1. Article purpose[edit source]
This article explains how to configure the ETZPC internal peripheral.
The configuration is performed using the device tree mechanism that provides a hardware description of the ETZPC peripheral, used by TF-A or OP-TEE.
2. DT bindings documentation[edit source]
The ETZPC device tree bindings [1] describe all the required and optional properties.
3. DT configuration[edit source]
This hardware description is a combination of the STM32 microprocessor device tree files (.dtsi extension) and board device tree files (.dts extension). See the Device tree for an explanation of the device tree file split.
STM32CubeMX can be used to generate the board device tree. Refer to How to configure the DT using STM32CubeMX for more details.
3.1. DT configuration (STM32 level)[edit source]
The ETZPC node is in the stm32mp151.dtsi [2] file. It describes the hardware register address, clock and status.
etzpc: etzpc@5C007000 { compatible = "st,stm32-etzpc"; reg = <0x5C007000 0x400>; clocks = <&rcc TZPC>; status = "disabled"; secure-status = "okay"; };
3.2. DT configuration (board level)[edit source]
The ETZPC node in the board dedicated device tree file is used to configure the status of securable peripherals. The "st,decprot" property must only contain the list of peripherals for which the user wants a different status than the one configured by default in the ETZPC. Refer to the ETZPC chapter of the reference manual [3] for more details.
To fill the "st,decprot" property, a DECPROT helper macro is provided. Its definition is in a dedicated header file [4]. It includes three parameters: the peripheral ID in the ETZPC list of peripherals, the domain, and a lock status. Additional information on these parameters can be found in the device tree bindings documentation [1].
3.3. DT configuration examples[edit source]
Below an example of peripheral configuration:
&etzpc { st,decprot = < DECPROT(STM32MP1_ETZPC_USART1_ID, DECPROT_NS_RW, DECPROT_UNLOCK) DECPROT(STM32MP1_ETZPC_SPI6_ID, DECPROT_NS_RW, DECPROT_UNLOCK) DECPROT(STM32MP1_ETZPC_I2C4_ID, DECPROT_NS_RW, DECPROT_UNLOCK) DECPROT(STM32MP1_ETZPC_I2C6_ID, DECPROT_NS_RW, DECPROT_UNLOCK) DECPROT(STM32MP1_ETZPC_RNG1_ID, DECPROT_NS_RW, DECPROT_UNLOCK) DECPROT(STM32MP1_ETZPC_HASH1_ID, DECPROT_NS_RW, DECPROT_UNLOCK) DECPROT(STM32MP1_ETZPC_CRYP1_ID, DECPROT_NS_RW, DECPROT_UNLOCK) >; };
By default these peripherals are secure only. They can then be configured to be used by the non-secure world in read and write modes.
Below another example of peripheral assignment (here the RNG2) to the MCU. By default this peripheral is assigned to the MPU non-secure world.
&etzpc { st,decprot = < DECPROT(STM32MP1_ETZPC_RNG2_ID, DECPROT_MCU_ISOLATION, DECPROT_UNLOCK) >; };
4. How to configure the DT using STM32CubeMX[edit source]
The STM32CubeMX tool can be used to configure the STM32MPU device and get the corresponding platform configuration device tree files.
The STM32CubeMX may not support all the properties described in the above DT bindings documentation paragraph. If so, the tool inserts user sections in the generated device tree. These sections can then be edited to add some properties and they are preserved from one generation to another. Refer to STM32CubeMX user manual for further information.
5. References[edit source]
Please refer to the following links for additional information: