# RISC-V architecture documentation This section contains documentation about coreboot on RISC-V architecture. ## Mode usage All stages run in M mode. Payloads have a choice of managing M mode activity: they can control everything or nothing. Payloads run from the romstage (i.e. rampayloads) are started in M mode. The payload must, for example, prepare and install its own SBI. Payloads run from the ramstage are started in S mode, and trap delegation will have been done. These payloads rely on the SBI and can not replace it. ## Stage handoff protocol On entry to a stage or payload (including SELF payloads), * all harts are running. * A0 is the hart ID. * A1 is the pointer to the Flattened Device Tree (FDT). ## Additional payload handoff requirements The location of cbmem should be placed in a node in the FDT. ## Trap delegation Traps are delegated in the ramstage. ## SMP within a stage At the beginning of each stage, all harts save 0 are spinning in a loop on a semaphore. At the end of the stage harts 1..max are released by changing the semaphore. A possible way to do this is to have a pointer to a struct containing variables, e.g. ```c struct blocker { void (*fn)(); // never returns } ``` The hart blocks until fn is non-null, and then calls it. If fn returns, we will panic if possible, but behavior is largely undefined. Only hart 0 runs through most of the code in each stage.