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Alexandre Torgue authored
Adding a "secure" version of STM32 boards (DK1/DK2/ED1/EV1), SCMI (clock/ reset) protocol and OP-TEE node have been added in SoC dtsi file (stm32mp151.dtsi). They have been added with a status disabled in order to keep our legacy unchanged. It is actually not enough to keep our legacy unchanged. First, just a reminder about our use case: TF-A (BL2) loads and starts OP-TEE, then loads and runs U-Boot. U-Boot code checks if an OP-TEE is running, if yes it searches in Kernel device tree if an OP-TEE node is present: -If the OP-TEE node is not present then U-Boot copies OP-TEE node and its reserved memory region from U-Boot device tree to the kernel device tree. -If the OP-TEE node is present then it does nothing (this OP-TEE node will be used by Linux). So U-Boot lets the kernel device tree unchanged thinking it is correct for an OP-TEE usage. It is the case for our legacy boards, the OP-TEE node is present (although disabled) but the reserved memory region is not declared. As no memory region has been reserved for OP-TEE, the end of DDR is seen by the kernel as free and then used for CMA. But as OP-TEE is running, this end of DDR is already used by OP-TEE. So as soon as kernel tries to access to the CMA region OP-TEE raises an error. To fix it, all OP-TEE node and SCMI is moved in a dedicated file. Fixes: 40b4157d ("ARM: dts: stm32: enable optee firmware and SCMI support on STM32MP15") Signed-off-by: Alexandre Torgue <alexandre.torgue@foss.st.com> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20220613071920.5463-1-alexandre.torgue@foss.st.com' Signed-off-by: Arnd Bergmann <arnd@arndb.de>
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