[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] [PATCH] xen/arm: vtimer: Don't read/use the secure physical timer interrupt for ACPI
From: Julien Grall <jgrall@xxxxxxxxxx> Per ACPI 6.5 section 5.2.25 ("Generic Timer Description Table (GTDT)"), the fields "Secure EL1 Timer GSIV/Flags" are optional and an OS running in non-secure world is meant to ignore the values. However, Xen is trying to reserve the value. When booting on Graviton 2 metal instances, this would result to crash a boot because the value is 0 which is already reserved (I haven't checked for which device). While nothing prevent a PPI to be shared, the field should have been ignored by Xen. For the Device-Tree case, I couldn't find a statement suggesting that the secure physical timer interrupt is ignored. In fact, I have found some code in Linux using it as a fallback. That said, it should never be used. As I am not aware of any issue when booting using Device-Tree, the physical timer interrupt is only ignored for ACPI. Signed-off-by: Julien Grall <jgrall@xxxxxxxxxx> ---- This has not been tested on Graviton 2 because I can't seem to get the serial console working properly. @Dan would you be able to try it? It would also be good to understand why 0 why already reserved. This may be a sign for other issues in the ACPI code. --- xen/arch/arm/time.c | 4 ---- xen/arch/arm/vtimer.c | 17 +++++++++++++++-- 2 files changed, 15 insertions(+), 6 deletions(-) diff --git a/xen/arch/arm/time.c b/xen/arch/arm/time.c index 3535bd8ac7c7..8fc14cd3ff62 100644 --- a/xen/arch/arm/time.c +++ b/xen/arch/arm/time.c @@ -78,10 +78,6 @@ static int __init arch_timer_acpi_init(struct acpi_table_header *header) irq_set_type(gtdt->non_secure_el1_interrupt, irq_type); timer_irq[TIMER_PHYS_NONSECURE_PPI] = gtdt->non_secure_el1_interrupt; - irq_type = acpi_get_timer_irq_type(gtdt->secure_el1_flags); - irq_set_type(gtdt->secure_el1_interrupt, irq_type); - timer_irq[TIMER_PHYS_SECURE_PPI] = gtdt->secure_el1_interrupt; - irq_type = acpi_get_timer_irq_type(gtdt->virtual_timer_flags); irq_set_type(gtdt->virtual_timer_interrupt, irq_type); timer_irq[TIMER_VIRT_PPI] = gtdt->virtual_timer_interrupt; diff --git a/xen/arch/arm/vtimer.c b/xen/arch/arm/vtimer.c index c54360e20266..e73ae33c1b58 100644 --- a/xen/arch/arm/vtimer.c +++ b/xen/arch/arm/vtimer.c @@ -8,6 +8,7 @@ * Copyright (c) 2011 Citrix Systems. */ +#include <xen/acpi.h> #include <xen/lib.h> #include <xen/perfc.h> #include <xen/sched.h> @@ -61,10 +62,22 @@ int domain_vtimer_init(struct domain *d, struct xen_arch_domainconfig *config) config->clock_frequency = timer_dt_clock_frequency; - /* At this stage vgic_reserve_virq can't fail */ + /* + * Per the ACPI specification, providing a secure EL1 timer + * interrupt is optional and will be ignored by non-secure OS. + * Therefore don't reserve the interrupt number for the HW domain + * and ACPI. + * + * Note that we should still reserve it when using the Device-Tree + * because the interrupt is not optional. That said, we are not + * expecting any OS to use it when running on top of Xen. + * + * At this stage vgic_reserve_virq() is not meant to fail. + */ if ( is_hardware_domain(d) ) { - if ( !vgic_reserve_virq(d, timer_get_irq(TIMER_PHYS_SECURE_PPI)) ) + if ( acpi_disabled && + !vgic_reserve_virq(d, timer_get_irq(TIMER_PHYS_SECURE_PPI)) ) BUG(); if ( !vgic_reserve_virq(d, timer_get_irq(TIMER_PHYS_NONSECURE_PPI)) ) -- 2.40.1
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