calls U-Boot it should use standard passage. If >> U-Boot calls TF-A or Optee it should use standard passage. >> >> > b) define a standard entry scheme (register map, processor state, MMU >> > state, SMMU state, GIC state...) that does not look realistic. >> >> No I don't mean that. This data structure could be used in any state, >> so long as the two registers are set correctly. >> >> > I think you mean a) but just want to be sure. >> >> Yes I think so. >> >> >> >> >> Re the registers, do you think we need 5? >> >> >> >> I don't :-) >> >> >> > >> >> > Thinking entry ABI, here is what I observed on Arm: >> >> > >> >> > Linux has two entry ABIs: >> >> > - plain: x0 = dtb; >> >> > command line = dtb:/chosen/bootargs; initrd = >> >> > dtb:/chosen/linux,initrd-* >> >> > - EFI: x0=handle, x1=systemtable, x30=return address; >> >> >dtb = EFI_UUID config table; initrd = efi:> >> > vendor media UUID); command line = efi: image_protocol::load_options >> >> > >> >> > U-Boot (proper) has plenty of schemes: >> >> > - dtb is passed as either x0, x1, fixed memory area (Qemu which is bad >> >> > in itself), or other registers >> >> > - additional information passing: board specific register scheme, SMC >> >> > calls >> >> > - U-Boot for RPI boards implement a Linux shaped entry ABI to be >> >> > launched by Videocore firmware >> >> > >> >> > Based on all the above, I would tend to think that RPI scheme is a good >> >> > idea but also >> >> > shall not prevent additional schemes for the boards. >> >> >> >> I was not actually considering Linux since I believe/assume its entry >> >> scheme is fixed and not up for discussion. >> >> >> >> I also did not think about the EFI case. As I understand it we cannot >> >> touch it as it is used by UEFI today. Maybe it is even in the >> >> standard? >> > >> > It is in the spec and we are making it evolve, or its understanding evolve >> > (jurisprudence) for instance on initrd standard handling. >> >> Well perhaps we could merge it with standard passage. But EFI is not >> going to want to use a bloblist, it will want to use a HOB. >> >> >> >> >> >> >> Really I am hoping we can start afresh...? >> >> >> >> > >> >> > What about a U-Boot Arm entry ABI like: >> >> > - plain: x0=dtb, x1=, x2-x5 = , other >> >> > registers are per platform, SMC calls allowed too >> >> >> >> Hmm we don't actually need the dtb as it is available in the bloblist. >> > >> > If you don't have x0=dtb, then you will not be able to use U-Boot on RPI4. >> > Unless you want to redo everything the RPI firmware is doing. >> >> That's right, RPI cannot support standard passage. It is not >> open-source firmware so it isn't really relevant to this discussion. >> It will just do what it does and have limited functionality, with >> work-arounds to deal with the pain, as one might expect. >> > So you are seeing two "all-or-nothing" options: > : U-Boot entry is board specific as it is today > : A new form where the only parameter is a head of bloblist, one > of those blobs contain a DT > You propose to mandate a DT for all boards make sense in that environment. > For RPI4, you just ignore everything the prior boot loader does because it is > not compliant. It's not that. It's just that it is closed-source, so not relevant to the discussion here. They could open-source it and then we could consider it, but it has been closed-source for years now, so why would we think that would happen? > > This reinforces my opposition to the mandatory DT proposal. > > a third option is I think wa
Re: [PATCH 00/31] passage: Define a standard for firmware data flow
On Fri, 5 Nov 2021 at 03:02, Simon Glass wrote: > Hi François, > > On Tue, 2 Nov 2021 at 10:03, François Ozog > wrote: > > > > Hi Simon, > > > > On Tue, 2 Nov 2021 at 15:59, Simon Glass wrote: > >> > >> Hi François, > >> > >> On Mon, 1 Nov 2021 at 02:53, François Ozog > wrote: > >> > > >> > Hi Simon, > >> > > >> > this seems a great endeavor. I'd like to better understand the scope > of it. > >> > > >> > Is it to be used as part of what could become a U-Boot entry ABI > scheme? By that I mean giving some fixed aspects > >> > to U-Boot entry while letting boards to have flexibility (say for > instance that the first 5 architecture ABI > >> > parameter registers are reserved for U-Boot), and the Passage is > about specifying either those reserved registers > >> > or one of them? > >> > >> The goal is to provide a standard entry scheme for all firmware > >> binaries. Whether it achieves that (or can with some mods) is up for > >> discussion. > >> > > If you say > > a) define a U-Boot entry ABI and providing a firmware-to-firmware > information passing facility which would be part of all firmware ABIs (as > the projects decide to define their own ABI) it looks good. > > but If you say > > It is an ABI to be adopted by U-Boot but also other firmware. For > example, if TF-A calls U-Boot it should use standard passage. If > U-Boot calls TF-A or Optee it should use standard passage. > > > b) define a standard entry scheme (register map, processor state, MMU > state, SMMU state, GIC state...) that does not look realistic. > > No I don't mean that. This data structure could be used in any state, > so long as the two registers are set correctly. > > > I think you mean a) but just want to be sure. > > Yes I think so. > > >> > >> Re the registers, do you think we need 5? > >> > > I don't :-) > > >> > > >> > Thinking entry ABI, here is what I observed on Arm: > >> > > >> > Linux has two entry ABIs: > >> > - plain: x0 = dtb; > >> > command line = dtb:/chosen/bootargs; initrd = > dtb:/chosen/linux,initrd-* > >> > - EFI: x0=handle, x1=systemtable, x30=return address; > >> >dtb = EFI_UUID config table; initrd = > efi: image_protocol::load_options > >> > > >> > U-Boot (proper) has plenty of schemes: > >> > - dtb is passed as either x0, x1, fixed memory area (Qemu which is > bad in itself), or other registers > >> > - additional information passing: board specific register scheme, SMC > calls > >> > - U-Boot for RPI boards implement a Linux shaped entry ABI to be > launched by Videocore firmware > >> > > >> > Based on all the above, I would tend to think that RPI scheme is a > good idea but also > >> > shall not prevent additional schemes for the boards. > >> > >> I was not actually considering Linux since I believe/assume its entry > >> scheme is fixed and not up for discussion. > >> > >> I also did not think about the EFI case. As I understand it we cannot > >> touch it as it is used by UEFI today. Maybe it is even in the > >> standard? > > > > It is in the spec and we are making it evolve, or its understanding > evolve (jurisprudence) for instance on initrd standard handling. > > Well perhaps we could merge it with standard passage. But EFI is not > going to want to use a bloblist, it will want to use a HOB. > > >> > >> > >> Really I am hoping we can start afresh...? > >> > >> > > >> > What about a U-Boot Arm entry ABI like: > >> > - plain: x0=dtb, x1=, x2-x5 = , other > registers are per platform, SMC calls allowed too > >> > >> Hmm we don't actually need the dtb as it is available in the bloblist. > > > > If you don't have x0=dtb, then you will not be able to use U-Boot on > RPI4. > > Unless you want to redo everything the RPI firmware is doing. > > That's right, RPI cannot support standard passage. It is not > open-source firmware so it isn't really relevant to this discussion. > It will just do what it does and have limited functionality, with > work-arounds to deal with the pain, as one might expect. > > So you are seeing two "all-or-nothing" options: : U-Boot entry is board specific as it is today : A new form where the only parameter is a head of bloblist, one of those blobs contain a DT You propose to mandate a DT for all boards make sense in that environment. For RPI4, you just ignore everything the prior boot loader does because it is not compliant. This reinforces my opposition to the mandatory DT proposal. a third option is I think way more attractive: : shaped after the architecture Linux entry (ie. first parameter is dtb) [+ passage head (i.e. second parameter is pointer to passage head)] This way, you make U-Boot entry clean in RPI4, Apple M1, Qemu, SystemReady contexts and get a well deserved standardized information passing between prior loaders and U-Boot. The three options are possible though, you could select a U-Boot entry CONFIG option for: But despite it would be technically feasible, I don't think it is goes in the right direction. >> > >> But I added an offset
Re: [PATCH 00/31] passage: Define a standard for firmware data flow
Hi François, On Tue, 2 Nov 2021 at 10:03, François Ozog wrote: > > Hi Simon, > > On Tue, 2 Nov 2021 at 15:59, Simon Glass wrote: >> >> Hi François, >> >> On Mon, 1 Nov 2021 at 02:53, François Ozog wrote: >> > >> > Hi Simon, >> > >> > this seems a great endeavor. I'd like to better understand the scope of it. >> > >> > Is it to be used as part of what could become a U-Boot entry ABI scheme? >> > By that I mean giving some fixed aspects >> > to U-Boot entry while letting boards to have flexibility (say for instance >> > that the first 5 architecture ABI >> > parameter registers are reserved for U-Boot), and the Passage is about >> > specifying either those reserved registers >> > or one of them? >> >> The goal is to provide a standard entry scheme for all firmware >> binaries. Whether it achieves that (or can with some mods) is up for >> discussion. >> > If you say > a) define a U-Boot entry ABI and providing a firmware-to-firmware information > passing facility which would be part of all firmware ABIs (as the projects > decide to define their own ABI) it looks good. > but If you say It is an ABI to be adopted by U-Boot but also other firmware. For example, if TF-A calls U-Boot it should use standard passage. If U-Boot calls TF-A or Optee it should use standard passage. > b) define a standard entry scheme (register map, processor state, MMU state, > SMMU state, GIC state...) that does not look realistic. No I don't mean that. This data structure could be used in any state, so long as the two registers are set correctly. > I think you mean a) but just want to be sure. Yes I think so. >> >> Re the registers, do you think we need 5? >> I don't :-) >> > >> > Thinking entry ABI, here is what I observed on Arm: >> > >> > Linux has two entry ABIs: >> > - plain: x0 = dtb; >> > command line = dtb:/chosen/bootargs; initrd = >> > dtb:/chosen/linux,initrd-* >> > - EFI: x0=handle, x1=systemtable, x30=return address; >> >dtb = EFI_UUID config table; initrd = efi:> > vendor media UUID); command line = efi: image_protocol::load_options >> > >> > U-Boot (proper) has plenty of schemes: >> > - dtb is passed as either x0, x1, fixed memory area (Qemu which is bad in >> > itself), or other registers >> > - additional information passing: board specific register scheme, SMC calls >> > - U-Boot for RPI boards implement a Linux shaped entry ABI to be launched >> > by Videocore firmware >> > >> > Based on all the above, I would tend to think that RPI scheme is a good >> > idea but also >> > shall not prevent additional schemes for the boards. >> >> I was not actually considering Linux since I believe/assume its entry >> scheme is fixed and not up for discussion. >> >> I also did not think about the EFI case. As I understand it we cannot >> touch it as it is used by UEFI today. Maybe it is even in the >> standard? > > It is in the spec and we are making it evolve, or its understanding evolve > (jurisprudence) for instance on initrd standard handling. Well perhaps we could merge it with standard passage. But EFI is not going to want to use a bloblist, it will want to use a HOB. >> >> >> Really I am hoping we can start afresh...? >> >> > >> > What about a U-Boot Arm entry ABI like: >> > - plain: x0=dtb, x1=, x2-x5 = , other registers >> > are per platform, SMC calls allowed too >> >> Hmm we don't actually need the dtb as it is available in the bloblist. > > If you don't have x0=dtb, then you will not be able to use U-Boot on RPI4. > Unless you want to redo everything the RPI firmware is doing. That's right, RPI cannot support standard passage. It is not open-source firmware so it isn't really relevant to this discussion. It will just do what it does and have limited functionality, with work-arounds to deal with the pain, as one might expect. >> >> But I added an offset to it as a convenience. >> >> > - EFI: x0=handle, x1=systemtable, x30=return address; (when U-Boot is >> > launched as an EFI app) >> >dtb = EFI_UUID config table, + Passage = Passage UUID config table >> >> I don't understand the last line. Where is the passage info / >> bloblist? Do you mean it goes in the HOB list with a UUID? I suppose >> that is the most EFI-compatible way. > > The Passage config table could just contain the "head" of the > bloblist/Passage information. If UEFI wants to deal with standard passage, that is... >> >> >> What do you think about the idea of using an offset into the bloblist >> for the dtb? > > It is possible but as I said, failing to mimic Linux entry ABI would miss the > opportunity to just boot without changes on RPI4. See above. Broadcom could look at open-sourcing their bootloader if they wish. >> >> Also, can we make the standard passage ABI a build-time >> option, so it is deterministic? >> > Looks good. I would look into stating that for SystemReady we would advise to > use that option and make it standard for Trusted Substrate (Linaro recipes > that we upstreamin
Re: [PATCH 00/31] passage: Define a standard for firmware data flow
Hi Simon, On Tue, 2 Nov 2021 at 15:59, Simon Glass wrote: > Hi François, > > On Mon, 1 Nov 2021 at 02:53, François Ozog > wrote: > > > > Hi Simon, > > > > this seems a great endeavor. I'd like to better understand the scope of > it. > > > > Is it to be used as part of what could become a U-Boot entry ABI scheme? > By that I mean giving some fixed aspects > > to U-Boot entry while letting boards to have flexibility (say for > instance that the first 5 architecture ABI > > parameter registers are reserved for U-Boot), and the Passage is about > specifying either those reserved registers > > or one of them? > > The goal is to provide a standard entry scheme for all firmware > binaries. Whether it achieves that (or can with some mods) is up for > discussion. > > If you say a) define a U-Boot entry ABI and providing a firmware-to-firmware information passing facility which would be part of all firmware ABIs (as the projects decide to define their own ABI) it looks good. but If you say b) define a standard entry scheme (register map, processor state, MMU state, SMMU state, GIC state...) that does not look realistic. I think you mean a) but just want to be sure. > Re the registers, do you think we need 5? > > > > > Thinking entry ABI, here is what I observed on Arm: > > > > Linux has two entry ABIs: > > - plain: x0 = dtb; > > command line = dtb:/chosen/bootargs; initrd = > dtb:/chosen/linux,initrd-* > > - EFI: x0=handle, x1=systemtable, x30=return address; > >dtb = EFI_UUID config table; initrd = efi: vendor media UUID); command line = efi: image_protocol::load_options > > > > U-Boot (proper) has plenty of schemes: > > - dtb is passed as either x0, x1, fixed memory area (Qemu which is bad > in itself), or other registers > > - additional information passing: board specific register scheme, SMC > calls > > - U-Boot for RPI boards implement a Linux shaped entry ABI to be > launched by Videocore firmware > > > > Based on all the above, I would tend to think that RPI scheme is a good > idea but also > > shall not prevent additional schemes for the boards. > > I was not actually considering Linux since I believe/assume its entry > scheme is fixed and not up for discussion. > > I also did not think about the EFI case. As I understand it we cannot > touch it as it is used by UEFI today. Maybe it is even in the > standard? > It is in the spec and we are making it evolve, or its understanding evolve (jurisprudence) for instance on initrd standard handling. > > Really I am hoping we can start afresh...? > > > > > What about a U-Boot Arm entry ABI like: > > - plain: x0=dtb, x1=, x2-x5 = , other > registers are per platform, SMC calls allowed too > > Hmm we don't actually need the dtb as it is available in the bloblist. > If you don't have x0=dtb, then you will not be able to use U-Boot on RPI4. Unless you want to redo everything the RPI firmware is doing. > But I added an offset to it as a convenience. > > > - EFI: x0=handle, x1=systemtable, x30=return address; (when U-Boot is > launched as an EFI app) > >dtb = EFI_UUID config table, + Passage = Passage UUID config table > > I don't understand the last line. Where is the passage info / > bloblist? Do you mean it goes in the HOB list with a UUID? I suppose > that is the most EFI-compatible way. > The Passage config table could just contain the "head" of the bloblist/Passage information. > > What do you think about the idea of using an offset into the bloblist > for the dtb? It is possible but as I said, failing to mimic Linux entry ABI would miss the opportunity to just boot without changes on RPI4. > Also, can we make the standard passage ABI a build-time > option, so it is deterministic? > > Looks good. I would look into stating that for SystemReady we would advise to use that option and make it standard for Trusted Substrate (Linaro recipes that we upstreaming to make SystemReady compliance easy and consistent across platforms). > > > > We could further leverage Passage to pass Operating Systems parameters > that could be removed from device tree (migration of /chosen to Passage). > Memory inventory would still be in DT but allocations for CMA or GPUs would > be in Passage. This idea is to reach a point where device tree is a > "pristine" hardware description. > > I'm worried about this becoming a substitute for devicetree. Really my > intent is to provide a way to pass simple info, whereas what you talk > about there seems like something that should be DT, just that it might > need suitable bindings. > > I see your point and I agree It should not be a substitute. here is an expanded version of what I had in mind when I wrote those lines. cma, initrd and other Linux kernel parameters can be conveyed either through command line or DT. When using the non UEFI Linux entry ABI, you need to use the DT to pass those parameters. When using the UEFI Linux entry ABI, you *can* (not must) use the command line to pass all information, leav
Re: [PATCH 00/31] passage: Define a standard for firmware data flow
Hi François, On Mon, 1 Nov 2021 at 02:53, François Ozog wrote: > > Hi Simon, > > this seems a great endeavor. I'd like to better understand the scope of it. > > Is it to be used as part of what could become a U-Boot entry ABI scheme? By > that I mean giving some fixed aspects > to U-Boot entry while letting boards to have flexibility (say for instance > that the first 5 architecture ABI > parameter registers are reserved for U-Boot), and the Passage is about > specifying either those reserved registers > or one of them? The goal is to provide a standard entry scheme for all firmware binaries. Whether it achieves that (or can with some mods) is up for discussion. Re the registers, do you think we need 5? > > Thinking entry ABI, here is what I observed on Arm: > > Linux has two entry ABIs: > - plain: x0 = dtb; > command line = dtb:/chosen/bootargs; initrd = > dtb:/chosen/linux,initrd-* > - EFI: x0=handle, x1=systemtable, x30=return address; >dtb = EFI_UUID config table; initrd = efi: media UUID); command line = efi: image_protocol::load_options > > U-Boot (proper) has plenty of schemes: > - dtb is passed as either x0, x1, fixed memory area (Qemu which is bad in > itself), or other registers > - additional information passing: board specific register scheme, SMC calls > - U-Boot for RPI boards implement a Linux shaped entry ABI to be launched by > Videocore firmware > > Based on all the above, I would tend to think that RPI scheme is a good idea > but also > shall not prevent additional schemes for the boards. I was not actually considering Linux since I believe/assume its entry scheme is fixed and not up for discussion. I also did not think about the EFI case. As I understand it we cannot touch it as it is used by UEFI today. Maybe it is even in the standard? Really I am hoping we can start afresh...? > > What about a U-Boot Arm entry ABI like: > - plain: x0=dtb, x1=, x2-x5 = , other registers > are per platform, SMC calls allowed too Hmm we don't actually need the dtb as it is available in the bloblist. But I added an offset to it as a convenience. > - EFI: x0=handle, x1=systemtable, x30=return address; (when U-Boot is > launched as an EFI app) >dtb = EFI_UUID config table, + Passage = Passage UUID config table I don't understand the last line. Where is the passage info / bloblist? Do you mean it goes in the HOB list with a UUID? I suppose that is the most EFI-compatible way. What do you think about the idea of using an offset into the bloblist for the dtb? Also, can we make the standard passage ABI a build-time option, so it is deterministic? > > We could further leverage Passage to pass Operating Systems parameters that > could be removed from device tree (migration of /chosen to Passage). Memory > inventory would still be in DT but allocations for CMA or GPUs would be in > Passage. This idea is to reach a point where device tree is a "pristine" > hardware description. I'm worried about this becoming a substitute for devicetree. Really my intent is to provide a way to pass simple info, whereas what you talk about there seems like something that should be DT, just that it might need suitable bindings. As you know I have more expansive views about what should be in DT. > > Cheers > > PS: as Ilias mentions, this patch set contains bug fixes, non immediately > related additional functions (DM stats). It would be great to carve those out > to fast path them and keep this one with the very core of your idea. The DM stats is used in 'passage: Report the devicetree source'. I know it is sideways but I think it is better to make the output line more useful than just reporting the devicetree source. The first patch is indeed unrelated. I will pick it up so we can drop it for the next rev. Regards, Simon > > On Mon, 1 Nov 2021 at 02:17, Simon Glass wrote: >> >> >> This series adds a standard way of passing information between different >> firmware phases. This already exists in U-Boot at a very basic level, in >> the form of a bloblist containing an spl_handoff structure, but the intent >> here is to define something useful across projects. >> >> The need for this is growing as firmware fragments into multiple binaries >> each with its own purpose. Without any run-time connection, we must rely >> on build-time settings which are brittle and painful to keep in sync. >> >> This feature is named 'standard passage' since the name is more unique >> than many others that could be chosen, it is a passage in the sense that >> information is flowing from one place to another and it is standard, >> because that is what we want to create. >> >> The implementation is simply a pointer to a bloblist in a register, with >> an extra register to point to a devicetree, for more complex data, if one >> is present in the bloblist. This should cover all cases (small memory >> footprint as well as complex data flow) and be easy enough to implement on >> all architectur
Re: [PATCH 00/31] passage: Define a standard for firmware data flow
Hi Mark, Le lun. 1 nov. 2021 à 19:19, Mark Kettenis a écrit : > > From: François Ozog > > Date: Mon, 1 Nov 2021 09:53:40 +0100 > > [...] > > > We could further leverage Passage to pass Operating Systems parameters > that > > could be removed from device tree (migration of /chosen to Passage). > Memory > > inventory would still be in DT but allocations for CMA or GPUs would be > in > > Passage. This idea is to reach a point where device tree is a "pristine" > > hardware description. > > I wanted to react on something you said in an earlier thread, but this > discussion seems to be appropriate as well: > > The notion that device trees only describe the hardware isn't really > correct. Device trees have always been used to configure firmware > options (through the /options node) and between firmware and the OS > (through the /chosen node) and to describe firmware interfaces > (e.g. OpenFirmware calls, PSCI (on ARM), RTAS (on POWER)). This was > the case on the original Open Firmware systems, and is still done on > PowerNV systems that use flattened device trees. > I understand and agree with the above. Yet, PSCI is different from /options and /chosen: those are platform services made available to the OS when the boot firmware code has been unloaded/neutralized. What I (not just myself but let’s simplify) am trying to decouple the supply chain: loosely coupled platform provider (ODM), the firmware provider, OS provider, application provider. So it is not to prevent presence of those existing nodes, it is to be able introduce some rationalization in their use: Platform interfaces such as PSCI: The question is “who” injects them in the DT (build time or runtime). There is no single good answer and you may want the authoritative entity that implements the service to actually inject itself in the DT passed to the OS. I know some platforms are using SMC calls from U-Boot to know what to inject in the DT. I see those as the same nature of DIMM sensing and injection in the DT. /chosen: a must have when you do not have UEFI but not necessary with UEFI. /options: it should be possible for the end customer to make the decision of integration: at build time or at runtime based on a separate flattened device tree file. This decoupling should result for instance, in the long run, in adjustable memory layouts without headaches. changing the secure dram size is simple from hardware perspective but a massive issue from a firmware perspective: multiple firmware projects sources need to be adjusted, making manual calculations on explicit constants or “hidden” ones. It should even be possible to adjust it at runtime on the field (user selected firmware parameter). > I don't see what the benefits are from using Passage instead. It > would only fragment things even more. > -- François-Frédéric Ozog | *Director Business Development* T: +33.67221.6485 francois.o...@linaro.org | Skype: ffozog
Re: [PATCH 00/31] passage: Define a standard for firmware data flow
> From: François Ozog > Date: Mon, 1 Nov 2021 09:53:40 +0100 [...] > We could further leverage Passage to pass Operating Systems parameters that > could be removed from device tree (migration of /chosen to Passage). Memory > inventory would still be in DT but allocations for CMA or GPUs would be in > Passage. This idea is to reach a point where device tree is a "pristine" > hardware description. I wanted to react on something you said in an earlier thread, but this discussion seems to be appropriate as well: The notion that device trees only describe the hardware isn't really correct. Device trees have always been used to configure firmware options (through the /options node) and between firmware and the OS (through the /chosen node) and to describe firmware interfaces (e.g. OpenFirmware calls, PSCI (on ARM), RTAS (on POWER)). This was the case on the original Open Firmware systems, and is still done on PowerNV systems that use flattened device trees. I don't see what the benefits are from using Passage instead. It would only fragment things even more.
Re: [PATCH 00/31] passage: Define a standard for firmware data flow
Hi Simon, this seems a great endeavor. I'd like to better understand the scope of it. Is it to be used as part of what could become a U-Boot entry ABI scheme? By that I mean giving some fixed aspects to U-Boot entry while letting boards to have flexibility (say for instance that the first 5 architecture ABI parameter registers are reserved for U-Boot), and the Passage is about specifying either those reserved registers or one of them? Thinking entry ABI, here is what I observed on Arm: Linux has two entry ABIs: - plain: x0 = dtb; command line = dtb:/chosen/bootargs; initrd = dtb:/chosen/linux,initrd-* - EFI: x0=handle, x1=systemtable, x30=return address; dtb = EFI_UUID config table; initrd = efi:, x2-x5 = , other registers are per platform, SMC calls allowed too - EFI: x0=handle, x1=systemtable, x30=return address; (when U-Boot is launched as an EFI app) dtb = EFI_UUID config table, + Passage = Passage UUID config table We could further leverage Passage to pass Operating Systems parameters that could be removed from device tree (migration of /chosen to Passage). Memory inventory would still be in DT but allocations for CMA or GPUs would be in Passage. This idea is to reach a point where device tree is a "pristine" hardware description. Cheers PS: as Ilias mentions, this patch set contains bug fixes, non immediately related additional functions (DM stats). It would be great to carve those out to fast path them and keep this one with the very core of your idea. On Mon, 1 Nov 2021 at 02:17, Simon Glass wrote: > > This series adds a standard way of passing information between different > firmware phases. This already exists in U-Boot at a very basic level, in > the form of a bloblist containing an spl_handoff structure, but the intent > here is to define something useful across projects. > > The need for this is growing as firmware fragments into multiple binaries > each with its own purpose. Without any run-time connection, we must rely > on build-time settings which are brittle and painful to keep in sync. > > This feature is named 'standard passage' since the name is more unique > than many others that could be chosen, it is a passage in the sense that > information is flowing from one place to another and it is standard, > because that is what we want to create. > > The implementation is simply a pointer to a bloblist in a register, with > an extra register to point to a devicetree, for more complex data, if one > is present in the bloblist. This should cover all cases (small memory > footprint as well as complex data flow) and be easy enough to implement on > all architectures. > > The core bloblist code is relicensed to BSD-3-Clause in case it is useful > in non-GPL projects but there is no requirement to use the same code. > > This series includes tweaks to the bloblist implementation in U-Boot to > make it more suitable for the task, including: > >- Allocate tags explicitly in the enum >- Put the magic number first >- Define a process for adding tags > > The emphasis is on enabling open communcation between binaries, not > enabling passage of secret, undocumented data, although this is possible > in a private environment. > > This series is built on the OF_BOARD series It is available at > u-boot-dm/pass-working or: > > > https://source.denx.de/u-boot/custodians/u-boot-dm/-/commit/073b5c156f222c69a98b8ebcaa563d1ff10eb217 > > > Simon Glass (31): > Makefile: Correct TPL rule for OF_REAL > kconfig: Add support for conditional values > dm: core: Allow getting some basic stats > stddef: Avoid warning with clang with offsetof() > fdt: Drop SPL_BUILD macro > bloblist: Put the magic number first > bloblist: Rename the SPL tag > bloblist: Drop unused tags > bloblist: Use explicit numbering for the tags > bloblist: Support allocating the bloblist > bloblist: Use LOG_CATEGORY to simply logging > bloblist: Use 'phase' consistently for bloblists > bloblist: Refactor Kconfig to support alloc or fixed > arm: qemu: Add an SPL build > bloblist: Add functions to obtain base address and size > passage: Support an incoming passage > passage: Support a control devicetree > passage: arm: Accept a passage from the previous phase > passage: spl: Support adding the dtb to the passage bloblist > passage: spl: Support passing the passage to U-Boot > passage: Record where the devicetree came from > passage: Report the devicetree source > passage: Add a qemu test for ARM > bloblist: doc: Bring in the API documentation > bloblist: Relicense to allow BSD-3-Clause > sandbox: Add a way of checking structs for standard passage > passage: Add documentation > passage: Add docs for spl_handoff > x86: Move Intel GNVS file into the common include directory > passage: Add checks for pre-existing blobs > WIP: RFC: Add a gitlab test > > .gitlab-ci.yml| 6 + > MAINTAINERS