On 04/03/2016 02:42 AM, Tomas Winkler wrote: > Few storage technology such is EMMC, UFS, and NVMe support RPMB > hardware partition with common protocol and frame layout. > The RPMB partition cannot be accessed via standard block layer, but by > a set of specific commands: WRITE, READ, GET_WRITE_COUNTER, and > PROGRAM_KEY. > Such a partition provides authenticated and replay protected access, > hence suitable as a secure storage. > > A storage device registers its RPMB hardware (emmc) partition or RPMB > W-LUN (ufs) with the RPMB layer providing an implementation for > send_rpmb_req() handler. > Tere is as well simulation platform device. This is handy as an RPMB > key can be programmed only once at storage device lifetime. > > The RPMB layer aims to provide in-kernel API for Trusted Execution > Environment (TEE) devices that are capable to securely compute block > frame signature. A TEE driver can claim rpmb interface, for example, > via class_interface_register (). What's the workflow? Does the TEE ask the kernel to do RPMB operations for it and supply the kernel with the authenticated request blobs to forward to the RPMB? Exactly, though it's not exactly a blob, just the data part, but it has to have the whole frame in orther to copute the signature correctly. Neither emmc nor ufs have dual head so a TEE device cannot access the RPMB partition directly and the access has to done via kernel storage device. Thanks Tomas -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-mmc" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html