On Thu, Jun 18, 2020 at 01:08:34AM +0300, Jarkko Sakkinen wrote: > Provisioning Certification Enclave (PCE), the root of trust for other > enclaves, generates a signing key from a fused key called Provisioning > Certification Key. PCE can then use this key to certify an attestation key > of a QE, e.g. we get the chain of trust down to the hardware if the Intel What's a QE? I don't see this acronym resolved anywhere in the whole patchset. > signed PCE is used. > > To use the needed keys, ATTRIBUTE.PROVISIONKEY is required but should be > only allowed for those who actually need it so that only the trusted > parties can certify QE's. > > Obviously the attestation service should know the public key of the used > PCE and that way detect illegit attestation, but whitelisting the legit > users still adds an additional layer of defence. > > Add new device file called /dev/sgx/provision. The sole purpose of this > file is to provide file descriptors that act as privilege tokens to allow > to build enclaves with ATTRIBUTE.PROVISIONKEY set. A new ioctl called > SGX_IOC_ENCLAVE_SET_ATTRIBUTE is used to assign this token to an enclave. So I'm sure I'm missing something here: what controls which enclave can open /dev/sgx/provision and thus pass the FD to SGX_IOC_ENCLAVE_SET_ATTRIBUTE? And in general, how does that whole flow look like: what calls SGX_IOC_ENCLAVE_SET_ATTRIBUTE when? Thx. -- Regards/Gruss, Boris. https://people.kernel.org/tglx/notes-about-netiquette