Copyright (c) 2011-2018, Arm Limited. All rights reserved.
[1] Power Control System Architecture - DEN0050B (Please contact Arm directly to obtain a copy of this document)
[2] System Control and Management Interface - DEN0056A
[3] Power Policy Unit - DEN0051C (Please contact Arm directly to obtain a copy of this document)
[4] System Guidance
There is a strong trend in the industry to provide microcontrollers in systems to abstract various power, or other system management tasks, away from application processors (AP). The Power Control System Architecture (PCSA) [1] describes how systems can be built following this approach.
The PCSA defines the concept of the System Control Processor (SCP), a dedicated processor that is used to abstract power and system management tasks away from application processors.
Similar to the SCP, the Manageability Control Processor (MCP) follows the same approach with the goal of providing a management entry-point to the System on Chip (SoC) where manageability is required, such as on a SoC targeting servers.
SCP-firmware provides a software reference implementation for the System Control Processor (SCP) and Manageability Control Processor (MCP) components found in several Arm Compute Sub-Systems.
To properly build SCP/MCP firmware for a target product, the following tools are required:
-
Git
-
Either of:
- [GNU Arm Embedded Toolchain ("6-2017-q2-update" or later)] (https://developer.arm.com/open-source/gnu-toolchain/gnu-rm)
- [Arm Compiler 6] (https://developer.arm.com/products/software-development-tools/compilers/arm-compiler)
-
GNU Make (4.2 or later)
-
Python 3 (3.5.0 or later)
In addition, the following tools are recommended:
- Doxygen (1.8.0 or later): Required to build supporting documentation
- GCC (6.0 or later): Required to build framework tests that run on the build host
SCP-firmware requires the use of components from the Cortex Microcontroller System Interface Standard (CMSIS) Software Pack, specifically the CMSIS Core and CMSIS Real-Time Operating System (RTOS) components. The CMSIS Software pack is included as a Git submodule.
To retrieve the CMSIS Software pack, just initialize and update the submodule of the repository.
$> git submodule update --init
The required CMSIS components are now present and the correct version has been selected.
If Doxygen is available on the system containing SCP-firmware then comprehensive documentation can be generated. The complete set of documentation is compiled into bundles in HTML, LaTeX, and XML formats and placed in the build/doc directory. This documentation includes:
- A Readme section (the content of this file)
- The BSD-3-Clause license under which this software and supporting files are distributed
- An overview of the framework on which SCP-firmware is written, including information on how components of the software must interact with the framework and with each other.
- An overview of the build system and the project directory structure
- The project's coding style
- Source documentation for the SCP-firmware framework
- Source documentation for modules that are distributed as part of the product
From within the SCP-firmware root directory Doxygen can be invoked using the top-level Makefile:
$> make doc
To build a product the basic command format for invoking 'make' is:
$> make [TARGET] <PRODUCT=<name>> [OPTIONS]
It is not necessary to provide a target since the default target for the product will build all the firmware contained within the product.
The 'help' target provides further information on the arguments that can be given:
$> make help
The framework includes a suite of tests that validate its core functionality. These can be run on the build host using:
$> make test
For more guidance on the build system, refer to the full set of documentation that includes the 'Build System' chapter.
The software is provided under a BSD-3-Clause license.
Arm welcomes any feedback on SCP-firmware. Please contact the maintainers (see maintainers.md).
To request support please contact Arm by email at [email protected]. Arm licensees may also contact Arm via their partner managers.