Re: [PATCH v5 3/3] hwrng: add mtk-sec-rng driver

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On 2019-12-12 14:03, Ard Biesheuvel wrote:
On Thu, 12 Dec 2019 at 12:45, Marc Zyngier <maz@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

On 2019-12-12 05:13, Neal Liu wrote:
> On Tue, 2019-12-03 at 11:17 +0000, Marc Zyngier wrote:
>> On 2019-12-03 04:16, Florian Fainelli wrote:
>> > On 12/2/2019 11:11 AM, Marc Zyngier wrote:
>> >> On Mon, 2 Dec 2019 16:12:09 +0000
>> >> Ard Biesheuvel <ard.biesheuvel@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>> >>
>> >>> (adding some more arm64 folks)
>> >>>
>> >>> On Fri, 29 Nov 2019 at 11:30, Neal Liu <neal.liu@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
>> >>> wrote:
>> >>>>
>> >>>> On Fri, 2019-11-29 at 18:02 +0800, Lars Persson wrote:
>> >>>>> Hi Neal,
>> >>>>>
>> >>>>> On Wed, Nov 27, 2019 at 3:23 PM Neal Liu
>> <neal.liu@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
>> >>>>> wrote:
>> >>>>>>
>> >>>>>> For MediaTek SoCs on ARMv8 with TrustZone enabled,
>> peripherals
>> >>>>>> like
>> >>>>>> entropy sources is not accessible from normal world (linux)
>> and
>> >>>>>> rather accessible from secure world (ATF/TEE) only. This
>> driver
>> >>>>>> aims
>> >>>>>> to provide a generic interface to ATF rng service.
>> >>>>>>
>> >>>>>
>> >>>>> I am working on several SoCs that also will need this kind of
>> >>>>> driver
>> >>>>> to get entropy from Arm trusted firmware.
>> >>>>> If you intend to make this a generic interface, please clean
>> up
>> >>>>> the
>> >>>>> references to MediaTek and give it a more generic name. For
>> >>>>> example
>> >>>>> "Arm Trusted Firmware random number driver".
>> >>>>>
>> >>>>> It will also be helpful if the SMC call number is
>> configurable.
>> >>>>>
>> >>>>> - Lars
>> >>>>
>> >>>> Yes, I'm trying to make this to a generic interface. I'll try
>> to
>> >>>> make
>> >>>> HW/platform related dependency to be configurable and let it
>> more
>> >>>> generic.
>> >>>> Thanks for your suggestion.
>> >>>>
>> >>>
>> >>> I don't think it makes sense for each arm64 platform to expose
>> an
>> >>> entropy source via SMC calls in a slightly different way, and
>> model
>> >>> it
>> >>> as a h/w driver. Instead, we should try to standardize this, and
>> >>> perhaps expose it via the architectural helpers that already
>> exist
>> >>> (get_random_seed_long() and friends), so they get plugged into
>> the
>> >>> kernel random pool driver directly.
>> >>
>> >> Absolutely. I'd love to see a standard, ARM-specified,
>> virtualizable
>> >> RNG that is abstracted from the HW.
>> >
>> > Do you think we could use virtio-rng on top of a modified
>> virtio-mmio
>> > which instead of being backed by a hardware mailbox, could use
>> > hvc/smc
>> > calls to signal writes to shared memory and get notifications via
>> an
>> > interrupt? This would also open up the doors to other virtio uses
>> > cases
>> > beyond just RNG (e.g.: console, block devices?). If this is
>> > completely
>> > stupid, then please disregard this comment.
>>
>> The problem with a virtio device is that it is a ... device. What we
>> want
>> is to be able to have access to an entropy source extremely early in
>> the
>> kernel life, and devices tend to be available pretty late in the
>> game.
>> This means we cannot plug them in the architectural helpers that Ard
>> mentions above.
>>
>> What you're suggesting looks more like a new kind of virtio
>> transport,
>> which is interesting, in a remarkably twisted way... ;-)
>>
>> Thanks,
>>
>>          M.
>
> In conclusion, is it helpful that hw_random has a generic interface
> to
> add device randomness by talking to hwrng which is implemented in the
> firmware or the hypervisor?
> For most chip vendors, I think the answer is yes. We already prepared
> a
> new patchset and need you agree with this idea.

As long as it is a *unified* interface, I'm all for that.



Yeah, but I'm not sure it makes sense to model it as a device like
this. It would be nice if we could tie this into the ARM SMCCC
discovery, and use the SMC calls to back arch_get_random_seed_long()

Probably I wasn't clear enough, but that's really what I meant by
a unified interface (implemented by the firmware or the hypervisor).

[provided we fix the braindead way in which that is being used today
in the interrupt code]

Ah, I said I'd look into it. Thanks for the reminder...

Thanks,

        M.
--
Jazz is not dead. It just smells funny...



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