On 5/15/23 17:22, Matthew Garrett wrote:
On Mon, May 15, 2023 at 05:15:15PM -0400, Daniel P. Smith wrote:
On 5/12/23 06:55, Matthew Garrett wrote:
On Thu, May 04, 2023 at 02:50:13PM +0000, Ross Philipson wrote:
+#define SLR_TABLE_MAGIC 0x4452544d
From convention I'd expect this to be 0x534c5254, but not really an
issue.
Apologies, but which convention?
Tables in ACPI and UEFI tend to have magic that corresponds to their
name, so a table called SLRT would tend to have magic that matches the
ASCII values for that. In this case the SLRT has DRTM as its magic,
which is a touch unexpected.
While the SLRT is meant for UEFI and non-UEFI environments, DRTM is
definitely a hold over when we started this and you are correct,
probably not the best choice. In fact, I agree that SLRT is a far better
magic. We will update the spec and fix it in the series.
Oof. Having the kernel know about bootloaders has not worked out super
well for us in the past. If someone writes a new bootloader, are they
unable to Secure Launch any existing kernels? The pragmatic thing for
them to do would be to just pretend they're grub, which kind of defeats
the point of having this definition...
Actually, this is not for making the kernel know about bootloaders. This is
dealing with the challenge created when the preamble was split for efi-stub,
and similar use cases, where what sets up the preamble, ie. the bootloader,
is separate from what invokes the dynamic launch, ie. the DLE handler. The
reality is that even in the simplest implementation of the DLE handler, a
remnant of GRUB for call back from efi-stub, there is information that is
needed to cross the gap.
What if I don't use grub, but use something that behaves equivalently?
Which value should be used here?
Generally we would request that the bootloader submit a request to
register for a value to be reserved in the spec. That aside, the intent
here is to allow for the possibility for the DLE handler to be
independent from the bootloader, but this does not have to be this way.
If a non-open entity decides to produce their own implementation, they
can freely use a unallocated value at their own risk that it could be
allocated to another bootloader in the future. Though in this scenario
it likely would not matter as the non-open DLE handler would only be
present when the non-open bootloader was present.
We wrote the TrenchBoot Secure Launch general spec [1] with as much
forethought as possible for the target environments. Specifically, the
desire is to have a common approach for x86 (Intel and AMD), Arm, and
perhaps down the road the POWER arch. In particular, I do not believe there
is anything in the Arm DRTM beta spec that prohibits a mixed 32/64 bit
environment. In the end it is better to for the spec to be safe for those
environments then having to make changes to the spec later down the road.
Ok.
Thank you for the review!
v/r,
dps
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