Re: [PATCH v3 0/7] Introduction of a remoteproc tee to load signed firmware

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On 2/22/24 10:55, Naman Jain wrote:
> On 2/22/2024 2:17 PM, Arnaud POULIQUEN wrote:
>> Hello Naman,
>>
>> On 2/22/24 06:43, Naman Jain wrote:
>>> On 2/14/2024 10:51 PM, Arnaud Pouliquen wrote:
>>>> Updates from the previous version [1]:
>>>>
>>>> This version proposes another approach based on an alternate load and boot
>>>> of the coprocessor. Therefore, the constraint introduced by tee_remoteproc
>>>> is that the firmware has to be authenticated and loaded before the resource
>>>> table can be obtained.
>>>>
>>>> The existing boot sequence is: >
>>>>     1) Get the resource table and store it in a cache,
>>>>        calling rproc->ops->parse_fw().
>>>>     2) Parse the resource table and handle resources,
>>>>        calling rproc_handle_resources.
>>>>     3) Load the firmware, calling rproc->ops->load().
>>>>     4) Start the firmware, calling rproc->ops->start().
>>>>    => Steps 1 and 2 are executed in rproc_fw_boot(), while steps 3 and 4 are
>>>>      executed in rproc_start().
>>>> => the use of rproc->ops->load() ops is mandatory
>>>>
>>>> The boot sequence needed for TEE boot is:
>>>>
>>>>     1) Load the firmware.
>>>>     2) Get the loaded resource, no cache.
>>>>     3) Parse the resource table and handle resources.
>>>>     4) Start the firmware.
>>>
>>> Hi,
>>> What problem are we really addressing here by reordering load, parse of
>>> FW resources?
>>
>> The feature introduced in TEE is the signature of the firmware images. That
>> means that before getting the resource table, we need to first authenticate the
>> firmware images.
>> Authenticating a firmware image means that we have to copy the firmware into
>> protected memory that cannot be corrupted by the non-secure and then verify the
>> signature.
>> The strategy implemented in OP-TEE is to load the firmware into destination
>> memory and then authenticate it.
>> This strategy avoids having a temporary copy of the whole images in a secure
>> memory.
>> This strategy imposes loading the firmware images before retrieving the resource
>> table.
>>
>>> Basically, what are the limitations of the current design you are referring to?
>>> I understood that TEE is designed that way.
>>
>> The limitation of the current design is that we obtain the resource table before
>> loading the firmware. Following the current design would impose constraints in
>> TEE that are not straightforward. Step 1 (getting the resource table and storing
>> it in a cache) would require having a copy of the resource table in TEE after
>> authenticating the images. However, authenticating the firmware, as explained
>> before, depends on the strategy implemented. In TEE implementation, we load the
>> firmware to authenticate it in the destination memory.
>>
>> Regards,
>> Arnaud
> 
> 
> Hello Arnaud,
> I think now I got your point. In TEE, you don't want to do anything(read
> resource table) with FW images, until its loaded and authenticated.
> Since current design was not allowing you to do it, you had to reorganize the
> code so that this can be achieved.
> 
> Generally speaking, in current design, if authentication fails for some
> reason later, one can handle it, but it depends on the implementation of
> parse_fw op if the damage is already done.
> 
> Please correct me if this is wrong assumption.

That's correct.

Regards,
Arnaud

> Patch looks good to me.
> 
> Regards,
> Naman Jain




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