Hi,
On 06/14/2017 02:40 PM, rijurekha@...71... wrote:
We want to read the instruction faulting in NW linux in tz_vmm, disassemble it, emulate it in genode code and restart the VM at the next instruction of the normal world. Do you think this is feasible, or your comments about "synchronous data abort in IMX53 vs. asynchronous aborts in Versatile Express" don't hold always?
As I said in my previous mail: I only observed synchronous data-abort on i.MX53. So I think this is not the show-stopper.
Anyway please read my whole mail especially the section regarding the caching issues. Being in your position, I would first correlate the instruction pointer values with your Linux binary, e.g. using objdump, before you start to do instruction decoding on cache-incoherent memory.
Regards Stefan
Thanks! Riju
Hello,
On 06/13/2017 11:17 AM, Abhishek Kumar wrote:
Hello I am trying to modify genode trustzone. I want to read the instruction which lead to data abort exception in normal world, in the `dump` function in tz_vmm. I have value of all the registers through `_state` register. We tried with `_state->ip`. On converting 16 bits stored at the address pointed by _state->ip, we got ARM Thumb instruction:
STRH R0, [R0, #6]
But the value (R0) + 6, doesn't match dfar. We're not sure if _state->ip is the register to go with. We tried with _state->mode[2].lr which is lr_abt register. But the address stored in lr_abt, lr_abt-16, lr_abt-32 all have 0s.
Which is right register to get the address of the instruction which caused the data-abort exception?
As long as you get an synchronous data-abort from the normal world, reading the current instruction pointer of the 'state' structure is perfectly fine. The mode-specific lr register is useful for the handling of MMU faults within the "normal" world itself. They are not modified, as long as the "normal" world MMU can resolve an access, but some bus resp. CSU is answering that the access is not allowed. This will not change the "normal" world register set.
On the other hand, in general a bus fault triggered by unallowed access of the "normal" world does not necessarily mean a synchronous data-abort, although on i.MX53 I only observed those. In general, it can also provoke an asynchronous external data-abort, which means that the instruction pointer is not necessarily pointing to the instruction that triggered the fault.
Moreover, looking at the "normal" world's memory from the secure side is troublesome. Because the normal and secure world's memory view is not cache-coherent. Cache entries are always tagged by the NS bit. That means you have to take care to flush caches yourself. If you want to debug instructions, you should instead look at the Linux binary itself and not into the memory on the secure side. To me it looks strange that you identify a Thumb instruction in the kernel here.
Btw. these kind of TrustZone/i.MX53 questions were asked repeatedly in the past, and are mostly answered in our TrustZone report:
https://genode.org/documentation/articles/trustzone
and in the discussions of our mailing list:
https://sourceforge.net/p/genode/mailman/search/?q=trustzone
Regards Stefan
Thanks Abhishek
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