15.9 Intellectual Property Protection
Intellectual property protection consists of restricting access to internal memories from external tools when the device is protected, and this is accomplished by setting the NVMCTRL security bit. This protected state can be removed by issuing a Chip-Erase (refer to Chip Erase). When the device is protected, read/write accesses using the AHB-AP are limited to the DSU address range and DSU commands are restricted. When issuing a Chip-Erase, sensitive information is erased from volatile memory and Flash.
The DSU implements a security filter that monitors the AHB transactions inside the DAP. If the device is protected, then AHB-AP read/write accesses outside the DSU external address range are discarded, causing an error response that sets the ARM AHB-AP sticky error bits (refer to the ARM Debug Interface v5 Architecture Specification on www.arm.com).
- Internally from the CPU, without any limitation, even when the device is protected
- Externally from a debug adapter, with some restrictions when the device is protected
- The first 0x100 bytes form the internal address range
- The next 0x100 bytes form the external address range
When the device is protected, the DAP can only issue MEM-AP accesses in the DSU range 0x0100-0x2000.
The DSU operating registers are located in the 0x0000-0x00FF area and remapped in 0x0100-0x01FF to differentiate accesses coming from a debugger and the CPU. If the device is protected and an access is issued in the region 0x0100-0x01FF, it is subject to security restrictions. For more information, refer to the Table 15-1.
Some features not activated by APB transactions are not available when the device is protected:
Features | Availability when the device is protected |
---|---|
CPU Reset Extension | Yes |
Clear CPU Reset Extension | No |
Debugger Cold-Plugging | Yes |
Debugger Hot-Plugging | No |
References: