If CONFIG_MMU is active, choose whether to separate text,
rodata, and ram into their own page-aligned regions so that
they have have different MMU permissions applied.
If disabled, all RAM pages will have RWX permission to
supervisor mode, but some memory may be saved due to lack
of page alignment padding between these regions.
This used to always happen. This patch adds the Kconfig,
linker script changes to come in a subsequent patch.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
This adds the necessary bits in arch code, and Python scripts
to enable coredump support for ARM Cortex-M.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Leung <daniel.leung@intel.com>
This adds a very primitive coredump mechanism under subsys/debug
where during fatal error, register and memory content can be
dumped to coredump backend. One such backend utilizing log
module for output is included. Once the coredump log is converted
to a binary file, it can be used with the ELF output file as
inputs to an overly simplified implementation of a GDB server.
This GDB server can be attached via the target remote command of
GDB and will be serving register and memory content. This allows
using GDB to examine stack and memory where the fatal error
occurred.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Leung <daniel.leung@intel.com>
unify how XIP is configured across architectures. Use imply instead of
setting defaults per architecture and imply XIP on riscv arch and remove
XIP configuration from individual defconfig files to match other
architectures.
Signed-off-by: Anas Nashif <anas.nashif@intel.com>
This config indicates that a memory management unit is present
and enabled, which will in turn allow arch APIs to allow
mapping memory to be used.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
x86-32 thread objects require special alignment since they
contain a buffer that is passed to fxsave/fxrstor instructions.
This fell over if the dummy thread is created in a stack frame.
Implement a custom swap to main for x86 which still uses a
dummy thread, but in an unused part of the interrupt stack
with proper alignment.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
This commit renames the Kconfig `FP_SHARING` symbol to `FPU_SHARING`,
since this symbol specifically refers to the hardware FPU sharing
support by means of FPU context preservation, and the "FP" prefix is
not fully descriptive of that; leaving room for ambiguity.
Signed-off-by: Stephanos Ioannidis <root@stephanos.io>
This commit reworks the symbol descriptions for `CONFIG_FPU` and
`CONFIG_FP_SHARING`, in order to provide more details and clarify any
ambiguity between the two symbols.
Signed-off-by: Stephanos Ioannidis <root@stephanos.io>
This commit renames the Kconfig `FLOAT` symbol to `FPU`, since this
symbol only indicates that the hardware Floating Point Unit (FPU) is
used and does not imply and/or indicate the general availability of
toolchain-level floating point support (i.e. this symbol is not
selected when building for an FPU-less platform that supports floating
point operations through the toolchain-provided software floating point
library).
Moreover, given that the symbol that indicates the availability of FPU
is named `CPU_HAS_FPU`, it only makes sense to use "FPU" in the name of
the symbol that enables the FPU.
Signed-off-by: Stephanos Ioannidis <root@stephanos.io>
This change adds full shared floating point support for the RISCV
architecture with minimal impact on threads with floating point
support not enabled.
Signed-off-by: Corey Wharton <coreyw7@fb.com>
This moves enabling XTENSA_HAL to the SoC definitions.
As Xtensa SoCs are highly configurable, it is possible
that the generic Xtensa HAL provided in the tree is
not suitable. So only enable XTENSA_HAL only if
the generic version can be used.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Leung <daniel.leung@intel.com>
Now that all posix boards have a dts we can move the selection of
HAS_DTS to the arch level like it is for all the other architectures.
Signed-off-by: Kumar Gala <kumar.gala@linaro.org>
This never needed to be put in a separate gperf table.
Privilege mode stacks can be generated by the main
gen_kobject_list.py logic, which we do here.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
Same deal as in commit eddd98f811 ("kconfig: Replace some single-symbol
'if's with 'depends on'"), for the remaining cases outside defconfig
files. See that commit for an explanation.
Will do the defconfigs separately in case there are any complaints
there.
Signed-off-by: Ulf Magnusson <Ulf.Magnusson@nordicsemi.no>
The existing stack_analyze APIs had some problems:
1. Not properly namespaced
2. Accepted the stack object as a parameter, yet the stack object
does not contain the necessary information to get the associated
buffer region, the thread object is needed for this
3. Caused a crash on certain platforms that do not allow inspection
of unused stack space for the currently running thread
4. No user mode access
5. Separately passed in thread name
We deprecate these functions and add a new API
k_thread_stack_space_get() which addresses all of these issues.
A helper API log_stack_usage() also added which resembles
STACK_ANALYZE() in functionality.
Fixes: #17852
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
All SoCs must now 'select' one of the CONFIG_<arch> symbols. Add an
ARCH_IS_SET helper symbol that's selected by the arch symbols and
checked in CMake, printing a warning otherwise.
Might save people some time until they're used to the new scheme.
Signed-off-by: Ulf Magnusson <Ulf.Magnusson@nordicsemi.no>
All board defconfig files currently set the architecture in addition to
the board and the SoC, by setting e.g. CONFIG_ARM=y. This spams up
defconfig files.
CONFIG_<arch> symbols currently being set in configuration files also
means that they are configurable (can be changed in menuconfig and in
configuration files), even though changing the architecture won't work,
since other things get set from -DBOARD=<board>. Many boards also allow
changing the architecture symbols independently from the SoC symbols,
which doesn't make sense.
Get rid of all assignments to CONFIG_<arch> symbols and clean up the
relationships between symbols and the configuration interface, like
this:
1. Remove the choice with the CONFIG_<arch> symbols in arch/Kconfig and
turn the CONFIG_<arch> symbols into invisible
(promptless/nonconfigurable) symbols instead.
Getting rid of the choice allows the symbols to be 'select'ed (choice
symbols don't support 'select').
2. Select the right CONFIG_<arch> symbol from the SOC_SERIES_* symbols.
This makes sense since you know the architecture if you know the SoC.
Put the select on the SOC_* symbol instead for boards that don't have
a SOC_SERIES_*.
3. Remove all assignments to CONFIG_<arch> symbols. The assignments
would generate errors now, since the symbols are promptless.
The change was done by grepping for assignments to CONFIG_<arch>
symbols, finding the SOC_SERIES_* (or SOC_*) symbol being set in the
same defconfig file, and putting a 'select' on it instead.
See
https://github.com/ulfalizer/zephyr/commits/hide-arch-syms-unsquashed
for a split-up version of this commit, which will make it easier to see
how stuff was done. This needs to go in as one commit though.
This change is safer than it might seem re. outstanding PRs, because any
assignment to CONFIG_<arch> symbols generates an error now, making
outdated stuff easy to catch.
Signed-off-by: Ulf Magnusson <Ulf.Magnusson@nordicsemi.no>
Define there options for runtime error handling:
- assert on all errors (ASSERT_ON_ERRORS)
- no runtime checks (no asserts, no runtime error handling)
(NO_RUNTIME_CHECKS)
- full runtime error handling (the default) (RUNTIME_ERROR_CHECKS)
Signed-off-by: Anas Nashif <anas.nashif@intel.com>
This commit addresses the following issues:
1. Add a new Kconfig configuration for specifying Dual-redundant Core
Lock-step (DCLS) processor topology.
2. Register initialisation is only required when Dual-redundant Core
Lock-step (DCLS) is implemented in hardware. This initialisation is
required on DCLS only because the architectural registers are in an
indeterminate state after reset and therefore the initial register
state of the two parallel executing cores are not guaranteed to be
identical, which can lead to DCCM detecting it as a hardware fault.
A conditional compilation check for this hardware configuration
using the newly added CONFIG_CPU_HAS_DCLS flag has been added.
3. The existing CPU register initialisation code did not take into
account the banked registers for every execution mode. The new
implementation ensures that all architectural registers of every
mode are initialised.
4. Add VFP register initialisation for when floating-point support is
enabled and the core is configured in DCLS topology. This
initialisation sequence is required for the same reason given in
the first issue.
5. Add provision for platform-specific initialisation on Cortex-R
using PLATFORM_SPECIFIC_INIT config and z_platform_init function.
6. Remove seemingly pointless and inadequately defined STACK_MARGIN.
Not only does it violate the 8-byte stack alignment rule, it does
not provide any form of real stack protection.
Signed-off-by: Stephanos Ioannidis <root@stephanos.io>
The SRAM address and size are currently available as both
DT_SRAM_{BASE_ADDRESS,SIZE} and as CONFIG_SRAM_{BASE_ADDRESS,SIZE} (via
the Kconfig preprocessor).
Use the CONFIG_SRAM_* versions everywhere, and remove generation of the
DT_SRAM_* versions from gen_defines.py.
The Kconfig symbols currently depend on 'ARC || ARM || NIOS2 || X86'.
Not sure why, so I removed it.
It looks like no configuration files set CONFIG_SRAM_* at the moment, so
another option might be to use the DT_* symbols everywhere instead. Some
Kconfig.defconfig.series files add defaults to them though.
Also improve the help texts for CONFIG_SRAM_* to say that they normally
come from devicetree rather than configuration files.
Signed-off-by: Ulf Magnusson <Ulf.Magnusson@nordicsemi.no>
How prompts work is better documented nowadays, and these comments might
not be that helpful if you don't know.
There are lots promptless symbols that don't have a comment.
Also fix up some comments in arch/Kconfig that seem misplaced/redundant,
and clean up some whitespace (no blank line after a comment makes it
look like it only applies to the symbol directly after it to me).
Signed-off-by: Ulf Magnusson <Ulf.Magnusson@nordicsemi.no>
This adds the necessary bits to build the Xtensa HAL as
a module, and removes the bits to use the HAL built with
the Zephyr SDK.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Leung <daniel.leung@intel.com>
When we build without support for user mode, we do not need
a large number of MPU regions, so we should not allow having
MPU_GAP_FILLING unset. This would allow PRIV code execute from
SRAM, which is an unnecessary compromise on ARMv8-M builds
without USERSPACE support. We update the Kconfig dependencies
and add a sentence for clarification.
Signed-off-by: Ioannis Glaropoulos <Ioannis.Glaropoulos@nordicsemi.no>
This API was only created to facilitate testing of kernel
objects in IRQ context, never for actual applications.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
We introduce MPU_GAP_FILLING Kconfig option that instructs
the MPU driver to enforce a full SRAM partitioning, when it
programs the dynamic MPU regions (user thread stack, PRIV stack
guard and application memory domains) at context-switch. We
allow this to be configurable, in order to increase the number
of MPU regions available for application memory domain programming.
This option is introduced in arch/Kconfig, as it is expected
to serve as a cross-ARCH symbol. The option can be set by the
user during build configuration.
By not enforcing full partition, we may leave part of kernel
SRAM area covered only by the default ARM memory map. This
is fine for User Mode, since the background ARM map does not
allow nPRIV access at all. The difference is that kernel code
will be able to attempt fetching instructions from kernel SRAM
area without this leading directly to a MemManage exception.
Since this does not compromize User Mode, we make the skipping
of full partitioning the default behavior for the ARMv8-M MPU
driver. The application developer may be able to overwrite this.
In the wake of this change we update the macro definitions in
arm_core_mpu_dev.h that derive the maximum number of MPU regions
for application memory domains.
Signed-off-by: Ioannis Glaropoulos <Ioannis.Glaropoulos@nordicsemi.no>
Use this short header style in all Kconfig files:
# <description>
# <copyright>
# <license>
...
Also change all <description>s from
# Kconfig[.extension] - Foo-related options
to just
# Foo-related options
It's clear enough that it's about Kconfig.
The <description> cleanup was done with this command, along with some
manual cleanup (big letter at the start, etc.)
git ls-files '*Kconfig*' | \
xargs sed -i -E '1 s/#\s*Kconfig[\w.-]*\s*-\s*/# /'
Signed-off-by: Ulf Magnusson <Ulf.Magnusson@nordicsemi.no>
Clean up space errors and use a consistent style throughout the Kconfig
files. This makes reading the Kconfig files more distraction-free, helps
with grepping, and encourages the same style getting copied around
everywhere (meaning another pass hopefully won't be needed).
Go for the most common style:
- Indent properties with a single tab, including for choices.
Properties on choices work exactly the same syntactically as
properties on symbols, so not sure how the no-indentation thing
happened.
- Indent help texts with a tab followed by two spaces
- Put a space between 'config' and the symbol name, not a tab. This
also helps when grepping for definitions.
- Do '# A comment' instead of '#A comment'
I tweaked Kconfiglib a bit to find most of the stuff.
Some help texts were reflowed to 79 columns with 'gq' in Vim as well,
though not all, because I was afraid I'd accidentally mess up
formatting.
Signed-off-by: Ulf Magnusson <Ulf.Magnusson@nordicsemi.no>
There are two set of code supporting x86_64: x86_64 using x32 ABI,
and x86 long mode, and this consolidates both into one x86_64
architecture and SoC supporting truly 64-bit mode.
() Removes the x86_64:x32 architecture and SoC, and replaces
them with the existing x86 long mode arch and SoC.
() Replace qemu_x86_64 with qemu_x86_long as qemu_x86_64.
() Updates samples and tests to remove reference to
qemu_x86_long.
() Renames CONFIG_X86_LONGMODE to CONFIG_X86_64.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Leung <daniel.leung@intel.com>
We introduce a Kconfig option to signify whether
an Architecture has the capability of detecting
whether execution is, currently, in a nested
exception.
Signed-off-by: Ioannis Glaropoulos <Ioannis.Glaropoulos@nordicsemi.no>
Replace:
dt_chosen_reg_addr
dt_chosen_reg_size
dt_node_reg_addr
dt_node_reg_size
with:
dt_chosen_reg_addr_int
dt_chosen_reg_size_int
dt_chosen_reg_addr_hex
dt_chosen_reg_size_hex
dt_node_reg_addr_int
dt_node_reg_size_int
dt_node_reg_addr_hex
dt_node_reg_size_hex
So that we get the proper formatted string for the type of symbol.
Signed-off-by: Kumar Gala <kumar.gala@linaro.org>
Remove the
# Omit prompt to signify a "hidden" option
comments that appear on some symbols. They seem to have been copy-pasted
at random, as there are lots of promptless symbols that don't have them
(that's confusing in itself, because it might give the idea that the
ones with comments are special in some way).
I suspect those comments wouldn't have helped me much if I didn't know
Kconfig either. There's a lot more Kconfig documentation now too, e.g.
https://docs.zephyrproject.org/latest/guides/kconfig/index.html.
Keep some comments that give more information than the symbol having no
prompt.
Also do some minor drive-by cleanup.
Signed-off-by: Ulf Magnusson <Ulf.Magnusson@nordicsemi.no>
Convert how we get the various chosen properties like "zephyr,console"
to use the new kconfig functions like dt_chosen_to_label.
Because of how kconfig parses things we define a set of variables of the
form DT_CHOSEN_Z_<PROP> since comma's are parsed as field seperators in
macros.
This conversion allows us to remove code in gen_defines.py for the
following chosen properties:
zephyr,console
zephyr,shell-uart
zephyr,bt-uart
zephyr,uart-pipe
zephyr,bt-mon-uart
zephyr,uart-mcumgr
zephyr,bt-c2h-uart
Signed-off-by: Kumar Gala <kumar.gala@linaro.org>
We re-wrote the xtensa arch code, but never got around
to purging the old implementation.
Removed those boards which hadn't been moved to the new
arch code. These were all xt-sim simulator targets and not
real hardware.
Fixes: #18138
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
With the upcoming riscv64 support, it is best to use "riscv" as the
subdirectory name and common symbols as riscv32 and riscv64 support
code is almost identical. Then later decide whether 32-bit or 64-bit
compilation is wanted.
Redirects for the web documentation are also included.
Then zephyrbot complained about this:
"
New files added that are not covered in CODEOWNERS:
dts/riscv/microsemi-miv.dtsi
dts/riscv/riscv32-fe310.dtsi
Please add one or more entries in the CODEOWNERS file to cover
those files
"
So I assigned them to those who created them. Feel free to readjust
as necessary.
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Pitre <npitre@baylibre.com>
The ARM specific _impl_k_thread_abort function only applies to Cortex-M
so move it to the cortex_m specific directory.
Signed-off-by: Bradley Bolen <bbolen@lexmark.com>
* z_NanoFatalErrorHandler() is now moved to common kernel code
and renamed z_fatal_error(). Arches dump arch-specific info
before calling.
* z_SysFatalErrorHandler() is now moved to common kernel code
and renamed k_sys_fatal_error_handler(). It is now much simpler;
the default policy is simply to lock interrupts and halt the system.
If an implementation of this function returns, then the currently
running thread is aborted.
* New arch-specific APIs introduced:
- z_arch_system_halt() simply powers off or halts the system.
* We now have a standard set of fatal exception reason codes,
namespaced under K_ERR_*
* CONFIG_SIMPLE_FATAL_ERROR_HANDLER deleted
* LOG_PANIC() calls moved to k_sys_fatal_error_handler()
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
sw_isr_table has two entries, an argument and an ISR function. The
comment on struct _isr_table_entry in include/sw_isr_table.h says that
"This allows a table entry to be loaded [...] with one ldmia
instruction, on ARM [...]". Some arch, e.g. SPARC, also has a double
word load instruction, "ldd", but the instruct must have address align
to double word or 8 bytes.
This commit makes the table alignment configurable. It allows each
architecture to specify it, if needed. The default value is 0 for no
alignment.
Signed-off-by: Yasushi SHOJI <y-shoji@ispace-inc.com>
The libc hooks for Newlib requires CONFIG_SRAM_SIZE and
the symbol "_end" at the end of memory. This is in preparation
for enabling Newlib for x86_64.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Leung <daniel.leung@intel.com>
Found a few annoying typos and figured I better run script and
fix anything it can find, here are the results...
Signed-off-by: Anas Nashif <anas.nashif@intel.com>
The ARCH_CHOICE symbol on the arch/Kconfig choice for Architecture
selection, allows for multiple definitions of the choice group which
makes it possible for out-of-tree architectures to add entries to the
list as needed.
For example, in $(ARCH_DIR)/$(ARCH)/Kconfig by adding something like;
choice ARCH_CHOICE
config xARCH
bool "xARCH architecture"
endchoice
No functional change expected.
Signed-off-by: Danny Oerndrup <daor@demant.com>
Support for Floating Point (both un-sharing and sharing
registers mode) is currently implemented for ARM and X86
architectures, so reflect this in the Kconfig symbol
definition.
Signed-off-by: Ioannis Glaropoulos <Ioannis.Glaropoulos@nordicsemi.no>
This is the generic symbol to select or otherwise test for when 64-bit
compilation is desired. Two trivial usages of this symbol are also
included.
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Pitre <npitre@baylibre.com>
The original value of 256 was selected more or less randomly
and special cases keep proliferating. Until we have a formal
method of proving maximum syscall stack depth, set to 1024.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
Add SYS_POWER_ prefix to HAS_STATE_SLEEP_, HAS_STATE_DEEP_SLEEP_
options to align them with names of power states they control.
Following is a detailed list of string replacements used:
s/HAS_STATE_SLEEP_(\d)/HAS_SYS_POWER_STATE_SLEEP_$1/
s/HAS_STATE_DEEP_SLEEP_(\d)/HAS_SYS_POWER_STATE_DEEP_SLEEP_$1/
Signed-off-by: Piotr Mienkowski <piotr.mienkowski@gmail.com>
There exists SoCs, e.g. STM32L4, where one of the low power modes
reduces CPU frequency and supply voltage but does not stop the CPU. Such
power modes are currently not supported by Zephyr.
To facilitate adding support for such class of power modes in the future
and to ensure the naming convention makes it clear that the currently
supported power modes stop the CPU this commit renames Low Power States
to Slep States and updates the documentation.
Signed-off-by: Piotr Mienkowski <piotr.mienkowski@gmail.com>
Since #14545 was merged building with USERSPACE and NO_OPTIMIZATIONS
has been broken due to #5226.
To fix#5226 we increase the size of KOBJECT_TEXT_AREA when
NO_OPTIMIZATIONS.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Bøe <sebastian.boe@nordicsemi.no>
Currently thread abort doesn't work if a thread is currently scheduled
on a different CPU, because we have no way of delivering an interrupt
to the other CPU to force the issue. This patch adds a simple
framework for an architecture to provide such an IPI, implements it
for x86_64, and uses it to implement a spin loop in abort for the case
where a thread is currently scheduled elsewhere.
On SMP architectures (xtensa) where no such IPI is implemented, we
fall back to waiting on an arbitrary interrupt to occur. This "works"
for typical code (and all current tests), but of course it cannot be
guaranteed on such an architecture that k_thread_abort() will return
in finite time (e.g. the other thread on the other CPU might have
taken a spinlock and entered an infinite loop, so it will never
receive an interrupt to terminate itself)!
On non-SMP architectures this patch changes no code paths at all.
Signed-off-by: Andy Ross <andrew.j.ross@intel.com>
Some more were added since the cleanup pass in June 2018. See e.g.
commit 2d50da70a1 ("drivers: ipm: Kconfig: Remove redundant 'default n'
properties") for a motivation. It also avoids people wondering whether
or not they need to put in 'default n'.
Signed-off-by: Ulf Magnusson <Ulf.Magnusson@nordicsemi.no>
CPU_LPS_n name used to indicate a low power state is cryptic and
incorrect. The low power states act on the whole SoC and not exclusively
on the CPU. This patch renames CPU_LPS_n states to LOW_POWER_n. Also
HAS_ pattern for Kconfig options is used in favor of a non standard
_SUPPORTED. Naming of deep sleep states was adjusted accordingly.
Following is a detailed list of string replacements used:
s/SYS_POWER_STATE_CPU_LPS_(\d)_SUPPORTED/HAS_STATE_LOW_POWER_$1/
s/SYS_POWER_STATE_CPU_LPS_(\d)/SYS_POWER_STATE_LOW_POWER_$1/
s/SYS_POWER_STATE_DEEP_SLEEP_(\d)_SUPPORTED/HAS_STATE_DEEP_SLEEP_$1/
Signed-off-by: Piotr Mienkowski <piotr.mienkowski@gmail.com>
This commit removes dependency on SYS_POWER_LOW_POWER_STATES_SUPPORTED,
SYS_POWER_DEEP_SLEEP_STATES_SUPPORTED Kconfig options. Power management
SYS_POWER_LOW_POWER_STATES, SYS_POWER_DEEP_SLEEP_STATES options depend
now directly on specific power states supported by the given SoC. This
simplifies maintenance of SoC Kconfig files.
Signed-off-by: Piotr Mienkowski <piotr.mienkowski@gmail.com>
Instead of having to enable ramfunc support manually, just make it
transparently available to users, keeping the MPU region disabled if not
used to not waste a MPU region. This however wastes 24 bytes of code
area when the MPU is disabled and 48 bytes when it is enabled, and
probably a dozen of CPU cycles during boot. I believe it is something
acceptable.
Note that when XIP is used, code is already in RAM, so the __ramfunc
keyword does nothing, but does not generate an error.
Signed-off-by: Aurelien Jarno <aurelien@aurel32.net>
128 already gets exceeded in a lot of cases, and the binaries
with the new SDK are very slightly larger. Just kick this up
to 256 and get rid of all the exceptions.
Fixes: #13594
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
Some of power states used numerical suffix while otthers not.
This commit adds proper suffix to all power state names.
Signed-off-by: Piotr Zięcik <piotr.ziecik@nordicsemi.no>
f
This commit changes the names of SYS_POWER_DEEP_SLEEP* Kconfig
options in order to match SYS_POWER_LOW_POWER_STATE* naming
scheme.
Signed-off-by: Piotr Zięcik <piotr.ziecik@nordicsemi.no>
The SYS_POWER_LOW_POWER_STATE_SUPPORTED and SYS_POWER_LOW_POWER_STATE
suggests one low power state but these options control multiple
low power state. This commit uses plural in the names to indicate
that.
Signed-off-by: Piotr Zięcik <piotr.ziecik@nordicsemi.no>
Introduces the ARCH_ROOT argument, similar to BOARD_ROOT and SOC_ROOT.
This enables support for out-of-tree architectures.
The ARCH_ROOT out-of-tree layout is expected to be the following:
* ${ARCH_ROOT}/arch/${ARCH}/
* ${ARCH_ROOT}/include/arch/${ARCH}/ (Optional)
Signed-off-by: Klaus Petersen <kape@oticon.com>
This commit introduces a new Kconfig option symbol,
MPU_REQUIRES_NON_OVERLAPPING_REGIONS, to signify the use of an
MPU architecture that requires the active MPU regions be
non-overlapping. This requirement concerns the standard
(unmodified) ARMv8-M MPU implementation. For that, we select
the option in the definition of ARM_MPU, if the CPU architecture
is ARMv8-M (Baseline or Mainline).
Signed-off-by: Ioannis Glaropoulos <Ioannis.Glaropoulos@nordicsemi.no>
In #9717, 777407b9ea
coverage support was broken for all NATIVE_APPLICATION except
native_posix
This includes the nrf52_bsim board
Fix it.
Fixes: #13009
Signed-off-by: Alberto Escolar Piedras <alpi@oticon.com>
Now that all supported xtensa boards use DTS we can move the Kconfig
setting to the arch level. Remove HAS_DTS from board Kconfig files.
Signed-off-by: Kumar Gala <kumar.gala@linaro.org>
dts will now generate DT_SRAM_BASE_ADDRESS, DT_SRAM_SIZE,
DT_FLASH_BASE_ADDRESS, and DT_FLASH_SIZE defines. Kconfig can utilize
these defines to set defaults for the CONFIG_ variants.
Signed-off-by: Kumar Gala <kumar.gala@linaro.org>
This patch adds all the required hooks needed in the kernel to
get the coverage reports from ARM SoCs.
Signed-off-by: Adithya Baglody <adithya.nagaraj.baglody@intel.com>
This patch provides support for generating Code coverage reports.
The prj.conf needs to enable CONFIG_COVERAGE. Once enabled, the
code coverage data dump now comes via UART.
This data dump on the UART is triggered once the main
thread exits.
Next step is to save this data dump on file. Then run
scripts/gen_gcov_files.py with the serial console log as argument.
The last step would be be to run the gcovr. Use the following cmd
gcovr -r . --html -o gcov_report/coverage.html --html-details
Currently supported architectures are ARM and x86.
Signed-off-by: Adithya Baglody <adithya.nagaraj.baglody@intel.com>
This patch adds a x86_64 architecture and qemu_x86_64 board to Zephyr.
Only the basic architecture support needed to run 64 bit code is
added; no drivers are added, though a low-level console exists and is
wired to printk().
The support is built on top of a "X86 underkernel" layer, which can be
built in isolation as a unit test on a Linux host.
Limitations:
+ Right now the SDK lacks an x86_64 toolchain. The build will fall
back to a host toolchain if it finds no cross compiler defined,
which is tested to work on gcc 8.2.1 right now.
+ No x87/SSE/AVX usage is allowed. This is a stronger limitation than
other architectures where the instructions work from one thread even
if the context switch code doesn't support it. We are passing
-no-sse to prevent gcc from automatically generating SSE
instructions for non-floating-point purposes, which has the side
effect of changing the ABI. Future work to handle the FPU registers
will need to be combined with an "application" ABI distinct from the
kernel one (or just to require USERSPACE).
+ Paging is enabled (it has to be in long mode), but is a 1:1 mapping
of all memory. No MMU/USERSPACE support yet.
+ We are building with -mno-red-zone for stack size reasons, but this
is a valuable optimization. Enabling it requires automatic stack
switching, which requires a TSS, which means it has to happen after
MMU support.
+ The OS runs in 64 bit mode, but for compatibility reasons is
compiled to the 32 bit "X32" ABI. So while the full 64 bit
registers and instruction set are available, C pointers are 32 bits
long and Zephyr is constrained to run in the bottom 4G of memory.
Signed-off-by: Andy Ross <andrew.j.ross@intel.com>
As this was written before, a 'FLAOT' menu entry was present, and to
see what kind of features or configuration it had, one had to navigate
into the menu to determine if anything related to 'FLOAT' was enabled
at all.
Now there is an unchecked box on the 'FLOAT' menu when it is disabled,
which clearly expresses that it is disabled without the need to enter
the menu entry.
This change only changes the menu layout, and not the dependencies of
any options.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Bøe <sebastian.boe@nordicsemi.no>
When code relocation feature with userspace mode is turned on we
need a bit more memory to fit the text section for these 2
generated files.
Signed-off-by: Adithya Baglody <adithya.nagaraj.baglody@intel.com>
This commit exposes k_mem_partition_attr_t outside User Mode, so
we can use struct k_mem_partition for defining memory partitions
outside the scope of user space (for example, to describe thread
stack guards or no-cacheable MPU regions). A requirement is that
the Zephyr build supports Memory protection. To signify this, a
new hidden, all-architecture Kconfig symbol is defined (MPU). In
the wake of exposing k_mem_partition_attr_t, the commit exposes
the MPU architecture-specific access permission attribute macros
outside the User space context (for all ARCHs), so they can be
used in a more generic way.
Signed-off-by: Ioannis Glaropoulos <Ioannis.Glaropoulos@nordicsemi.no>
Add a "nocache" read-write memory section that is configured to
not be cached. This memory section can be used to perform DMA
transfers when cache coherence issues are not optimal or can not
be solved using cache maintenance operations.
This is currently only supported on ARM Cortex M7 with MPU.
Fixes#2927
Signed-off-by: Aurelien Jarno <aurelien@aurel32.net>
This option is useful to have for a flatter hierarchy for one-off SoCs
that aren't split into family and series from the silicon vendor
perspective.
The commit saying it was going to go away is from 2 years ago; it
hasn't happened and it doesn't seem to need to happen. Just delete it.
Signed-off-by: Marti Bolivar <marti@foundries.io>
In the past the capability to install interrupts at runtime was
removed due to lack of use-cases for Zephyr's intended targets.
Now we want to support hypervisor applications like ACRN where
virtual devices are presented to the kernel using PCI enumeration,
and the interrupt configuration is not known at build time.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
Remove either duplicate settings between arch & board, or just set
HAS_DTS at the arch level since all the boards for a given arch support
DTS now.
Signed-off-by: Kumar Gala <kumar.gala@linaro.org>
This commit increases the privilege stack size to 512 bytes,
when building with support for built-in stack-overflow checking.
This is in alignment with #10729, which increases the privilege
stack size when MPU-based stack guarding is enabled.
Signed-off-by: Ioannis Glaropoulos <Ioannis.Glaropoulos@nordicsemi.no>
This commit contributes a Kconfig symbol hierarchy which allows
the user to build Zephyr Secure and Non-Secure images on ARMv8-M
MCUs with support for Trusted Execution. However, the high-level
configuration structure is generic, thus, can be potentially
used for any platform that supports Trusted Execution.
Signed-off-by: Ioannis Glaropoulos <Ioannis.Glaropoulos@nordicsemi.no>
This patch adds Big Endian architecture support. Even if a compiler
generating big endian object files is used, our linker script, or
include/linker/linker-tool-gcc.h to be precise, has default output
format as little endian.
This patch adds a hidden config CONFIG_BIG_ENDIAN, which should be set
by big endian architectures or a SoC's, and adds an condition to
switch OUTPUT_FORMAT in our linker.cmd.
Signed-off-by: Yasushi SHOJI <y-shoji@ispace-inc.com>
Instead of hardcoding in linker script, use a Kconfig and deal with
dependencies in Kconfig instead of directly in the linker file.
This patch moves both:
PRIVILEGED_STACK_TEXT_AREA
and
KOBJECT_TEXT_AREA
to arch/Kconfig.
Signed-off-by: Anas Nashif <anas.nashif@intel.com>
Add Kconfig options for Low Power and Deep Sleep States which
need to be selected by the SoC's based on it's supported
Low Power States.
Signed-off-by: Ramakrishna Pallala <ramakrishna.pallala@intel.com>
Rather than do that for each architecture, source SoC Kconfigs where the
code is maintained, under ZEPHYR_BASE/soc.
Signed-off-by: Anas Nashif <anas.nashif@intel.com>
With the new Kconfig preprocessor (described in
https://github.com/torvalds/linux/blob/master/Documentation/kbuild/
kconfig-macro-language.txt), the syntax for expanding environment
variables is $(FOO) rather than $FOO.
$(FOO) is a general preprocessor variable expansion, which falls back to
environment variables if the variable isn't set (like in Make). It can
also be used in prompts, 'comment's, etc.
The old syntax will probably be supported forever in Kconfiglib for
backwards compatibility, but might as well make it consistent now that
people might start using the preprocessor more.
Signed-off-by: Ulf Magnusson <Ulf.Magnusson@nordicsemi.no>
The prefixes might be a leftover from the old 'option env="..."' symbols
(which are no longer needed). Since environment variables can be
referenced directly now, there's no point in having a prefix.
Signed-off-by: Ulf Magnusson <Ulf.Magnusson@nordicsemi.no>
Consistently use
config FOO
bool/int/hex/string "Prompt text"
instead of
config FOO
bool/int/hex/string
prompt "Prompt text"
(...and a bunch of other variations that e.g. swapped the order of the
type and the 'prompt', or put other properties between them).
The shorthand is fully equivalent to using 'prompt'. It saves lines and
avoids tricking people into thinking there is some semantic difference.
Most of the grunt work was done by a modified version of
https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/26284/how-can-i-use-sed-to-replace-a-multi-line-string/26290#26290, but some
of the rarer variations had to be converted manually.
Signed-off-by: Ulf Magnusson <Ulf.Magnusson@nordicsemi.no>
A design flaw of 'gsource' is that there's no way to require at least
one file to match the glob pattern. This could lead to silent errors.
Switch to a new design, where a plain 'source' is globbing and requires
at least one file to match. A separate 'osource' (optional source)
statement is available for cases where it's okay for a pattern (or plain
filename) to not match any files.
'orsource' combines 'osource' and 'rsource' (relative source).
This commit search-replaces 'gsource' with 'source', but backwards
compatibility with 'gsource' is still maintained by making it an alias
for 'osource' (and by making 'grsource' an alias for 'orsource').
The three Kconfig files arch/{nios2,posix,xtensa}/Kconfig source
arch/{nios2,posix,xtensa}/soc/*/Kconfig, which doesn't match any files.
Use 'osource' for those. The soc/*/Kconfig files seem to be for
additional SoC-specific symbols, only none exist yet on those ARCHes.
Also use 'osource' for the source of $ENV_VAR_BOARD_DIR/Kconfig in
boards/Kconfig, which doesn't exist for all boards.
Signed-off-by: Ulf Magnusson <Ulf.Magnusson@nordicsemi.no>
Up until now, Zephyr has patched Kconfig to use the last 'default' with
a satisfied condition, instead of the first one. I'm not sure why the
patch was added (it predates Kconfiglib), but I suspect it's related to
Kconfig.defconfig files.
There are at least three problems with the patch:
1. It's inconsistent with how Kconfig works in other projects, which
might confuse newcomers.
2. Due to oversights, earlier 'range' properties are still preferred,
as well as earlier 'default' properties on choices.
In addition to being inconsistent, this makes it impossible to
override 'range' properties and choice 'default' properties if the
base definition of the symbol/choice already has 'range'/'default'
properties.
I've seen errors caused by the inconsistency, and I suspect there
are more.
3. A fork of Kconfiglib that adds the patch needs to be maintained.
Get rid of the patch and go back to standard Kconfig behavior, as
follows:
1. Include the Kconfig.defconfig files first instead of last in
Kconfig.zephyr.
2. Include boards/Kconfig and arch/<arch>/Kconfig first instead of
last in arch/Kconfig.
3. Include arch/<arch>/soc/*/Kconfig first instead of last in
arch/<arch>/Kconfig.
4. Swap a few other 'source's to preserve behavior for some scattered
symbols with multiple definitions.
Swap 'source's in some no-op cases too, where it might match the
intent.
5. Reverse the defaults on symbol definitions that have more than one
default.
Skip defaults that are mutually exclusive, e.g. where each default
has an 'if <some board>' condition. They are already safe.
6. Remove the prefer-later-defaults patch from Kconfiglib.
Testing was done with a Python script that lists all Kconfig
symbols/choices with multiple defaults, along with a whitelist of fixed
symbols. The script also verifies that there are no "unreachable"
defaults hidden by defaults without conditions
As an additional test, zephyr/.config was generated before and after the
change for several samples and checked to be identical (after sorting).
This commit includes some default-related cleanups as well:
- Simplify some symbol definitions, e.g. where a default has 'if FOO'
when the symbol already has 'depends on FOO'.
- Remove some redundant 'default ""' for string symbols. This is the
implicit default.
Piggyback fixes for swapped ranges on BT_L2CAP_RX_MTU and
BT_L2CAP_TX_MTU (caused by confusing inconsistency).
Piggyback some fixes for style nits too, e.g. unindented help texts.
Signed-off-by: Ulf Magnusson <Ulf.Magnusson@nordicsemi.no>
Bool symbols implicitly default to 'n'.
A 'default n' can make sense e.g. in a Kconfig.defconfig file, if you
want to override a 'default y' on the base definition of the symbol. It
isn't used like that on any of these symbols though.
Signed-off-by: Ulf Magnusson <Ulf.Magnusson@nordicsemi.no>
Considering the case of call of printk, interrupt and
other cases, adjust the privileged stack size of arc to
384 bytes to avoid the the overflow of privileged stack.
Signed-off-by: Wayne Ren <wei.ren@synopsys.com>
This commit gets rid of the 'option env="ENV_VAR"' bounce symbols.
"$FOO" now expands directly to the value of the environment variable
FOO, instead of to the value of the Kconfig symbol FOO.
This change is likely to soon appear in the C tools as well. Those
'option env' symbols always seemed kinda pointless, and have broken
dependency handling due to forcing symbol evaluation during parsing,
before all the symbols have even been seen.
Compatibility with the C tools could be retained by naming all
'option env' symbols the same as the environment variable they
reference.
This commit also updated the Zephyr documentation to explain the new
behavior. It's relevant for $ZEPHYR_BASE and out-of-tree Kconfig
extensions.
Commit message from Kconfiglib (cbf32e29a130d)
==============================================
Make "$FOO" directly reference the environment variable $FOO in e.g.
'source' statements, instead of the symbol FOO. Use os.path.expandvars()
to expand strings (which preserves "$FOO" as-is if no environment
variable FOO exists).
This gets rid of the 'option env' "bounce" symbols, which are mostly
just spam and are buggy in the C tools (dependencies aren't always
respected, due to parsing and evaluation getting mixed up). The same
change will probably appear soon in the C tools as well.
Keep accepting 'option env' to preserve some backwards compatibility,
but ignore it when expanding strings. For compatibility with the C
tools, bounce symbols will need to be named the same as the environment
variables they reference (which is the case for the Linux kernel).
This is a compatibility break, so the major version will be bumped to 6
at the next release.
The main motivation for adding this now is to allow recording properties
on each MenuNode in a clean way. 'option env' symbols interact badly
with delayed dependency propagation.
Side note: I have a feeling that recording environment variable values
might be redundant to trigger rebuilds if sync_deps() is run at each
compile. It should detect all changes to symbol values due to
environment variables changing value.
Signed-off-by: Ulf Magnusson <Ulf.Magnusson@nordicsemi.no>
Dynamic kernel objects no longer is hard-coded to use the kernel
heap. Instead, objects will now be drawn from the calling thread's
resource pool.
Since we now have a reference counting mechanism, if an object
loses all its references and it was dynamically allocated, it will
be automatically freed.
A parallel dlist is added for efficient iteration over the set of
all dynamic objects, allowing deletion during iteration.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
Until now, Zephyr has used a patched Kconfiglib that turns 'source' into
a globbing source (by replacing 'source' with 'gsource' at the token
level). There's two problems with this:
- The patch needs to be maintained separately
- Misspelled filenames are silently ignored, as they look like glob
patterns that don't match anything
Fix it as follows:
1. Replace all 'source' statements that use wildcards with 'gsource'
2. Remove the custom Kconfiglib patch so that 'source' no longer globs
The sed pattern '/source.*[*?]/s/source/gsource/' was run over all
Kconfig* files to do the replacement.
source's that use environment variables that might contain glob patterns
were manually changed to gsource.
Building the docs in doc/ is a good test, as doc/Makefile deliberately
sets the environment variables to glob up as many Kconfig files as
possible.
Signed-off-by: Ulf Magnusson <ulfalizer@gmail.com>
"depends on" cannot use expressions as arguments, this statement
didn't actually do anything for kconfiglib.py and caused an
error with menuconfig.
There's currently no way to depend on a system heap being
present, however forthcoming patches move this feature away
from using the system heap anyway.
For now, if the user enables dynamic objects without defining
a system heap, they will get a build error.
Fixes#7266.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
A red-black tree is maintained containing the metadata for all
dynamically created kernel objects, which are allocated out of the
system heap.
Currently, k_object_alloc() and k_object_free() are supervisor-only.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
Now that all ARC SoCs we can remove code associated with !HAS_DTS and
select HAS_DTS at the architecture level.
Signed-off-by: Kumar Gala <kumar.gala@linaro.org>
This was previously just a #define in one header file, but we need
this expressed in Kconfig space in case some feature only works
properly with downward-growing stacks.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
Keyword FLASH_HAS_PAGE_LAYOUT is related to flash and should
be declared in its Kconfig.
Signed-off-by: Andrzej Puzdrowski <andrzej.puzdrowski@nordicsemi.no>
Fix Kconfig help sections and add spacing to be consistent across all
Kconfig file. In a previous run we missed a few.
Signed-off-by: Anas Nashif <anas.nashif@intel.com>
This patch adds the generation and incorporation of privileged stack
regions that are used by ARM user mode threads. This patch adds the
infrastructure for privileged stacks. Later patches will utilize the
generated stacks and helper functions.
Signed-off-by: Chunlin Han <chunlin.han@linaro.org>
Signed-off-by: Andy Gross <andy.gross@linaro.org>
This patch adds application data section alignment constraints
to match the region definition requirements for ARM MPUs. Most MPUs
require a minimum of 32 bytes of alignment for any regions, but some
require power of two alignment to the size of a region.
This requires that the linker align the application data section to
the size of the section. This requires a linker pass to determine the
size. Once this is accomplished the correct value is added to a linker
include file that is utilized in subsequent linker operations.
Signed-off-by: Andy Gross <andy.gross@linaro.org>
When Kconfiglib was introduced it caused a significant performance
issue. This patch uses pruning to mitigate the performance issue.
The pruning exploits the fact that before the Kconfig database is
parsed we already know what ARCH and BOARD has been selected. So in
theory we could prune away all Kconfig sources that are not related to
the current ARCH or BOARD. In practice, it is only the Kconfig sources
in zephyr/arch/$ARCH and zephyr/board/$ARCH/ that are easy to prune.
Still, that is quite a few Kconfig sources. For qemu_x86 this patch
reduced the number of parsed Kconfig source files from 632 to
272. This pruning resulted in a incremental reconfiguration (time
cmake ..) speedup of 21% (0.56s to 0.46) and a clean build speedup of
4% (Using board qemu_x86 and sample hello_world).
Furthermore, it should be easier to maintain ARCH's and BOARD's
out-of-tree since the user now has a mechanism to redirect where
Kconfig sources are found. But this has not been explored.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Bøe <sebastian.boe@nordicsemi.no>
A new arch (posix) which relies on pthreads to emulate the context
switching
A new soc for it (inf_clock) which emulates a CPU running at an
infinely high clock (so when the CPU is awaken it runs till completion
in 0 time)
A new board, which provides a trivial system tick timer and
irq generation.
Origin: Original
Fixes#1891
Signed-off-by: Alberto Escolar Piedras <alpi@oticon.com>
Signed-off-by: Anas Nashif <anas.nashif@intel.com>
Was ARM specific and could not be used by other architectures.
Signed-off-by: Anas Nashif <anas.nashif@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Alberto Escolar Piedras <alpi@oticon.com>
Some drivers doesn't implement flash API page layout extension
which is causing the application crash once the API was calling.
This patch introduce system termination for this in those drivers
which doesn't implement extension. This will help to discover this
problem early.
It is not done by preprocessor check because it is possible to have
enabled a driver which support and a driver which doesn't support
this API simultaneously.
Now FLASH_PAGE_LAYOUT configuration option is accessible only in case
that at last one driver which implements mentioned API is enabled.
Signed-off-by: Andrzej Puzdrowski <andrzej.puzdrowski@nordicsemi.no>
This is intended for memory-constrained systems and will save
4K per thread, since we will no longer reserve room for or
activate a kernel stack guard page.
If CONFIG_USERSPACE is enabled, stack overflows will still be
caught in some situations:
1) User mode threads overflowing stack, since it crashes into the
kernel stack page
2) Supervisor mode threads overflowing stack, since the kernel
stack page is marked non-present for non-user threads
Stack overflows will not be caught:
1) When handling a system call
2) When the interrupt stack overflows
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
This adds CONFIG_EXECUTE_XOR_WRITE, which is enabled by default on
systems that support controlling whether a page can contain executable
code. This is also known as W^X[1].
Trying to add a memory domain with a page that is both executable and
writable, either for supervisor mode threads, or for user mode threads,
will result in a kernel panic.
There are few cases where a writable page should also be executable
(JIT compilers, which are most likely out of scope for Zephyr), so an
option is provided to disable the check.
Since the memory domain APIs are executed in supervisor mode, a
determined person could bypass these checks with ease. This is seen
more as a way to avoid people shooting themselves in the foot.
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/W%5EX
Signed-off-by: Leandro Pereira <leandro.pereira@intel.com>
Indicate to users that this feature isn't fully baked yet.
This will be reverted for 1.11 release.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
Userspace is built on top of hardware stack protection and assumes
it is there. We can't enable this unless ARCH_HAS_USERSPACE is defined
anyway.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
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 this is set incorrectly things will break all over the place.
Needs a default defined per-arch and left alone.
Change-Id: I3f8c842937a240297ee21589a22a7a9e51dbdfad
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
Added arch sub folder, make files and Kconfig files for a set of standard SoCs.
Change-Id: I4ee9cba966860072e55c95795d87356b665e4d49
Signed-off-by: Mazen NEIFER <mazen@nestwave.com>
This is a new mechanism for generating interrupt tables which will
be useful on many architectures. It replaces the old linker-based
mechanism for creating these tables and has a couple advantages:
1) It is now possible to use enums as the IRQ line argument to
IRQ_CONNECT(), which should ease CMSIS integration.
2) The vector table itself is now generated, which lets us place
interrupts directly into the vector table without having to
hard-code them. This is a feature we have long enjoyed on x86
and will enable 'direct' interrupts.
3) More code is common, requiring less arch-specific code to
support.
This patch introduces the common code for this mechanism. Follow-up
patches will enable it on various arches.
Issue: ZEP-1038, ZEP-1165
Change-Id: I9acd6e0de8b438fa9293f2e00563628f7510168a
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
This flag is no longer necessary and TICKLESS_IDLE will be
enabled by default if SYS_POWER_MANAGEMENT is enabled.
Jira: ZEP-1325
Change-Id: Ic6cd4b8dc0a17c6a413cabf6509b215a4558318d
Signed-off-by: Ramesh Thomas <ramesh.thomas@intel.com>
Replace the existing Apache 2.0 boilerplate header with an SPDX tag
throughout the zephyr code tree. This patch was generated via a
script run over the master branch.
Also updated doc/porting/application.rst that had a dependency on
line numbers in a literal include.
Manually updated subsys/logging/sys_log.c that had a malformed
header in the original file. Also cleanup several cases that already
had a SPDX tag and we either got a duplicate or missed updating.
Jira: ZEP-1457
Change-Id: I6131a1d4ee0e58f5b938300c2d2fc77d2e69572c
Signed-off-by: David B. Kinder <david.b.kinder@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Kumar Gala <kumar.gala@linaro.org>
RISC-V is an open-source instruction set architecture.
Added support for the 32bit version of RISC-V to Zephyr.
1) exceptions/interrupts/faults are handled at the architecture
level via the __irq_wrapper handler. Context saving/restoring
of registers can be handled at both architecture and SOC levels.
If SOC-specific registers need to be saved, SOC level needs to
provide __soc_save_context and __soc_restore_context functions
that shall be accounted by the architecture level, when
corresponding config variable RISCV_SOC_CONTEXT_SAVE is set.
2) As RISC-V architecture does not provide a clear ISA specification
about interrupt handling, each RISC-V SOC handles it in its own
way. Hence, at the architecture level, the __irq_wrapper handler
expects the following functions to be provided by the SOC level:
__soc_is_irq: to check if the exception is the result of an
interrupt or not.
__soc_handle_irq: handle pending IRQ at SOC level (ex: clear
pending IRQ in SOC-specific IRQ register)
3) Thread/task scheduling, as well as IRQ offloading are handled via
the RISC-V system call ("ecall"), which is also handled via the
__irq_wrapper handler. The _Swap asm function just calls "ecall"
to generate an exception.
4) As there is no conventional way of handling CPU power save in
RISC-V, the default nano_cpu_idle and nano_cpu_atomic_idle
functions just unlock interrupts and return to the caller, without
issuing any CPU power saving instruction. Nonetheless, to allow
SOC-level to implement proper CPU power save, nano_cpu_idle and
nano_cpu_atomic_idle functions are defined as __weak
at the architecture level.
Change-Id: I980a161d0009f3f404ad22b226a6229fbb492389
Signed-off-by: Jean-Paul Etienne <fractalclone@gmail.com>
rename NANOKERNEL_TICKLESS_IDLE_SUPPORTED to
TICKLESS_IDLE_SUPPORTED and remove nanokernel occurances in Kconfig
files.
Make TICKLESS_IDLE depend on hardware that supports it.
Change-Id: I6a2e4fb0f7cf4b45475b48e71823ea089ee98759
Signed-off-by: Anas Nashif <anas.nashif@intel.com>
For very constrained systems, like bootloaders.
Only the main thread is available, so a main() function must be
provided. Kernel objects where pending is in play will not behave as
expected, since the main thread cannot pend, it being the only thread in
the system. Usage of objects should be limited to using K_NO_WAIT as the
timeout parameter, effectively polling on the object.
Change-Id: Iae0261daa98bff388dc482797cde69f94e2e95cc
Signed-off-by: Benjamin Walsh <benjamin.walsh@windriver.com>
- does not pull in printk(), for potential footprint gain
- does not pull in k_thread_abort(), for single-threaded systems
Signed-off-by: Benjamin Walsh <benjamin.walsh@windriver.com>
Change-Id: Ibc6a198b81a6cd73117d1e85aa05b92a4501a34d
Some bootloaders have power management support to restoer context
upon resume from deep sleep. In such cases, the OS startup code
should call the notification hook. Create Kconfig flags to configure
this option.
Jira: 1257
Change-Id: I9f40c5fa077c2f17dc8e9f11604c3ed17e549ed5
Signed-off-by: Ramesh Thomas <ramesh.thomas@intel.com>
Builtin might not be available for ARMv6 (Cortex-M0/M0+) depending on
the toolchain used (not available by Zephyr's SDK GCC), so move the
atomic operations selection to the Cortex-M family Kconfig file.
Change-Id: I20a5a0c5fdd2bcff2d304139f5a7e8502fdb1cb3
Signed-off-by: Ricardo Salveti <ricardo.salveti@linaro.org>
Arches now select whether they want to use the GCC built-ins,
their own assembly implementation, or the generic C code.
At the moment, the SDK compilers only support builtins for ARM
and X86. ZEP-557 opened to investigate further.
Change-Id: I53e411b4967d87f737338379bd482bd653f19422
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
Convert leading whitespace into tabs in Kconfig files. Also replaced
double spaces between config and <prompt>.
Change-Id: I341c718ecf4143529b477c239bbde88e18f37062
Signed-off-by: Kumar Gala <kumar.gala@linaro.org>
Avoids confusion with .gitignore rules, which were inadequate to
cover all the places where these files are found. At least in
VIM, these files are now syntax highlighted correctly.
Change-Id: I23810b0ed34129320cc2760e19ed1a610afe039e
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
Basic build framework for Nios2. Everything is stubbed out,
we just want to have a build going so that we can start to
parallelize implementation tasks.
This patch is not intended to be functional, but should be
able to produce a binary for all the nanokernel-based
sanity checks.
Change-Id: I12dd8ca4a2273f7662bee46175822c9bbd99202a
Signed-off-by: Andrew Boie <andrew.p.boie@intel.com>
Add additional layers when defining SoCs to allow reuse among SoCs
of the same family and architecture.
The Board is the first location where we search for a linker.cmd file,
if not found we look for the linker file in
arch/<arch>/soc/<family>/<series>
Change-Id: I51d5e9a056220d0bd2ae0fa31474ffe63568e698
Signed-off-by: Anas Nashif <anas.nashif@intel.com>
Changed names of Kconfig flags, variables, functions, files and
return codes consistent with names used in the RFC. Updated
relevant comments to match the changes.
Origin: Original
Change-Id: Ie7941032d7ad7af61fc02928f74538745e7966e8
Signed-off-by: Ramesh Thomas <ramesh.thomas@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Anas Nashif <anas.nashif@intel.com>
This is part of an ongoing development of power management
support in zephyr. This implementation builds upon an existing
hook interface and adds more enhancements. This was tested
with reference implementations on quark_d2000 and quark_se.
Change-Id: I28092b7ec90ce1f1cc661cf99ca88708910c8eb2
Signed-off-by: Ramesh Thomas <ramesh.thomas@intel.com>
Modifications to timer drivers and interrupt setup, to manage
the tickless idle for the x86 architecture
Change-Id: Ie02d484b7e5636de6ea382ba2eeed57e704c8498
Signed-off-by: Sergio Rodriguez <sergio.sf.rodriguez@intel.com>
Change terminology and use SoC instead of platform. An SoC provides
features and default configurations available with an SoC. A board
implements the SoC and adds more features and IP block specific to the
board to extend the SoC functionality such as sensors and debugging
features.
Change-Id: I15e8d78a6d4ecd5cfb3bc25ced9ba77e5ea1122f
Signed-off-by: Anas Nashif <anas.nashif@intel.com>
First step for adding the new board layer. Create configurations for the
various boards we support on x86 under boards with the new Kconfig variables
defining them.
The board selection is optional, that means you will be able to run
make menuconfig
and create your own .config and select any SoC.
Change-Id: If08e88e9675d13f0f0501ef6750b9424b15f5dc8
Signed-off-by: Anas Nashif <anas.nashif@intel.com>
This variable (CONFIG_BOARD) will store the textual form of the
platform name and will be used for locating files related to the
board in the source tree.
Change-Id: I3c8a05ed428451a6785799a5492f0dd14682f208
Signed-off-by: Anas Nashif <anas.nashif@intel.com>
define CONFIG_PLATFORM only once in arch/Kconfig and set it
for every platform.
Change-Id: I8554bb36d2d15c3ee71fa63dfc3a763ebca956ee
Signed-off-by: Anas Nashif <anas.nashif@intel.com>
Do not depend on environment variables and use a kconfig variable
for defining the architecture.
In addition, remove the X86_32 variable, it just duplicates X86 for
not good reason, at least until start supporting MCUs with 64bit.
Change-Id: Ia001db81ed007e6a43f34506fed9be1345b88a4b
Signed-off-by: Anas Nashif <anas.nashif@intel.com>
Change all the Intel and Wind River code license from BSD-3 to Apache 2.
Change-Id: Id8be2c1c161a06ea8a0b9f38e17660e11dbb384b
Signed-off-by: Javier B Perez Hernandez <javier.b.perez.hernandez@linux.intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Anas Nashif <anas.nashif@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Allan Stephens <allan.stephens@windriver.com>
Signed-off-by: Benjamin Walsh <benjamin.walsh@windriver.com>