Re: Sending vendor specific commands to spi-nor flash

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

 



On 07/06/2022 14:50, Paul Barker wrote:
Hi Michael, folks,

Apologies for the slow follow-up, I was ill over the last week of May & start of June.

On 23/05/2022 12:25, Michael Walle wrote:
[+ linux-security-module, linux-integrity, sorry if these are the
wrong MLs, but I don't have any experiences with crypto]

Am 2022-05-23 12:02, schrieb Paul Barker:
On 23/05/2022 09:31, Michael Walle wrote:
Am 2022-05-18 14:32, schrieb Paul Barker:
We're looking to add support for sending vendor specific commands to
Micron Authenta flash devices over the SPI bus.

Please elaborate a bit more on the use case. Is this something specific
to the flash or is it more of a general feature?

The Authenta flash devices support two groups of vendor-specific commands:

1) "Advanced Sector Protection" commands, common to several Micron
parts. These include volatile & non-volatile lock bits, password
protection and a global freeze bit.

Parts of that isn't really specific to Micron, is it? Sounds like
a per sector locking. AFAIR Tudor was working on advanced sector
protection.

I see your point here. The implementation may be Micron specific but there are probably ways to improve the generic locking APIs to cover these features.

I'm happy to look at what Tudor was working on, have any patches been posted for this? I've searched the mailing list history for the past few months but can't find any.


2) "Authenticated Core Root of Trust for Measurement (A-CRTM)"
commands, specific to Authenta flash devices. These include
authenticated write operations where the data to be written must be
signed with a cryptographic key and measurement operations which allow
remote attestation of the contents of the flash. These features
interact with the cloud-based Authenta Key Management Service (KMS)
provided by Micron and user-controlled cryptographic keys can also be
supported for these devices.

To make use of these features vendor-specific commands are sent to the
flash device. We expect to send these commands during the boot process
and during the process of securely deploying a new software image to
the flash device.

Brief information on the Authenta features is available as a PDF [1].

[1]:
https://media-www.micron.com/-/media/client/global/documents/products/data-sheet/nor-flash/serial-nor/mt25q/mt25q_a_crtm_rpmc_addendum_rev_1_6_brief.pdf



Since we're using the
MTD block interface to support a filesystem on the SPI flash we need
to send these vendor specific commands via some sort of IOCTL.

I can see a couple of ways to achieve this (as follows) and would like
to get some feedback from the MTD & spi-nor maintainers on which
approach is preferred:

1) Add new IOCTLs to the mtdchar device to support these vendor
specific operations. An initial set of patches was sent back in
October 2021 which took this route [1], but no further progress was
made. The new IOCTLs would exist for all mtdchar devices (regardless
of vendor) if we go this route and we'd need to ensure -EINVAL or
-ENOTSUPP is returned as appropriate if these IOCTLs are called on a
device which does not implement them.

2) Add a vendor-specific IOCTL layer to the mtdchar device interface.
When the mtdchar IOCTL handler is called with a command not defined in
mtdchar.c, pass the call on to a device-specific IOCTL handler which
can potentially handle vendor specific commands.

3) Add a generic SPI transfer IOCTL for spi-nor MTD devices. This
would avoid the need to define IOCTLs for every vendor specific
command supported by SPI flash devices. Instead, knowledge of the
vendor specific commands would be kept in userspace and the kernel
would simply provide an API for sending & receiving arbitrary bytes
over the SPI bus. This is similar to the MMC_IOC_CMD IOCTL supported
by the MMC driver.

My preference would be for option (3) since it minimizes the scope of
the changes we need to make in the kernel. We're not tied to this
though, so let us know if a different option is preferred.

I'm not sure we should allow a generic "issue anything to the spi
flash". It it is just a one time thing, like for example, program
a password during production, or program non-volatile memory during
production of the board, I'm fine with it. Most probably, calling
that ioctl will also call add_taint(). This will also need to go
with proper userspace util support.

But if it is something for general use, please provide a proper API
and don't write userspace drivers.

I've been looking at how the eMMC/SD and NVMe drivers support passing
through vendor specific commands using MMC_IOC_CMD for eMMC/SD and
NVME_IOCTL_ADMIN_CMD/NVME_IOCTL_IO_CMD for NVMe. Neither of these
ioctl handlers appear to call add_taint().

I don't know the use case for MMC/NVMe, but until you convince me
otherwise, I see "sending raw commands to the SPI flash" as something
exceptional, and thus you'd taint the kernel.

Looking at https://docs.kernel.org/admin-guide/tainted-kernels.html, I can't see any taint flag (tainted state bit) that would apply for the case when raw commands are sent to a hardware device. I may be misunderstanding something though - which tainted state bit would be set by this operation?


For A-CRTM operations, in our current use case the command bytes to be
sent over the SPI bus to the flash device are sent from a cloud-based
service to a userspace agent on the device. The agent simply needs a
way to pass these command bytes over the SPI bus to the device and
retrieve the sequence of response bytes to send back to the
cloud-based service. For this we could use either a generic SPI
transfer IOCTL or a Micron specific A-CRTM command IOCTL.

For the Advanced Sector Protection commands we can add IOCTLs for each
command if that's the preferred approach. The command list can be seen
on page 35 of the datasheet for the MT25QL02GCBB spi-nor flash device
[2] and on other Micron flash device datasheets.

This doesn't sound like a proper abstraction to me. Again, the per
sector lock protection should be integrated into the current locking
ioctls. Regarding the security commands, I'm afraid I can't help
you on that point, but it sounds like bypassing the kernel is the
wrong thing to do.

For the Advanced Sector Protection commands I can look into extending the existing IOCTLs if that's the preferred approach.

For the A-CRTM operations, these don't fit well into the existing APIs. Furthermore, for several of these operations the bytes sent over the SPI bus consist of a message block (including an opcode/sub-opcode and any arguments) followed by a HMAC signature of the message block. The signing key for this HMAC is typically kept off the device itself (e.g. in an on-site server or a cloud-based Key Management System). This means that the sequence of bytes to be sent over the SPI bus is typically produced by a system which has access to the signing key and is then sent to the target device to be relayed over the SPI bus to the Authenta flash device. The kernel running on a system with an Authenta flash device is typically not in a position to construct and sign the sequence of bytes to be sent over the SPI bus for A-CRTM commands.

So, I think the best API for A-CRTM operations would be a pair of vendor-specific IOCTLs, WR_CRTM_CMD and RD_CRTM_CMD, which each take an array of bytes, including any HMAC signature, to be sent over the SPI bus to the Authenta flash device. These would check the opcode/sub-opcode to ensure that they represent a valid A-CRTM command and for RD_CRTM_CMD to also check that this is an A-CRTM command that does not modify the device state or flash contents. Thus WR_CRTM_CMD requires the device to be opened for writing, RD_CRTM_CMD only requires the device to be opened for reading. Once the opcode/sub-opcode has been checked the command would be sent to the Authenta flash device and the response sent back to userspace.

I'd like to start moving things forward here. I think the best place to start is going to be to send an initial RFC patch series for the changes to drivers/mtd/spi-nor/micron-st.c to add wrapper functions for the Advanced Sector Protection & A-CRTM commands, and add appropriate entries to micron_nor_parts. That will hopefully improve the context and we can continue to discuss what is an appropriate API for exposing these commands to the user space service which needs to invoke them (to perform actions such as initiating a cryptographic measurement, deriving a secret key based on a measurement or securely updating a bootloader image in the flash).

If anyone has any further thoughts at this stage please let us know.

Regards,

--
Paul Barker
Principal Software Engineer
SanCloud Ltd

e: paul.barker@xxxxxxxxxxxx
w: https://sancloud.com/

Attachment: OpenPGP_0xA67255DFCCE62ECD.asc
Description: OpenPGP public key

Attachment: OpenPGP_signature
Description: OpenPGP digital signature


[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]
[Index of Archives]     [Linux Kernel]     [Linux Kernel Hardening]     [Linux NFS]     [Linux NILFS]     [Linux USB Devel]     [Video for Linux]     [Linux Audio Users]     [Yosemite News]     [Linux SCSI]

  Powered by Linux