FreeCalypso > hg > freecalypso-docs
changeset 15:38cc5795d79c
Calypso-test-reset article written
author | Mychaela Falconia <falcon@freecalypso.org> |
---|---|
date | Sun, 26 May 2019 10:45:04 +0000 |
parents | f5ddeacbe744 |
children | 396d44c543e3 |
files | Calypso-test-reset |
diffstat | 1 files changed, 284 insertions(+), 0 deletions(-) [+] |
line wrap: on
line diff
--- /dev/null Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000 +++ b/Calypso-test-reset Sun May 26 10:45:04 2019 +0000 @@ -0,0 +1,284 @@ +Reset logic and on/off states in the Calypso+Iota chipset +========================================================= + +Our beloved Calypso+Iota chipset provides a special reset signal (called +nTESTRESET on Leonardo schematics) that is just for testing, development and +debugging, not used at all in the normal life cycle of a phone handset or +modem. This special test reset is triggered when you press the RESET button on +a TI/FreeCalypso development board (D-Sample or FCDEV3B), and it can also be +triggered slightly indirectly through the reset pin on the TI-style JTAG +connector. The way this reset works is very quirky and requires a lot of +explanation, but before one can properly understand this test reset, we first +need to look at the "regular" power-on reset, switch-on and switch-off logic +that works in the absence of nTESTRESET. + +Before looking at resets and switch-on and switch-off sequences, we first need +to understand the power domains that are involved. There are two major power +domains of interest: there is the main power domain that is physically powered +off when the mobile device is not in the switched-on state, and there is the +RTC power domain that is powered at all times whenever the battery is physically +present, or perhaps even from a separate backup battery (a tiny coin cell) that +provides RTC power when the main battery is removed. The always-on RTC power +domain allows the real time clock to maintain the time of day while the mobile +is otherwise off (hence the name), and it also provides power to the logic that +allows the rest of the mobile (the main power domain) to be powered on, +initialized, booted, run and eventually switched off again in an orderly manner. + +All reset and on/off logic in our chipset happens in the VRPC (Voltage Reference +and Power Control) block in the Iota chip; all of Calypso and the rest of Iota +are fully subservient to this VRPC block. It is crucial to understand the +difference between powering on and off vs. switching on and off: in the +terminology that is established in TI's chip datasheets and application notes, +powering on means physically providing battery power to the chipset (inserting +the battery into a phone that had it removed, or connecting a VBAT power supply +to the orange power input connector on one of our development boards), and +powering off means physically removing all battery power, i.e., yanking the +battery out of a phone or disconnecting the power supply from the development +board. In board designs with a backup battery or a provision for one, it is +even more complicated: a power-on happens when either the main battery or a +backup battery becomes present, and a power-off happens when both batteries are +removed, leaving the Iota chipset without any energy source whatsoever. In +contrast, the actions of a user turning her phone on and off are called +switch-on and switch-off, respectively. + +The RTC power domain is powered on and receives its power-on reset (POR) on a +power-on event and loses power only on a full power-off (complete loss of all +battery power), whereas the main power domain is powered on and lifted out of +reset only on a switch-on, and powered back down and held in reset on a +switch-off. The Calypso chip receives two reset signals from the Iota (meaning +that each signal is an output from the Iota and an input to the Calypso): +nRESPWON and ON_nOFF. The nRESPWON signal is asserted (active low) only on a +hardware power-on (and also on nTESTRESET as will be explained in due course) +and stays high (inactive) at all other times, whereas ON_nOFF is driven high on +switch-on and low on switch-off. When the ON_nOFF signal is driven low by the +Iota ABB in the switched-off state, all main (non-RTC) logic in the Calypso is +held in reset, and in any case that logic cannot function as the physical power +to it (coming from LDO regulators in the Iota) will typically be turned off. +When the Iota ABB drives ON_nOFF high on switch-on, it does so after the LDO +regulators for the main power domain have been turned on and have had enough +time to stabilize; in the Calypso chip the transition of ON_nOFF from low to +high causes the ARM7 core to boot. + +A true power-on reset happens only when all battery power is removed and +reconnected: in simple designs without a backup battery one would need to +remove the main battery or the power supply providing VBAT and also disconnect +anything that may be feeding power into the system through pull-up resistors; +in more complex designs that feature a backup battery, both the main battery +and the backup battery would need to be removed and reconnected in order to +trigger a POR. Such a complete POR would reset the RTC power domain, and on +exit from the POR the VRPC block will be in the switched-off state, with +everything except the RTC powered off and waiting for the user to press the +PWON button. + +The green LED on the FCDEV3B indicates the state of the ON_nOFF signal, and +thus allows you to see if the VRPC block is switched on (LED on) or switched +off (LED off). The actual VRPC state machine in the Iota chip is a little more +complicated and has 5 states, not just two (the states are NOBAT, BACKUP, OFF, +ACTIVE and SLEEP), but I am simplifying here - for the complete details, please +see the VRPC description in Iota datasheet TWL3025_SWRS021.pdf, section 4.10 +starting on page 40. The transition from OFF to ACTIVE (switch-on event) +happens whenever the PWON button is pressed or charging voltage is applied (on +hardware that has charging circuits), whereas commanding a switch-off (going +back to OFF) requires having Calypso ARM7 firmware establish communication with +the Iota ABB over SPI and send a DEVOFF command. If the Calypso firmware +requests a switch-off when the PWON button is held down (jumper on FCDEV3B) or +when a charging power source is present, the Iota VRPC goes through a switch-off +immediately followed by a switch-on, effecting a very deep kind of reboot. + +nTESTRESET enters the picture +============================= + +So where does nTESTRESET fit in the just-described architecture of on/off +switching and resets? Contrary to what one might naively think, it is NOT an +externally-triggerable way to simulate a POR, nor is it simply ANDed or ORed +together with some other internal reset signal. Instead as you can see in +Figure 4-8 on page 43 of the TWL3025_SWRS021.pdf datasheet, it is its own +separate and very special path through the VRPC state machine that is never +exercised at all in normal product operation. + +When you press the RESET button or trigger a reset through JTAG connector pin 2 +(let's call it XDS_RESET), the VRPC state machine will unconditionally leave +whatever state it was in and will be forced into this special nTESTRESET state +that does not occur at any other time. For as long as nTESTRESET is held low, +both reset signals to the Calypso (nRESPWON and ON_nOFF) will be held low as +well, putting the Calypso into a POR-like superdeep reset, but meanwhile the +LDO regulators are fully turned on, not off! While nTESTRESET is held low, the +green LED on the FCDEV3B will be off (ON_nOFF is low), but the regulators are +on, as can be seen on JTAG connector pin 5 where the V-IO rail is brough out. +This combination of ON_nOFF low (green LED off) but regulators on happens only +in this special nTESTRESET-held-low state and not at any other time. + +When the RESET button and XDS_RESET are both released, causing nTESTRESET to go +back to high, the VRPC state machine goes from the special nTESTRESET state to +the ACTIVE (switched-on) state via a special direct transition that bypasses +the normal checks. Calypso reset inputs nRESPWON and ON_nOFF go from low to +high at the same time (this is the only time when they do it like this), and +the ARM7 core boots. + +Thus the test reset triggered via nTESTRESET is not a simple POR-like reset, +instead it is a very special "deep reset, then unconditional power-on and boot" +kind of operation. As a practical matter, it does its intended job of giving +developers an unconditional and unstoppable way to take control of the chipset +when the ARM7 processor and its code execution are in a runaway state: in the +Calypso+Iota on/off architecture, the most "kosher" way to cleanly reset the +system would be a switch-off followed by a switch-on, but a normal switch-off +is a quite complex operation that has to be performed by ARM7 firmware, and it +is thus unavailable when the processor executes something other than perfectly +good firmware code with clean soft-power-off functionality. The test reset +mechanism provides a solution, although it is a solution that may be quite +difficult to understand at first. + +It is also important to note that nTESTRESET acts the same way and puts the +chipset into the exact same state regardless of *all* prior state, as in not +only prior sw state, but also prior hw state: in particular, it works exactly +the same way whether the chipset was switched on or switched off prior to +nTESTRESET assertion. If the system was previously switched on, running some +code that hung or become uncontrollable, nTESTRESET can be thought of as acting +mostly like a typical processor reset that most software developers are used to, +but if the system was previously switched off, nTESTRESET acts like a different +kind of "turn on" command, producing a switch-on that is distinguishable from +all other switch-on causes like PWON and charger-plug. + +Lack of debouncing +================== + +It is important to note that there is no debouncing circuit for nTESTRESET +inside the Iota chip, like there is for the regular PWON button. Thus shorting +nTESTRESET to GND directly with a finger-actuated pushbutton switch is not +particularly good, although TI's Leonardo schematics depict just such an +arrangement, and it works OK on the FCDEV3B in practice. + +The entity that drives nTESTRESET to the Calypso+Iota system takes full +responsibility for ensuring proper timing. The reset which is propagated from +nTESTRESET to nRESPWON and ON_nOFF needs to have a certain duration in order to +reset all logic properly, and there is nothing in the chipset itself to assure +such, unlike what happens on normal switch-on sequences - instead it is the +responsibility of the nTESTRESET driving source. The exact timing requirements +are not stated anywhere (at least none that we could find), but if you are +driving nTESTRESET from a programmatic source (presumably via the XDS_RESET +signal path described below), I would give it a 50 ms pulse. + +When nTESTRESET is shorted to GND with a finger-actuated pushbutton switch, one +needs to watch out for contact bounce. If the dry contact switch does a lot of +make-break bounce, that make-break noise will translate directly into Calypso +and Iota resets being asserted and negated just as rapidly, which is certainly +not clean. The final release from reset is the most important part though: if +the system is put through a bunch of erratic resets as a result of contact +bounce on the initial RESET button press, there should be no problem if there +is a long solid reset at the end, with a clean release from it. But if the +release from reset is also accompanied by contact bounce with make-break events +on the order of microseconds, then the chipset may enter garbage state by way +of an improperly timed reset. The nTESTRESET signal was clearly designed to be +driven by development systems that can produce controlled timing, not by +bounce-prone electromechanical switches driven by bounce-prone human fingers. + +nTESTRESET vs. XDS_RESET +======================== + +In its native form the internal nTESTRESET signal is pulled up to a non-logic +voltage rail (specifically UPR, which normally follows VBAT in the absence of +backup batteries), and it can be shorted or pulled to GND either by pushbutton +switches (aside from the contact bounce problem noted above) or by OC/OD +drivers. It cannot, however, be driven by any kind of external push-pull +driver, and more generally it cannot be connected to any circuit that operates +on standard logic voltages like 3.3 V - the VBAT rail will typically be in the +3.6 to 4.2 V range, which is too high for external 3.3 V logic. + +But TI Back In The Day had a need to drive this test reset from their XDS510 +and XDS560 "emulator" pods, and the only reset signal those pods put out is the +one that was originally intended for JTAG TRST (which does not exist in the +Calypso+Iota chipset), driven with a push-pull driver. TI's solution was to +insert a clever transistor circuit between JTAG connector pin 2 (the pin that +was originally intended to be TRST) and the internal nTESTRESET signal; this +circuit is depicted on the available Leonardo schematics, it has been replicated +on our FCDEV3B, and we have every reason to believe that it is the same on TI's +D-Sample board as well. The effect of this circuit is that whenever the +external XDS_RESET signal is driven low and the internal V-IO rail has power +(see below), the internal nTESTRESET signal is driven low (asserted), and +whenever the external XDS_RESET signal is either driven high or left alone, the +internal nTESTRESET signal is left alone, high from the pull-up to UPR - but +the nTESTRESET and XDS_RESET electrical nets are never exposed directly to each +other's voltages. + +This clever solution does however have one side effect which is visible to +developers working with these boards: the reset signal isolation circuit can +only propagate an asserted low from XDS_RESET to nTESTRESET when the V-IO rail +has power, i.e., when Iota regulators are turned on - and in the normal +switched-off state these regulators are turned off. Thus the operator needs to +first cause a switch-on or at least a regulator turn-on by pressing either the +PWON button or the RESET button, and once V-IO is on, the external host driving +the XDS_RESET signal via the JTAG connector can take over. + +Another unexpected quirk is that XDS_RESET can still sometimes work even though +the Iota regulators are off (VRPC in the switched-off state) if some leakage +power is being fed into the V-IO rail from UART or JTAG lines through pull-up +resistors - but this behaviour should be considered an unfortunate design +blemish, not something to be relied on. + +Test reset, then switch-off, then switch-on quirk +================================================= + +If you use any version of FreeCalypso host tools earlier than the upcoming +fc-host-tools-r11 release with an FCDEV3B, you might have noticed a really odd +quirk: if you make an fc-loadtool entry via the RESET button instead of PWON, +then exit your loadtool session cleanly, such that the green LED goes out, the +board ends up in a weird state - if you then do a subsequent switch-on via PWON, +something goes wrong (fc-loadtool entry doesn't work, regular fw also hangs +instead of producing rvinterf output) - it seems as though if you have done a +RESET once, only another RESET works from then on, and PWON stops working +correctly. Yet if you press the RESET button without fc-loadtool and let the +regular firmware boot from this nTESTRESET switch-on, and then execute a +switch-off through the firmware (AT@POFF, fc-shell poweroff, or press, hold and +release the PWON button) the board is powered off in a clean state - subsequent +PWON works just fine. What in the world is going on? + +The secret magic was discovered by carefully studying the TCS211 firmware code +we've inherited from TI. It turns out that our Iota chip has at least one +secret undocumented register (or perhaps many more, who knows) that is not +documented in the TWL3025_SWRS021.pdf datasheet, and any Calypso programs (full +firmwares or standalone programs like our loadagent) that execute a Iota +poweroff (really switch-off) operation need to make a special write to this +magic register in order to avoid trouble in the test reset, then switch-off, +then switch-on sequence. + +We are calling this undocumented Iota register VRPCAUX (its official name is +unknown, but there is a seemingly-corresponding register in TI's newer Syren +ABB chip which the firmware calls VRPCAUX, and the name logically fits in terms +of the function), and it is accessed via undocumented register page 2. +Officially both Iota and Syren ABB chips only have register pages 0 and 1, but +it turns out that both chips also have an undocumented page 2 - and in order to +access this secret page 2, one first needs to issue a special (also secret) +unlock command through yet other registers - whew! + +So just *why* do we need to mess around with secret undocumented Iota registers +from our production code? From what we can tell, this VRPCAUX register lives +in the VRPC block in the RTC power domain, and it preserves its state when the +rest of the system is powered down in the switched-off state. Apparently this +register controls some aspects of the switch-on process, and when an nTESTRESET +reset-and-boot sequence is performed, this VRPCAUX register is loaded with a +different configuration than on normal POR. It appears that the "normal" value +of VRPCAUX in the absence of test reset operations is 0x007 (bit meaning unknown +of course when we are dealing with secret undocumented stuff), and this value +is needed for switch-on and possibly other things (sleep entry and exit, ABB +interrupts, who knows) to work correctly. But if we boot via nTESTRESET and +read the secret register, we see 0x2E7 instead - and if we do a normal DEVOFF +command without changing it to 0x007 first, we get into the broken state where +PWON switch-ons don't work. (It is very reassuring though that another +nTESTRESET always works no matter what - so it looks like this debug reset is +truly irrespective of all prior hw state.) + +TI's TCS211 firmware has a bit of magic in its boot code path in the ABB_on() +function in the chipsetsw/drivers/drv_core/abb/abb.c module, and it has this +attention-drawing comment: + +// Restore the ABB checks and debouncing if start on TESTRESETZ + +The code following this comment goes through the gymnastics of enabling access +to register page 2, then writing 0x007 into the register which we've named +VRPCAUX. (That's what it does for Iota; for Syren it also writes a few other +registers also in that same undocumented page 2.) Reproducing these steps in +our target-utils code (loadagent and friends) has resulted in the problem +behaviour going away: now we can enter fc-loadtool via the RESET button, then +exit loadtool (loadagent poweroff command executed on the target), and the +board is powered off cleanly, with both PWON and RESET working for subsequent +switch-ons. Whew!