In benchmark test (test_info) while making function call regs
r0 - r4 are modified into called function. Due to this value
inside r3 is getting lost.
This patch saves and restore the value in r0-r4 regs while making
function calls from assembly language.
Jira: ZEP-2314
Signed-off-by: Youvedeep Singh <youvedeep.singh@intel.com>
The API/Variable names in timing_info looks very speicific to
platform (like systick etc), whereas these variabled are used
across platforms (nrf/arm/quark).
So this patch :-
1. changing API/Variable names to generic one.
2. Creating some of Macros whose implimentation is platform
depenent.
Jira: ZEP-2314
Signed-off-by: Youvedeep Singh <youvedeep.singh@intel.com>
This patch fixes a couple of issues with the stack guard size and
properly constructs the STACK_ALIGN and STACK_ALIGN_SIZE definitions.
The ARM AAPCS requires that the stack pointers be 8 byte aligned. The
STACK_ALIGN_SIZE definition is meant to contain the stack pointer
alignment requirements. This is the required alignment at public API
boundaries (ie stack frames).
The STACK_ALIGN definition is the required alignment for the start
address for stack buffer storage. STACK_ALIGN is used to validate
the allocation sizes for stack buffers.
The MPU_GUARD_ALIGN_AND_SIZE definition is the minimum alignment and
size for the MPU. The minimum size and alignment just so happen to be
32 bytes for vanilla ARM MPU implementations.
When defining stack buffers, the stack guard alignment requirements
must be taken into consideration when allocating the stack memory.
The __align() must be filled in with either STACK_ALIGN_SIZE or the
align/size of the MPU stack guard. The align/size for the guard region
will be 0 when CONFIG_MPU_STACK_GUARD is not set, and 32 bytes when it
is.
The _ARCH_THREAD_STACK_XXXXXX APIs need to know the minimum alignment
requirements for the stack buffer memory and the stack guard size to
correctly allocate and reference the stack memory. This is reflected
in the macros with the use of the STACK_ALIGN definition and the
MPU_GUARD_ALIGN_AND_SIZE definition.
Signed-off-by: Andy Gross <andy.gross@linaro.org>
This patch removes the redundant stack alignment check being done. The
stack definition macros enforce the alignment requirements via the
__align() directives.
In addition, fix the rounding down of the psp to be correct. The
actual initial stack pointer is the end of the stack minus the size of
the __esf structure. Rounding down after the subtraction will get us
to the correct offset.
Signed-off-by: Andy Gross <andy.gross@linaro.org>
For some reason, the ESP32 HAL defines XCHAL_EXCM_LEVEL to 3. This
enables a version of _Level4Vector that doesn't work on this hardware.
Without complete visibility if the version that should work be axed,
keep both in the tree, but build the working other version instead
if building for ESP32.
Jira: ZEP-2556
Signed-off-by: Leandro Pereira <leandro.pereira@intel.com>
When we mask out the GPIO High impedance/Pull-up/Pull-down field we
should be shifting the mask file, not shifting the field. This is
because all the other defines already assume the shift.
Coverity-CID: 173640
Jira: ZEP-2538
Signed-off-by: Kumar Gala <kumar.gala@linaro.org>
Esp-idf defines the BIT macro that is also defined in Zephyr's
misc/util.h. Fix the issue by including the esp-idf headers first, so
that a check in util.h won't redefine the macro if it's already
defined.
Signed-off-by: Leandro Pereira <leandro.pereira@intel.com>
* apply STACK_GUARD_SIZE, no extra space will be added if
MPU_STACK_GUARD is disabled
* When ARC_STACK_CHECKING is enabled, MPU_STACK_GUARD will be
disabled
* add two new api: arc_core_mpu_default and arc_core_mpu_region
to configure mpu regions
* improve arc_core_mpu_enable and arc_core_mpu_disable
Signed-off-by: Wayne Ren <wei.ren@synopsys.com>
* add arc mpu driver
* modify the corresponding kconfig and kbuild
* currently only em_starterkit 2.2's em7d configuration
has mpu feature (mpu version 2)
* as the minimum region size of arc mpu version 2 is 2048 bytes and
region size should be power of 2, the stack size of threads
(including main thread and idle thread) should be at least
2048 bytes and power of 2
* for mpu stack guard feature, a stack guard region of 2048 bytes
is generated. This brings more memory footprint
* For arc mpu version 3, the minimum region size is 32 bytes.
* the codes are tested by the mpu_stack_guard_test and stackprot
Signed-off-by: Wayne Ren <wei.ren@synopsys.com>
Per ZEP-1958, Phase 2 of adding CC3220sf LaunchXL support,
was to "deprecate the CC3200 launchxl support in Zephyr
(redundant to the CC3220)."
Effectively, the CC3220 SOC replaces the CC3200.
This patch removes the following:
* the imported CC3200 SDK
* CC3200 SOC, board, DTS files.
* adjusts other files where cc3200 was mentioned.
Also, it fixes explicit references to CC3200 in generic
CC32xx driver files.
Jira: ZEP-1958
Signed-off-by: Gil Pitney <gil.pitney@linaro.org>
- .text, .text.*, .literal, .literal.* had no matching input section
rule and were being passed to the output binary verbatim. These
are all now in the output "text" section as intended.
- various rules in the data section were unnecessarily using KEEP().
- SW_ISR_TABLE wasn't included in linker script anywhere and was
ending up in its own section, and not the data section as intended.
- noinit section didn't exist at all, now defined.
Issue: ZEP-2508
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
Previously, calling NVIC_SetPriority(IRQn_Type irqn, ....) with
the NWP interrupt number of 171 caused a hard fault during a
subsequent svc #0 instruction during _Swap().
GNU compiler is generating a bit extension instruction (sxtb) which
converts a positive IRQ value argument to a negative value when
casting to the CMSIS IRQn_Type enum parameter type.
This generates a negative index, which then writes to an SCB
control register instead of NVIC register, causing a hard
fault later on.
This issue only occurs when passing interrupt numbers > 0x80
(eg: 171 (0xab) for the NWP) to the CMSIS NVIC apis.
The solution here is simply to redefine IRQn_Type to be an
unsigned 32 bit integer, while redefining the CMSIS IRQn_Type
enum definitions for interrupts less than zero.
Jira: ZEP-1958
Signed-off-by: Gil Pitney <gil.pitney@linaro.org>
* add nested interrupt support for interrupts
+ use a varibale exc_nest_count to trace nest interrupt and exception
+ regular interrupts can be nested by regular interrupts and fast
interrupts
+ fast interrupt's priority is the highest, cannot be nested
* remove the firq stack and exception stack
+ remove the coressponding kconfig option
+ all interrupts (normal and fast) and exceptions will be handled
in the same stack (_interrupt stack)
+ the pros are, smaller memory footprint (no firq stack), simpler
stack management, simpler codes, etc.. The cons are, possible
10-15 instructions overhead for the case where fast irq nests
regular irq
* add the case of ARC in test/kernel/gen_isr_table
Signed-off-by: Wayne Ren <wei.ren@synopsys.com>
Signed-off-by: Anas Nashif <anas.nashif@intel.com>
When you build application for em starterkit 2.3 em7d, it will
report error during build since it is not supported currently.
Signed-off-by: Huaqi Fang <huaqi.fang@synopsys.com>
em starterkit has two versions, 2.2 and 2.3.
Change soc.h to support both versions,
main changes are the interrupt connections.
Signed-off-by: Huaqi Fang <huaqi.fang@synopsys.com>
Since em starterkit has different firmware versions(2.2 and 2.3),
but the EM7D of 2.3 has new secureshield feature, which is not supported
in Zephyr, but EM7D of 2.2 is a normal EM core, which can be supported,
so we add support for 2.2 EM7D.
Signed-off-by: Huaqi Fang <huaqi.fang@synopsys.com>
An abnormal crash was encountered in ARMv6-M SoCs that don't have flash
starting at 0. With Zephyr OS the reason for this crash is that, on
ARMv6-M the system requires an exception vector table at the 0 address.
We implement the relocate_vector_table function to move the vector table
code to address 0 on systems which don't have the start of code already
at 0.
[kumar.gala: reworderd commit message, tweaked how we check if we need
to copy vector table]
Signed-off-by: Xiaorui Hu <xiaorui.hu@linaro.org>
Signed-off-by: Kumar Gala <kumar.gala@linaro.org>
Now that we have an mcux shim driver, remove the old k64-specific
driver. Also remove include/drivers/k20_sim.h, since the old
k64-specific driver was the only thing left using it.
Jira: ZEP-2025
Signed-off-by: Maureen Helm <maureen.helm@nxp.com>
Switches the default pwm driver from the k64-specific driver to the
mcux shim, which can be used on other SoCs with the ftm peripheral.
Jira: ZEP-2025
Signed-off-by: Maureen Helm <maureen.helm@nxp.com>
Adds a shim layer around the mcux ftm driver to adapt it to the Zephyr
pwm interface.
Jira: ZEP-2025
Signed-off-by: Maureen Helm <maureen.helm@nxp.com>
This cleans up the exception handling by removing the table declaration
from xtensa_intr_asm.S, and removing the unused
_xt_set_exception_handler() function.
Signed-off-by: Leandro Pereira <leandro.pereira@intel.com>
The Xtensa port was the only one remaining to be converted to the new
way of connecting interrupts in Zephyr. Some things are still
unconverted, mainly the exception table, and this will be performed
another time.
Of note: _irq_priority_set() isn't called on _ARCH_IRQ_CONNECT(), since
IRQs can't change priority on Xtensa: while the architecture has the
concept of interrupt priority levels, each line has a fixed level and
can't be changed.
Signed-off-by: Leandro Pereira <leandro.pereira@intel.com>
Dynamic IRQ allocation has been yanked from Zephyr a few releases ago,
so there's no point in keeping these options available.
Signed-off-by: Leandro Pereira <leandro.pereira@intel.com>
This provides basic GPIO support, with interrupts, and the ability to
read and write to ports on a pin-by-pin basis.
Jira: ZEP-2286
Signed-off-by: Leandro Pereira <leandro.pereira@intel.com>
This patch adjusts the ARM MPU implementation to be compliant to the
recent changes that introduced the opaque kernel data types.
Signed-off-by: Andy Gross <andy.gross@linaro.org>
The mimimum mpu size is 32 bytes, but requires mpu base address to be
aligned on 32 bytes to work. Define architecture thread macro when
MPU_STACK_GUARD config to allocate stack with 32 more bytes.
Signed-off-by: Michel Jaouen <michel.jaouen@st.com>
In the stm32_gpio_flags_to_conf function the configuration
values of the GPIO pin are shifted two times. One in the
stm32-pinctrlf1 header and one in the function. This patch
removes one of those shifts.
Signed-off-by: Yannis Damigos <giannis.damigos@gmail.com>
The value of the PTE (starting_pte_num) was not
calulated correctly. If size of the buffer exceeded 4KB,
the buffer validation API was failing.
JIRA: ZEP-2489
Signed-off-by: Adithya Baglody <adithya.nagaraj.baglody@intel.com>
The API name space for Bluetooth is bt_* and BT_* so it makes sense to
align the Kconfig name space with this. The additional benefit is that
this also makes the names shorter. It is also in line with what Linux
uses for Bluetooth Kconfig entries.
Some Bluetooth-related Networking Kconfig defines are renamed as well
in order to be consistent, such as NET_L2_BLUETOOTH.
Signed-off-by: Johan Hedberg <johan.hedberg@intel.com>
This patch adds the allow flash write CONFIG option to the ARM MPU
configuration in privileged mode.
Signed-off-by: Vincenzo Frascino <vincenzo.frascino@linaro.org>
Signed-off-by: Michael Scott <michael.scott@linaro.org>
Signed-off-by: David Brown <david.brown@linaro.org>
This patch adds the allow flash write CONFIG option to the NXP MPU
configuration in privileged mode.
Signed-off-by: Vincenzo Frascino <vincenzo.frascino@linaro.org>
Signed-off-by: David Brown <david.brown@linaro.org>
Currently Thread time slice is getting reset at end of timer
interrupt. Due to which equal priority threads behind current thread
in ready_q are not getting chance to run and leading to starvation.
This patch handles time slice in _ExcExit section context switch is
required.
Jira: ZEP-2444
Signed-off-by: Youvedeep Singh <youvedeep.singh@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Ramesh Thomas <ramesh.thomas@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Anas Nashif <anas.nashif@intel.com>
As luck would have it, the TSS for the main IA task has
all the information we need, populate an exception stack
frame with it.
The double-fault handler just stashes data and makes the main
hardware thread runnable again, and processing of the
exception continues from there.
We check the first byte before the faulting ESP value to see
if the stack pointer had run up to a non-present page, a sign
that this is a stack overflow and not a double fault for
some other reason.
Stack overflows in kernel mode are now recoverable for non-
essential threads, with the caveat that we hope we weren't in
a critical section updating kernel data structures when it
happened.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
Configuring the RAM/ROM regions will be the same for all
x86 targets as this is done with linker symbols.
Peripheral configuration left at the SOC level.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
The CPU first checks the page directory entry for write
or user permissions on a particular page before looking
at the page table entry.
If a region configured all pages to be non user accessible,
and this was changed for a page within it to be accessible,
the PDE would not be updated and any access would still
return a page fault.
The least amount of runtime logic to deal with this is to
indicate at build time that some pages within a region may
be marked writable or user accessible at runtime, and to
pre-set the flags in the page directory entry accordingly.
The driving need for this is the region configuration for
kernel memory, which will have user permissions set at
runtime for stacks and user-configured memory domains.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
Page faults will additionally dump out some interesting
page directory and page table flags for the faulting
memory address.
Intended to help determine whether the page tables have been
configured incorrectly as we enable memory protection features.
This only happens if CONFIG_EXCEPTION_DEBUG is turned on.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
The ouput speed of the gpio pins passed via the 'conf' argument was
ignored, causing the speed to always be in its reset state (lowest
possible speed for most pins). This was causing problems for pins that
actually need a speed faster than the default, like the ethernet
controller pins.
Combined with the correct pinmux configuration this fixes problems
of the olimex_stm32_e407 board not being able to send ethernet data.
Signed-off-by: Erwin Rol <erwin@erwinrol.com>
Historically, stacks were just character buffers and could be treated
as such if the user wanted to look inside the stack data, and also
declared as an array of the desired stack size.
This is no longer the case. Certain architectures will create a memory
region much larger to account for MPU/MMU guard pages. Unfortunately,
the kernel interfaces treat both the declared stack, and the valid
stack buffer within it as the same char * data type, even though these
absolutely cannot be used interchangeably.
We introduce an opaque k_thread_stack_t which gets instantiated by
K_THREAD_STACK_DECLARE(), this is no longer treated by the compiler
as a character pointer, even though it really is.
To access the real stack buffer within, the result of
K_THREAD_STACK_BUFFER() can be used, which will return a char * type.
This should catch a bunch of programming mistakes at build time:
- Declaring a character array outside of K_THREAD_STACK_DECLARE() and
passing it to K_THREAD_CREATE
- Directly examining the stack created by K_THREAD_STACK_DECLARE()
which is not actually the memory desired and may trigger a CPU
exception
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
Move to using the generated IRQ defines from the DTS instead of soc.h.
This change also fixes a minor bug in that the error irq priority wasn't
getting correctly picked up from device tree.
Signed-off-by: Kumar Gala <kumar.gala@linaro.org>
STM32F3 pinmux handler is reworked to support future pinmux dts
generation.
Preliminary change is done to move pin configuration
informations in a {pin, conf} structure closer to dts fields
"pins" array is removed as information is transfered to
"pinconf" array
Signed-off-by: Erwan Gouriou <erwan.gouriou@linaro.org>
STM32F4 pinmux handler is reworked to support future pinmux dts
generation.
Preliminary change is done to move pin configuration
informations in a {pin, conf} structure closer to dts fields
"pins" array is removed as information is transfered to
"pinconf" array
Signed-off-by: Erwan Gouriou <erwan.gouriou@linaro.org>
Rework stm32f1 pinmux code for future dts based pinmux code
generation.
Pin configuration is now done directly thanks to gpio port
configuration. Reference to pseudo alternate functions are
now removed same as the use of pins[] array.
Pins function (uart tx for instance) is set implicitly by
defining gpio mode and configuration.
This behavior is specific to stm32f10x series.
Signed-off-by: Erwan Gouriou <erwan.gouriou@linaro.org>
STM32L4 pinmux handler is reworked to support future pinmux dts
generation.
Preliminary change is done to move pin configuration
informations in a {pin, conf} structure closer to dts fields
"pins" array is removed and information is transferred to
"pinconf" array
Signed-off-by: Erwan Gouriou <erwan.gouriou@linaro.org>
In L4 series, select HAS_STM32CUBE is done per soc.
This could be factorized in Kconfig.series.
Aim is to lower the steps to add a new SoC.
Signed-off-by: Erwan Gouriou <erwan.gouriou@linaro.org>
Now that we generate BLUETOOTH_UART_ON_DEV_NAME, UART_PIPE_ON_DEV_NAME,
and BLUETOOTH_MONITOR_ON_DEV_NAME Kconfig defines for dts enabled
platforms add those into the appropriate dts files and remove from the
various board/Kconfig.defconfig files.
Signed-off-by: Kumar Gala <kumar.gala@linaro.org>
This will trigger a page fault if the guard area
is written to. Since the exception itself will try
to write to the memory, a double fault will be triggered
and we will do an IA task switch to the df_tss and panic.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
Subsequent patches will set this guard page as unmapped,
triggering a page fault on access. If this is due to
stack overflow, a double fault will be triggered,
which we are now capable of handling with a switch to
a know good stack.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
We now create a special IA hardware task for handling
double faults. This has a known good stack so that if
the kernel tries to push stack data onto an unmapped page,
we don't triple-fault and reset the system.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
We will need this for stack memory protection scenarios
where a writable GDT with Task State Segment descriptors
will be used. The addresses of the TSS segments cannot be
put in the GDT via preprocessor magic due to architecture
requirments that the address be split up into different
fields in the segment descriptor.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
This has one use-case: configuring the double-fault #DF
exception handler to do an IA task switch to a special
IA task with a known good stack, such that we can dump
diagnostic information and then panic.
Will be used for stack overflow detection in kernel mode,
as otherwise the CPU will triple-fault and reset.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
This is one less host tool we have to compile for every build,
and makes the build tools more portable across host OSes.
The code is also much simpler to maintain.
Issue: ZEP-2063
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
This enables the MMU-based stack protection feature,
which will cause a fatal error if a thread overflows
its stack in kernel mode, at a nontrivial cost in memory
(4K per thread).
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
This will cause sanitycheck runs to finish more quickly
instead of sitting there waiting on a timeout. We already
do this with the Xtensa simulator.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
With introduction of commit "pinmux: stm32: directly return error if
stm32_get_pin_config fails", pin configuration fails when
pins are not configured in pins[] array.
This was the case for configuration UART1 assigned on PB6/PB7.
Signed-off-by: Erwan Gouriou <erwan.gouriou@linaro.org>
'commit
("devicetree: Generate BLUETOOTH_UART ,UART_PIPE etc config from dt")'
created a dependency of selecting UART_QMSI_0 on device tree.
This change is reverted as it incorrect.
Signed-off-by: Savinay Dharmappa <savinay.dharmappa@intel.com>
If the adc driver configuration is enabled (CONFIG_ADC=y), then enable
the mcux shim driver by default for all Kinetis SoCs.
Jira: ZEP-1396
Signed-off-by: Maureen Helm <maureen.helm@nxp.com>
Adds a shim layer around the mcux adc16 driver to adapt it to the Zephyr
adc interface.
Jira: ZEP-1396
Signed-off-by: Maureen Helm <maureen.helm@nxp.com>
patch uses chosen property zephyr,bt-uart, zephyr,uart-pipe
and zephyr,bt-mon-uart to determine the uart instance to be
used for bluetooth,uart_pipe and bluetooth_monitor and generate
appropriate configs.
Signed-off-by: Savinay Dharmappa <savinay.dharmappa@intel.com>
A user space buffer must be validated before required operation
can proceed. This API will check the current MMU
configuration to determine if the buffer held by the user is valid.
Jira: ZEP-2326
Signed-off-by: Adithya Baglody <adithya.nagaraj.baglody@intel.com>
This needs to be in <arch/cpu.h> so that it can be called
from the k_panic()/k_oops() macros in kernel.h.
Fixes build errors on these arches when using k_panic() or
k_oops().
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
We can use the chosen property "zephyr,console" to determine what uart
should be used as the console and find its name to generate a define for
CONFIG_UART_CONSOLE_ON_DEV_NAME.
Signed-off-by: Kumar Gala <kumar.gala@linaro.org>
This breaks too easily, for example if &some_linker_variable
is used. The names don't matter at all, use preprocessor
__COUNTER__.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
Previously we were instantiating QEMU with 32MB of RAM but
only enabling a small fraction of it.
Now we boot with 8MB of ram. We ignore the first 4K so we can
make that an unmapped paged to catch NULL pointer dereferences.
If XIP is enabled, the "ROM" region will be the first half of
memory, the "RAM" region the latter.
Move the IDT_LIST and MMU_LIST regions elsewhere so they don't
overlap the new memory arrangement.
Use !XIP to fix a problem where CONFIG_RAM_SIZE was set incorrectly
for XIP case.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
Add a STM32 LL based driver for the RNG processor. The RNG processor
is a random number generator, based on a continuous analog noise, that
provides a random 32-bit value to the host when read. The RNG passed
the FIPS PUB 140-2 (2001 October 10) tests with a success ratio of 99%.
Signed-off-by: Erwin Rol <erwin@erwinrol.com>
Right now we allow for the I2C subsystem to be built without any drivers
enabled that utilize it. When we added support for the new STM32 I2C
driver we forced the I2C driver to be enabled if the I2C subsystem was
enabled. While this makes a reasonable amount of sense, it breaks
current assumptions for various testcases that we need to cleanup.
Signed-off-by: Kumar Gala <kumar.gala@linaro.org>
By now, t0 register restored value is overwritten
by mepc and mstatus values prior to returning from ISR.
Fixed by restoring mstatus and mepc registers before
restoring the caller-saved registers.
As t0 is a temporary register within the riscv ABI,
this issue was unnoticed for most applications, except
for computation intensive apps, like crypto tests.
Signed-off-by: Jean-Paul Etienne <fractalclone@gmail.com>
The defaults of 0x100000 for ROM and 0x400000 for RAM are intended
to 'fake' a XIP configuration, this all takes place in just RAM.
The gap between these two values is 3 megabytes, specify this
properly.
Fixes numerous test cases on qemu_x86 if CONFIG_XIP is enabled.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
Enabled the boot_time test on ARM SoCs, set __start_time_stamp on ARM
since we don't have a free running counter similar to TSC on x86.
Also moved to printing the values out as %u to increase the range of
values.
Signed-off-by: Kumar Gala <kumar.gala@linaro.org>
This patch allows more generic USB configuration in the samples
and removes platform dependent driver configuration.
Signed-off-by: Johann Fischer <j.fischer@phytec.de>
In added mode flash operation are performed in timeslice
(in radio idle time).
Kconfig for mode enabling CONFIG_SOC_FLASH_NRF5_RADIO_SYNC.
Erase and write API implementations were rewritten and preserved against
concurrent execution.
Signed-off-by: Andrzej Puzdrowski <andrzej.puzdrowski@nordicsemi.no>
Signed-off-by: Carles Cufi <carles.cufi@nordicsemi.no>
Board port was done before the yaml transition, so was missing a
cc2650_sensortag.yaml. As such when we build all the test we get a few
build errors that we also fixed up.
Signed-off-by: Kumar Gala <kumar.gala@linaro.org>
Add configuration, documentation, pinmux, fixup and dts support for
STM32F103x8 based Minimum System Development board.
Signed-off-by: Siddharth Chandrasekaran <siddharth@embedjournal.com>
Add configuration and memory definitions to support STM32F103x8
Medium-density performance line SoC with 64 KB Flash.
Merge multiple files into single Kconfig.defconfig.stm32f103xx
Signed-off-by: Siddharth Chandrasekaran <siddharth@embedjournal.com>
Since not all socs from f3 series (i.e stm32f334x8 no MPU) have MPU
capability, add capability only for MPU capable socs in Kconfig.soc
JIRA: ZEP-2220
Signed-off-by: Michel Jaouen <michel.jaouen@st.com>
As other stm32 series support MPU, move common file in a file tree
useable by socs from other series
JIRA: ZEP-2220
Signed-off-by: Michel Jaouen <michel.jaouen@st.com>
patch adds necessary files and does the modification to the existing
files to add device support for x86 based intel quark microcontroller
Signed-off-by: Savinay Dharmappa <savinay.dharmappa@intel.com>
The first stage bootloader, part of the ESP32 ROM, already sets up
a stack that's sufficient to execute C programs. So, instead of
implementing __stack() in assembly, do it in C to simplify things
slightly.
This ESP32-specific initialization will perform the following:
- Disable the watchdog timer that's enabled by the bootloader
- Move exception handlers to IRAM
- Disable normal interrupts
- Disable the second CPU
- Zero out the BSS segment
Things that might be performed in the future include setting up the
CPU frequency, memory protection regions, and enabling the flash
cache.
Signed-off-by: Leandro Pereira <leandro.pereira@intel.com>
Unconditionally use CONFIG_SIMULATOR_XTENSA to determine if XT_SIMULATOR
or XT_BOARD should be defined.
If CONFIG_SYS_CLOCK_HW_CYCLES_PER_SEC, also define XT_CLOCK_FREQ. This
isn't ideal as the clock frequency might be changed in runtime and this
effectively makes it a constant.
Until we can control the clock frequency in runtime, this will suffice.
Signed-off-by: Leandro Pereira <leandro.pereira@intel.com>
This is a minimal driver enabling console output during the port
bringup. While the driver works, only one of the three UART devices
are supported, and there isn't any way to change any parameters or
use interrupts. This will most likely be superceded by a proper
driver after the port has matured.
Signed-off-by: Leandro Pereira <leandro.pereira@intel.com>
Due to the configurable nature of the Xtensa platform, the generic name of
"LX6" cannot be used to describe an SoC as far as Zephyr goes. So ESP32 is
defined both as a SoC and as a board.
This is based on work by Rajavardhan Gundi.
Signed-off-by: Leandro Pereira <leandro.pereira@intel.com>
We always have UART_IRQ_FLAGS set to 0, so just call IRQ_CONNECT with a
0 argument for the flags, and remove the UART_IRQ_FLAGS. This is
towards support for using the driver on the TI CC2650. (we add a
comment about that as well).
Signed-off-by: Geoffrey Le Gourriérec <geoffrey.legourrierec@smile.fr>
Signed-off-by: Kumar Gala <kumar.gala@linaro.org>
Clearing fields in the region descriptor attributes doesn't always have
the expected effect of revoking permissions. In the case of bus master
supervisor mode fields (MxSM), setting to zero actually enables read,
write, and execute access.
When we reworked handling of region descriptor 0, we inadvertently
enabled execution from RAM by clearing the MxSM fields and enabling the
descriptor. This caused samples/mpu_test run to throw a usage fault
instead of an MPU-triggered bus fault.
Fix this by setting all the MxSM fields to 2'b11, which gives supervisor
mode the same access as user mode.
Signed-off-by: Maureen Helm <maureen.helm@nxp.com>
1. Changed _tsc_read() to k_cycles_get_32(). Thus reading the
time stamp will be agnostic of the architecutre used.
2. Changed the variable names from *_tsc to *_time_stamp.
JIRA: ZEP-1426
Signed-off-by: Adithya Baglody <adithya.nagaraj.baglody@intel.com>
Add a separate section in the linker to place the MMU configuration
information. This location is read by the gen_mmu.py script to
create the actual page tables.
JIRA: ZEP-2095
Signed-off-by: Adithya Baglody <adithya.nagaraj.baglody@intel.com>
In crt0.S the MMU is initialized. It uses the statically build
page tables. Here 32-bit paging scheme is used, thereby each page
table entry maps to a 4KB page. The valid regions of the memory are
specified by SOC specific file(soc.c).
JIRA: ZEP-2099
Signed-off-by: Adithya Baglody <adithya.nagaraj.baglody@intel.com>
Makefile rule to create the MMU page tables at boot time. This
rule invokes the gen_mmu.py script to create a binary which is
then placed into the kernel image using objcopy.
Makefile.mmu is included only when CONFIG_X86_MMU is enabled.
JIRA: ZEP-2095
Signed-off-by: Adithya Baglody <adithya.nagaraj.baglody@intel.com>
Macro is used to create a structure to specify the boot time
page table configuration. Needed by the gen_mmu.py script to generate
the actual page tables.
Linker script is needed for the following:
1. To place the MMU page tables at 4KByte boundary.
2. To keep the configuration structure created by
the Macro(mentioned above).
Signed-off-by: Adithya Baglody <adithya.nagaraj.baglody@intel.com>
Kconfig definition for enabling the memory management Unit
on x86 based platforms.
JIRA: ZEP-2093
Signed-off-by: Adithya Baglody <adithya.nagaraj.baglody@intel.com>
The .balign directives were not working correctly in their
previous positions as the directive was applying to the section
before the variable's section, causing in some builds the
variables to be misaligned, and accesses to them causing faults.
With the alignments after the section declaration, the variables
will now be aligned as specified. Any future variable declarations
should use this form instead to ensure proper alignment.
Signed-off-by: Michael R Rosen <michael.r.rosen@intel.com>
Both the ARM and NXP MPU drivers incorrectly calculated the region index
by assuming the region type (e.g., THREAD_STACK_GUARD_REGION) was
zero-indexed, when in reality it is one-indexed. This had the effect of
wasting one region.
Signed-off-by: Maureen Helm <maureen.helm@nxp.com>
The NXP MPU requires special handling of region descriptor 0 to
guarantee that the debugger has access to the entire address space. It
does not allow writes from the core to affect the start or end
addresses, or the permissions associated with the debugger.
The original implementation of this driver attempted to work around
region descriptor 0, resulting in an off-by-1 error caught by Coverity.
Instead, define region descriptor 0 explicitly in the mpu_regions array,
and add some asserts to ensure that one doesn't try to change its start
or end addresses. This has an added benefit such that more permissions
can be enabled in region 0 if desired, whereas the previous
implementation always forced all writable permissions to be cleared.
Coverity-CID: 170473
Jira: ZEP-2258
Signed-off-by: Maureen Helm <maureen.helm@nxp.com>
The original implementation of _get_num_regions() parsed the CESR[NRGD]
register field to determine the number of mpu region descriptors
implemented in hardware. There was a possible path in the code to return
zero, which would cause underflow later on in arm_core_mpu_configure().
Coverity complained despite an assert to catch this condition. Instead,
use a preprocessor macro from mcux that defines the number of mpu region
descriptors.
Coverity-CID: 169811
Jira: ZEP-2208
Signed-off-by: Maureen Helm <maureen.helm@nxp.com>
Stack sentinel doesn't prevent corruption, it just notices when
it happens. Any memory could be in a bad state and it's more
appropriate to take the entire system down rather than just kill
the thread.
Fatal testcase will still work since it installs its own
_SysFatalErrorHandler.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
One of the stack sentinel policies was to check the sentinel
any time a cooperative context switch is done (i.e, _Swap is
called).
This was done by adding a hook to _check_stack_sentinel in
every arch's __swap function.
This way is cleaner as we just have the hook in one inline
function rather than implemented in several different assembly
dialects.
The check upon interrupt is now made unconditionally rather
than checking if we are calling __swap, since the check now
is only called on cooperative _Swap(). The interrupt is always
serviced first.
Issue: ZEP-2244
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
The REGION bits (bit[3:0]) of MPU_RBAR register can specify the number
of the region to update if the VALID bit (bit[4]) is also set.
If the bit[3:0] of "region_addr" are not zero, might cause to update
unexpected region. This could happen since we might not declare stack
memory with specific alignment.
This patch will mask the bit[4:0] of "region_addr" to prevent updating
unexpected region.
Signed-off-by: Chunlin Han <chunlin.han@linaro.org>
The kernel tracks time slice usage with the _time_slice_elapsed global.
Every time the timer interrupt goes off and the timer driver calls
_nano_sys_clock_tick_announce() with the elapsed time, this is added to
_time_slice_elapsed. If it exceeds the total time slice, the thread is
moved to the back of the queue for that priority level and
_time_slice_elapsed is reset to zero.
In a non-tickless kernel, this is the only time _time_slice_elapsed is
reset. If a thread uses up a partial time slice, and then cooperatively
switches to another thread, the next thread will inherit the remaining
time slice, causing it not to be able to run as long as it ought to.
There does exist code to properly reset the elapsed count, but it was
only compiled in a tickless kernel. Now it is built any time
CONFIG_TIMESLICING is enabled.
Issue: ZEP-2107
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
Add necessary Kconfig and minimal device tree in order to support
STM32F412ZG variant as found on the Nucleo STM32F412 board.
Origin: Original
Change-Id: Ic98a686f478ce551dc6101466ed0cf16924109e8
Signed-off-by: Florian Vaussard <florian.vaussard@heig-vd.ch>
Following migration of stm32f1xx series clock control driver to
STM32Cube LL API, cleanup stm32 code base in order to take into
account that this is the only clock driver available for stm32
family.
Signed-off-by: Erwan Gouriou <erwan.gouriou@linaro.org>
Following introduction of stm32cube LL based clock control driver,
remove references to former native driver.
Signed-off-by: Erwan Gouriou <erwan.gouriou@linaro.org>
Align stm32f1xx series clock driver to other parts of stm32 family.
Driver support both Connectivity and Density lines of stm32f1 series,
that are based on different Reset and Clock Control architectures.
Signed-off-by: Erwan Gouriou <erwan.gouriou@linaro.org>
The STM32F413ZH has 1536kB of Flash and 320kB of SRAM. This
configuration is currently not supported by ST MPU driver, so fill in
the blanks.
Note: The MPU does not support region size that is not a power-of-2 (see
the SIZE field in the MPU_RASR register). This is a problem for our
1536kB Flash region, so it was rounded up to the nearest choice. This is
possible because the memory in the range 0x0818000 - 0x0FFFFFFF is
"Reserved" and thus not mapped anyway.
Change-Id: If0c3d1db564ca45e77f8b5bafa2afdbafa85b40f
Signed-off-by: Florian Vaussard <florian.vaussard@heig-vd.ch>
This reverts commit 37f4178f58.
This change builds gen_idt in the zephyr project tree instead of
building it in outdir of the application. The build process should all
happen inside outdir and no binaries should be placed in the zephyr
tree.
Signed-off-by: Anas Nashif <anas.nashif@intel.com>
pop {lr} instruction is not supported in ARMv6-M, fixed by
using pop {r0}; mov lr, r0; instructions.
Jira: ZEP-2222
Signed-off-by: Vinayak Kariappa Chettimada <vich@nordicsemi.no>
We now have generic ARM M4 MPU support added to Zephyr.
Let's enable it for use with Nordic nRF52 chips.
Memory Layout was generated from Section 8.3 "Memory
Map" of nRF52 Product Specifications (for both nRF52832
and nRF52840):
0x00000000: Flash
0x10000000: Factory Information Config Registers
0x10001000: User Information Config Registers
0x20000000: SRAM
0x40000000: APB Peripherals
0x50000000: AHB Peripherals
0xE0000000: ARM M4 Private Peripheral Registers
NOT Configured:
0x60000000: External RAM
0x80000000: External RAM
0xA0000000: External Device
0xC0000000: External Device
NOTE: More work will be needed for future Nordic MWU (Memory
Watching Unit) support.
Signed-off-by: Michael Scott <michael.scott@linaro.org>
This patch add arm core MPU support to NXP MPU driver.
With this feature it is now possible to enable stack guarding on NXP
MPUs.
Signed-off-by: Vincenzo Frascino <vincenzo.frascino@linaro.org>
The STM32L4x SoCs embeds a slightly different embedded flash controller
from the STM32F4x SoCs.
This particular controller has the following properties :
- Up to 2 512KiB banks divided in 2KiB pages
- Flash can be accessed in any sizes
- Flash must be written in 64bit aligned 64bit double-words
The drivers/flash/flash_stm32f4x.c is refactored into a new common
drivers/flash/flash_stm32.c and drivers/flash/flash_stm32l4x.c is
created with the STM32L4x specific functions.
To ease the refactoring and keep common functions, the STM32L4x flash
headers are slightly modified to match the hardware reference naming
and solve compilation issues.
Signed-off-by: Neil Armstrong <narmstrong@baylibre.com>
Neither ASF nor CMSIS provide defines that can be processed by
the assembler. Exclude those from soc.h. Before this was done
incorrectly in board.h file.
Signed-off-by: Piotr Mienkowski <piotr.mienkowski@gmail.com>
This patch converts Atmel sam3x MCU series to use register
header files from Atmel Software Framework (ASF) library.
By using ASF different Atmel SAM MCU series can use common
device drivers.
Signed-off-by: Piotr Mienkowski <piotr.mienkowski@gmail.com>
This patch adds support for remaining Atmel SAM MCU series,
like sam3x to the common GPIO driver. After this update
full SAM MCU family should be supported by the driver.
Signed-off-by: Piotr Mienkowski <piotr.mienkowski@gmail.com>
Add configuration, dtsi and memory configuration fixup for the
STM32F469XI High Performance SoC.
Signed-off-by: Neil Armstrong <narmstrong@baylibre.com>
Here are the main changes:
* board: Update EMSK onboard resources such as Button, Switch and LEDs
+ update soc.h for em7d, em9d, em11d
+ update board.h for em_starterkit board
* arc: Add floating point support and code density support
+ add kconfig configuration
+ add compiler options
+ add register definitions, marcos, assembly codes
+ fixes in existing codes and configurations.
* arc: Update detailed board configurations for cores of emsk 2.3
* script: Provide arc_debugger.sh for debugging em_starterkit board
+ make BOARD=em_starterkit debug
This will start openocd server for emsk, and arc gdb will connect
to this debug server, user can run `continue` command if user just
want to run the application, or other commands if debugging needed.
+ make BOARD=em_starterkit debugserver
This will start an openocd debugger server for emsk, and user can
connect to this debugserver using arc gdb and do what they want to.
+ make BOARD=em_starterkit flash
This will download the zephyr application elf file to emsk,
and run it.
Signed-off-by: Huaqi Fang <huaqi.fang@synopsys.com>
Use TOOLCHAIN_VARIANT to indicate what XCC toolchain release
to use.
Set a reasonable default for the RG-2016.4 toolchain release.
D_108mini, D_212GP, D_233L are only in RF-2016.4, set that
appropriately.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
This patch integrates the thread stack guard feature in the arm
Zephyr core.
Change-Id: I2022899cbc7a340be71cfaa52f79418292f93bae
Signed-off-by: Vincenzo Frascino <vincenzo.frascino@linaro.org>
This patch adds the arm core MPU implementation.
This implementation currently supports the thread stack guard feature.
Change-Id: I8b3795ebaf1ebad38aaddc2ed2f05535ead2c09a
Signed-off-by: Vincenzo Frascino <vincenzo.frascino@linaro.org>
This patch add arm core MPU support to ARM MPU driver.
Change-Id: I5a61da4615ae687bf42f1c9947e291ebfd2d2c1d
Signed-off-by: Vincenzo Frascino <vincenzo.frascino@linaro.org>
This patch adds the arm core MPU interface, a common way to access the
pu functionalities by the arm zephyr kernel.
The interface can be divided in two parts:
- a core part that will be implemented by the arm_core_mpu driver and
used directly by the kernel
- a driver part that will be implemented by the mpu drivers and used by
the arm_core_mpu driver
Change-Id: I590bd284abc40d98b06fdf1efb5800903313aa00
Signed-off-by: Vincenzo Frascino <vincenzo.frascino@linaro.org>
This patch adds initial MPU support to NXP K6x family.
The boot configuration prevents the following security issues:
* Prevent to read at an address that is reserved in the memory map.
* Prevent to write into the boot Flash/ROM.
* Prevent from running code located in SRAM.
This driver has been tested on FRDM-K64F.
Change-Id: I907168fff0c6028f1c665f1d3c224cbeec31be32
Signed-off-by: Vincenzo Frascino <vincenzo.frascino@linaro.org>
XCC doesn't recognize the "I" compiler constraint but GCC does. Switch
to "i" which is understood by both.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
Now that all ARM platforms have a device tree we can move selecting of
HAS_DTS up and remove any !HAS_DTS cases, as well as setting in all the
defconfigs.
Signed-off-by: Kumar Gala <kumar.gala@linaro.org>
Add defines and pinmux arrays to support more UARTs on STM32F4.
Change-Id: Ib06c549bdb2b3d7065554a0a6d1a3d15441b29c9
Signed-off-by: Florian Vaussard <florian.vaussard@heig-vd.ch>
It is useless to include the pinmux for a peripheral if it is not
enabled in the Kconfig. This is unnecessary and it increases the size of
the binary.
Define macros that will default to void if the associated Kconfig is not
enabled.
Change-Id: I0857fcef335c75b8bb6d537fd859f93d5be4a228
Signed-off-by: Florian Vaussard <florian.vaussard@heig-vd.ch>
Clean-up the pinmux arrays as a preparatory work before adding more
pinmuxes.
This is achieved by the following two actions:
- Define the PAD macro to simplify the [x - 1] = y construct
- Reorder the declartions by bank / pin to make it easier to
locate a pin among a high number of other pins, while minimizing the
risk of conflict when two people add a new declaration for two
different pins
Change-Id: I1ca0cc4f48bcd8cfd35b331e9821935f5c855876
Signed-off-by: Florian Vaussard <florian.vaussard@heig-vd.ch>
Add necessary Kconfig and minimal device tree in order to support
STM32F413xH variants as found on the Nucleo STM32F413 board.
Origin: Original
Change-Id: I60230c240d6acb610f16a02c62048d448476e9c5
Signed-off-by: Florian Vaussard <florian.vaussard@heig-vd.ch>
The bitfield determining the I/O direction already defines the pin
as either input or output, cannot be none or both at the same time
This issue was reported by Coverity
Coverity-CID: 151970
Signed-off-by: Kumar Gala <kumar.gala@linaro.org>
Not all the boards (for instance the Nuclo F412) use USART1 or USART2.
Let each board enable these USARTs when really used.
Change-Id: Idfe79c724bd7b1ab154310b4a8234b52eef2298d
Signed-off-by: Florian Vaussard <florian.vaussard@heig-vd.ch>
Commit 87893ddf7ad4 ("soc: stm32f429zi: rename SOC config flag") renamed
SOC_STM32F429XX to SOC_STM32F429XI but the text of the option should be
changed as well to reflect this restriction in scope.
Change-Id: I2627b59f805e73d6c8a3534e0feec71a4269c9ab
Signed-off-by: Florian Vaussard <florian.vaussard@heig-vd.ch>
Commit 599149dfb831 ("soc: stm32f407xg: rename SOC config flag") renamed
SOC_STM32F407XX to SOC_STM32F407XG but the text of the option should be
changed as well to reflect this restriction in scope.
Change-Id: Id03529452f5ec7d7ffee214b152c4aa555e1208a
Signed-off-by: Florian Vaussard <florian.vaussard@heig-vd.ch>
Rename SOC_STM32F407XX to SOC_STM32F407XG to keep flash
size information.
Aim is to be able to distinguish flash size variants of
the SoC when needed (for instance in dts/arm/st/mem.h file).
Change-Id: I0afa16e86b7c99b9e685004f96beeb888f9e7568
Signed-off-by: Erwan Gouriou <erwan.gouriou@linaro.org>
Rename SOC_STM32F429XX to SOC_STM32F429XI to keep flash
size information.
Aim is to be able to distinguish flash size variants of
the SoC when needed (for instance in dts/arm/st/mem.h file)
Change-Id: Id188b7703d2bce0a3ded09132ff0f205efa9c143
Signed-off-by: Erwan Gouriou <erwan.gouriou@linaro.org>
Rename SOC_STM32L476XX to SOC_STM32L476XG to keep flash
size information.
Aim is to be able to distinguish flash size variants of
the SoC when needed (for instance in dts/arm/st/mem.h file)
Change-Id: I834bb5b83c24c39e90c0492a2b22a7c7802de361
Signed-off-by: Erwan Gouriou <erwan.gouriou@linaro.org>
The xC tag in the SoC reference indicates the flash size, use it in the
configuration to permit selection of correct flash size for dts.
Signed-off-by: Neil Armstrong <narmstrong@baylibre.com>
This patch enables the generation of the ARM CMSDK UART base address
from the device tree.
Signed-off-by: Vincenzo Frascino <vincenzo.frascino@linaro.org>
This places a sentinel value at the lowest 4 bytes of a stack
memory region and checks it at various intervals, including when
servicing interrupts or context switching.
This is implemented on all arches except ARC, which supports stack
bounds checking directly in hardware.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
- There's no clear need to disable frame pointers if this feature is
used, remove this directive.
- The 'top' and 'base' terms are reversed. The 'base' is the high
address of the stack. The top is the lowest address, where we cannot
push further down. Fixup member and offset names to correspond to how
these terms are used in hardware documentation.
- Use correct pointers for stack top location
- Fatal exceptions now go through _NanoFatalErrorHandler to report the
faulting ip and thread.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
For various reasons its often necessary to generate certain
complex data structures at build-time by separate tools outside
of the C compiler. Data is populated to these tools by way of
special binary sections not intended to be included in the final
binary. We currently do this to generate interrupt tables, forthcoming
work will also use this to generate MMU page tables.
The way we have been doing this is to generatea "kernel_prebuilt.elf",
extract the metadata sections with objcopy, run the tool, and then
re-link the kernel with the extra data *and* use objcopy to pull
out the unwanted sections.
This doesn't scale well if multiple post-build steps are needed.
Now this is much simpler; in any Makefile, a special
GENERATED_KERNEL_OBJECT_FILES variable may be appended to containing
the filenames to the generated object files, which will be generated
by Make in the usual fashion.
Instead of using objcopy to pull out, we now create a linker-pass2.cmd
which additionally defines LINKER_PASS2. The source linker script
can #ifdef around this to use the special /DISCARD/ section target
to not include metadata sections in the final binary.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
None of this is currently necessary, the spurious interrupt
stubs and exception entry code is included in the binary just
fine. To make matters worse, some data referenced lives in the
.intList section which is completely stripped out of the binary.
If in the future we find certain essential functions are being
garbage collected when they should not be, the proper way to
mitigate this is with KEEP() directives in the linker script.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
We had two assembly files to prepare for entry into C domain,
one intended for the simulator and one intended for real boards.
- Both files merged into a single crt1.S for either simulated or real
targets
- Extra logic to populate command line arguments from simulator removed,
we don't use it.
- BSS zeroing logic from crt1-boards.S used
- Reference to missing reset-unneeded.S removed
- exit() implementation moved to fatal.c, now invokes a kernel panic
if we are not running under the simulator
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
Unline k_thread_spawn(), the struct k_thread can live anywhere and not
in the thread's stack region. This will be useful for memory protection
scenarios where private kernel structures for a thread are not
accessible by that thread, or we want to allow the thread to use all the
stack space we gave it.
This requires a change to the internal _new_thread() API as we need to
provide a separate pointer for the k_thread.
By default, we still create internal threads with the k_thread in stack
memory. Forthcoming patches will change this, but we first need to make
it easier to define k_thread memory of variable size depending on
whether we need to store coprocessor state or not.
Change-Id: I533bbcf317833ba67a771b356b6bbc6596bf60f5
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
C library is not actually used by the xtensa port, we only need the
'exit' function. Implement 'exit' in crt1-* and drop remaining
references to the C library.
Change-Id: I8a562363956b4755a6b5baee7acf3726485e5ce3
Signed-off-by: Max Filippov <jcmvbkbc@gmail.com>
Add QEMU_CPU_TYPE for the sample_controller, so that zephyr image could
be run on QEMU with sample_controller core.
Change-Id: Id9e97a43c4b7921142289dcf97ff782993ca0463
Signed-off-by: Max Filippov <jcmvbkbc@gmail.com>
XT_* macros are defined in xtensa HAL headers as xcc intrinsics. gcc
does not have any of these intrinsics. Replace XT_* macros with inline
assembly or provide gcc-compatible definitions.
Change-Id: If823ea8a7898a11a3a8363b17efdba27dee4c6a4
Signed-off-by: Max Filippov <jcmvbkbc@gmail.com>
A bad rebase of a patch that moved these defines around
unintentionally reverted a necessary change to the coprocessor
save area.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
The files for the Arduino Due needed to be updated to use the new
configuration when the SoC moved from the atmel_sam3 directory to
the atmel_sam/sam3x directory.
Jira: ZEP-2067
Signed-off-by: Justin Watson <jwatson5@gmail.com>
The FPGA on the MPS2 board implements 4 SBCon devices for I2C which are
connected to:
- a touchscreen controller
- the audio device (for configuration)
- both shield connectors
Change-Id: I55ca985e18b45d68f5e7421c4768dfc9bf2fcb3f
Signed-off-by: Jon Medhurst <tixy@linaro.org>
Converted Stellaris UART driver over to utilize device tree generated
defines. Added a yaml description for the uart, and converted over the
ti_lm3s6965 SoC & qemu_cortex_m3 board port over to utilize it.
Change-Id: Ie20844eb63d2c68eb59ad4160f7f5b5a35e2943b
Signed-off-by: Kumar Gala <kumar.gala@linaro.org>
Introduce a simple device tree for the TI lm3s6965 SoC and QEMU
Cortex-M3 board port. We get flash and memory base addresses and sizes
from the device tree as well as the ARM NVIC number of priority bits.
Change-Id: I4452b5543de7be55518997e54837ccbfd4f121df
Signed-off-by: Kumar Gala <kumar.gala@linaro.org>
Reorder config entries alphabetically to make it easier to add new ones.
Change-Id: Ib118405a150a408638232513fba7198b458ecfa7
Signed-off-by: Florian Vaussard <florian.vaussard@heig-vd.ch>
Now that all the nRF based board/SoCs have device trees, we can remove
the Kconfig bits that are now coming from device tree.
Change-Id: Ia1a870a50582d4109070d2833660f58fd6f8691f
Signed-off-by: Kumar Gala <kumar.gala@linaro.org>
Add device tree support for nRF51822 SoCs and Arduino 101-BLE,
Curie-BLE, BLE Nano, PCA10028-DK, and Quark-SE BLE boards. This
is minimal support for memory, flash, and UART.
Change-Id: I7e572bea537e384b6d66e520462f023ace0c9b35
Signed-off-by: Kumar Gala <kumar.gala@linaro.org>
Fixup the nRF52840-QIAA to allow getting its SRAM & FLASH sizes from
device tree.
Change-Id: I67ecd7da5f0472402064f158030d9f97f49d7d20
Signed-off-by: Kumar Gala <kumar.gala@linaro.org>
Nothing calls _ScpMainOscEnable, so lets remove it and associated files
that aren't used anymore.
Change-Id: Ibe900d039c531c4da56baa673d309ee961b09e52
Signed-off-by: Kumar Gala <kumar.gala@linaro.org>
Cleanup soc code to enable UART_MCUX_LPSCI to support UART0.
Change-Id: I173febffcffc902f228946124e0434f122a67607
Signed-off-by: Kumar Gala <kumar.gala@linaro.org>
Adds a shim layer around the mcux lpsci driver to adapt it to the Zephyr
serial interface.
Change-Id: I024f1605e3194f34bb57e8a121900e05b3085a82
Signed-off-by: Kumar Gala <kumar.gala@linaro.org>
Add support for STM32L475xG SoC as a preliminary for
Discovery IOT board support.
stm32l476.dtsi file is now including stm32l475.dtsi
since STM32L476 SoC is a STM32L475 SoC with LCD support
Change-Id: I7567255e4172231cbf4899474617ecae0cd68d64
Signed-off-by: Erwan Gouriou <erwan.gouriou@linaro.org>
Following activation of stm32 common clock driver for stm32f4 series
remove references to stm32f4 specific driver.
Change-Id: I372a0ea046007bcb34944d6b2b8880077583b1d3
Signed-off-by: Erwan Gouriou <erwan.gouriou@linaro.org>
This commit disables native stm32f4x clock control
driver and enables stm32 LL clock control driver
for stm32f4 family
Jira: ZEP-2039
Change-Id: I98ba6c89c4a3a1f39658c5808cd47a2d1f344130
Signed-off-by: Erwan Gouriou <erwan.gouriou@linaro.org>
This commit enables STM32Cube LL based driver for stm32f4 series.
This generic driver provides a unified API to clock driver for all
stm32 series.
LL API allows driver to be lightweight and to keep genericity across
stm32 family to ease further devlopment and maintenance.
Change-Id: Ie31ae8f433313787f9c9eda77de41925721d54dd
Signed-off-by: Erwan Gouriou <erwan.gouriou@linaro.org>
The CC3220SF is a replacement for the CC3200 SoC, comprising
a network coprocessor and Cortex-M4 MPU.
This leverages the CC3220 SDK driver peripheral library in ROM,
and some files built from ext/hal/ti/.
Jira: ZEP-1958
Change-Id: I892b212c178e05d84ff1d716dde593ced653ae6d
Signed-off-by: Gil Pitney <gil.pitney@linaro.org>
This fixes ZEP-1955. The issue was that the interrupt stack frame only
allocates 4 registers. This means that if any window overflow happens,
only 4 registers can be saved. This implies that the interrupt handler
can not call functions other than using call4. If this rule is not
honored, then it will result in the registers being overwriting other
context information and thus a stack corruption.
The fix consists on using call4 for calling even t logger function,
which is by the way more optimal as the interrupt handler does not need
to save more than 4 registers when these functions are called.
Issue: ZEP-1955
Change-Id: Iacea626443d1d61d95a52253ac8ff15fc3722d2c
Signed-off-by: Mazen NEIFER <mazen@nestwave.com>
This was more or less transplanted from old Viper codebase (Zephyr's
ancestor which supported paging) and adapted to current coding style.
Change-Id: I203e631f1dcd5f2fb4e9a2fa9339fc7521c7962d
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
Adds event based scheduling logic to the kernel. Updates
management of timeouts, timers, idling etc. based on
time tracked at events rather than periodic ticks. Provides
interfaces for timers to announce and get next timer expiry
based on kernel scheduling decisions involving time slicing
of threads, timeouts and idling. Uses wall time units instead
of ticks in all scheduling activities.
The implementation involves changes in the following areas
1. Management of time in wall units like ms/us instead of ticks
The existing implementation already had an option to configure
number of ticks in a second. The new implementation builds on
top of that feature and provides option to set the size of the
scheduling granurality to mili seconds or micro seconds. This
allows most of the current implementation to be reused. Due to
this re-use and co-existence with tick based kernel, the names
of variables may contain the word "tick". However, in the
tickless kernel implementation, it represents the currently
configured time unit, which would be be mili seconds or
micro seconds. The APIs that take time as a parameter are not
impacted and they continue to pass time in mili seconds.
2. Timers would not be programmed in periodic mode
generating ticks. Instead they would be programmed in one
shot mode to generate events at the time the kernel scheduler
needs to gain control for its scheduling activities like
timers, timeouts, time slicing, idling etc.
3. The scheduler provides interfaces that the timer drivers
use to announce elapsed time and get the next time the scheduler
needs a timer event. It is possible that the scheduler may not
need another timer event, in which case the system would wait
for a non-timer event to wake it up if it is idling.
4. New APIs are defined to be implemented by timer drivers. Also
they need to handler timer events differently. These changes
have been done in the HPET timer driver. In future other timers
that support tickles kernel should implement these APIs as well.
These APIs are to re-program the timer, update and announce
elapsed time.
5. Philosopher and timer_api applications have been enabled to
test tickless kernel. Separate configuration files are created
which define the necessary CONFIG flags. Run these apps using
following command
make pristine && make BOARD=qemu_x86 CONF_FILE=prj_tickless.conf qemu
Jira: ZEP-339 ZEP-1946 ZEP-948
Change-Id: I7d950c31bf1ff929a9066fad42c2f0559a2e5983
Signed-off-by: Ramesh Thomas <ramesh.thomas@intel.com>
Future tickless kernel patches would be inserting some
code before call to Swap. To enable this it will create
a mcro named as the current _Swap which would call first
the tickless kernel code and then call the real __swap()
Jira: ZEP-339
Change-Id: Id778bfcee4f88982c958fcf22d7f04deb4bd572f
Signed-off-by: Ramesh Thomas <ramesh.thomas@intel.com>
Found out that the SAM3 series is not a single series. There are actully
3 different series, 3U, 3A, and 3X.
Origin: Original
Jira: ZEP-2067
Change-Id: I61cdc826cc32dbdd25b5e6bafaada062c8ae8417
Signed-off-by: Justin Watson <jwatson5@gmail.com>
Historically, space for struct k_thread was always carved out of the
thread's stack region. However, we want more control on where this data
will reside; in memory protection scenarios the stack may only be used
for actual stack data and nothing else.
On some platforms (particularly ARM), including kernel_arch_data.h from
the toplevel kernel.h exposes intractable circular dependency issues.
We create a new per-arch header "kernel_arch_thread.h" with very limited
scope; it only defines the three data structures necessary to instantiate
the arch-specific bits of a struct k_thread.
Change-Id: I3a55b4ed4270512e58cf671f327bb033ad7f4a4f
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
Moved the Atmel SAM 3 from its own directory into
the directory tree laid out in arch/arm/soc/atmel_sam.
Origin: Original
Jira: ZEP-2067
Change-Id: I26a1a521dd7caa607c3e95a06cd574ee68ca59b8
Signed-off-by: Justin Watson <jwatson5@gmail.com>
This SoC, in its default configuration, does not have any SW IRQ below
the EXCM level. This make it unsuitable to use irq_offload() and thus
almost untestable.
Decision was made to remove this configuration in favorof custom one
XRC_D2PM_5swIrq, which is the same core but with additional 4 SW IRQs
of level 1 and an additional timer.
Issue: ZEP-2029
Change-Id: Iee4f8346aa9d610e14898444f78d28ef0ac4cef2
Signed-off-by: Mazen NEIFER <mazen@nestwave.com>
This patch adds initial MPU support to STM32F401XE.
The boot configuration prevents the following security issues:
* Prevent to read at an address that is reserved in the memory map.
* Prevent to write into the boot Flash/ROM.
* Prevent the application to access to the BootROM.
* Prevent from running code located in SRAM.
Change-Id: I4dc0669009bd5c0a829a69f8ff417c787b7043ed
Signed-off-by: Vincenzo Frascino <vincenzo.frascino@linaro.org>
This patch adds initial MPU support to ARM Beetle.
The boot configuration prevents the following security issues:
* Prevent to read at an address that is reserved in the memory map.
* Prevent to write into the boot Flash/ROM.
* Prevent from running code located in SRAM.
Change-Id: I64f1001369896fffb0647de6be605a95161c4695
Signed-off-by: Vincenzo Frascino <vincenzo.frascino@linaro.org>
This patch adds an initial driver for the ARM MPU.
This driver has been tested on ARM Beetle and STM32F4.
Change-Id: I2bc4031961ec5a1d569929249237646f4a349f16
Signed-off-by: Vincenzo Frascino <vincenzo.frascino@linaro.org>
This patch add the Memory Protection Unit parameter to the arm core
configuration.
Change-Id: Ifee8cdd5738391a6f182e8d0382d27eeb8c546ba
Signed-off-by: Vincenzo Frascino <vincenzo.frascino@linaro.org>
Signed-off-by: Marc Moreno <marc.morenoberengue@linaro.org>
This patch adds the regions for the mpu configuration to the soc.h file.
Change-Id: Ifd1ce96eeb4731ae01f5171924af92b9e236a3dc
Signed-off-by: Vincenzo Frascino <vincenzo.frascino@linaro.org>
Signed-off-by: Marc Moreno <marc.morenoberengue@linaro.org>
When calling scripts/gen_idt, if we don't have $ZEPHYR_BASE/scripts in
the path, it will fail, so we can call it with its full path to avoid
such need.
Change-Id: I47b340c9f3204ad8740c29e663e12082208bb13b
Signed-off-by: Inaky Perez-Gonzalez <inaky.perez-gonzalez@intel.com>
Document the flash latency values by copying the relevant tables
from the reference manuals for each MCU.
Change-Id: Ieb2824ffd7634d917399e3e62146d9243b527f44
Signed-off-by: Christer Weinigel <christer@weinigel.se>
Fix misspellings in Kconfig help text and made spelling of
RX and TX consistent (from reviewer comments)
Change-Id: Ie9d4c3863cd210e7a17b50a85a7e64156b6bf3d7
Signed-off-by: David B. Kinder <david.b.kinder@intel.com>
If the flash latency isn't set most STM32F4xx MCU's won't be able
to run from flash when the CPU frequency is changed. Make this a
compile time error instead of an assert at runtime.
Change-Id: Ic3421194545f8f83bd6e00f0cd011306c8d1eedd
Signed-off-by: Christer Weinigel <christer@weinigel.se>
Put the reason code in r0 and make a SVC #2 call, which will be
propagated to _fatal_error_handler as an exception.
The _is_in_isr() implementation had to be tweaked a bit. User-generated
SVC exception no longer just used for irq_offload(); just because we are
in it does not mean we are in interrupt context. Instead, have the
irq_offload code set and clear the offload_routine global; it will be
non-NULL only if it's in use. Upcoming changes to support memory
protection (which will require system calls) will need this too.
We free up some small amount of ROM deleting _default_esf struct as it's
no longer needed.
Issue: ZEP-843
Change-Id: Ie82bd708575934cffe41e64f5c128c8704ca4e48
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
We reserve a specific vector in the IDT to trigger when we want to
enter a fatal exception state from software.
Disabled for drivers/build_all tests as we were up to the ROM limit
on Quark D2000.
Issue: ZEP-843
Change-Id: I4de7f025fba0691d07bcc3b3f0925973834496a0
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
Unlike assertions, these APIs are active at all times. The kernel will
treat these errors in the same way as fatal CPU exceptions. Ultimately,
the policy of what to do with these errors is implemented in
_SysFatalErrorHandler.
If the archtecture supports it, a real CPU exception can be triggered
which will provide a complete register dump and PC value when the
problem occurs. This will provide more helpful information than a fake
exception stack frame (_default_esf) passed to the arch-specific exception
handling code.
Issue: ZEP-843
Change-Id: I8f136905c05bb84772e1c5ed53b8e920d24eb6fd
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
The ICSR RETTOBASE bit is improperly implemented in QEMU (the polarity
is flipped) and the fix for it has not yet made it into a QEMU release,
although it is present in upstream master branch.
The symptom is that if we are not in thread mode, the system always
believes were are in a nested exception state, causing _IsInIsr() to
always return true.
Skip the nested exception check if we are building for QEMU.
This is a workaround until SDK-54 is resolved.
Issue: SDK-54
Change-Id: I06eafcc85fb76a9b23b4ba85ed6e111a08516231
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
For exceptions where we are just going to abort the current thread, we
need to exit handler mode properly so that PendSV can run and perform a
context switch. For ARM architecture this means that the fatal error
handling code path can indeed return if we were 1) in handler mode and
2) only wish to abort the current thread.
Fixes a very long-standing bug where a thread that generates an
exception, and should only abort the thread, instead takes down the
entire system.
Issue: ZEP-2052
Change-Id: Ib356a34a6fda2e0f8aff39c4b3270efceb81e54d
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
We do the same thing on all arch's right now for thread_monitor_init so
lets put it in a common place. This also should fix an issue on xtensa
when thread monitor can be enabled (reference to _nanokernel.threads).
Change-Id: If2f26c1578aa1f18565a530de4880ae7bd5a0da2
Signed-off-by: Kumar Gala <kumar.gala@linaro.org>