Files
Stewart Smith 49496485fe Re-license IBM written files as Apache 2.0 OR GPLv2+
SPDX makes it a simpler diff.

I have audited the commit history of each file to ensure that they are
exclusively authored by IBM and thus we have the right to relicense.

The motivation behind this is twofold:
1) We want to enable experiments with coreboot, which is GPLv2 licensed
2) An upcoming firmware component wants to incorporate code from skiboot
   and code from the Linux kernel, which is GPLv2 licensed.

I have gone through the IBM internal way of gaining approval for this.

The following files are not exclusively authored by IBM, so are *not*
included in this update (I will be seeking approval from contributors):

core/direct-controls.c
core/flash.c
core/pcie-slot.c
external/common/arch_flash_unknown.c
external/common/rules.mk
external/gard/Makefile
external/gard/rules.mk
external/opal-prd/Makefile
external/pflash/Makefile
external/xscom-utils/Makefile
hdata/vpd.c
hw/dts.c
hw/ipmi/ipmi-watchdog.c
hw/phb4.c
include/cpu.h
include/phb4.h
include/platform.h
libflash/libffs.c
libstb/mbedtls/sha512.c
libstb/mbedtls/sha512.h
platforms/astbmc/barreleye.c
platforms/astbmc/garrison.c
platforms/astbmc/mihawk.c
platforms/astbmc/nicole.c
platforms/astbmc/p8dnu.c
platforms/astbmc/p8dtu.c
platforms/astbmc/p9dsu.c
platforms/astbmc/vesnin.c
platforms/rhesus/ec/config.h
platforms/rhesus/ec/gpio.h
platforms/rhesus/gpio.c
platforms/rhesus/rhesus.c
platforms/astbmc/talos.c
platforms/astbmc/romulus.c

Signed-off-by: Stewart Smith <stewart@linux.ibm.com>
[oliver: fixed up the drift]
Signed-off-by: Oliver O'Halloran <oohall@gmail.com>
2020-03-12 20:33:18 +11:00

450 lines
13 KiB
C

// SPDX-License-Identifier: Apache-2.0 OR GPL-2.0-or-later
/*
* This is based on the hostboot ecc code
*
* Copyright 2013-2019 IBM Corp.
*/
#include <stdint.h>
#include <inttypes.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <ccan/endian/endian.h>
#include "libflash.h"
#include "ecc.h"
/* Bit field identifiers for syndrome calculations. */
enum eccbitfields
{
GD = 0xff, //< Good, ECC matches.
UE = 0xfe, //< Uncorrectable.
E0 = 71, //< Error in ECC bit 0
E1 = 70, //< Error in ECC bit 1
E2 = 69, //< Error in ECC bit 2
E3 = 68, //< Error in ECC bit 3
E4 = 67, //< Error in ECC bit 4
E5 = 66, //< Error in ECC bit 5
E6 = 65, //< Error in ECC bit 6
E7 = 64 //< Error in ECC bit 7
/* 0-63 Correctable bit in byte */
};
/*
* Matrix used for ECC calculation.
*
* Each row of this is the set of data word bits that are used for
* the calculation of the corresponding ECC bit. The parity of the
* bitset is the value of the ECC bit.
*
* ie. ECC[n] = eccMatrix[n] & data
*
* Note: To make the math easier (and less shifts in resulting code),
* row0 = ECC7. HW numbering is MSB, order here is LSB.
*
* These values come from the HW design of the ECC algorithm.
*/
static uint64_t eccmatrix[] = {
0x0000e8423c0f99ffull,
0x00e8423c0f99ff00ull,
0xe8423c0f99ff0000ull,
0x423c0f99ff0000e8ull,
0x3c0f99ff0000e842ull,
0x0f99ff0000e8423cull,
0x99ff0000e8423c0full,
0xff0000e8423c0f99ull
};
/**
* Syndrome calculation matrix.
*
* Maps syndrome to flipped bit.
*
* To perform ECC correction, this matrix is a look-up of the bit
* that is bad based on the binary difference of the good and bad
* ECC. This difference is called the "syndrome".
*
* When a particular bit is on in the data, it cause a column from
* eccMatrix being XOR'd into the ECC field. This column is the
* "effect" of each bit. If a bit is flipped in the data then its
* "effect" is missing from the ECC. You can calculate ECC on unknown
* quality data and compare the ECC field between the calculated
* value and the stored value. If the difference is zero, then the
* data is clean. If the difference is non-zero, you look up the
* difference in the syndrome table to identify the "effect" that
* is missing, which is the bit that is flipped.
*
* Notice that ECC bit flips are recorded by a single "effect"
* bit (ie. 0x1, 0x2, 0x4, 0x8 ...) and double bit flips are identified
* by the UE status in the table.
*
* Bits are in MSB order.
*/
static enum eccbitfields syndromematrix[] = {
GD, E7, E6, UE, E5, UE, UE, 47, E4, UE, UE, 37, UE, 35, 39, UE,
E3, UE, UE, 48, UE, 30, 29, UE, UE, 57, 27, UE, 31, UE, UE, UE,
E2, UE, UE, 17, UE, 18, 40, UE, UE, 58, 22, UE, 21, UE, UE, UE,
UE, 16, 49, UE, 19, UE, UE, UE, 23, UE, UE, UE, UE, 20, UE, UE,
E1, UE, UE, 51, UE, 46, 9, UE, UE, 34, 10, UE, 32, UE, UE, 36,
UE, 62, 50, UE, 14, UE, UE, UE, 13, UE, UE, UE, UE, UE, UE, UE,
UE, 61, 8, UE, 41, UE, UE, UE, 11, UE, UE, UE, UE, UE, UE, UE,
15, UE, UE, UE, UE, UE, UE, UE, UE, UE, 12, UE, UE, UE, UE, UE,
E0, UE, UE, 55, UE, 45, 43, UE, UE, 56, 38, UE, 1, UE, UE, UE,
UE, 25, 26, UE, 2, UE, UE, UE, 24, UE, UE, UE, UE, UE, 28, UE,
UE, 59, 54, UE, 42, UE, UE, 44, 6, UE, UE, UE, UE, UE, UE, UE,
5, UE, UE, UE, UE, UE, UE, UE, UE, UE, UE, UE, UE, UE, UE, UE,
UE, 63, 53, UE, 0, UE, UE, UE, 33, UE, UE, UE, UE, UE, UE, UE,
3, UE, UE, 52, UE, UE, UE, UE, UE, UE, UE, UE, UE, UE, UE, UE,
7, UE, UE, UE, UE, UE, UE, UE, UE, 60, UE, UE, UE, UE, UE, UE,
UE, UE, UE, UE, 4, UE, UE, UE, UE, UE, UE, UE, UE, UE, UE, UE,
};
/**
* Create the ECC field corresponding to a 8-byte data field
*
* @data: The 8 byte data to generate ECC for.
* @return: The 1 byte ECC corresponding to the data.
*/
static uint8_t eccgenerate(uint64_t data)
{
int i;
uint8_t result = 0;
for (i = 0; i < 8; i++)
result |= __builtin_parityll(eccmatrix[i] & data) << i;
return result;
}
/**
* Verify the data and ECC match or indicate how they are wrong.
*
* @data: The data to check ECC on.
* @ecc: The [supposed] ECC for the data.
*
* @return: eccBitfield or 0-64.
*
* @retval GD - Indicates the data is good (matches ECC).
* @retval UE - Indicates the data is uncorrectable.
* @retval all others - Indication of which bit is incorrect.
*/
static enum eccbitfields eccverify(uint64_t data, uint8_t ecc)
{
return syndromematrix[eccgenerate(data) ^ ecc];
}
/* IBM bit ordering */
static inline uint64_t eccflipbit(uint64_t data, uint8_t bit)
{
if (bit > 63)
return data;
return data ^ (1ul << (63 - bit));
}
static int eccbyte(beint64_t *dst, struct ecc64 *src)
{
uint8_t ecc, badbit;
uint64_t data;
data = be64_to_cpu(src->data);
ecc = src->ecc;
badbit = eccverify(data, ecc);
if (badbit == UE) {
FL_ERR("ECC: uncorrectable error: %016llx %02x\n", (unsigned long long int)data, ecc);
return badbit;
}
if (badbit <= UE)
FL_INF("ECC: correctable error: %i\n", badbit);
if (badbit < 64)
*dst = cpu_to_be64(eccflipbit(data, badbit));
else
*dst = cpu_to_be64(data);
return 0;
}
static beint64_t *inc_beint64_by(const void *p, uint64_t i)
{
return (beint64_t *)(((char *)p) + i);
}
static uint64_t *inc_uint64_by(const void *p, uint64_t i)
{
return (uint64_t *)(((char *)p) + i);
}
static struct ecc64 *inc_ecc64_by(struct ecc64 *p, uint64_t i)
{
return (struct ecc64 *)(((char *)p) + i);
}
static uint64_t whole_ecc_bytes(uint64_t i)
{
return i & ~(BYTES_PER_ECC - 1);
}
static uint64_t whole_ecc_structs(uint64_t i)
{
return whole_ecc_bytes(i) >> 3;
}
/**
* Copy data from an input buffer with ECC to an output buffer without ECC.
* Correct it along the way and check for errors.
*
* @dst: destination buffer without ECC
* @src: source buffer with ECC
* @len: number of bytes of data to copy (without ecc).
* Must be 8 byte aligned.
*
* @return: Success or error
*
* @retval: 0 - success
* @retfal: other - fail
*/
int memcpy_from_ecc(beint64_t *dst, struct ecc64 *src, uint64_t len)
{
uint32_t i;
if (len & 0x7) {
/* TODO: we could probably handle this */
FL_ERR("ECC data length must be 8 byte aligned length:%" PRIx64 "\n",
len);
return -1;
}
/* Handle in chunks of 8 bytes, so adjust the length */
len >>= 3;
for (i = 0; i < len; i++) {
int rc;
rc = eccbyte(dst, src + i);
if (rc)
return rc;
dst++;
}
return 0;
}
/**
* Copy data from an input buffer with ECC to an output buffer without ECC.
* Correct it along the way and check for errors.
*
* Unlike memcmp_from_ecc() which requires that the first byte into
* dst be the first byte in src (which must also be aligned to a
* struct ecc64 struct boundary) this function can cope with the first
* byte in dst not being the first byte in src.
*
* Note: src MUST still be aligned to a struct ecc64 otherwise ECC
* calculations are impossible.
*
* The alignment parameter species the number of bytes present at the
* start of src that should be skipped and not written to dst. Once
* again, these bytes must be in src otherwise the ECC cannot be
* checked.
*
* len also doesn't have any value limitation for this function. Of
* course src must contain an exact multiple of struct ecc64 otherwise
* ECC calculation cannot be performed but this function won't copy
* the entirety of the last src data word if len is not mutiple of 8
*
* @dst: destination buffer without ECC
* @src: source buffer with ECC
* @len: number of bytes of data to copy (without ecc).
* @alignment: number of leading bytes in src which shouldn't be
* copied to dst
* @return: Success or error
*
* @retval: 0 - success
* @retfal: other - fail
*/
int memcpy_from_ecc_unaligned(beint64_t *dst, struct ecc64 *src,
uint64_t len, uint8_t alignment)
{
char data[BYTES_PER_ECC];
uint8_t bytes_wanted;
int rc;
if (alignment > 8)
return -1;
bytes_wanted = BYTES_PER_ECC - alignment;
/*
* Only actually do the first calculation if an alignment is
* required - otherwise jump straight to memcpy_from_ecc()
*/
if (alignment) {
rc = eccbyte((beint64_t *)data, src);
if (rc)
return rc;
memcpy(dst, &data[alignment], bytes_wanted);
src = inc_ecc64_by(src, sizeof(struct ecc64));
dst = inc_beint64_by(dst, bytes_wanted);
len -= bytes_wanted;
}
if (len >= BYTES_PER_ECC) {
rc = memcpy_from_ecc(dst, src, whole_ecc_bytes(len));
if (rc)
return rc;
/*
* It helps to let the compiler to the pointer arithmetic
* here, (dst and src are different types)
*/
dst += whole_ecc_structs(len);
src += whole_ecc_structs(len);
len -= whole_ecc_bytes(len);
}
if (len) {
rc = eccbyte((beint64_t *)data, src);
if (rc)
return rc;
memcpy(dst, data, len);
}
return 0;
}
/**
* Copy data from an input buffer without ECC to an output buffer with ECC.
*
* @dst: destination buffer with ECC
* @src: source buffer without ECC
* @len: number of bytes of data to copy (without ecc, length of src).
* Note: dst must be big enough to hold ecc bytes as well.
* Must be 8 byte aligned.
*
* @return: success or failure
*
* @retval: 0 - success
* @retfal: other - fail
*/
int memcpy_to_ecc(struct ecc64 *dst, const beint64_t *src, uint64_t len)
{
struct ecc64 ecc_word;
uint64_t i;
if (len & 0x7) {
/* TODO: we could probably handle this */
FL_ERR("Data to add ECC bytes to must be 8 byte aligned length: %"
PRIx64 "\n", len);
return -1;
}
/* Handle in chunks of 8 bytes, so adjust the length */
len >>= 3;
for (i = 0; i < len; i++) {
ecc_word.ecc = eccgenerate(be64_to_cpu(*(src + i)));
ecc_word.data = *(src + i);
*(dst + i) = ecc_word;
}
return 0;
}
/**
* Copy data from an input buffer without ECC to an output buffer with ECC.
*
* Unlike memcmp_to_ecc() which requires that the first byte in src be
* the first byte of a struct ecc64 structure this function does not
* have this requirement.
*
* Like memcpy_to_ecc_unaligned() the alignment parameter specfies the
* number of bytes in the first src word that are missing and would be
* required to form a struct ecc64 structure.
*
* It must be noted here that extra work IN THE CALLER must be done
* if your data is unaligned. In order to peform ECC calculations
* whatever portions of the ecc words are missing in src must be in
* dst.
*
* For example, if there is an alignment value of 1 then this means
* there is 1 byte (of the total of 8 bytes) missing in src which is
* needed to calculate the first ECC byte. Therefore the first byte of
* dst MUST CONTAIN IT!
*
* The same problem exists for the end of the buffer where src may not
* end exactly aligned, if this is the case dst must contain the
* required bytes to calculate the last ECC byte - they should be in
* dst where they would normally be found if src did contain those
* bytes.
*
* @dst: destination buffer with ECC
* @src: source buffer without ECC
* @len: number of bytes of data to copy (without ecc, length of src).
* @alignment: The number of bytes 'missing' from the start of src to
* be struct ecc64 aligned
*
* Note: dst must be big enough to hold ecc bytes as well.
* Must be 8 byte aligned.
*
* @return: success or failure
*
* @retval: 0 - success
* @retfal: other - fail
*/
int memcpy_to_ecc_unaligned(struct ecc64 *dst, const beint64_t *src,
uint64_t len, uint8_t alignment)
{
struct ecc64 ecc_word;
uint8_t bytes_wanted;
int rc;
bytes_wanted = BYTES_PER_ECC - alignment;
/*
* Only actually do the first calculation if an alignment is
* required - otherwise jump straight to memcpy_to_ecc()
*/
if (alignment) {
ecc_word.data = dst->data;
memcpy(inc_uint64_by(&ecc_word.data, alignment), src, bytes_wanted);
ecc_word.ecc = eccgenerate(be64_to_cpu(ecc_word.data));
memcpy(dst, inc_ecc64_by(&ecc_word, alignment),
sizeof(struct ecc64) - alignment);
dst = inc_ecc64_by(dst, sizeof(struct ecc64) - alignment);
src = inc_beint64_by(src, bytes_wanted);
len -= bytes_wanted;
}
if (len >= BYTES_PER_ECC) {
rc = memcpy_to_ecc(dst, src, whole_ecc_bytes(len));
if (rc)
return rc;
/*
* It helps to let the compiler to the pointer arithmetic
* here, (dst and src are different types)
*/
dst += whole_ecc_structs(len);
src += whole_ecc_structs(len);
len -= whole_ecc_bytes(len);
}
if (len) {
bytes_wanted = BYTES_PER_ECC - len;
ecc_word.data = *src;
memcpy(inc_uint64_by(&ecc_word.data, len), inc_ecc64_by(dst, len),
bytes_wanted);
ecc_word.ecc = eccgenerate(be64_to_cpu(ecc_word.data));
*dst = ecc_word;
}
return 0;
}