12.2. Transfer List Compiler

The Transfer List Compiler (tlc) is a host tool used by TF-A to generate transfer lists compliant with the v0.9 of the Firmware Handoff specification. It enables developers to statically generate transfer list blobs containing any number of transfer entries.

12.2.1. Getting Started

tlc is installed by default with TF-A’s poetry environment. All of it’s dependencies are listed in tools/tlc/pyproject.toml.

To install tlc seperately, run the following command:

make -C tools/tlc install

12.2.2. Creating a Transfer List

To create an empty TL, you can use the create command.

tlc create tl.bin

This commands generates a binary blob representing an empty TL, shown in the hexdump below.

$ hexdump tl.bin | head
0000000 b10b 4a0f 01a6 0318 0018 0000 1000 0000
0000010 0001 0000 0000 0000

A common use-case this tool supports is the addition of TE’s via the option --entry. This takes as input the tag ID and path to a binary blob to be included in the transfer list. The snippet below shows how to include an FDT in the TL.

tlc create --entry 1 fdt.dtb tl.bin

Alternatively, addition of a device tree is supported through the option --fdt. This has the same effect as passing the device tree and it’s tag ID through the --entry option.

tlc create --fdt fdt.dtb tl.bin

Note

tlc makes no effort to verify the contents of a binary blob against the provided tag ID. It only checks that the tags provided as input are within range and that there is sufficient memory to include their TE’s.

You can also create a TL from a YAML config file.

tlc create --from-yaml config.yaml tl.bin

12.2.3. Printing the contents of a TL

Support is provided for dumping the contents of a TL via the info command. This prints the header of the TL and all included TE’s.

$ tlc info tl.bin
signature  0x4a0fb10b
checksum   0xe1
version    0x1
hdr_size   0x18
alignment  0x3
size       0x2a6f
total_size 0x4e20
flags      0x1
----
id         0x1
data_size  0x2a47
hdr_size   0x8
offset     0x18
----
id         0x0
data_size  0x0
hdr_size   0x8
offset     0x2a68

The example above shows the dump produced by tlc for a 20Kb TL containing a device tree (tag_id=1) and a NULL entry (tag_id=0).

12.2.4. Modifying the contents of an existing TL

tlc supports removal of one or more entries from a TL through the remove command. It takes as argument the filename, and one or more tag ID’s, passed through the --tags option. It produces a valid TL blob without those entries.

For example, using the same blob as in the section above, we can remove the FDT TE with the command.

$ tlc remove --tags 1 tl.bin

Using the info command, shows the the TE has been remove:

$ tlc info tl.bin

signature  0x4a0fb10b
checksum   0x38
version    0x1
hdr_size   0x18
alignment  0x3
size       0x20
total_size 0x4e20
flags      0x1
----
id         0x0
data_size  0x0
hdr_size   0x8
offset     0x18

Note that more than one entry can be removed at a time. The --tags option accepts multiple tag ID’s.

Conversely, TE’s can be added to an existing TL. This is achieved through the add command.

$ tlc add --entry 1 fdt.dtb tl.bin

The result of this modification is shown below:

$ tlc info tl.bin

signature  0x4a0fb10b
checksum   0xe1
version    0x1
hdr_size   0x18
alignment  0x3
size       0x2a6f
total_size 0x4e20
flags      0x1
----
id         0x0
data_size  0x0
hdr_size   0x8
offset     0x18
----
id         0x1
data_size  0x2a47
hdr_size   0x8
offset     0x20

12.2.5. Unpacking a Transfer List

Given a transfer list, tlc also provides a mechanism for extracting TE data. Running the command unpack, yields binary files containing data from all the TE’s.

$ tlc create --size 20000 --fdt build/fvp/debug/fdts/fvp-base-gicv3-psci.dtb tl.bin
$ tlc unpack tl.bin
$ file te_1.bin
te_1.bin: Device Tree Blob version 17, size=10823, boot CPU=0, string block size=851, DT structure block size=9900

12.2.6. Validate a Transfer List

tlc validate provides a quick and simple mechanism for checking wether the TL is compliant with version of the specification supported by the tool. It performs the following checks:

  1. Validates the signature.

  2. Ensures that the specified version is greater than or equal to the tool’s current version.

  3. Verifies alignment criteria for all TE’s.

12.2.7. YAML Config File Format

Example YAML config file:

execution_state: aarch32
has_checksum: true
max_size: 4096
entries:
        - tag_id: 258  # entry point info
          ep_info:
                  args:
                          - 67112968
                          - 67112960
                          - 0
                          - 0
                          - 0
                          - 0
                          - 0
                          - 0
                  h:
                          attr: 8
                          type: 1
                          version: 2
                  pc: 67239936
                  spsr: 467
        - tag_id: 3  # memory layout
          addr: 8
          size: 8
        - tag_id: 1,  # fdt
          blob_file_path: "fdt.bin",

max_size defaults to 0x1000, execution_state defaults to aarch64, and has_checksum defaults to true.

The fields of the YAML file should match the fields in the specification for the transfer list. You don’t need to give the hdr_size or data_size fields. For example, a memory layout entry would have an entry like:

tag_id: 3
addr: 8
size: 8

You can input blob files by giving paths to the current working directory. You can do this for any TE type. For example, an FDT layout would have an entry like:

tag_id: 1,
blob_file_path: "fdt.bin",

You can input C-types by giving its fields. For example, an entry point info entry would have an entry like:

tag_id: 258
ep_info:
        args:
                - 67112968
                - 67112960
                - 0
                - 0
        h:
                attr: 8
                type: 1
                version: 2
        lr_svc: 0
        pc: 67239936
        spsr: 467

You can give the name of the tag instead of the tag id number. The valid tag names are in the transfer_entry_formats dict in tools/tlc/tlc/tl.py. Some examples are:

  • empty

  • fdt

  • hob_block

  • hob_list

You can input the attr field of entry_point_info as a string of flag names separated by |. The names are taken from ep_info_exp.h in TF-A. For example:

has_checksum: true
max_size: 4096
entries:
- tag_id: 0x102
  ep_info:
    args:
    - 67112976
    - 67112960
    - 0
    - 0
    - 0
    - 0
    - 0
    - 0
    h:
      attr: EP_NON_SECURE | EP_ST_ENABLE
      type: 1
      version: 2
    pc: 67239936
    spsr: 965

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