qemu/include/hw/misc/iotkit-secctl.h
Peter Maydell b1ce38e12b hw/misc/iotkit-secctl: Add remaining simple registers
Add remaining easy registers to iotkit-secctl:
 * NSCCFG just routes its two bits out to external GPIO lines
 * BRGINSTAT/BRGINTCLR/BRGINTEN can be dummies, because QEMU's
   bus fabric can never report errors

Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org>
Message-id: 20180220180325.29818-18-peter.maydell@linaro.org
2018-03-02 11:03:45 +00:00

104 lines
3.3 KiB
C

/*
* ARM IoT Kit security controller
*
* Copyright (c) 2018 Linaro Limited
* Written by Peter Maydell
*
* This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
* it under the terms of the GNU General Public License version 2 or
* (at your option) any later version.
*/
/* This is a model of the security controller which is part of the
* Arm IoT Kit and documented in
* http://infocenter.arm.com/help/index.jsp?topic=/com.arm.doc.ecm0601256/index.html
*
* QEMU interface:
* + sysbus MMIO region 0 is the "secure privilege control block" registers
* + sysbus MMIO region 1 is the "non-secure privilege control block" registers
* + named GPIO output "sec_resp_cfg" indicating whether blocked accesses
* should RAZ/WI or bus error
* + named GPIO output "nsc_cfg" whose value tracks the NSCCFG register value
* Controlling the 2 APB PPCs in the IoTKit:
* + named GPIO outputs apb_ppc0_nonsec[0..2] and apb_ppc1_nonsec
* + named GPIO outputs apb_ppc0_ap[0..2] and apb_ppc1_ap
* + named GPIO outputs apb_ppc{0,1}_irq_enable
* + named GPIO outputs apb_ppc{0,1}_irq_clear
* + named GPIO inputs apb_ppc{0,1}_irq_status
* Controlling each of the 4 expansion APB PPCs which a system using the IoTKit
* might provide:
* + named GPIO outputs apb_ppcexp{0,1,2,3}_nonsec[0..15]
* + named GPIO outputs apb_ppcexp{0,1,2,3}_ap[0..15]
* + named GPIO outputs apb_ppcexp{0,1,2,3}_irq_enable
* + named GPIO outputs apb_ppcexp{0,1,2,3}_irq_clear
* + named GPIO inputs apb_ppcexp{0,1,2,3}_irq_status
* Controlling each of the 4 expansion AHB PPCs which a system using the IoTKit
* might provide:
* + named GPIO outputs ahb_ppcexp{0,1,2,3}_nonsec[0..15]
* + named GPIO outputs ahb_ppcexp{0,1,2,3}_ap[0..15]
* + named GPIO outputs ahb_ppcexp{0,1,2,3}_irq_enable
* + named GPIO outputs ahb_ppcexp{0,1,2,3}_irq_clear
* + named GPIO inputs ahb_ppcexp{0,1,2,3}_irq_status
*/
#ifndef IOTKIT_SECCTL_H
#define IOTKIT_SECCTL_H
#include "hw/sysbus.h"
#define TYPE_IOTKIT_SECCTL "iotkit-secctl"
#define IOTKIT_SECCTL(obj) OBJECT_CHECK(IoTKitSecCtl, (obj), TYPE_IOTKIT_SECCTL)
#define IOTS_APB_PPC0_NUM_PORTS 3
#define IOTS_APB_PPC1_NUM_PORTS 1
#define IOTS_PPC_NUM_PORTS 16
#define IOTS_NUM_APB_PPC 2
#define IOTS_NUM_APB_EXP_PPC 4
#define IOTS_NUM_AHB_EXP_PPC 4
typedef struct IoTKitSecCtl IoTKitSecCtl;
/* State and IRQ lines relating to a PPC. For the
* PPCs in the IoTKit not all the IRQ lines are used.
*/
typedef struct IoTKitSecCtlPPC {
qemu_irq nonsec[IOTS_PPC_NUM_PORTS];
qemu_irq ap[IOTS_PPC_NUM_PORTS];
qemu_irq irq_enable;
qemu_irq irq_clear;
uint32_t ns;
uint32_t sp;
uint32_t nsp;
/* Number of ports actually present */
int numports;
/* Offset of this PPC's interrupt bits in SECPPCINTSTAT */
int irq_bit_offset;
IoTKitSecCtl *parent;
} IoTKitSecCtlPPC;
struct IoTKitSecCtl {
/*< private >*/
SysBusDevice parent_obj;
/*< public >*/
qemu_irq sec_resp_cfg;
qemu_irq nsc_cfg_irq;
MemoryRegion s_regs;
MemoryRegion ns_regs;
uint32_t secppcintstat;
uint32_t secppcinten;
uint32_t secrespcfg;
uint32_t nsccfg;
uint32_t brginten;
IoTKitSecCtlPPC apb[IOTS_NUM_APB_PPC];
IoTKitSecCtlPPC apbexp[IOTS_NUM_APB_EXP_PPC];
IoTKitSecCtlPPC ahbexp[IOTS_NUM_APB_EXP_PPC];
};
#endif