On 12 October 2015 at 16:49, Matt Fleming <matt@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On Mon, 12 Oct, at 04:17:54PM, Ingo Molnar wrote: >> >> * Matt Fleming <matt@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> >> > On Mon, 12 Oct, at 02:49:36PM, Ingo Molnar wrote: >> > > >> > > >> > > So why not unmap them after bootup? Is there any reason to call into EFI code >> > > while the system is up and running? >> > >> > That's where the runtime services code lives. So if you want things like EFI >> > variables (used by the distro installer, among other things) you need to map the >> > runtime regions. >> >> So EFI variables could be queried during bootup and saved on the Linux side. > > Right, we could do that, but then we wouldn't be able to support > creation/updating variables at runtime, such as when you install a > distribution for the first time, or want to boot a new kernel filename > directly from the firmware without a boot loader (and need to modify > the BootXXXX variables). > > And it's not just EFI variables that need runtime support either, for > some platforms the only way to reboot/poweroff is with EFI, such as on > the ASUS T100TA (Intel Baytrail-T). > > That's not to say your suggestion doesn't make sense for some cases, I > can definitely see how turning off runtime support but providing a > cache of EFI variables would be useful for some scenarios. But I don't > think it's ever going to be workable as a default option. > >> Calling into firmware after the kernel has booted up is fragile in general - >> beyond W+X the security considerations. > > It isn't intended to be fragile, and effort has gone into defining the > context under which the EFI runtime services can operate (though there > are obviously gaps in that specification). > > The entire point of the EFI runtime services is that they can be > invoked from the OS, and because hardware/firmware developers rely on > that when designing platforms, it's going to be something that Linux > is going to have to be able to do. Of course, that doesn't we > shouldn't be able to turn it off if the user is happy to sacrifice > some platform functionality. > > Additionally, if we've got suggestions for the firmware developers on > what we want the runtime context to look like, let's propose it to > them. They're pretty receptive in my experience. > On arm64, we only map in all of the UEFI runtime services regions during the time any of these services are being invoked. I think this should be mostly feasible on x86 as well, although it would involve yet another rewrite of the EFI region mapping code, and most likely a long list of quirks for platforms that are not able to deal with it correctly for one reason or the other (but that all come down to: 'if you are not doing it like Windows does it, you must be doing it wrong'). That would make the 'secure' way of mapping things an opt-in feature, which is generally not desirable for security features (since it will rarely be used in the real world then). So enabling the Properties Table memprotect feature as soon as the spec defines it in a meaningful way is probably a better way to go, and our current involvement is focused on defining it such that it can be enabled by default by firmwares rather than ending up an obscure switch in the BIOS screen that only the paranoid ever turn on. -- Ard. -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-efi" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html