/* * __acpi_map_table() will be called before page_init(), so early_ioremap() * or early_memremap() should be called here to for ACPI table mapping.
*/ void __init __iomem *__acpi_map_table(unsignedlong phys, unsignedlong size)
{ if (!size) return NULL;
/* Whether HVC must be used instead of SMC as the PSCI conduit */ bool acpi_psci_use_hvc(void)
{ return acpi_gbl_FADT.arm_boot_flags & ACPI_FADT_PSCI_USE_HVC;
}
/* * acpi_fadt_sanity_check() - Check FADT presence and carry out sanity * checks on it * * Return 0 on success, <0 on failure
*/ staticint __init acpi_fadt_sanity_check(void)
{ struct acpi_table_header *table; struct acpi_table_fadt *fadt;
acpi_status status; int ret = 0;
/* * FADT is required on arm64; retrieve it to check its presence * and carry out revision and ACPI HW reduced compliancy tests
*/
status = acpi_get_table(ACPI_SIG_FADT, 0, &table); if (ACPI_FAILURE(status)) { constchar *msg = acpi_format_exception(status);
pr_err("Failed to get FADT table, %s\n", msg); return -ENODEV;
}
fadt = (struct acpi_table_fadt *)table;
/* * Revision in table header is the FADT Major revision, and there * is a minor revision of FADT which was introduced by ACPI 5.1, * we only deal with ACPI 5.1 or newer revision to get GIC and SMP * boot protocol configuration data.
*/ if (table->revision < 5 ||
(table->revision == 5 && fadt->minor_revision < 1)) {
pr_err(FW_BUG "Unsupported FADT revision %d.%d, should be 5.1+\n",
table->revision, fadt->minor_revision);
if (!fadt->arm_boot_flags) {
ret = -EINVAL; goto out;
}
pr_err("FADT has ARM boot flags set, assuming 5.1\n");
}
if (!(fadt->flags & ACPI_FADT_HW_REDUCED)) {
pr_err("FADT not ACPI hardware reduced compliant\n");
ret = -EINVAL;
}
out: /* * acpi_get_table() creates FADT table mapping that * should be released after parsing and before resuming boot
*/
acpi_put_table(table); return ret;
}
/* * acpi_boot_table_init() called from setup_arch(), always. * 1. find RSDP and get its address, and then find XSDT * 2. extract all tables and checksums them all * 3. check ACPI FADT revision * 4. check ACPI FADT HW reduced flag * * We can parse ACPI boot-time tables such as MADT after * this function is called. * * On return ACPI is enabled if either: * * - ACPI tables are initialized and sanity checks passed * - acpi=force was passed in the command line and ACPI was not disabled * explicitly through acpi=off command line parameter * * ACPI is disabled on function return otherwise
*/ void __init acpi_boot_table_init(void)
{ int ret;
/* * Enable ACPI instead of device tree unless * - ACPI has been disabled explicitly (acpi=off), or * - the device tree is not empty (it has more than just a /chosen node, * and a /hypervisor node when running on Xen) * and ACPI has not been [force] enabled (acpi=on|force)
*/ if (param_acpi_off ||
(!param_acpi_on && !param_acpi_force && !dt_is_stub())) goto done;
/* * ACPI is disabled at this point. Enable it in order to parse * the ACPI tables and carry out sanity checks
*/
enable_acpi();
/* * If ACPI tables are initialized and FADT sanity checks passed, * leave ACPI enabled and carry on booting; otherwise disable ACPI * on initialization error. * If acpi=force was passed on the command line it forces ACPI * to be enabled even if its initialization failed.
*/ if (acpi_table_init() || acpi_fadt_sanity_check()) {
pr_err("Failed to init ACPI tables\n"); if (!param_acpi_force)
disable_acpi();
}
/* * For varying privacy and security reasons, sometimes need * to completely silence the serial console output, and only * enable it when needed. * But there are many existing systems that depend on this * behaviour, use acpi=nospcr to disable console in ACPI SPCR * table as default serial console.
*/
ret = acpi_parse_spcr(earlycon_acpi_spcr_enable,
!param_acpi_nospcr); if (!ret || param_acpi_nospcr || !IS_ENABLED(CONFIG_ACPI_SPCR_TABLE))
pr_info("Use ACPI SPCR as default console: No\n"); else
pr_info("Use ACPI SPCR as default console: Yes\n");
if (IS_ENABLED(CONFIG_ACPI_BGRT))
acpi_table_parse(ACPI_SIG_BGRT, acpi_parse_bgrt);
}
}
static pgprot_t __acpi_get_writethrough_mem_attribute(void)
{ /* * Although UEFI specifies the use of Normal Write-through for * EFI_MEMORY_WT, it is seldom used in practice and not implemented * by most (all?) CPUs. Rather than allocate a MAIR just for this * purpose, emit a warning and use Normal Non-cacheable instead.
*/
pr_warn_once("No MAIR allocation for EFI_MEMORY_WT; treating as Normal Non-cacheable\n"); return __pgprot(PROT_NORMAL_NC);
}
pgprot_t __acpi_get_mem_attribute(phys_addr_t addr)
{ /* * According to "Table 8 Map: EFI memory types to AArch64 memory * types" of UEFI 2.5 section 2.3.6.1, each EFI memory type is * mapped to a corresponding MAIR attribute encoding. * The EFI memory attribute advises all possible capabilities * of a memory region.
*/
u64 attr;
attr = efi_mem_attributes(addr); if (attr & EFI_MEMORY_WB) return PAGE_KERNEL; if (attr & EFI_MEMORY_WC) return __pgprot(PROT_NORMAL_NC); if (attr & EFI_MEMORY_WT) return __acpi_get_writethrough_mem_attribute(); return __pgprot(PROT_DEVICE_nGnRnE);
}
if (WARN_ON_ONCE(!efi_enabled(EFI_MEMMAP))) return NULL;
for_each_efi_memory_desc(md) {
u64 end = md->phys_addr + (md->num_pages << EFI_PAGE_SHIFT);
if (phys < md->phys_addr || phys >= end) continue;
if (phys + size > end) {
pr_warn(FW_BUG "requested region covers multiple EFI memory regions\n"); return NULL;
}
region = md; break;
}
/* * It is fine for AML to remap regions that are not represented in the * EFI memory map at all, as it only describes normal memory, and MMIO * regions that require a virtual mapping to make them accessible to * the EFI runtime services.
*/
prot = __pgprot(PROT_DEVICE_nGnRnE); if (region) { switch (region->type) { case EFI_LOADER_CODE: case EFI_LOADER_DATA: case EFI_BOOT_SERVICES_CODE: case EFI_BOOT_SERVICES_DATA: case EFI_CONVENTIONAL_MEMORY: case EFI_PERSISTENT_MEMORY: if (memblock_is_map_memory(phys) ||
!memblock_is_region_memory(phys, size)) {
pr_warn(FW_BUG "requested region covers kernel memory @ %pa\n", &phys); return NULL;
} /* * Mapping kernel memory is permitted if the region in * question is covered by a single memblock with the * NOMAP attribute set: this enables the use of ACPI * table overrides passed via initramfs, which are * reserved in memory using arch_reserve_mem_area() * below. As this particular use case only requires * read access, fall through to the R/O mapping case.
*/
fallthrough;
case EFI_RUNTIME_SERVICES_CODE: /* * This would be unusual, but not problematic per se, * as long as we take care not to create a writable * mapping for executable code.
*/
prot = PAGE_KERNEL_RO; break;
case EFI_ACPI_RECLAIM_MEMORY: /* * ACPI reclaim memory is used to pass firmware tables * and other data that is intended for consumption by * the OS only, which may decide it wants to reclaim * that memory and use it for something else. We never * do that, but we usually add it to the linear map * anyway, in which case we should use the existing * mapping.
*/ if (memblock_is_map_memory(phys)) return (void __iomem *)__phys_to_virt(phys);
fallthrough;
/* * Claim Synchronous External Aborts as a firmware first notification. * * Used by KVM and the arch do_sea handler. * @regs may be NULL when called from process context.
*/ int apei_claim_sea(struct pt_regs *regs)
{ int err = -ENOENT; bool return_to_irqs_enabled; unsignedlong current_flags;
if (!IS_ENABLED(CONFIG_ACPI_APEI_GHES)) return err;
current_flags = local_daif_save_flags();
/* current_flags isn't useful here as daif doesn't tell us about pNMI */
return_to_irqs_enabled = !irqs_disabled_flags(arch_local_save_flags());
if (regs)
return_to_irqs_enabled = interrupts_enabled(regs);
/* * SEA can interrupt SError, mask it and describe this as an NMI so * that APEI defers the handling.
*/
local_daif_restore(DAIF_ERRCTX);
nmi_enter();
err = ghes_notify_sea();
nmi_exit();
/* * APEI NMI-like notifications are deferred to irq_work. Unless * we interrupted irqs-masked code, we can do that now.
*/ if (!err) { if (return_to_irqs_enabled) {
local_daif_restore(DAIF_PROCCTX_NOIRQ);
__irq_enter();
irq_work_run();
__irq_exit();
} else {
pr_warn_ratelimited("APEI work queued but not completed");
err = -EINPROGRESS;
}
}
#ifdef CONFIG_ACPI_HOTPLUG_CPU int acpi_map_cpu(acpi_handle handle, phys_cpuid_t physid, u32 apci_id, int *pcpu)
{ /* If an error code is passed in this stub can't fix it */ if (*pcpu < 0) {
pr_warn_once("Unable to map CPU to valid ID\n"); return *pcpu;
}
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