qemu/target/arm/tlb_helper.c
Richard Henderson ee03027a2c target/arm: Take an exception if PC is misaligned
For A64, any input to an indirect branch can cause this.

For A32, many indirect branch paths force the branch to be aligned,
but BXWritePC does not.  This includes the BX instruction but also
other interworking changes to PC.  Prior to v8, this case is UNDEFINED.
With v8, this is CONSTRAINED UNPREDICTABLE and may either raise an
exception or force align the PC.

We choose to raise an exception because we have the infrastructure,
it makes the generated code for gen_bx simpler, and it has the
possibility of catching more guest bugs.

Signed-off-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org>
Reviewed-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org>
Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org>
2021-12-15 10:35:26 +00:00

252 lines
8.4 KiB
C

/*
* ARM TLB (Translation lookaside buffer) helpers.
*
* This code is licensed under the GNU GPL v2 or later.
*
* SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0-or-later
*/
#include "qemu/osdep.h"
#include "cpu.h"
#include "internals.h"
#include "exec/exec-all.h"
#include "exec/helper-proto.h"
static inline uint32_t merge_syn_data_abort(uint32_t template_syn,
unsigned int target_el,
bool same_el, bool ea,
bool s1ptw, bool is_write,
int fsc)
{
uint32_t syn;
/*
* ISV is only set for data aborts routed to EL2 and
* never for stage-1 page table walks faulting on stage 2.
*
* Furthermore, ISV is only set for certain kinds of load/stores.
* If the template syndrome does not have ISV set, we should leave
* it cleared.
*
* See ARMv8 specs, D7-1974:
* ISS encoding for an exception from a Data Abort, the
* ISV field.
*/
if (!(template_syn & ARM_EL_ISV) || target_el != 2 || s1ptw) {
syn = syn_data_abort_no_iss(same_el, 0,
ea, 0, s1ptw, is_write, fsc);
} else {
/*
* Fields: IL, ISV, SAS, SSE, SRT, SF and AR come from the template
* syndrome created at translation time.
* Now we create the runtime syndrome with the remaining fields.
*/
syn = syn_data_abort_with_iss(same_el,
0, 0, 0, 0, 0,
ea, 0, s1ptw, is_write, fsc,
true);
/* Merge the runtime syndrome with the template syndrome. */
syn |= template_syn;
}
return syn;
}
static uint32_t compute_fsr_fsc(CPUARMState *env, ARMMMUFaultInfo *fi,
int target_el, int mmu_idx, uint32_t *ret_fsc)
{
ARMMMUIdx arm_mmu_idx = core_to_arm_mmu_idx(env, mmu_idx);
uint32_t fsr, fsc;
if (target_el == 2 || arm_el_is_aa64(env, target_el) ||
arm_s1_regime_using_lpae_format(env, arm_mmu_idx)) {
/*
* LPAE format fault status register : bottom 6 bits are
* status code in the same form as needed for syndrome
*/
fsr = arm_fi_to_lfsc(fi);
fsc = extract32(fsr, 0, 6);
} else {
fsr = arm_fi_to_sfsc(fi);
/*
* Short format FSR : this fault will never actually be reported
* to an EL that uses a syndrome register. Use a (currently)
* reserved FSR code in case the constructed syndrome does leak
* into the guest somehow.
*/
fsc = 0x3f;
}
*ret_fsc = fsc;
return fsr;
}
static void QEMU_NORETURN arm_deliver_fault(ARMCPU *cpu, vaddr addr,
MMUAccessType access_type,
int mmu_idx, ARMMMUFaultInfo *fi)
{
CPUARMState *env = &cpu->env;
int target_el;
bool same_el;
uint32_t syn, exc, fsr, fsc;
target_el = exception_target_el(env);
if (fi->stage2) {
target_el = 2;
env->cp15.hpfar_el2 = extract64(fi->s2addr, 12, 47) << 4;
if (arm_is_secure_below_el3(env) && fi->s1ns) {
env->cp15.hpfar_el2 |= HPFAR_NS;
}
}
same_el = (arm_current_el(env) == target_el);
fsr = compute_fsr_fsc(env, fi, target_el, mmu_idx, &fsc);
if (access_type == MMU_INST_FETCH) {
syn = syn_insn_abort(same_el, fi->ea, fi->s1ptw, fsc);
exc = EXCP_PREFETCH_ABORT;
} else {
syn = merge_syn_data_abort(env->exception.syndrome, target_el,
same_el, fi->ea, fi->s1ptw,
access_type == MMU_DATA_STORE,
fsc);
if (access_type == MMU_DATA_STORE
&& arm_feature(env, ARM_FEATURE_V6)) {
fsr |= (1 << 11);
}
exc = EXCP_DATA_ABORT;
}
env->exception.vaddress = addr;
env->exception.fsr = fsr;
raise_exception(env, exc, syn, target_el);
}
/* Raise a data fault alignment exception for the specified virtual address */
void arm_cpu_do_unaligned_access(CPUState *cs, vaddr vaddr,
MMUAccessType access_type,
int mmu_idx, uintptr_t retaddr)
{
ARMCPU *cpu = ARM_CPU(cs);
ARMMMUFaultInfo fi = {};
/* now we have a real cpu fault */
cpu_restore_state(cs, retaddr, true);
fi.type = ARMFault_Alignment;
arm_deliver_fault(cpu, vaddr, access_type, mmu_idx, &fi);
}
void helper_exception_pc_alignment(CPUARMState *env, target_ulong pc)
{
ARMMMUFaultInfo fi = { .type = ARMFault_Alignment };
int target_el = exception_target_el(env);
int mmu_idx = cpu_mmu_index(env, true);
uint32_t fsc;
env->exception.vaddress = pc;
/*
* Note that the fsc is not applicable to this exception,
* since any syndrome is pcalignment not insn_abort.
*/
env->exception.fsr = compute_fsr_fsc(env, &fi, target_el, mmu_idx, &fsc);
raise_exception(env, EXCP_PREFETCH_ABORT, syn_pcalignment(), target_el);
}
#if !defined(CONFIG_USER_ONLY)
/*
* arm_cpu_do_transaction_failed: handle a memory system error response
* (eg "no device/memory present at address") by raising an external abort
* exception
*/
void arm_cpu_do_transaction_failed(CPUState *cs, hwaddr physaddr,
vaddr addr, unsigned size,
MMUAccessType access_type,
int mmu_idx, MemTxAttrs attrs,
MemTxResult response, uintptr_t retaddr)
{
ARMCPU *cpu = ARM_CPU(cs);
ARMMMUFaultInfo fi = {};
/* now we have a real cpu fault */
cpu_restore_state(cs, retaddr, true);
fi.ea = arm_extabort_type(response);
fi.type = ARMFault_SyncExternal;
arm_deliver_fault(cpu, addr, access_type, mmu_idx, &fi);
}
bool arm_cpu_tlb_fill(CPUState *cs, vaddr address, int size,
MMUAccessType access_type, int mmu_idx,
bool probe, uintptr_t retaddr)
{
ARMCPU *cpu = ARM_CPU(cs);
ARMMMUFaultInfo fi = {};
hwaddr phys_addr;
target_ulong page_size;
int prot, ret;
MemTxAttrs attrs = {};
ARMCacheAttrs cacheattrs = {};
/*
* Walk the page table and (if the mapping exists) add the page
* to the TLB. On success, return true. Otherwise, if probing,
* return false. Otherwise populate fsr with ARM DFSR/IFSR fault
* register format, and signal the fault.
*/
ret = get_phys_addr(&cpu->env, address, access_type,
core_to_arm_mmu_idx(&cpu->env, mmu_idx),
&phys_addr, &attrs, &prot, &page_size,
&fi, &cacheattrs);
if (likely(!ret)) {
/*
* Map a single [sub]page. Regions smaller than our declared
* target page size are handled specially, so for those we
* pass in the exact addresses.
*/
if (page_size >= TARGET_PAGE_SIZE) {
phys_addr &= TARGET_PAGE_MASK;
address &= TARGET_PAGE_MASK;
}
/* Notice and record tagged memory. */
if (cpu_isar_feature(aa64_mte, cpu) && cacheattrs.attrs == 0xf0) {
arm_tlb_mte_tagged(&attrs) = true;
}
tlb_set_page_with_attrs(cs, address, phys_addr, attrs,
prot, mmu_idx, page_size);
return true;
} else if (probe) {
return false;
} else {
/* now we have a real cpu fault */
cpu_restore_state(cs, retaddr, true);
arm_deliver_fault(cpu, address, access_type, mmu_idx, &fi);
}
}
#else
void arm_cpu_record_sigsegv(CPUState *cs, vaddr addr,
MMUAccessType access_type,
bool maperr, uintptr_t ra)
{
ARMMMUFaultInfo fi = {
.type = maperr ? ARMFault_Translation : ARMFault_Permission,
.level = 3,
};
ARMCPU *cpu = ARM_CPU(cs);
/*
* We report both ESR and FAR to signal handlers.
* For now, it's easiest to deliver the fault normally.
*/
cpu_restore_state(cs, ra, true);
arm_deliver_fault(cpu, addr, access_type, MMU_USER_IDX, &fi);
}
void arm_cpu_record_sigbus(CPUState *cs, vaddr addr,
MMUAccessType access_type, uintptr_t ra)
{
arm_cpu_do_unaligned_access(cs, addr, access_type, MMU_USER_IDX, ra);
}
#endif /* !defined(CONFIG_USER_ONLY) */