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mirror of https://review.coreboot.org/flashrom.git synced 2025-04-27 23:22:37 +02:00
flashrom/flash.h
David Hendricks f9a3055480 linux_mtd: Import driver from ChromiumOS
This imports a series of patches from chromiumos for MTD support.
The patches are squashed to ease review and original Change-Ids have
been removed to avoid confusing Gerrit.

There are a few changes to integrate the code:
- Conflict resolution
- Makefile changes
- Remove file library usage from linux_mtd. We may revisit this and use
  it for other Linux interfaces later on.
- Switch to using file stream functions for reads and writes.

This consolidated patch is
Signed-off-by: David Hendricks <dhendricks@fb.com>

The first commit's message is:
Initial MTD support

This adds MTD support to flashrom so that we can read, erase, and
write content on a NOR flash chip via MTD.

BUG=chrome-os-partner:40208
BRANCH=none
TEST=read, write, and erase works on Oak

Signed-off-by: David Hendricks <dhendrix@chromium.org>
Reviewed-on: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/272983
Reviewed-by: Shawn N <shawnn@chromium.org>

This is the 2nd commit message:

linux_mtd: Fix compilation errors

This fixes compilation errors from the initial import patch.

Signed-off-by: David Hendricks <dhendricks@fb.com>

This is the 3rd commit message:

linux_mtd: Suppress message if NOR device not found

This just suppresses a message that might cause confusion for
unsuspecting users.

BUG=none
BRANCH=none
TEST=ran on veyron_mickey, "NOR type device not found" message
no longer appears under normal circumstances.
Signed-off-by: David Hendricks <dhendrix@chromium.org>

Reviewed-on: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/302145
Commit-Ready: David Hendricks <dhendrix@chromium.org>
Tested-by: David Hendricks <dhendrix@chromium.org>
Reviewed-by: Shawn N <shawnn@chromium.org>

This is the 4th commit message:

linux_mtd: Support for NO_ERASE type devices

Some mtd devices have the MTD_NO_ERASE flag set. This means
these devices don't require an erase to write and might not have
implemented an erase function. We should be conservative and skip
erasing altogether, falling back to performing writes over the whole
flash.

BUG=b:35104688
TESTED=Zaius flash is now written correctly for the 0xff regions.

Signed-off-by: William A. Kennington III <wak@google.com>
Reviewed-on: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/472128
Commit-Ready: William Kennington <wak@google.com>
Tested-by: William Kennington <wak@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Norris <briannorris@chromium.org>

This is the 5th commit message:

linux_mtd: do reads in eraseblock-sized chunks

It's probably not the best idea to try to do an 8MB read in one syscall.
Theoretically, this should work; but MTD just relies on the SPI driver
to deliver the whole read in one transfer, and many SPI drivers haven't
been tested well with large transfer sizes.

I'd consider this a workaround, but it's still good to have IMO.

BUG=chrome-os-partner:53215
TEST=boot kevin; `flashrom --read ...`
TEST=check for performance regression on oak
BRANCH=none

Signed-off-by: Brian Norris <briannorris@chromium.org>
Reviewed-on: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/344006
Reviewed-by: David Hendricks <dhendrix@chromium.org>

This is the 6th commit message:

linux_mtd: make read/write loop chunks consistent, and documented

Theoretically, there should be no maximum size for the read() and
write() syscalls on an MTD (well, except for the size of the entire
device). But practical concerns (i.e., bugs) have meant we don't quite
do this.

For reads:
Bug https://b/35573113 shows that some SPI-based MTD drivers don't yet
handle very large transactions. So we artificially limit this to
block-sized chunks.

For writes:
It's not clear there is a hard limit. Some drivers will already split
large writes into smaller chunks automatically. Others don't do any
splitting. At any rate, using *small* chunks can actually be a problem
for some devices (b:35104688), as they get worse performance (doing an
internal read/modify/write). This could be fixed in other ways by
advertizing their true "write chunk size" to user space somehow, but
this isn't so easy.

As a simpler fix, we can just increase the loop increment to match the
read loop. Per David, the original implementation (looping over page
chunks) was just being paranoid.

So this patch:
 * clarifies comments in linux_mtd_read(), to note that the chunking is
   somewhat of a hack that ideally can be fixed (with bug reference)
 * simplifies the linux_mtd_write() looping to match the structure in
   linux_mtd_read(), including dropping several unnecessary seeks, and
   correcting the error messages (they referred to "reads" and had the
   wrong parameters)
 * change linux_mtd_write() to align its chunks to eraseblocks, not page
   sizes

Note that the "->page_size" parameter is still somewhat ill-defined, and
only set by the upper layers for "opaque" flash. And it's not actually
used in this driver now. If we could figure out what we really want to
use it for, then we could try to set it appropriately.

BRANCH=none
BUG=b:35104688
TEST=various flashrom tests on Kevin
TEST=Reading and writing to flash works on our zaius machines over mtd

Change-Id: I3d6bb282863a5cf69909e28a1fc752b35f1b9599
Signed-off-by: Brian Norris <briannorris@chromium.org>
Reviewed-on: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/505409
Reviewed-by: David Hendricks <dhendrix@chromium.org>
Reviewed-by: Martin Roth <martinroth@chromium.org>
Reviewed-by: William Kennington <wak@google.com>
Reviewed-on: https://review.coreboot.org/25706
Tested-by: David Hendricks <david.hendricks@gmail.com>
Tested-by: build bot (Jenkins) <no-reply@coreboot.org>
Reviewed-by: Nico Huber <nico.h@gmx.de>
Reviewed-by: Philipp Deppenwiese <zaolin.daisuki@gmail.com>
2018-05-17 16:49:16 +00:00

405 lines
17 KiB
C

/*
* This file is part of the flashrom project.
*
* Copyright (C) 2000 Silicon Integrated System Corporation
* Copyright (C) 2000 Ronald G. Minnich <rminnich@gmail.com>
* Copyright (C) 2005-2009 coresystems GmbH
* Copyright (C) 2006-2009 Carl-Daniel Hailfinger
*
* This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
* it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
* the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
* (at your option) any later version.
*
* This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
* but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
* MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
* GNU General Public License for more details.
*/
#ifndef __FLASH_H__
#define __FLASH_H__ 1
#include "platform.h"
#include <inttypes.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdint.h>
#include <stddef.h>
#include <stdarg.h>
#include <stdbool.h>
#if IS_WINDOWS
#include <windows.h>
#undef min
#undef max
#endif
#include "libflashrom.h"
#include "layout.h"
#define ERROR_PTR ((void*)-1)
/* Error codes */
#define ERROR_OOM -100
#define TIMEOUT_ERROR -101
/* TODO: check using code for correct usage of types */
typedef uintptr_t chipaddr;
#define PRIxPTR_WIDTH ((int)(sizeof(uintptr_t)*2))
int register_shutdown(int (*function) (void *data), void *data);
int shutdown_free(void *data);
void *programmer_map_flash_region(const char *descr, uintptr_t phys_addr, size_t len);
void programmer_unmap_flash_region(void *virt_addr, size_t len);
void programmer_delay(unsigned int usecs);
#define ARRAY_SIZE(a) (sizeof(a) / sizeof((a)[0]))
enum chipbustype {
BUS_NONE = 0,
BUS_PARALLEL = 1 << 0,
BUS_LPC = 1 << 1,
BUS_FWH = 1 << 2,
BUS_SPI = 1 << 3,
BUS_PROG = 1 << 4,
BUS_NONSPI = BUS_PARALLEL | BUS_LPC | BUS_FWH,
};
/*
* The following enum defines possible write granularities of flash chips. These tend to reflect the properties
* of the actual hardware not necesserily the write function(s) defined by the respective struct flashchip.
* The latter might (and should) be more precisely specified, e.g. they might bail out early if their execution
* would result in undefined chip contents.
*/
enum write_granularity {
/* We assume 256 byte granularity by default. */
write_gran_256bytes = 0,/* If less than 256 bytes are written, the unwritten bytes are undefined. */
write_gran_1bit, /* Each bit can be cleared individually. */
write_gran_1byte, /* A byte can be written once. Further writes to an already written byte cause
* its contents to be either undefined or to stay unchanged. */
write_gran_128bytes, /* If less than 128 bytes are written, the unwritten bytes are undefined. */
write_gran_264bytes, /* If less than 264 bytes are written, the unwritten bytes are undefined. */
write_gran_512bytes, /* If less than 512 bytes are written, the unwritten bytes are undefined. */
write_gran_528bytes, /* If less than 528 bytes are written, the unwritten bytes are undefined. */
write_gran_1024bytes, /* If less than 1024 bytes are written, the unwritten bytes are undefined. */
write_gran_1056bytes, /* If less than 1056 bytes are written, the unwritten bytes are undefined. */
write_gran_1byte_implicit_erase, /* EEPROMs and other chips with implicit erase and 1-byte writes. */
};
/*
* How many different contiguous runs of erase blocks with one size each do
* we have for a given erase function?
*/
#define NUM_ERASEREGIONS 5
/*
* How many different erase functions do we have per chip?
* Macronix MX25L25635F has 8 different functions.
*/
#define NUM_ERASEFUNCTIONS 8
/* Feature bits used for non-SPI only */
#define FEATURE_REGISTERMAP (1 << 0)
#define FEATURE_LONG_RESET (0 << 4)
#define FEATURE_SHORT_RESET (1 << 4)
#define FEATURE_EITHER_RESET FEATURE_LONG_RESET
#define FEATURE_RESET_MASK (FEATURE_LONG_RESET | FEATURE_SHORT_RESET)
#define FEATURE_ADDR_FULL (0 << 2)
#define FEATURE_ADDR_MASK (3 << 2)
#define FEATURE_ADDR_2AA (1 << 2)
#define FEATURE_ADDR_AAA (2 << 2)
#define FEATURE_ADDR_SHIFTED (1 << 5)
/* Feature bits used for SPI only */
#define FEATURE_WRSR_EWSR (1 << 6)
#define FEATURE_WRSR_WREN (1 << 7)
#define FEATURE_WRSR_EITHER (FEATURE_WRSR_EWSR | FEATURE_WRSR_WREN)
#define FEATURE_OTP (1 << 8)
#define FEATURE_QPI (1 << 9)
#define FEATURE_4BA_ENTER (1 << 10) /**< Can enter/exit 4BA mode with instructions 0xb7/0xe9 w/o WREN */
#define FEATURE_4BA_ENTER_WREN (1 << 11) /**< Can enter/exit 4BA mode with instructions 0xb7/0xe9 after WREN */
#define FEATURE_4BA_EXT_ADDR (1 << 12) /**< Regular 3-byte operations can be used by writing the most
significant address byte into an extended address register. */
#define FEATURE_4BA_READ (1 << 13) /**< Native 4BA read instruction (0x13) is supported. */
#define FEATURE_4BA_FAST_READ (1 << 14) /**< Native 4BA fast read instruction (0x0c) is supported. */
#define FEATURE_4BA_WRITE (1 << 15) /**< Native 4BA byte program (0x12) is supported. */
/* 4BA Shorthands */
#define FEATURE_4BA_NATIVE (FEATURE_4BA_READ | FEATURE_4BA_FAST_READ | FEATURE_4BA_WRITE)
#define FEATURE_4BA (FEATURE_4BA_ENTER | FEATURE_4BA_EXT_ADDR | FEATURE_4BA_NATIVE)
#define FEATURE_4BA_WREN (FEATURE_4BA_ENTER_WREN | FEATURE_4BA_EXT_ADDR | FEATURE_4BA_NATIVE)
/*
* Most flash chips are erased to ones and programmed to zeros. However, some
* other flash chips, such as the ENE KB9012 internal flash, work the opposite way.
*/
#define FEATURE_ERASED_ZERO (1 << 16)
#define FEATURE_NO_ERASE (1 << 17)
#define ERASED_VALUE(flash) (((flash)->chip->feature_bits & FEATURE_ERASED_ZERO) ? 0x00 : 0xff)
enum test_state {
OK = 0,
NT = 1, /* Not tested */
BAD, /* Known to not work */
DEP, /* Support depends on configuration (e.g. Intel flash descriptor) */
NA, /* Not applicable (e.g. write support on ROM chips) */
};
#define TEST_UNTESTED (struct tested){ .probe = NT, .read = NT, .erase = NT, .write = NT }
#define TEST_OK_PROBE (struct tested){ .probe = OK, .read = NT, .erase = NT, .write = NT }
#define TEST_OK_PR (struct tested){ .probe = OK, .read = OK, .erase = NT, .write = NT }
#define TEST_OK_PRE (struct tested){ .probe = OK, .read = OK, .erase = OK, .write = NT }
#define TEST_OK_PREW (struct tested){ .probe = OK, .read = OK, .erase = OK, .write = OK }
#define TEST_BAD_PROBE (struct tested){ .probe = BAD, .read = NT, .erase = NT, .write = NT }
#define TEST_BAD_PR (struct tested){ .probe = BAD, .read = BAD, .erase = NT, .write = NT }
#define TEST_BAD_PRE (struct tested){ .probe = BAD, .read = BAD, .erase = BAD, .write = NT }
#define TEST_BAD_PREW (struct tested){ .probe = BAD, .read = BAD, .erase = BAD, .write = BAD }
struct flashrom_flashctx;
#define flashctx flashrom_flashctx /* TODO: Agree on a name and convert all occurences. */
typedef int (erasefunc_t)(struct flashctx *flash, unsigned int addr, unsigned int blocklen);
struct flashchip {
const char *vendor;
const char *name;
enum chipbustype bustype;
/*
* With 32bit manufacture_id and model_id we can cover IDs up to
* (including) the 4th bank of JEDEC JEP106W Standard Manufacturer's
* Identification code.
*/
uint32_t manufacture_id;
uint32_t model_id;
/* Total chip size in kilobytes */
unsigned int total_size;
/* Chip page size in bytes */
unsigned int page_size;
int feature_bits;
/* Indicate how well flashrom supports different operations of this flash chip. */
struct tested {
enum test_state probe;
enum test_state read;
enum test_state erase;
enum test_state write;
} tested;
/*
* Group chips that have common command sets. This should ensure that
* no chip gets confused by a probing command for a very different class
* of chips.
*/
enum {
/* SPI25 is very common. Keep it at zero so we don't have
to specify it for each and every chip in the database.*/
SPI25 = 0,
SPI_EDI = 1,
} spi_cmd_set;
int (*probe) (struct flashctx *flash);
/* Delay after "enter/exit ID mode" commands in microseconds.
* NB: negative values have special meanings, see TIMING_* below.
*/
signed int probe_timing;
/*
* Erase blocks and associated erase function. Any chip erase function
* is stored as chip-sized virtual block together with said function.
* The first one that fits will be chosen. There is currently no way to
* influence that behaviour. For testing just comment out the other
* elements or set the function pointer to NULL.
*/
struct block_eraser {
struct eraseblock {
unsigned int size; /* Eraseblock size in bytes */
unsigned int count; /* Number of contiguous blocks with that size */
} eraseblocks[NUM_ERASEREGIONS];
/* a block_erase function should try to erase one block of size
* 'blocklen' at address 'blockaddr' and return 0 on success. */
int (*block_erase) (struct flashctx *flash, unsigned int blockaddr, unsigned int blocklen);
} block_erasers[NUM_ERASEFUNCTIONS];
int (*printlock) (struct flashctx *flash);
int (*unlock) (struct flashctx *flash);
int (*write) (struct flashctx *flash, const uint8_t *buf, unsigned int start, unsigned int len);
int (*read) (struct flashctx *flash, uint8_t *buf, unsigned int start, unsigned int len);
struct voltage {
uint16_t min;
uint16_t max;
} voltage;
enum write_granularity gran;
};
struct flashrom_flashctx {
struct flashchip *chip;
/* FIXME: The memory mappings should be saved in a more structured way. */
/* The physical_* fields store the respective addresses in the physical address space of the CPU. */
uintptr_t physical_memory;
/* The virtual_* fields store where the respective physical address is mapped into flashrom's address
* space. A value equivalent to (chipaddr)ERROR_PTR indicates an invalid mapping (or none at all). */
chipaddr virtual_memory;
/* Some flash devices have an additional register space; semantics are like above. */
uintptr_t physical_registers;
chipaddr virtual_registers;
struct registered_master *mst;
const struct flashrom_layout *layout;
struct single_layout fallback_layout;
struct {
bool force;
bool force_boardmismatch;
bool verify_after_write;
bool verify_whole_chip;
} flags;
/* We cache the state of the extended address register (highest byte
of a 4BA for 3BA instructions) and the state of the 4BA mode here.
If possible, we enter 4BA mode early. If that fails, we make use
of the extended address register. */
int address_high_byte;
bool in_4ba_mode;
};
/* Timing used in probe routines. ZERO is -2 to differentiate between an unset
* field and zero delay.
*
* SPI devices will always have zero delay and ignore this field.
*/
#define TIMING_FIXME -1
/* this is intentionally same value as fixme */
#define TIMING_IGNORED -1
#define TIMING_ZERO -2
extern const struct flashchip flashchips[];
extern const unsigned int flashchips_size;
void chip_writeb(const struct flashctx *flash, uint8_t val, chipaddr addr);
void chip_writew(const struct flashctx *flash, uint16_t val, chipaddr addr);
void chip_writel(const struct flashctx *flash, uint32_t val, chipaddr addr);
void chip_writen(const struct flashctx *flash, const uint8_t *buf, chipaddr addr, size_t len);
uint8_t chip_readb(const struct flashctx *flash, const chipaddr addr);
uint16_t chip_readw(const struct flashctx *flash, const chipaddr addr);
uint32_t chip_readl(const struct flashctx *flash, const chipaddr addr);
void chip_readn(const struct flashctx *flash, uint8_t *buf, const chipaddr addr, size_t len);
/* print.c */
int print_supported(void);
void print_supported_wiki(void);
/* helpers.c */
uint32_t address_to_bits(uint32_t addr);
int bitcount(unsigned long a);
int max(int a, int b);
int min(int a, int b);
char *strcat_realloc(char *dest, const char *src);
void tolower_string(char *str);
#ifdef __MINGW32__
char* strtok_r(char *str, const char *delim, char **nextp);
#endif
#if defined(__DJGPP__) || (!defined(__LIBPAYLOAD__) && !defined(HAVE_STRNLEN))
size_t strnlen(const char *str, size_t n);
#endif
/* flashrom.c */
extern const char flashrom_version[];
extern const char *chip_to_probe;
char *flashbuses_to_text(enum chipbustype bustype);
int map_flash(struct flashctx *flash);
void unmap_flash(struct flashctx *flash);
int read_memmapped(struct flashctx *flash, uint8_t *buf, unsigned int start, unsigned int len);
int erase_flash(struct flashctx *flash);
int probe_flash(struct registered_master *mst, int startchip, struct flashctx *fill_flash, int force);
int read_flash_to_file(struct flashctx *flash, const char *filename);
char *extract_param(const char *const *haystack, const char *needle, const char *delim);
int verify_range(struct flashctx *flash, const uint8_t *cmpbuf, unsigned int start, unsigned int len);
int need_erase(const uint8_t *have, const uint8_t *want, unsigned int len, enum write_granularity gran, const uint8_t erased_value);
void print_version(void);
void print_buildinfo(void);
void print_banner(void);
void list_programmers_linebreak(int startcol, int cols, int paren);
int selfcheck(void);
int read_buf_from_file(unsigned char *buf, unsigned long size, const char *filename);
int write_buf_to_file(const unsigned char *buf, unsigned long size, const char *filename);
int prepare_flash_access(struct flashctx *, bool read_it, bool write_it, bool erase_it, bool verify_it);
void finalize_flash_access(struct flashctx *);
int do_read(struct flashctx *, const char *filename);
int do_erase(struct flashctx *);
int do_write(struct flashctx *, const char *const filename, const char *const referencefile);
int do_verify(struct flashctx *, const char *const filename);
/* Something happened that shouldn't happen, but we can go on. */
#define ERROR_NONFATAL 0x100
/* Something happened that shouldn't happen, we'll abort. */
#define ERROR_FATAL -0xee
#define ERROR_FLASHROM_BUG -200
/* We reached one of the hardcoded limits of flashrom. This can be fixed by
* increasing the limit of a compile-time allocation or by switching to dynamic
* allocation.
* Note: If this warning is triggered, check first for runaway registrations.
*/
#define ERROR_FLASHROM_LIMIT -201
/* cli_common.c */
void print_chip_support_status(const struct flashchip *chip);
/* cli_output.c */
extern enum flashrom_log_level verbose_screen;
extern enum flashrom_log_level verbose_logfile;
#ifndef STANDALONE
int open_logfile(const char * const filename);
int close_logfile(void);
void start_logging(void);
#endif
int flashrom_print_cb(enum flashrom_log_level level, const char *fmt, va_list ap);
/* Let gcc and clang check for correct printf-style format strings. */
int print(enum flashrom_log_level level, const char *fmt, ...)
#ifdef __MINGW32__
# ifndef __MINGW_PRINTF_FORMAT
# define __MINGW_PRINTF_FORMAT gnu_printf
# endif
__attribute__((format(__MINGW_PRINTF_FORMAT, 2, 3)));
#else
__attribute__((format(printf, 2, 3)));
#endif
#define msg_gerr(...) print(FLASHROM_MSG_ERROR, __VA_ARGS__) /* general errors */
#define msg_perr(...) print(FLASHROM_MSG_ERROR, __VA_ARGS__) /* programmer errors */
#define msg_cerr(...) print(FLASHROM_MSG_ERROR, __VA_ARGS__) /* chip errors */
#define msg_gwarn(...) print(FLASHROM_MSG_WARN, __VA_ARGS__) /* general warnings */
#define msg_pwarn(...) print(FLASHROM_MSG_WARN, __VA_ARGS__) /* programmer warnings */
#define msg_cwarn(...) print(FLASHROM_MSG_WARN, __VA_ARGS__) /* chip warnings */
#define msg_ginfo(...) print(FLASHROM_MSG_INFO, __VA_ARGS__) /* general info */
#define msg_pinfo(...) print(FLASHROM_MSG_INFO, __VA_ARGS__) /* programmer info */
#define msg_cinfo(...) print(FLASHROM_MSG_INFO, __VA_ARGS__) /* chip info */
#define msg_gdbg(...) print(FLASHROM_MSG_DEBUG, __VA_ARGS__) /* general debug */
#define msg_pdbg(...) print(FLASHROM_MSG_DEBUG, __VA_ARGS__) /* programmer debug */
#define msg_cdbg(...) print(FLASHROM_MSG_DEBUG, __VA_ARGS__) /* chip debug */
#define msg_gdbg2(...) print(FLASHROM_MSG_DEBUG2, __VA_ARGS__) /* general debug2 */
#define msg_pdbg2(...) print(FLASHROM_MSG_DEBUG2, __VA_ARGS__) /* programmer debug2 */
#define msg_cdbg2(...) print(FLASHROM_MSG_DEBUG2, __VA_ARGS__) /* chip debug2 */
#define msg_gspew(...) print(FLASHROM_MSG_SPEW, __VA_ARGS__) /* general debug spew */
#define msg_pspew(...) print(FLASHROM_MSG_SPEW, __VA_ARGS__) /* programmer debug spew */
#define msg_cspew(...) print(FLASHROM_MSG_SPEW, __VA_ARGS__) /* chip debug spew */
/* layout.c */
int register_include_arg(char *name);
int read_romlayout(const char *name);
int normalize_romentries(const struct flashctx *flash);
void layout_cleanup(void);
/* spi.c */
struct spi_command {
unsigned int writecnt;
unsigned int readcnt;
const unsigned char *writearr;
unsigned char *readarr;
};
#define NULL_SPI_CMD { 0, 0, NULL, NULL, }
int spi_send_command(struct flashctx *flash, unsigned int writecnt, unsigned int readcnt, const unsigned char *writearr, unsigned char *readarr);
int spi_send_multicommand(struct flashctx *flash, struct spi_command *cmds);
enum chipbustype get_buses_supported(void);
#endif /* !__FLASH_H__ */