1 /*
2  * Copyright (C) 2017 The Android Open Source Project
3  *
4  * Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
5  * you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
6  * You may obtain a copy of the License at
7  *
8  *      http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
9  *
10  * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
11  * distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
12  * WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
13  * See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
14  * limitations under the License.
15  */
16 #ifndef __CROS_EC_INCLUDE_APPLICATION_H
17 #define __CROS_EC_INCLUDE_APPLICATION_H
18 #include <stdint.h>
19 
20 #ifdef __cplusplus
21 extern "C" {
22 #endif
23 
24 #ifndef __packed
25 #define __packed __attribute__((packed))
26 #endif
27 
28 typedef const void * const __private;
29 
30 /*
31  * Typical applications are independent tasks which are directed (or at least
32  * influenced) by some off-chip program. Communications with the applications
33  * are initiated by that off-chip Master and are routed to the application
34  * using a variety of methods.
35  */
36 
37 /****************************************************************************/
38 /*
39  * Datagram API:
40  *
41  * Nugget OS abstracts the bus protocol (SPI, USB, whatever) into two
42  * unidirectional "datagram" transactions:
43  *
44  * - Read (the master wants data from the application)
45  * - Write (the master sends data to the application)
46  *
47  * Each transaction consists of a four-byte Command from the Master, plus zero
48  * or more data bytes either to (Read) or from (Write) the Master.
49  *
50  * The Command indicates the direction of data transfer, the application it
51  * addresses, and various other parameters. The application is responsible for
52  * providing (Read) or accepting (Write) the data bytes.
53  *
54  * Note: This interface was first used on the SPI bus, which allows for
55  * simultaneous bidirectional data transfer. We limit this interface to
56  * unidirectional transfers, because none of the other buses support that
57  * feature.
58  */
59 
60 /****************************************************************************/
61 /* Application IDs */
62 
63 /* These two App IDs shouldn't be changed or used for other purposes */
64 #define APP_ID_NUGGET            0x00    /* because we're selfish */
65 #define APP_ID_TPM_REGISTER_API  0xD4    /* mandated by the TCG */
66 /*
67  * Other App IDs are defined here. It will help avoid confusion if you use only
68  * the values from here and don't change them once they're set. But it's up to
69  * you. I'm a comment, not a cop.
70  */
71 #define APP_ID_AVB               0x01
72 #define APP_ID_KEYMASTER         0x02
73 #define APP_ID_WEAVER            0x03
74 #define APP_ID_PROTOBUF          0x04
75 #define APP_ID_IDENTITY          0x05
76 #define APP_ID_GSC_FACEAUTH      0x06
77 
78 /* Fake apps used only for testing */
79 #define APP_ID_AVB_TEST          0x11
80 #define APP_ID_TRANSPORT_TEST    0x12
81 #define APP_ID_FACEAUTH_TEST     0x13
82 
83 /* This app ID should only be used by tests. */
84 #define APP_ID_TEST              0xff
85 
86 /****************************************************************************/
87 /* Other command fields */
88 
89 /*
90  * The Command encoding is:
91  *
92  *   Bits 31-24   Control flags (reserved)
93  *   Bits 23-16   Application ID
94  *   Bits 15-0    Parameters (application-specific)
95  */
96 
97 /* Control flag bits */
98 #define CMD_IS_READ       0x80000000    /* 1=Read, 0=Write */
99 /* All other control flags bits are reserved */
100 
101 /* Extracting fields from a command */
102 #define GET_APP_ID(cmd)     (((cmd) & 0x00ff0000) >> 16)
103 #define GET_APP_PARAM(cmd)  ((cmd) & 0x0000ffff)
104 
105 /* Specifying command fields */
106 #define CMD_ID(id)       (((id) & 0x000000ff) << 16)
107 #define CMD_PARAM(p)     ((p) & 0x0000ffff)
108 #define CMD_SET_PARAM(cmd, p) cmd = ((cmd & 0xffff0000) | (p & 0x0000ffff))
109 
110 /****************************************************************************/
111 /* Data transfer */
112 
113 /*
114  * Functions of this type are invoked when the Master wants to read bytes from
115  * an application. The app should parse the Command, copy up to max_tx_size
116  * bytes into the tx_buffer provided, and return the number of bytes to send
117  * back to the Master.
118  *
119  * This is called in interrupt context, so act quickly.
120  *
121  * The last arg is for internal use. Just ignore it.
122  */
123 typedef uint32_t (read_from_app_fn_t)(uint32_t command,
124                                       uint8_t *tx_buffer,
125                                       uint32_t max_tx_bytes,
126                                       __private priv);
127 
128 /*
129  * Functions of this type are invoked when the Master has sent bytes to the
130  * application. The app should parse the Command and copy or process the
131  * expected number of bytes in the rx_buffer that the master has sent, up to
132  * rx_num_bytes.
133  *
134  * NOTE: Due to a quirk of the Citadel hardware, up to four extra bytes from
135  * the *next* transaction may be at the end of the rx_buffer. The application
136  * should only poke at the bytes it expects to see and ignore any extras.
137  *
138  * This is called in interrupt context, so act quickly.
139  *
140  * The last arg is for internal use. Just ignore it.
141  */
142 typedef void (write_to_app_fn_t)(uint32_t command,
143                                  const uint8_t *rx_buffer,
144                                  uint32_t num_rx_bytes,
145                                  __private priv);
146 
147 /*
148  * For apps that run asynchronously with little oversight, occasional
149  * Read/Write operations may be all that's necessary. An app that intercepts
150  * button presses, an accelerometer, or a fingerprint scanner can simply be
151  * told to start or stop and will send interrupts to the Master when its
152  * attention is required.
153  *
154  * Applications are free to define their own protcols and APIs using only the
155  * functions and constants above (and at least one app does just that).
156  *
157  * An app that wishes to handle its messaging using only the components
158  * described to this point would use the following macro to declare itself.
159  */
160 
161 /**
162  * This registers an application that communicates using the Datagram API,
163  * which deals only with the raw byte streams between Master (AP) and Slave
164  * (application).
165  *
166  * The name and version values may be exported to the Master by Nugget OS, so
167  * the Master can query what applications are available without blindly trying
168  * them all to see what works.
169  *
170  * @param  Id        The Application ID, defined above
171  * @param  Name      A human-readable string identifying the application
172  * @param  Version   An app-specific uint32_t number, for compability purposes
173  * @param  From_fn   A pointer to the app's read_from_app_fn_t handler
174  * @param  To_fn     A pointer to the app's write_to_app_fn_t handler
175  * @param  Data      App's private data
176  */
177 #define DECLARE_APPLICATION_DATAGRAM(Id, Name, Version, From_fn, To_fn, Data) \
178   const struct app_info __keep CONCAT2(app_, Id)                        \
179     __attribute__((section(".rodata.app_info")))                        \
180     = { .api = { .id = Id,                                              \
181                  .from_fn = From_fn, .to_fn = To_fn,                    \
182                  .data = Data},                                         \
183         .version = Version, .name = Name }
184 
185 /****************************************************************************/
186 /* Transport API */
187 /*
188  * Rather than handle unidirectonal datagrams themselves, many applications
189  * want to implement a request/response behavior, where the Master tells the
190  * app to do something and waits for it to finish and return the result.
191  *
192  * Seen from the AP's side, the application would be invoked using a blocking
193  * function something like this:
194  *
195  *   uint32_t call_application(uint8_t app_id, uint16_t app_param,
196  *                             const uint8_t *args, uint16_t arg_len,
197  *                             uint8_t *reply, uint16_t *reply_len);
198  *
199  * The request or response may be larger than one bus transaction, and the AP
200  * may poll until the app finishes or wait for an interrupt before retrieving
201  * the reply (there's no difference from app's point of view).
202  *
203  * With this API, the application is initially idle. Nugget OS will marshall
204  * all the input from the Master before waking the application. The Application
205  * then performs the requested operation and transititions to a "done" state.
206  * The Master will retrieve the application status and any reply data from
207  * Nugget OS, after which the application is ready to handle the next command.
208  */
209 
210 #define TRANSPORT_V0    0x0000
211 #define TRANSPORT_V1    0x0001
212 
213 /* Command information for the transport protocol. */
214 struct transport_command_info {
215   /* v1 fields */
216   uint16_t length;           /* length of this message */
217   uint16_t version;          /* max version used by master */
218   uint16_t crc;              /* CRC of some command fields */
219   uint16_t reply_len_hint;   /* max that the master will read */
220 } __packed;
221 
222 #define COMMAND_INFO_MIN_LENGTH 8
223 #define COMMAND_INFO_MAX_LENGTH 32
224 /* If more data needs to be sent, chain a new struct to the end of this one. It
225  * will require its own CRC for data integrity and something to signify the
226  * presence of the extra data. */
227 
228 struct transport_status {
229   /* v0 fields */
230   uint32_t status;         /* status of the app */
231   uint16_t reply_len;      /* length of available response data */
232   /* v1 fields */
233   uint16_t length;         /* length of this message */
234   uint16_t version;        /* max version used by slave */
235   uint16_t flags;          /* space for more protocol state flags */
236   uint16_t crc;            /* CRC of this status with crc set to 0 */
237   uint16_t reply_crc;      /* CRC of the reply data */
238 } __packed;
239 
240 /* Valid range of lengths for the status message */
241 #define STATUS_MIN_LENGTH 0x10
242 #define STATUS_MAX_LENGTH 0xff
243 
244 /* Flags used in the status message */
245 #define STATUS_FLAG_WORKING 0x0001 /* added in v1 */
246 
247 /* Pre-calculated CRCs for different status responses set in the interrupt
248  * context where the CRC would otherwise not be calculated. */
249 #define STATUS_CRC_FOR_IDLE              0x54c1
250 #define STATUS_CRC_FOR_WORKING           0x2101
251 #define STATUS_CRC_FOR_ERROR_TOO_MUCH    0x97c0
252 
253 /*
254  * Applications that wish to use this transport API will need to declare a
255  * private struct app_transport which Nugget OS can use to maintain the state:
256  */
257 struct app_transport {
258   void (*done_fn)(struct app_transport *);    /* optional cleanup function */
259   /* Note: Any done_fn() is called in interrupt context. Be quick. */
260   uint8_t *const request;                     /* input data buffer */
261   uint8_t *const response;                    /* output data buffer */
262   const uint16_t max_request_len;             /* input data buffer size */
263   const uint16_t max_response_len;            /* output data buffer size */
264   /* The following are used for the incoming command. */
265   uint32_t command;                           /* from master */
266   union {
267     struct transport_command_info info;
268     uint8_t data[COMMAND_INFO_MAX_LENGTH];    /* space for future growth */
269   } command_info;                             /* extra info about the command */
270   uint16_t request_len;                       /* command data buffer size */
271   uint16_t response_idx;                      /* current index into response */
272   struct transport_status status[2];          /* current transport_status */
273   volatile uint8_t status_idx;                /* index of active status */
274 };
275 
276 /*
277  * Note that request and response buffers are transferred as byte streams.
278  * However, if they will eventually represent structs, the usual ABI alignment
279  * requirements will be required. Until we've declared all applications structs
280  * in a union, we will need to align the buffers manually. Use this to declare
281  * the uint8_t buffers until then:
282  */
283 #define __TRANSPORT_ALIGNED__ __attribute__((aligned(8)))
284 
285 /*
286  * The application will need to provide a write_to_app_fn_t function that will
287  * be invoked when a new request is ready to be processed. All command and data
288  * parameters will already be present in the app's struct app_transport, so it
289  * just needs to awaken the application task to do the work.
290  *
291  * When awakened, the application task must check that there were no errors in
292  * the transmission of the request by calling this function. If it returns
293  * true, the task should go back to sleep until the next request arrives.
294  */
295 int request_is_invalid(struct app_transport *s);
296 /*
297  * When processing is finished, the app should call the app_reply() function to
298  * return its status code and specify the length of any data it has placed into
299  * the response buffer, and then it can go back to sleep until its next
300  * invocation. CAUTION: The Master polls for app completion independently, so
301  * it may immediately begin retrieving the results as soon as this function
302  * is called *without* waiting for the Nugget OS app to go to sleep.
303  */
304 void app_reply(struct app_transport *st, uint32_t status, uint16_t reply_len);
305 
306 /* Application status codes are uint32_t, but an enum is easier to read. */
307 enum app_status {
308   /* A few values are common to all applications */
309   APP_SUCCESS = 0,
310   APP_ERROR_BOGUS_ARGS, /* caller being stupid */
311   APP_ERROR_INTERNAL,   /* application being stupid */
312   APP_ERROR_TOO_MUCH,   /* caller sent too much data */
313   APP_ERROR_IO,         /* problem sending or receiving data */
314   APP_ERROR_RPC,        /* problem during RPC communication */
315   APP_ERROR_CHECKSUM,   /* checksum failed, only used within protocol */
316   APP_ERROR_BUSY,       /* the app is already working on a commnad */
317   APP_ERROR_TIMEOUT,    /* the app took too long to respond */
318   APP_ERROR_NOT_READY,  /* some required condition is not satisfied */
319   /* more? */
320 
321   /*
322    * Applications can define their own app-specific error codes.  For example,
323    * app_foobar.h can do:
324    *
325    *	#define APP_ERROR_FOOBAR_BAZ (APP_SPECIFIC_ERROR + 0)
326    *
327    * Do not use (APP_SPECIFIC_ERROR + N) directly in your code, because the
328    * error definition, firmware which generates it, and host code which
329    * interprets it are all in different repos.  You'll never be able to keep
330    * the constants straight without using a #define or enum in your app's
331    * header file that everyone can share.
332    */
333   APP_SPECIFIC_ERROR = 0x20, /* "should be enough for anybody" */
334 
335   /* For debugging, returning a line number might be helpful */
336   APP_LINE_NUMBER_BASE = 0x70000000,
337 #define APP_ERROR_LINENO (APP_LINE_NUMBER_BASE + __LINE__)
338 
339   /* Bit 31 is reserved for internal use */
340   MAX_APP_STATUS = 0x7fffffff,
341 };
342 
343 /**
344  * This registers an application that communicates using the Transport API.
345  *
346  * The name and version values may be exported to the Master by Nugget OS, so
347  * the Master can query what applications are available without blindly trying
348  * them all to see what works.
349  *
350  * @param  Id        The Application ID, defined above
351  * @param  Name      A human-readable string identifying the application
352  * @param  Version   An app-specific uint32_t number, for compability purposes
353  * @param  State     A pointer to the app's struct app_transport
354  * @param  To_fn     A pointer to the app's write_to_app_fn_t handler
355  */
356 #define DECLARE_APPLICATION_TRANSPORT(Id, Name, Version, State, To_fn)  \
357     const struct app_info __keep CONCAT2(app_, Id)                      \
358       __attribute__((section(".rodata.app_info")))                      \
359       = { .api = { .id = Id,                                            \
360              .from_fn = transaction_api_from_fn,                        \
361              .to_fn = transaction_api_to_fn,                            \
362              .data = &(const struct datagram_api)                       \
363              { .id = Id, .to_fn = To_fn,                                \
364                .data = State } },                                       \
365           .version = Version, .name = Name }
366 
367 /****************************************************************************/
368 /* Pay no attention to that man behind the curtain */
369 
370 /* We'll allow 31 bits of application status. We need one bit for transport. */
371 #define APP_STATUS_IDLE     0x00000000    /* waiting for instructions */
372 #define APP_STATUS_DONE     0x80000000    /* finished, reply is ready */
373 #define APP_STATUS_CODE(res) ((res) & 0x7fffffff) /* actual status */
374 
375 /* Datagram API needs this info */
376 struct datagram_api {
377   uint8_t id;
378   read_from_app_fn_t * const from_fn;
379   write_to_app_fn_t * const to_fn;
380   const void * const data;
381 };
382 
383 /* Here's the struct that keeps track of registered applications */
384 struct app_info {
385   struct datagram_api api;
386   uint32_t version;
387   const char * const name;
388 };
389 
390 /* These handle the Transport API */
391 extern read_from_app_fn_t transaction_api_from_fn;
392 extern write_to_app_fn_t transaction_api_to_fn;
393 
394 /* Command flags used internally by Transport API messages */
395 #define CMD_TRANSPORT       0x40000000    /* 1=Transport API message */
396 /* When CMD_TRANSPORT is set, the following bits have meaning */
397 #define CMD_IS_DATA         0x20000000    /* 1=data msg 0=status msg */
398 #define CMD_MORE_TO_COME    0x10000000    /* 1=continued 0=new */
399 
400 #ifdef __cplusplus
401 }
402 #endif
403 
404 #endif  /* __CROS_EC_INCLUDE_APPLICATION_H */
405