Commit graph

206 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Peter Maydell 4e5ec9c0dc
target/arm: Factor MPU lookup code out of get_phys_addr_pmsav8()
For the TT instruction we're going to need to do an MPU lookup that
also tells us which MPU region the access hit. This requires us
to do the MPU lookup without first doing the SAU security access
check, so pull the MPU lookup parts of get_phys_addr_pmsav8()
out into their own function.

The TT instruction also needs to know the MPU region number which
the lookup hit, so provide this information to the caller of the
MPU lookup code, even though get_phys_addr_pmsav8() doesn't
need to know it.

Backports commit 54317c0ff3a3c0f6b2c3a1d3c8b5d93686a86d24 from qemu
2018-03-05 13:48:31 -05:00
Peter Maydell c441b19d76
target/arm: Create new arm_v7m_mmu_idx_for_secstate_and_priv()
The TT instruction is going to need to look up the MMU index
for a specified security and privilege state. Refactor the
existing arm_v7m_mmu_idx_for_secstate() into a version that
lets you specify the privilege state and one that uses the
current state of the CPU.

Backports commit ec8e3340286a87d3924c223d60ba5c994549f796 from qemu
2018-03-05 13:48:31 -05:00
Peter Maydell 89acdeb9af
target/arm: Split M profile MNegPri mmu index into user and priv
For M profile, we currently have an mmu index MNegPri for
"requested execution priority negative". This fails to
distinguish "requested execution priority negative, privileged"
from "requested execution priority negative, usermode", but
the two can return different results for MPU lookups. Fix this
by splitting MNegPri into MNegPriPriv and MNegPriUser, and
similarly for the Secure equivalent MSNegPri.

This takes us from 6 M profile MMU modes to 8, which means
we need to bump NB_MMU_MODES; this is OK since the point
where we are forced to reduce TLB sizes is 9 MMU modes.

(It would in theory be possible to stick with 6 MMU indexes:
{mpu-disabled,user,privileged} x {secure,nonsecure} since
in the MPU-disabled case the result of an MPU lookup is
always the same for both user and privileged code. However
we would then need to rework the TB flags handling to put
user/priv into the TB flags separately from the mmuidx.
Adding an extra couple of mmu indexes is simpler.)

Backports commit 62593718d77c06ad2b5e942727cead40775d2395 from qemu
2018-03-05 13:48:31 -05:00
Peter Maydell d877985eea
target/arm: Add missing M profile case to regime_is_user()
When we added the ARMMMUIdx_MSUser MMU index we forgot to
add it to the case statement in regime_is_user(), so we
weren't treating it as unprivileged when doing MPU lookups.
Correct the omission.

Backports commit 871bec7c44a453d9cab972ce1b5d12e1af0545ab from qemu
2018-03-05 13:48:31 -05:00
Peter Maydell 999080382f
target/arm: Allow explicit writes to CONTROL.SPSEL in Handler mode
In ARMv7M the CPU ignores explicit writes to CONTROL.SPSEL
in Handler mode. In v8M the behaviour is slightly different:
writes to the bit are permitted but will have no effect.

We've already done the hard work to handle the value in
CONTROL.SPSEL being out of sync with what stack pointer is
actually in use, so all we need to do to fix this last loose
end is to update the condition we use to guard whether we
call write_v7m_control_spsel() on the register write.

Backports commit 83d7f86d3d27473c0aac79c1baaa5c2ab01b02d9 from qemu
2018-03-05 13:48:30 -05:00
Peter Maydell 6713884243
target/arm: Handle SPSEL and current stack being out of sync in MSP/PSP reads
For v8M it is possible for the CONTROL.SPSEL bit value and the
current stack to be out of sync. This means we need to update
the checks used in reads and writes of the PSP and MSP special
registers to use v7m_using_psp() rather than directly checking
the SPSEL bit in the control register.

Backports commit 1169d3aa5b19adca9384d954d80e1f48da388284 from qemu
2018-03-05 13:48:30 -05:00
Peter Maydell 352a7b2501
target/arm: Generate UNDEF for 32-bit Thumb2 insns
The refactoring of commit 296e5a0a6c3935 has a nasty bug:
it accidentally dropped the generation of code to raise
the UNDEF exception when disas_thumb2_insn() returns nonzero.
This means that 32-bit Thumb2 instruction patterns that
ought to UNDEF just act like nops instead. This is likely
to break any number of things, including the kernel's "disable
the FPU and use the UNDEF exception to identify when to turn
it back on again" trick.

Backports commit 7472e2efb049ea65a6a5e7261b78ebf5c561bc2f from qemu
2018-03-05 13:48:29 -05:00
Peter Maydell c01b9a3cfe
arm: check regime, not current state, for ATS write PAR format
In do_ats_write(), rather than using extended_addresses_enabled() to
decide whether the value we get back from get_phys_addr() is a 64-bit
format PAR or a 32-bit one, use arm_s1_regime_using_lpae_format().

This is not really the correct answer, because the PAR format
depends on the AT instruction being used, not just on the
translation regime. However getting this correct requires a
significant refactoring, so that get_phys_addr() returns raw
information about the fault which the caller can then assemble
into a suitable FSR/PAR/syndrome for its purposes, rather than
get_phys_addr() returning a pre-formatted FSR.

However this change at least improves the situation by making
the PAR work correctly for address translation operations done
at AArch64 EL2 on the EL2 translation regime. In particular,
this is necessary for Xen to be able to run in our emulation,
so this seems like a safer interim fix given that we are in freeze.

Backports commit 50cd71b0d347c74517dcb7da447fe657fca57d9c from qemu
2018-03-05 13:48:28 -05:00
Peter Maydell 175b632c91
target/arm: Report GICv3 sysregs present in ID registers if needed
The CPU ID registers ID_AA64PFR0_EL1, ID_PFR1_EL1 and ID_PFR1
have a field for reporting presence of GICv3 system registers.
We need to report this field correctly in order for Xen to
work as a guest inside QEMU emulation. We mustn't incorrectly
claim the sysregs exist when they don't, though, or Linux will
crash.

Unfortunately the way we've designed the GICv3 emulation in QEMU
puts the system registers as part of the GICv3 device, which
may be created after the CPU proper has been realized. This
means that we don't know at the point when we define the ID
registers what the correct value is. Handle this by switching
them to calling a function at runtime to read the value, where
we can fill in the GIC field appropriately.

Backports commit 96a8b92ed8f02d5e86ad380d3299d9f41f99b072 from qemu
2018-03-05 13:48:28 -05:00
Richard Henderson a58eb310eb
target/arm: Use helper_retaddr in stxp helpers
We use raw memory primitives along the !parallel_cpus paths in order to
simplify the endianness handling. Because of that, we did not benefit
from the generic changes to cpu_ldst_user_only_template.h.

The simplest fix is to manipulate helper_retaddr here.

Backports commit 3bdb5fcc9a08a9a47ce30c4e0c2d64c95190b49d from qemu
2018-03-05 13:48:28 -05:00
Emilio G. Cota 208014df9e
arm/translate-a64: mark path as unreachable to eliminate warning
Fixes the following warning when compiling with gcc 5.4.0 with -O1
optimizations and --enable-debug:

target/arm/translate-a64.c: In function ‘aarch64_tr_translate_insn’:
target/arm/translate-a64.c:2361:8: error: ‘post_index’ may be used uninitialized in this function [-Werror=maybe-uninitialized]
if (!post_index) {
^
target/arm/translate-a64.c:2307:10: note: ‘post_index’ was declared here
bool post_index;
^
target/arm/translate-a64.c:2386:8: error: ‘writeback’ may be used uninitialized in this function [-Werror=maybe-uninitialized]
if (writeback) {
^
target/arm/translate-a64.c:2308:10: note: ‘writeback’ was declared here
bool writeback;
^

Note that idx comes from selecting 2 bits, and therefore its value
can be at most 3.

Backports commit 5ca66278c859bb1ded243755aeead2be6992ce73 from qemu
2018-03-05 11:40:11 -05:00
Peter Maydell 33d42df60c
translate.c: Fix usermode big-endian AArch32 LDREXD and STREXD
For AArch32 LDREXD and STREXD, architecturally the 32-bit word at the
lowest address is always Rt and the one at addr+4 is Rt2, even if the
CPU is big-endian. Our implementation does these with a single
64-bit store, so if we're big-endian then we need to put the two
32-bit halves together in the opposite order to little-endian,
so that they end up in the right places. We were trying to do
this with the gen_aa32_frob64() function, but that is not correct
for the usermode emulator, because there there is a distinction
between "load a 64 bit value" (which does a BE 64-bit access
and doesn't need swapping) and "load two 32 bit values as one
64 bit access" (where we still need to do the swapping, like
system mode BE32).

Backports commit 3448d47b3172015006b79197eb5a69826c6a7b6d from qemu
2018-03-05 11:39:29 -05:00
Andrew Baumann 5250db33b5
arm: implement cache/shareability attribute bits for PAR registers
On a successful address translation instruction, PAR is supposed to
contain cacheability and shareability attributes determined by the
translation. We previously returned 0 for these bits (in line with the
general strategy of ignoring caches and memory attributes), but some
guest OSes may depend on them.

This patch collects the attribute bits in the page-table walk, and
updates PAR with the correct attributes for all LPAE translations.
Short descriptor formats still return 0 for these bits, as in the
prior implementation.

Backports commit 5b2d261d60caf9d988d91ca1e02392d6fc8ea104 from qemu
2018-03-05 11:35:28 -05:00
Stefano Stabellini 1212c9b73c
fix WFI/WFE length in syndrome register
WFI/E are often, but not always, 4 bytes long. When they are, we need to
set ARM_EL_IL_SHIFT in the syndrome register.

Pass the instruction length to HELPER(wfi), use it to decrement pc
appropriately and to pass an is_16bit flag to syn_wfx, which sets
ARM_EL_IL_SHIFT if needed.

Set dc->insn in both arm_tr_translate_insn and thumb_tr_translate_insn.

Backports commit 58803318e5a546b2eb0efd7a053ed36b6c29ae6f from qemu
2018-03-05 11:21:51 -05:00
Richard Henderson 28061c2e59
qom: Introduce CPUClass.tcg_initialize
Move target cpu tcg initialization to common code,
called from cpu_exec_realizefn.

Backports commit 55c3ceef61fcf06fc98ddc752b7cce788ce7680b from qemu
2018-03-05 09:49:26 -05:00
Peter Maydell 0c06666800
target/arm: Implement SG instruction corner cases
The common situation of the SG instruction is that it is
executed from S&NSC memory by a CPU in NS state. That case
is handled by v7m_handle_execute_nsc(). However the instruction
also has defined behaviour in a couple of other cases:
* SG instruction in NS memory (behaves as a NOP)
* SG in S memory but CPU already secure (clears IT bits and
does nothing else)
* SG instruction in v8M without Security Extension (NOP)

These can be implemented in translate.c.

Backports commit 76eff04d166b8fe747adbe82de8b7e060e668ff9 from qemu
2018-03-05 03:47:20 -05:00
Peter Maydell 272427b4a0
target/arm: Support some Thumb insns being always unconditional
A few Thumb instructions are always unconditional even inside an
IT block (as opposed to being UNPREDICTABLE if used inside an
IT block): BKPT, the v8M SG instruction, and the A profile
HLT (debug halt) instruction.

This means we need to suppress the jump-over-instruction-on-condfail
code generation (though the IT state still advances as usual and
subsequent insns in the IT block may be conditional).

Backports commit dcf14dfb704519846f396a376339ebdb93eaf049 from qemu
2018-03-05 03:46:10 -05:00
Peter Maydell 7a293cd7cc
target-arm: Simplify insn_crosses_page()
Recent changes have left insn_crosses_page() more complicated
than it needed to be:
* it's only called from thumb_tr_translate_insn() so we know
for certain that we're looking at a Thumb insn
* the caller's check for dc->pc >= dc->next_page_start - 3
means that dc->pc can't possibly be 4 aligned, so there's
no need to check that (the check was partly there to ensure
that we didn't treat an ARM insn as Thumb, I think)
* we now have thumb_insn_is_16bit() which lets us do a precise
check of the length of the next insn, rather than opencoding
an inaccurate check

Simplify it down to just loading the first half of the insn
and calling thumb_insn_is_16bit() on it.

Backports commit 5b8d7289e9e92a0d7bcecb93cd189e245fef10cd from qemu
2018-03-05 03:44:54 -05:00
Peter Maydell 96f86f472a
target/arm: Pull Thumb insn word loads up to top level
Refactor the Thumb decode to do the loads of the instruction words at
the top level rather than only loading the second half of a 32-bit
Thumb insn in the middle of the decode.

This is simple apart from the awkward case of Thumb1, where the
BL/BLX prefix and suffix instructions live in what in Thumb2 is the
32-bit insn space. To handle these we decode enough to identify
whether we're looking at a prefix/suffix that we handle as a 16 bit
insn, or a prefix that we're going to merge with the following suffix
to consider as a 32 bit insn. The translation of the 16 bit cases
then moves from disas_thumb2_insn() to disas_thumb_insn().

The refactoring has the benefit that we don't need to pass the
CPUARMState* down into the decoder code any more, but the major
reason for doing this is that some Thumb instructions must be always
unconditional regardless of the IT state bits, so we need to know the
whole insn before we emit the "skip this insn if the IT bits and cond
state tell us to" code. (The always unconditional insns are BKPT,
HLT and SG; the last of these is 32 bits.)

Backports commit 296e5a0a6c393553079a641c50521ae33ff89324 from qemu
2018-03-05 03:43:38 -05:00
Peter Maydell b85d617bda
target-arm: Don't check for "Thumb2 or M profile" for not-Thumb1
The code which implements the Thumb1 split BL/BLX instructions
is guarded by a check on "not M or THUMB2". All we really need
to check here is "not THUMB2" (and we assume that elsewhere too,
eg in the ARCH(6T2) test that UNDEFs the Thumb2 insns).

This doesn't change behaviour because all M profile cores
have Thumb2 and so ARM_FEATURE_M implies ARM_FEATURE_THUMB2.
(v6M implements a very restricted subset of Thumb2, but we
can cross that bridge when we get to it with appropriate
feature bits.)

Backports commit 6b8acf256df09c8a8dd7dcaa79b06eaff4ad63f7 from qemu
2018-03-05 03:34:48 -05:00
Peter Maydell ee9b8a20c9
target/arm: Implement secure function return
Secure function return happens when a non-secure function has been
called using BLXNS and so has a particular magic LR value (either
0xfefffffe or 0xfeffffff). The function return via BX behaves
specially when the new PC value is this magic value, in the same
way that exception returns are handled.

Adjust our BX excret guards so that they recognize the function
return magic number as well, and perform the function-return
unstacking in do_v7m_exception_exit().

Backports commit d02a8698d7ae2bfed3b11fe5b064cb0aa406863b from qemu
2018-03-05 03:33:42 -05:00
Peter Maydell e312993f1f
target/arm: Implement BLXNS
Implement the BLXNS instruction, which allows secure code to
call non-secure code.

Backports commit 3e3fa230e3b8ffe119f14ba57a6bc677a411be57 from qemu
2018-03-05 03:31:59 -05:00
Peter Maydell 2c4578f46e
target/arm: Implement SG instruction
Implement the SG instruction, which we emulate 'by hand' in the
exception handling code path.

Backports commit 333e10c51ef5876ced26f77b61b69ce0f83161a9 from qemu
2018-03-05 03:28:28 -05:00
Peter Maydell 19ecd4f732
target/arm: Add M profile secure MMU index values to get_a32_user_mem_index()
Add the M profile secure MMU index values to the switch in
get_a32_user_mem_index() so that LDRT/STRT work correctly
rather than asserting at translate time.

Backports commit b9f587d62cebed427206539750ebf59bde4df422 from qemu
2018-03-05 03:25:54 -05:00
Emilio G. Cota 5fae6dd433
tcg: remove addr argument from lookup_tb_ptr
It is unlikely that we will ever want to call this helper passing
an argument other than the current PC. So just remove the argument,
and use the pc we already get from cpu_get_tb_cpu_state.

This change paves the way to having a common "tb_lookup" function.

Backports commit 7f11636dbee89b0e4d03e9e2b96e14649a7db778 from qemu
2018-03-05 02:16:34 -05:00
Peter Maydell 059f238f11
target/arm: Factor out "get mmuidx for specified security state"
For the SG instruction and secure function return we are going
to want to do memory accesses using the MMU index of the CPU
in secure state, even though the CPU is currently in non-secure
state. Write arm_v7m_mmu_idx_for_secstate() to do this job,
and use it in cpu_mmu_index().

Backports commit b81ac0eb6315e602b18439961e0538538e4aed4f from qemu
2018-03-05 02:00:23 -05:00
Peter Maydell 6958a4763d
target/arm: Fix calculation of secure mm_idx values
In cpu_mmu_index() we try to do this:
if (env->v7m.secure) {
mmu_idx += ARMMMUIdx_MSUser;
}
but it will give the wrong answer, because ARMMMUIdx_MSUser
includes the 0x40 ARM_MMU_IDX_M field, and so does the
mmu_idx we're adding to, and we'll end up with 0x8n rather
than 0x4n. This error is then nullified by the call to
arm_to_core_mmu_idx() which masks out the high part, but
we're about to factor out the code that calculates the
ARMMMUIdx values so it can be used without passing it through
arm_to_core_mmu_idx(), so fix this bug first.

Backports commit fe768788d29597ee56fc11ba2279d502c2617457 from qemu
2018-03-05 01:58:42 -05:00
Peter Maydell 7988aec017
target/arm: Implement security attribute lookups for memory accesses
Implement the security attribute lookups for memory accesses
in the get_phys_addr() functions, causing these to generate
various kinds of SecureFault for bad accesses.

The major subtlety in this code relates to handling of the
case when the security attributes the SAU assigns to the
address don't match the current security state of the CPU.

In the ARM ARM pseudocode for validating instruction
accesses, the security attributes of the address determine
whether the Secure or NonSecure MPU state is used. At face
value, handling this would require us to encode the relevant
bits of state into mmu_idx for both S and NS at once, which
would result in our needing 16 mmu indexes. Fortunately we
don't actually need to do this because a mismatch between
address attributes and CPU state means either:
* some kind of fault (usually a SecureFault, but in theory
perhaps a UserFault for unaligned access to Device memory)
* execution of the SG instruction in NS state from a
Secure & NonSecure code region

The purpose of SG is simply to flip the CPU into Secure
state, so we can handle it by emulating execution of that
instruction directly in arm_v7m_cpu_do_interrupt(), which
means we can treat all the mismatch cases as "throw an
exception" and we don't need to encode the state of the
other MPU bank into our mmu_idx values.

This commit doesn't include the actual emulation of SG;
it also doesn't include implementation of the IDAU, which
is a per-board way to specify hard-coded memory attributes
for addresses, which override the CPU-internal SAU if they
specify a more secure setting than the SAU is programmed to.

Backports commit 35337cc391245f251bfb9134f181c33e6375d6c1 from qemu
2018-03-05 01:57:07 -05:00
Peter Maydell f9b4381ce0
nvic: Implement Security Attribution Unit registers
Implement the register interface for the SAU: SAU_CTRL,
SAU_TYPE, SAU_RNR, SAU_RBAR and SAU_RLAR. None of the
actual behaviour is implemented here; registers just
read back as written.

When the CPU definition for Cortex-M33 is eventually
added, its initfn will set cpu->sau_sregion, in the same
way that we currently set cpu->pmsav7_dregion for the
M3 and M4.

Number of SAU regions is typically a configurable
CPU parameter, but this patch doesn't provide a
QEMU CPU property for it. We can easily add one when
we have a board that requires it.

Backports commit 9901c576f6c02d43206e5faaf6e362ab7ea83246 from qemu
2018-03-05 01:55:11 -05:00
Peter Maydell 3da3a3fb41
target/arm: Add v8M support to exception entry code
Add support for v8M and in particular the security extension
to the exception entry code. This requires changes to:
* calculation of the exception-return magic LR value
* push the callee-saves registers in certain cases
* clear registers when taking non-secure exceptions to avoid
leaking information from the interrupted secure code
* switch to the correct security state on entry
* use the vector table for the security state we're targeting

Backports commit d3392718e1fcf0859fb7c0774a8e946bacb8419c from qemu
2018-03-05 01:51:22 -05:00
Peter Maydell 39466771d6
target/arm: Add support for restoring v8M additional state context
For v8M, exceptions from Secure to Non-Secure state will save
callee-saved registers to the exception frame as well as the
caller-saved registers. Add support for unstacking these
registers in exception exit when necessary.

Backports commit 907bedb3f3ce134c149599bd9cb61856d811b8ca from qemu
2018-03-05 01:47:25 -05:00
Peter Maydell 2feecbac0d
target/arm: Update excret sanity checks for v8M
In v8M, more bits are defined in the exception-return magic
values; update the code that checks these so we accept
the v8M values when the CPU permits them.

Backports commit bfb2eb52788b9605ef2fc9bc72683d4299117fde from qemu
2018-03-05 01:44:33 -05:00
Peter Maydell 33d2358c91
target/arm: Add new-in-v8M SFSR and SFAR
Add the new M profile Secure Fault Status Register
and Secure Fault Address Register.

Backports commit bed079da04dd9e0e249b9bc22bca8dce58b67f40 from qemu
2018-03-05 01:42:52 -05:00
Peter Maydell 7af730ed3e
target/arm: Don't warn about exception return with PC low bit set for v8M
In the v8M architecture, return from an exception to a PC which
has bit 0 set is not UNPREDICTABLE; it is defined that bit 0
is discarded [R_HRJH]. Restrict our complaint about this to v7M.

Backports commit 4e4259d3c574a8e89c3af27bcb84bc19a442efb1 from qemu
2018-03-05 01:41:51 -05:00
Peter Maydell 2aea283c4f
target/arm: Warn about restoring to unaligned stack
Attempting to do an exception return with an exception frame that
is not 8-aligned is UNPREDICTABLE in v8M; warn about this.
(It is not UNPREDICTABLE in v7M, and our implementation can
handle the merely-4-aligned case fine, so we don't need to
do anything except warn.)

Backports commit cb484f9a6e790205e69d9a444c3e353a3a1cfd84 from qemu
2018-03-05 01:40:40 -05:00
Peter Maydell 5063ca11ab
target/arm: Check for xPSR mismatch usage faults earlier for v8M
ARM v8M specifies that the INVPC usage fault for mismatched
xPSR exception field and handler mode bit should be checked
before updating the PSR and SP, so that the fault is taken
with the existing stack frame rather than by pushing a new one.
Perform this check in the right place for v8M.

Since v7M specifies in its pseudocode that this usage fault
check should happen later, we have to retain the original
code for that check rather than being able to merge the two.
(The distinction is architecturally visible but only in
very obscure corner cases like attempting an invalid exception
return with an exception frame in read only memory.)

Backports commit 224e0c300a0098fb577a03bd29d774d0769f632a from qemu
2018-03-05 01:39:39 -05:00
Peter Maydell 6f08acdcfe
target/arm: Restore SPSEL to correct CONTROL register on exception return
On exception return for v8M, the SPSEL bit in the EXC_RETURN magic
value should be restored to the SPSEL bit in the CONTROL register
banked specified by the EXC_RETURN.ES bit.

Add write_v7m_control_spsel_for_secstate() which behaves like
write_v7m_control_spsel() but allows the caller to specify which
CONTROL bank to use, reimplement write_v7m_control_spsel() in
terms of it, and use it in exception return.

Backports commit 3f0cddeee1f266d43c956581f3050058360a810d from qemu
2018-03-05 01:35:17 -05:00
Peter Maydell 0bb50b9a7e
target/arm: Restore security state on exception return
Now that we can handle the CONTROL.SPSEL bit not necessarily being
in sync with the current stack pointer, we can restore the correct
security state on exception return. This happens before we start
to read registers off the stack frame, but after we have taken
possible usage faults for bad exception return magic values and
updated CONTROL.SPSEL.

Backports commit 3919e60b6efd9a86a0e6ba637aa584222855ac3a from qemu
2018-03-05 01:31:58 -05:00
Peter Maydell c7b5fccfb8
target/arm: Prepare for CONTROL.SPSEL being nonzero in Handler mode
In the v7M architecture, there is an invariant that if the CPU is
in Handler mode then the CONTROL.SPSEL bit cannot be nonzero.
This in turn means that the current stack pointer is always
indicated by CONTROL.SPSEL, even though Handler mode always uses
the Main stack pointer.

In v8M, this invariant is removed, and CONTROL.SPSEL may now
be nonzero in Handler mode (though Handler mode still always
uses the Main stack pointer). In preparation for this change,
change how we handle this bit: rename switch_v7m_sp() to
the now more accurate write_v7m_control_spsel(), and make it
check both the handler mode state and the SPSEL bit.

Note that this implicitly changes the point at which we switch
active SP on exception exit from before we pop the exception
frame to after it.

Backports commit de2db7ec894f11931932ca78cd14a8d2b1389d5b from qemu
2018-03-05 01:29:54 -05:00
Peter Maydell 8036c5b3de
target/arm: Don't switch to target stack early in v7M exception return
Currently our M profile exception return code switches to the
target stack pointer relatively early in the process, before
it tries to pop the exception frame off the stack. This is
awkward for v8M for two reasons:
* in v8M the process vs main stack pointer is not selected
purely by the value of CONTROL.SPSEL, so updating SPSEL
and relying on that to switch to the right stack pointer
won't work
* the stack we should be reading the stack frame from and
the stack we will eventually switch to might not be the
same if the guest is doing strange things

Change our exception return code to use a 'frame pointer'
to read the exception frame rather than assuming that we
can switch the live stack pointer this early.

Backports commit 5b5223997c04b769bb362767cecb5f7ec382c5f0 from qemu
2018-03-05 01:26:05 -05:00
Jan Kiszka ae16a26c20
arm: Fix SMC reporting to EL2 when QEMU provides PSCI
This properly forwards SMC events to EL2 when PSCI is provided by QEMU
itself and, thus, ARM_FEATURE_EL3 is off.

Found and tested with the Jailhouse hypervisor. Solution based on
suggestions by Peter Maydell.

Backports commit 77077a83006c3c9bdca496727f1735a3c5c5355d from qemu
2018-03-05 01:19:22 -05:00
Peter Maydell f0569ba11a
target/arm: Remove out of date ARM ARM section references in A64 decoder
In the A64 decoder, we have a lot of references to section numbers
from version A.a of the v8A ARM ARM (DDI0487). This version of the
document is now long obsolete (we are currently on revision B.a),
and various intervening versions renumbered all the sections.

The most recent B.a version of the document doesn't assign
section numbers at all to the individual instruction classes
in the way that the various A.x versions did. The simplest thing
to do is just to delete all the out of date C.x.x references.

Backports commit 4ce31af4aeb8471f6a913de7c59d3bde1fc4f03d from qemu
2018-03-05 01:05:53 -05:00
Peter Maydell 72dadc6518
target/arm: Handle banking in negative-execution-priority check in cpu_mmu_index()
Now that we have a banked FAULTMASK register and banked exceptions,
we can implement the correct check in cpu_mmu_index() for whether
the MPU_CTRL.HFNMIENA bit's effect should apply. This bit causes
handlers which have requested a negative execution priority to run
with the MPU disabled. In v8M the test has to check this for the
current security state and so takes account of banking.

Backports relevant part of commit 5d4791991d4de12e83d44738417c9e964167b6e8 from qemu
2018-03-05 00:54:28 -05:00
Peter Maydell 4b8bdda695
target/arm: Implement MSR/MRS access to NS banked registers
In v8M the MSR and MRS instructions have extra register value
encodings to allow secure code to access the non-secure banked
version of various special registers.

(We don't implement the MSPLIM_NS or PSPLIM_NS aliases, because
we don't currently implement the stack limit registers at all.)

Backports commit 50f11062d4c896408731d6a286bcd116d1e08465 from qemu
2018-03-05 00:53:13 -05:00
Igor Mammedov 607bc396c3
arm: drop intermediate cpu_model -> cpu type parsing and use cpu type directly
Backports defines from commit ba1ba5cca3962a9cc400c713c736b4fb8db1f38e from qemu
2018-03-05 00:10:21 -05:00
Richard Henderson c5e952978c
target/arm: Avoid an extra temporary for store_exclusive
Instead of copying addr to a local temp, reuse the value (which we
have just compared as equal) already saved in cpu_exclusive_addr.

Backports commit 37e29a64254bf82a1901784fcca17c25f8164c2f from qemu
2018-03-04 23:17:50 -05:00
Jaroslaw Pelczar 7fded6c15c
AArch64: Fix single stepping of ERET instruction
Previously when single stepping through ERET instruction via GDB
would result in debugger entering the "next" PC after ERET instruction.
When debugging in kernel mode, this will also cause unintended behavior,
because debugger will try to access memory from EL0 point of view.

Backports commit dddbba9943ef6a81c8702e4a50cb0a8b1a4201fe from qemu
2018-03-04 23:15:30 -05:00
Peter Maydell 6a951f17ed
target/arm: Rename 'type' to 'excret' in do_v7m_exception_exit()
In the v7M and v8M ARM ARM, the magic exception return values are
referred to as EXC_RETURN values, and in QEMU we use V7M_EXCRET_*
constants to define bits within them. Rename the 'type' variable
which holds the exception return value in do_v7m_exception_exit()
to excret, making it clearer that it does hold an EXC_RETURN value.

Backports commit 351e527a613147aa2a2e6910f92923deef27ee48 from qemu
2018-03-04 23:14:22 -05:00
Peter Maydell 1301cb1771
target/arm: Add and use defines for EXCRET constants
The exception-return magic values get some new bits in v8M, which
makes some bit definitions for them worthwhile.

We don't use the bit definitions for the switch on the low bits
which checks the return type for v7M, because this is defined
in the v7M ARM ARM as a set of valid values rather than via
per-bit checks.

Backports commit 4d1e7a4745c050f7ccac49a1c01437526b5130b5 from qemu
2018-03-04 23:12:37 -05:00
Peter Maydell aa71933721
target/arm: Remove unnecessary '| 0xf0000000' from do_v7m_exception_exit()
In do_v7m_exception_exit(), there's no need to force the high 4
bits of 'type' to 1 when calling v7m_exception_taken(), because
we know that they're always 1 or we could not have got to this
"handle return to magic exception return address" code. Remove
the unnecessary ORs.

Backports commit 7115cdf5782922611bcc44c89eec5990db7f6466 from qemu
2018-03-04 23:11:13 -05:00