Mark Rutland <mark.rutland at arm.com> writes: > On Thu, Aug 24, 2017 at 06:30:50PM +0100, Mark Rutland wrote: >> On Thu, Aug 24, 2017 at 05:18:11PM +0900, AKASHI Takahiro wrote: >> > The first PT_LOAD segment, which is assumed to be "text" code, in vmlinux >> > will be loaded at the offset of TEXT_OFFSET from the begining of system >> > memory. The other PT_LOAD segments are placed relative to the first one. >> >> I really don't like assuming things about the vmlinux ELF file. >> >> > Regarding kernel verification, since there is no standard way to contain >> > a signature within elf binary, we follow PowerPC's (not yet upstreamed) >> > approach, that is, appending a signature right after the kernel binary >> > itself like module signing. >> >> I also *really* don't like this. It's a bizarre in-band mechanism, >> without explcit information. It's not a nice ABI. >> >> If we can load an Image, why do we need to be able to load a vmlinux? > > So IIUC, the whole point of this is to be able to kexec_file_load() a > vmlinux + signature bundle, for !CONFIG_EFI kernels. > > For that, I think that we actually need a new kexec_file_load${N} > syscall, where we can pass the signature for the kernel as a separate > file. Ideally also with a flags argument and perhaps the ability to sign > the initrd too. > > That way we don't ahve to come up with a magic vmlinux+signature format, > as we can just pass a regular image and a signature for that image > separately. That should work for PPC and others, too. powerpc uses the same format that is used for signed kernel modules, which is a signature appended at the end of the file. It doesn't need to be passed separately since it's embedded in the file itself. The kernel already has a mechanism to verify signatures that aren't embedded in the file: it's possible to use IMA via the LSM hook in kernel_read_file_from_fd (which is called in kimage_file_prepare_segments) to verify a signature stored in an extended attribute by using an IMA policy rule such as: appraise func=KEXEC_KERNEL_CHECK appraise_type=imasig Of course, that only works if the kernel image is stored in a filesystem which supports extended attributes. But that is the case of most filesystems nowadays, with the notable exception of FAT-based filesystems. evmctl, the IMA userspace tool, also support signatures stored in a separate file as well ("sidecar" signatures), but the kernel can only verify them if they are copied into an xattr (which I believe the userspace tool can do). -- Thiago Jung Bauermann IBM Linux Technology Center