Re: [PATCH v6 07/14] x86: Secure Launch kernel early boot stub

[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

 



On 5/12/23 12:17, Ross Philipson wrote:
On 5/12/23 07:26, Matthew Garrett wrote:
On Thu, May 04, 2023 at 02:50:16PM +0000, Ross Philipson wrote:

+static void sl_find_event_log(struct slr_table *slrt)

If this is called after the EFI stub then we're presumably
post-ExitBootServices and we're copied the TPM event log into a
configuration table so it's available to the runtime kernel. That also
means that we should be adding all further measurements to the Final
Events Table rather than the initial event log. How's that handled here,
both in terms of ensuring further events (generated by firmware or by
us) get added to the right place, and in terms of ensuring the event
logs the kernel has later on were covered appropriately? Or is the SL
event log an entirely different thing that can be merged in later
because it only covers the DRTM PCRs?

This is a good point. At this point it is really something we overlooked. We will have to revisit this and figure out the best way to find the final event log depending on how things booted.

I believe Ross misunderstood what you were asking for here. There are two reasons this is not possible or desired. The first reason is that on Intel, the DRTM log is not initialized by TrenchBoot code in the preamble. It is only responsible for allocating a buffer and recording the location in the TXT structures. When the SINIT ACM is executed, it will initialize the log and record the measurement that CPU sent directly to the TPM and then the measurements the ACM makes of the environment. If you pointed at the SRTM log, then the ACM would write over existing log, which I don't think you want. Now if you pointed at the tail end of the SRTM log, you would still end up with a second, separate log that just happens to be memory adjacent. The second reason is more from a trusted computing perspective, these are two different trust chains starting from two different Roots of Trust reflecting two different temporal states of the system, i.e. freshness. Typically this is were most will point out the need to have a measure of the resident firmware, i.e. SMM. To address that, should Intel to publish the spec for interacting with PPAM[1], TrenchBoot will be able to finally close the SMM gap, giving runtime validation of SMM.

[1] https://www.intel.com/content/dam/www/central-libraries/us/en/documents/drtm-based-computing-whitepaper.pdf

v/r,
dps



[Index of Archives]     [Kernel Newbies]     [Security]     [Netfilter]     [Bugtraq]     [Linux FS]     [Yosemite Forum]     [MIPS Linux]     [ARM Linux]     [Linux Security]     [Linux RAID]     [Samba]     [Video 4 Linux]     [Device Mapper]     [Linux Resources]

  Powered by Linux