1*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributions# XNU Build Consolidation 2*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributions 3*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributions## Introduction and motivation 4*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributions 5*5e3eaea3SApple OSS DistributionsXNU is supported on approximately 20 different targets. Whilst in some cases the differences between two 6*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributionsgiven targets are small (e.g. when they both support the same ISA), XNU has traditionally required to have 7*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributionsseparate builds in cases where the topology of the targets differ (for example, when they feature different 8*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributionscore/cluster counts or cache sizes). Similarly, SoC-specific fix-ups are usually conditionally compiled 9*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributionsbased on the target. 10*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributions 11*5e3eaea3SApple OSS DistributionsGiven the time it takes to compile all three different variants (release, debug and development) for each 12*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributionssupported SoC, usually several times a day for various teams across Apple, the goal of this project was to 13*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributionsreduce the number of existing builds, as well as to set up a simple framework that makes it easier to share 14*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributionsbuilds across different SoCs moving forward. 15*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributions 16*5e3eaea3SApple OSS DistributionsAlthough this effort could be extended to KEXTs, and hence lead to shared KernelCaches across devices, the 17*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributionsscope of this document only includes XNU. In cases where KEXTs also differ across targets, or perhaps the 18*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributionsrequired KEXTs are completely different in the first place, the kernel still needs to be linked 19*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributionsappropriately with different sets of KEXTs and hence KernelCaches cannot be shared. 20*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributions 21*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributions 22*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributions## Changes required in XNU 23*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributions 24*5e3eaea3SApple OSS DistributionsThe kernel itself is relatively SoC-agnostic, although strongly architecture-dependent; this is because most 25*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributionsof the SoC-specific aspects of the KernelCache are abstracted by the KEXTs. Things that pertain to the 26*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributionskernel include: 27*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributions 28*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributions* Number of cores/clusters in the system, their physical IDs and type. 29*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributions* Addresses of PIO registers that are to be accessed from the XNU side. 30*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributions* L1/L2 cache geometry parameters (e.g. size, number of set/ways). 31*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributions* Just like other components, the kernel has its share of responsibility when it comes to setting up HID 32*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributionsregisters and applying fix-ups at various points during boot or elsewhere at runtime. 33*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributions* Certain kernel-visible architectural features are optional, which means that two same-generation SoCs may 34*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributionsstill differ in their feature set. 35*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributions 36*5e3eaea3SApple OSS DistributionsAll of these problems can be solved through a mix of relying more heavily on device tree information and 37*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributionsperforming runtime checks. The latter is possible because both the ARM architecture and the Apple's 38*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributionsextensions provide r/o registers that can be checked at runtime to discover supported features as well as 39*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributionsvarious CPU-specific parameters. 40*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributions 41*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributions### Obtaining cache geometry parameters at runtime 42*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributions 43*5e3eaea3SApple OSS DistributionsAlthough not often, the kernel may still require deriving, one way or another, parameters like cache sizes 44*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributionsand number of set/ways. XNU needs most of this information to perform set/way clean/invalidate operations. 45*5e3eaea3SApple OSS DistributionsPrior to this work, these values were hardcoded for each supported target in `proc_reg.h`, and used in 46*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributions`caches_asm.s`. The ARM architecture provides the `CCSIDR_EL1` register, which can be used in conjunction 47*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributionswith `CSSELR_EL1` to select the target cache and obtain geometry information. 48*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributions 49*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributions 50*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributions### Performing CPU/Revision-specific checks at runtime 51*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributions 52*5e3eaea3SApple OSS DistributionsCPU and revision checks may be required at various places, although the focus here has been the application 53*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributionsof tunables at boot time. 54*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributions 55*5e3eaea3SApple OSS DistributionsTunables are often applied: 56*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributions 57*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributions* On a specific core type of a specific SoC. 58*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributions* On a subset of all of the CPU revisions. 59*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributions* On all P-cores or all E-cores. 60*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributions 61*5e3eaea3SApple OSS DistributionsThis has led in the past to a number of nested, conditionally-compiled blocks of code that are not easy to 62*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributionsunderstand or manage as new tunables are added or SoCs/revisions are deprecated. 63*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributions 64*5e3eaea3SApple OSS DistributionsThe changes applied as part of this work focus mainly on: 65*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributions 66*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributions1. Decoupling the tunable-application code from `start.s`. 67*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributions2. Splitting the tunable-application code across different files, one per supported architecture (e.g. 68*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributions`tunables_h7.h`, or `tunables_h11.h`). 69*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributions3. Providing "templates" for the most commonly-used combinations of tunables. 70*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributions4. Providing a family of assembly macros that can be used to conditionally execute code on a specific core 71*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributionstype, CPU ID, revision(s), or a combination of these. 72*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributions 73*5e3eaea3SApple OSS DistributionsAll of the macros live in the 64-bit version of `proc_reg.h`, and are SoC-agnostic; they simply check the 74*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributions`MIDR_EL1` register against a CPU revision that is passed as a parameter to the macro, where applicable. 75*5e3eaea3SApple OSS DistributionsSimilarly, where a block of code is to be executed on a core type, rather than a specific core ID, a couple 76*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributionsof the provided macros can check this against `MPIDR_EL1`. 77*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributions 78*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributions 79*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributions### Checking for feature compatibility at runtime 80*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributions 81*5e3eaea3SApple OSS DistributionsSome architectural features are optional, which means that, when disabled at compile-time, this may cause 82*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributionstwo same-generation SoCs to diverge. 83*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributions 84*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributions 85*5e3eaea3SApple OSS DistributionsRather than disabling features, and assuming this does not pose security risks or performance regressions, 86*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributionsthe preferred approach is to compile them in, but perform runtime checks to enable/disable them, possibly in 87*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributionsearly boot. The way these checks are performed varies from feature to feature (for example, VHE is an ARM 88*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributionsfeature, and the ARM ARM specifies how it can be discovered). For Apple-specific features, these are all 89*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributionsadvertised through the `AIDR_EL1` register. One of the changes is the addition of a function, 90*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributionsml_feature_supported(), that may be used to check for the presence of a feature at runtime. 91*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributions 92*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributions 93*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributions### Deriving core/cluster counts from device tree 94*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributions 95*5e3eaea3SApple OSS DistributionsOne of the aspects that until now has been hardcoded in XNU is the system topology: number of cores/clusters 96*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributionsand their physical IDs. This effort piggybacks on other recent XNU changes which aimed to consolidate 97*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributionstopology-related information into XNU, by parsing it from the device tree and exporting it to KEXTs through 98*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributionswell-defined APIs. 99*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributions 100*5e3eaea3SApple OSS DistributionsChanges applied as part of the XNU consolidation project include: 101*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributions 102*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributions* Extending the `ml_*` API to extract cluster information from the topology parser. New APIs include the following: 103*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributions * `ml_get_max_cluster_number()` 104*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributions * `ml_get_cluster_count()` 105*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributions * `ml_get_first_cpu_id()` 106*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributions* Removing hardcoded core counts (`CPU_COUNT`) and cluster counts (`ARM_CLUSTER_COUNT`) from XNU, and 107*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributionsreplacing them with `ml_*` calls. 108*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributions* Similarly, deriving CPU physical IDs from the topology parser. 109*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributions 110*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributions 111*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributions### Allocating memory that is core size/cluster size/cache size aligned 112*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributions 113*5e3eaea3SApple OSS DistributionsIn some cases, certain statically-allocated arrays/structures need to be cache line-aligned, or have one 114*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributionselement per core or cluster. Whilst this information is not known precisely at compile time anymore, the 115*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributionsfollowing macros have been added to provide a reasonably close upper bound: 116*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributions 117*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributions* `MAX_CPUS` 118*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributions* `MAX_CPU_CLUSTERS` 119*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributions* `MAX_L2_CLINE` 120*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributions 121*5e3eaea3SApple OSS DistributionsThese macros are defined in `board_config.h`, and should be set to the same value for a group of targets 122*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributionssharing a single build. Note that these no longer reflect actual counts and sizes, and the real values need 123*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributionsto be queried at runtime through the `ml_` API. 124*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributions 125*5e3eaea3SApple OSS DistributionsThe L1 cache line size is still hardcoded, and defined as `MMU_CLINE`. Since this value is always the same 126*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributionsand very often checked at various places across XNU and elsewhere, it made sense to keep it as a compile 127*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributionstime macro rather than relying on runtime checks. 128*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributions 129*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributions### Restrictions on conditional compilation 130*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributions 131*5e3eaea3SApple OSS DistributionsCurrently, a family of per-SoC macros are defined at build time to enable XNU to conditionally compile code 132*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributionsfor different targets. These are named `ARM[64]_BOARD_CONFIG_[TARGET_NAME]`, and have historically been used 133*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributionsin different places across the kernel; for example, when applying tunables, various fixes, or enabling 134*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributionsdisabling features. In order not to create divergences in the future across same-generation SoCs, but also 135*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributionsto keep the codebase consistent, the recommendation is to avoid the use of these macros whenever possible. 136*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributions 137*5e3eaea3SApple OSS DistributionsInstead, XNU itself defines yet another family of macros that are defined for all targets of a particular 138*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributionsgeneration. These are named after the P-CORE introduced by each (for example, `APPLEMONSOON`, or 139*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributions`APPLEVORTEX`), and are preferred over the SoC-specific ones. Where a generation macro is not enough to 140*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributionsprovide correctness (which happens, for example, when the code block at hand should not be executed on a 141*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributionsgiven SoC of the same family), appropriate runtime checks can be performed inside the conditionally-compiled 142*5e3eaea3SApple OSS Distributionscode block. `machine_read_midr()` and `get_arm_cpu_version()` may be used for this purpose. 143