| ARM TCM (Tightly-Coupled Memory) handling in Linux |
| ---- |
| Written by Linus Walleij <linus.walleij@stericsson.com> |
| |
| Some ARM SoC:s have a so-called TCM (Tightly-Coupled Memory). |
| This is usually just a few (4-64) KiB of RAM inside the ARM |
| processor. |
| |
| Due to being embedded inside the CPU The TCM has a |
| Harvard-architecture, so there is an ITCM (instruction TCM) |
| and a DTCM (data TCM). The DTCM can not contain any |
| instructions, but the ITCM can actually contain data. |
| The size of DTCM or ITCM is minimum 4KiB so the typical |
| minimum configuration is 4KiB ITCM and 4KiB DTCM. |
| |
| ARM CPU:s have special registers to read out status, physical |
| location and size of TCM memories. arch/arm/include/asm/cputype.h |
| defines a CPUID_TCM register that you can read out from the |
| system control coprocessor. Documentation from ARM can be found |
| at http://infocenter.arm.com, search for "TCM Status Register" |
| to see documents for all CPUs. Reading this register you can |
| determine if ITCM (bits 1-0) and/or DTCM (bit 17-16) is present |
| in the machine. |
| |
| There is further a TCM region register (search for "TCM Region |
| Registers" at the ARM site) that can report and modify the location |
| size of TCM memories at runtime. This is used to read out and modify |
| TCM location and size. Notice that this is not a MMU table: you |
| actually move the physical location of the TCM around. At the |
| place you put it, it will mask any underlying RAM from the |
| CPU so it is usually wise not to overlap any physical RAM with |
| the TCM. |
| |
| The TCM memory can then be remapped to another address again using |
| the MMU, but notice that the TCM if often used in situations where |
| the MMU is turned off. To avoid confusion the current Linux |
| implementation will map the TCM 1 to 1 from physical to virtual |
| memory in the location specified by the kernel. Currently Linux |
| will map ITCM to 0xfffe0000 and on, and DTCM to 0xfffe8000 and |
| on, supporting a maximum of 32KiB of ITCM and 32KiB of DTCM. |
| |
| Newer versions of the region registers also support dividing these |
| TCMs in two separate banks, so for example an 8KiB ITCM is divided |
| into two 4KiB banks with its own control registers. The idea is to |
| be able to lock and hide one of the banks for use by the secure |
| world (TrustZone). |
| |
| TCM is used for a few things: |
| |
| - FIQ and other interrupt handlers that need deterministic |
| timing and cannot wait for cache misses. |
| |
| - Idle loops where all external RAM is set to self-refresh |
| retention mode, so only on-chip RAM is accessible by |
| the CPU and then we hang inside ITCM waiting for an |
| interrupt. |
| |
| - Other operations which implies shutting off or reconfiguring |
| the external RAM controller. |
| |
| There is an interface for using TCM on the ARM architecture |
| in <asm/tcm.h>. Using this interface it is possible to: |
| |
| - Define the physical address and size of ITCM and DTCM. |
| |
| - Tag functions to be compiled into ITCM. |
| |
| - Tag data and constants to be allocated to DTCM and ITCM. |
| |
| - Have the remaining TCM RAM added to a special |
| allocation pool with gen_pool_create() and gen_pool_add() |
| and provice tcm_alloc() and tcm_free() for this |
| memory. Such a heap is great for things like saving |
| device state when shutting off device power domains. |
| |
| A machine that has TCM memory shall select HAVE_TCM from |
| arch/arm/Kconfig for itself. Code that needs to use TCM shall |
| #include <asm/tcm.h> |
| |
| Functions to go into itcm can be tagged like this: |
| int __tcmfunc foo(int bar); |
| |
| Since these are marked to become long_calls and you may want |
| to have functions called locally inside the TCM without |
| wasting space, there is also the __tcmlocalfunc prefix that |
| will make the call relative. |
| |
| Variables to go into dtcm can be tagged like this: |
| int __tcmdata foo; |
| |
| Constants can be tagged like this: |
| int __tcmconst foo; |
| |
| To put assembler into TCM just use |
| .section ".tcm.text" or .section ".tcm.data" |
| respectively. |
| |
| Example code: |
| |
| #include <asm/tcm.h> |
| |
| /* Uninitialized data */ |
| static u32 __tcmdata tcmvar; |
| /* Initialized data */ |
| static u32 __tcmdata tcmassigned = 0x2BADBABEU; |
| /* Constant */ |
| static const u32 __tcmconst tcmconst = 0xCAFEBABEU; |
| |
| static void __tcmlocalfunc tcm_to_tcm(void) |
| { |
| int i; |
| for (i = 0; i < 100; i++) |
| tcmvar ++; |
| } |
| |
| static void __tcmfunc hello_tcm(void) |
| { |
| /* Some abstract code that runs in ITCM */ |
| int i; |
| for (i = 0; i < 100; i++) { |
| tcmvar ++; |
| } |
| tcm_to_tcm(); |
| } |
| |
| static void __init test_tcm(void) |
| { |
| u32 *tcmem; |
| int i; |
| |
| hello_tcm(); |
| printk("Hello TCM executed from ITCM RAM\n"); |
| |
| printk("TCM variable from testrun: %u @ %p\n", tcmvar, &tcmvar); |
| tcmvar = 0xDEADBEEFU; |
| printk("TCM variable: 0x%x @ %p\n", tcmvar, &tcmvar); |
| |
| printk("TCM assigned variable: 0x%x @ %p\n", tcmassigned, &tcmassigned); |
| |
| printk("TCM constant: 0x%x @ %p\n", tcmconst, &tcmconst); |
| |
| /* Allocate some TCM memory from the pool */ |
| tcmem = tcm_alloc(20); |
| if (tcmem) { |
| printk("TCM Allocated 20 bytes of TCM @ %p\n", tcmem); |
| tcmem[0] = 0xDEADBEEFU; |
| tcmem[1] = 0x2BADBABEU; |
| tcmem[2] = 0xCAFEBABEU; |
| tcmem[3] = 0xDEADBEEFU; |
| tcmem[4] = 0x2BADBABEU; |
| for (i = 0; i < 5; i++) |
| printk("TCM tcmem[%d] = %08x\n", i, tcmem[i]); |
| tcm_free(tcmem, 20); |
| } |
| } |