- 24 Jun, 2020 1 commit
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Louis Mayencourt authored
fw_config image is authenticated using secure boot framework by adding it into the single root and dual root chain of trust. The COT for fw_config image looks as below: +------------------+ +-------------------+ | ROTPK/ROTPK Hash |------>| Trusted Boot fw | +------------------+ | Certificate | | (Auth Image) | /+-------------------+ / | / | / | / | L v +------------------+ +-------------------+ | fw_config hash |------>| fw_config | | | | (Data Image) | +------------------+ +-------------------+ Signed-off-by: Louis Mayencourt <louis.mayencourt@arm.com> Signed-off-by: Manish V Badarkhe <Manish.Badarkhe@arm.com> Change-Id: I08fc8ee95c29a95bb140c807dd06e772474c7367
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- 09 Jun, 2020 1 commit
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Manish Pandey authored
A new certificate "sip-sp-cert" has been added for Silicon Provider(SiP) owned Secure Partitions(SP). A similar support for Platform owned SP can be added in future. The certificate is also protected against anti- rollback using the trusted Non-Volatile counter. To avoid deviating from TBBR spec, support for SP CoT is only provided in dualroot. Secure Partition content certificate is assigned image ID 31 and SP images follows after it. The CoT for secure partition look like below. +------------------+ +-------------------+ | ROTPK/ROTPK Hash |------>| Trusted Key | +------------------+ | Certificate | | (Auth Image) | /+-------------------+ / | / | / | / | L v +------------------+ +-------------------+ | Trusted World |------>| SiP owned SPs | | Public Key | | Content Cert | +------------------+ | (Auth Image) | / +-------------------+ / | / v| +------------------+ L +-------------------+ | SP_PKG1 Hash |------>| SP_PKG1 | | | | (Data Image) | +------------------+ +-------------------+ . . . . . . +------------------+ +-------------------+ | SP_PKG8 Hash |------>| SP_PKG8 | | | | (Data Image) | +------------------+ +-------------------+ Signed-off-by: Manish Pandey <manish.pandey2@arm.com> Change-Id: Ia31546bac1327a3e0b5d37e8b99c808442d5e53f
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- 19 May, 2020 1 commit
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Manish V Badarkhe authored
CoT used for BL1 and BL2 are moved to tbbr_cot_bl1.c and tbbr_cot_bl2.c respectively. Common CoT used across BL1 and BL2 are moved to tbbr_cot_common.c. Signed-off-by: Manish V Badarkhe <Manish.Badarkhe@arm.com> Change-Id: I2252ac8a6960b3431bcaafdb3ea4fb2d01b79cf5
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- 24 Feb, 2020 1 commit
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Sandrine Bailleux authored
This new chain of trust defines 2 independent signing domains: 1) One for the silicon firmware (BL1, BL2, BL31) and optionally the Trusted OS. It is rooted in the Silicon ROTPK, just as in the TBBR CoT. 2) One for the Normal World Bootloader (BL33). It is rooted in a new key called Platform ROTPK, or PROTPK for short. In terms of certificates chain, - Signing domain 1) is similar to what TBBR advocates (see page 21 of the TBBR specification), except that the Non-Trusted World Public Key has been removed from the Trusted Key Certificate. - Signing domain 2) only contains the Non-Trusted World Content certificate, which provides the hash of the Non-Trusted World Bootloader. Compared to the TBBR CoT, there's no Non-Trusted World Key certificate for simplicity. Change-Id: I62f1e952522d84470acc360cf5ee63e4c4b0b4d9 Signed-off-by: Sandrine Bailleux <sandrine.bailleux@arm.com>
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- 18 Feb, 2020 2 commits
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Sandrine Bailleux authored
The TBBR implementation extracts hashes from certificates and stores them in static buffers. TF-A supports 3 variants of SHA right now: SHA-256, SHA-384 and SHA-512. When support for SHA-512 was added in commit 9a3088a5 ("tbbr: Add build flag HASH_ALG to let the user to select the SHA"), the hash buffers got unconditionally increased from 51 to 83 bytes each. We can reduce that space if we're using SHA-256 or SHA-384. This saves some BSS space in both BL1 and BL2: - BL1 with SHA-256: saving 168 bytes. - BL1 with SHA-384: saving 80 bytes. - BL2 with SHA-256: saving 384 bytes. - BL2 with SHA-384: saving 192 bytes. Change-Id: I0d02e5dc5f0162e82339c768609c9766cfe7e2bd Signed-off-by: Sandrine Bailleux <sandrine.bailleux@arm.com>
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Sandrine Bailleux authored
The TBBR implementation extracts public keys from certificates and stores them in static buffers. DER-encoded ECDSA keys are only 91 bytes each but were each allocated 294 bytes instead. Reducing the size of these buffers saves 609 bytes of BSS in BL2 (294 - 91 = 203 bytes for each of the 3 key buffers in use). Also add a comment claryfing that key buffers are tailored on RSA key sizes when both ECDSA and RSA keys are used. Change-Id: Iad332856e7af1f9814418d012fba3e1e9399f72a Signed-off-by: Sandrine Bailleux <sandrine.bailleux@arm.com>
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- 12 Sep, 2019 1 commit
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Justin Chadwell authored
Previously, TF-A could not support large RSA key sizes as the configuration options passed to MBEDTLS prevented storing and performing calculations with the larger, higher-precision numbers required. With these changes to the arguments passed to MBEDTLS, TF-A now supports using 3072 (3K) and 4096 (4K) keys in certificates. Change-Id: Ib73a6773145d2faa25c28d04f9a42e86f2fd555f Signed-off-by: Justin Chadwell <justin.chadwell@arm.com>
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- 08 Apr, 2019 2 commits
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Joel Hutton authored
This changes the auth_img_desc_t struct to have pointers to struct arrays instead of struct arrays. This saves memory as many of these were never used, and can be NULL pointers. Note the memory savings are only when these arrays are not initialised, as it is assumed these arrays are fixed length. A possible future optimisation could allow for variable length. memory diff: bl1: bl2: text text -12 -12 bss bss -1463 0 data data -56 -48 rodata rodata -5688 -2592 total total -7419 -2652 Change-Id: I8f9bdedf75048b8867f40c56381e3a6dc6402bcc Signed-off-by: Joel Hutton <Joel.Hutton@Arm.com>
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Joel Hutton authored
When Trusted Board Boot is enabled, we need to specify the Chain of Trust (CoT) of the BL1 and BL2 images. A CoT consists of an array of image descriptors. The authentication module assumes that each image descriptor in this array is indexed by its unique image identifier. For example, the Trusted Boot Firmware Certificate has to be at index [TRUSTED_BOOT_FW_CERT_ID]. Unique image identifiers may not necessarily be consecutive. Also, a given BL image might not use all image descriptors. For example, BL1 does not need any of the descriptors related to BL31. As a result, the CoT array might contain holes, which unnecessarily takes up space in the BL binary. Using pointers to auth_img_desc_t structs (rather than structs themselves) means these unused elements only use 1 pointer worth of space, rather than one struct worth of space. This patch also changes the code which accesses this array to reflect the change to pointers. Image descriptors not needed in BL1 or BL2 respectively are also ifdef'd out in this patch. For example, verifying the BL31 image is the responsibility of BL2 so BL1 does not need any of the data structures describing BL31. memory diff: bl1: bl2: text text -20 -20 bss bss -1463 0 data data -256 -48 rodata rodata -5240 -1952 total total -6979 -2020 Change-Id: I163668b174dc2b9bbb183acec817f2126864aaad Signed-off-by: Joel Hutton <Joel.Hutton@Arm.com>
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- 04 Jan, 2019 1 commit
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Antonio Nino Diaz authored
Enforce full include path for includes. Deprecate old paths. The following folders inside include/lib have been left unchanged: - include/lib/cpus/${ARCH} - include/lib/el3_runtime/${ARCH} The reason for this change is that having a global namespace for includes isn't a good idea. It defeats one of the advantages of having folders and it introduces problems that are sometimes subtle (because you may not know the header you are actually including if there are two of them). For example, this patch had to be created because two headers were called the same way: e0ea0928 ("Fix gpio includes of mt8173 platform to avoid collision."). More recently, this patch has had similar problems: 46f9b2c3 ("drivers: add tzc380 support"). This problem was introduced in commit 4ecca339 ("Move include and source files to logical locations"). At that time, there weren't too many headers so it wasn't a real issue. However, time has shown that this creates problems. Platforms that want to preserve the way they include headers may add the removed paths to PLAT_INCLUDES, but this is discouraged. Change-Id: I39dc53ed98f9e297a5966e723d1936d6ccf2fc8f Signed-off-by: Antonio Nino Diaz <antonio.ninodiaz@arm.com>
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- 18 May, 2018 1 commit
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Soby Mathew authored
This patch implements support for adding dynamic configurations for BL31 (soc_fw_config), BL32 (tos_fw_config) and BL33 (nt_fw_config). The necessary cert tool support and changes to default chain of trust are made for these configs. Change-Id: I25f266277b5b5501a196d2f2f79639d838794518 Signed-off-by: Soby Mathew <soby.mathew@arm.com>
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- 26 Feb, 2018 1 commit
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Soby Mathew authored
This patch adds image IDs to `hw_config` and `tb_fw_config` and includes them in the default Chain Of Trust (CoT). Change-Id: If7bb3e9be8a5e48be76614b35bf43d58fc7fed12 Signed-off-by: Soby Mathew <soby.mathew@arm.com>
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- 21 Nov, 2017 1 commit
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Qixiang Xu authored
The flag support the following values: - sha256 (default) - sha384 - sha512 Change-Id: I7a49d858c361e993949cf6ada0a86575c3291066 Signed-off-by: Qixiang Xu <qixiang.xu@arm.com>
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- 09 Aug, 2017 1 commit
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Summer Qin authored
Since Trusted OS firmware may have extra images, need to assign new uuid and image id for them. The TBBR chain of trust has been extended to add support for the new images within the existing Trusted OS firmware content certificate. Change-Id: I678dac7ba1137e85c5779b05e0c4331134c10e06 Signed-off-by: Summer Qin <summer.qin@arm.com>
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- 12 Jul, 2017 1 commit
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Isla Mitchell authored
This fix modifies the order of system includes to meet the ARM TF coding standard. There are some exceptions in order to retain header groupings, minimise changes to imported headers, and where there are headers within the #if and #ifndef statements. Change-Id: I65085a142ba6a83792b26efb47df1329153f1624 Signed-off-by: Isla Mitchell <isla.mitchell@arm.com>
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- 23 May, 2017 1 commit
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Masahiro Yamada authored
Platforms aligned with TBBR are supposed to use their own OIDs, but defining the same macros with different OIDs does not provide any value (at least technically). For easier use of TBBR, this commit allows platforms to reuse the OIDs obtained by ARM Ltd. This will be useful for non-ARM vendors that do not need their own extension fields in their certificate files. The OIDs of ARM Ltd. have been moved to include/tools_share/tbbr_oid.h Platforms can include <tbbr_oid.h> instead of <platform_oid.h> by defining USE_TBBR_DEFS as 1. USE_TBBR_DEFS is 0 by default to keep the backward compatibility. For clarification, I inserted a blank line between headers from the include/ directory (#include <...>) and ones from a local directory (#include "..." ). Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <yamada.masahiro@socionext.com>
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- 03 May, 2017 1 commit
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dp-arm authored
To make software license auditing simpler, use SPDX[0] license identifiers instead of duplicating the license text in every file. NOTE: Files that have been imported by FreeBSD have not been modified. [0]: https://spdx.org/ Change-Id: I80a00e1f641b8cc075ca5a95b10607ed9ed8761a Signed-off-by: dp-arm <dimitris.papastamos@arm.com>
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- 31 Mar, 2016 1 commit
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Juan Castillo authored
This patch adds support for non-volatile counter authentication to the Authentication Module. This method consists of matching the counter values provided in the certificates with the ones stored in the platform. If the value from the certificate is lower than the platform, the boot process is aborted. This mechanism protects the system against rollback. The TBBR CoT has been updated to include this method as part of the authentication process. Two counters are used: one for the trusted world images and another for the non trusted world images. ** NEW PLATFORM APIs (mandatory when TBB is enabled) ** int plat_get_nv_ctr(void *cookie, unsigned int *nv_ctr); This API returns the non-volatile counter value stored in the platform. The cookie in the first argument may be used to select the counter in case the platform provides more than one (i.e. TBSA compliant platforms must provide trusted and non-trusted counters). This cookie is specified in the CoT. int plat_set_nv_ctr(void *cookie, unsigned int nv_ctr); This API sets a new counter value. The cookie may be used to select the counter to be updated. An implementation of these new APIs for ARM platforms is also provided. The values are obtained from the Trusted Non-Volatile Counters peripheral. The cookie is used to pass the extension OID. This OID may be interpreted by the platform to know which counter must return. On Juno, The trusted and non-trusted counter values have been tied to 31 and 223, respectively, and cannot be modified. ** IMPORTANT ** THIS PATCH BREAKS THE BUILD WHEN TRUSTED_BOARD_BOOT IS ENABLED. THE NEW PLATFORM APIs INTRODUCED IN THIS PATCH MUST BE IMPLEMENTED IN ORDER TO SUCCESSFULLY BUILD TF. Change-Id: Ic943b76b25f2a37f490eaaab6d87b4a8b3cbc89a
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- 14 Dec, 2015 2 commits
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Juan Castillo authored
This patch replaces all references to the SCP Firmware (BL0, BL30, BL3-0, bl30) with the image terminology detailed in the TF wiki (https://github.com/ARM-software/arm-trusted-firmware/wiki): BL0 --> SCP_BL1 BL30, BL3-0 --> SCP_BL2 bl30 --> scp_bl2 This change affects code, documentation, build system, tools and platform ports that load SCP firmware. ARM plaforms have been updated to the new porting API. IMPORTANT: build option to specify the SCP FW image has changed: BL30 --> SCP_BL2 IMPORTANT: This patch breaks compatibility for platforms that use BL2 to load SCP firmware. Affected platforms must be updated as follows: BL30_IMAGE_ID --> SCP_BL2_IMAGE_ID BL30_BASE --> SCP_BL2_BASE bl2_plat_get_bl30_meminfo() --> bl2_plat_get_scp_bl2_meminfo() bl2_plat_handle_bl30() --> bl2_plat_handle_scp_bl2() Change-Id: I24c4c1a4f0e4b9f17c9e4929da815c4069549e58
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Juan Castillo authored
This patch applies the TBBR naming convention to the certificates and the corresponding extensions defined by the CoT: * Certificate UUID names * Certificate identifier names * OID names Changes apply to: * Generic code (variables and defines) * The default certificate identifiers provided in the generic code * Build system * ARM platforms port * cert_create tool internal definitions * fip_create and cert_create tools command line options * Documentation IMPORTANT: this change breaks the compatibility with platforms that use TBBR. The platform will need to adapt the identifiers and OIDs to the TBBR naming convention introduced by this patch: Certificate UUIDs: UUID_TRUSTED_BOOT_FIRMWARE_BL2_CERT --> UUID_TRUSTED_BOOT_FW_CERT UUID_SCP_FIRMWARE_BL30_KEY_CERT --> UUID_SCP_FW_KEY_CERT UUID_SCP_FIRMWARE_BL30_CERT --> UUID_SCP_FW_CONTENT_CERT UUID_EL3_RUNTIME_FIRMWARE_BL31_KEY_CERT --> UUID_SOC_FW_KEY_CERT UUID_EL3_RUNTIME_FIRMWARE_BL31_CERT --> UUID_SOC_FW_CONTENT_CERT UUID_SECURE_PAYLOAD_BL32_KEY_CERT --> UUID_TRUSTED_OS_FW_KEY_CERT UUID_SECURE_PAYLOAD_BL32_CERT --> UUID_TRUSTED_OS_FW_CONTENT_CERT UUID_NON_TRUSTED_FIRMWARE_BL33_KEY_CERT --> UUID_NON_TRUSTED_FW_KEY_CERT UUID_NON_TRUSTED_FIRMWARE_BL33_CERT --> UUID_NON_TRUSTED_FW_CONTENT_CERT Certificate identifiers: BL2_CERT_ID --> TRUSTED_BOOT_FW_CERT_ID BL30_KEY_CERT_ID --> SCP_FW_KEY_CERT_ID BL30_CERT_ID --> SCP_FW_CONTENT_CERT_ID BL31_KEY_CERT_ID --> SOC_FW_KEY_CERT_ID BL31_CERT_ID --> SOC_FW_CONTENT_CERT_ID BL32_KEY_CERT_ID --> TRUSTED_OS_FW_KEY_CERT_ID BL32_CERT_ID --> TRUSTED_OS_FW_CONTENT_CERT_ID BL33_KEY_CERT_ID --> NON_TRUSTED_FW_KEY_CERT_ID BL33_CERT_ID --> NON_TRUSTED_FW_CONTENT_CERT_ID OIDs: TZ_FW_NVCOUNTER_OID --> TRUSTED_FW_NVCOUNTER_OID NTZ_FW_NVCOUNTER_OID --> NON_TRUSTED_FW_NVCOUNTER_OID BL2_HASH_OID --> TRUSTED_BOOT_FW_HASH_OID TZ_WORLD_PK_OID --> TRUSTED_WORLD_PK_OID NTZ_WORLD_PK_OID --> NON_TRUSTED_WORLD_PK_OID BL30_CONTENT_CERT_PK_OID --> SCP_FW_CONTENT_CERT_PK_OID BL30_HASH_OID --> SCP_FW_HASH_OID BL31_CONTENT_CERT_PK_OID --> SOC_FW_CONTENT_CERT_PK_OID BL31_HASH_OID --> SOC_AP_FW_HASH_OID BL32_CONTENT_CERT_PK_OID --> TRUSTED_OS_FW_CONTENT_CERT_PK_OID BL32_HASH_OID --> TRUSTED_OS_FW_HASH_OID BL33_CONTENT_CERT_PK_OID --> NON_TRUSTED_FW_CONTENT_CERT_PK_OID BL33_HASH_OID --> NON_TRUSTED_WORLD_BOOTLOADER_HASH_OID BL2U_HASH_OID --> AP_FWU_CFG_HASH_OID SCP_BL2U_HASH_OID --> SCP_FWU_CFG_HASH_OID NS_BL2U_HASH_OID --> FWU_HASH_OID Change-Id: I1e047ae046299ca913911c39ac3a6e123bd41079
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- 09 Dec, 2015 1 commit
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Yatharth Kochar authored
Firmware update(a.k.a FWU) feature is part of the TBB architecture. BL1 is responsible for carrying out the FWU process if platform specific code detects that it is needed. This patch adds support for FWU feature support in BL1 which is included by enabling `TRUSTED_BOARD_BOOT` compile time flag. This patch adds bl1_fwu.c which contains all the core operations of FWU, which are; SMC handler, image copy, authentication, execution and resumption. It also adds bl1.h introducing #defines for all BL1 SMCs. Following platform porting functions are introduced: int bl1_plat_mem_check(uintptr_t mem_base, unsigned int mem_size, unsigned int flags); This function can be used to add platform specific memory checks for the provided base/size for the given security state. The weak definition will invoke `assert()` and return -ENOMEM. __dead2 void bl1_plat_fwu_done(void *cookie, void *reserved); This function can be used to initiate platform specific procedure to mark completion of the FWU process. The weak definition waits forever calling `wfi()`. plat_bl1_common.c contains weak definitions for above functions. FWU process starts when platform detects it and return the image_id other than BL2_IMAGE_ID by using `bl1_plat_get_next_image_id()` in `bl1_main()`. NOTE: User MUST provide platform specific real definition for bl1_plat_mem_check() in order to use it for Firmware update. Change-Id: Ice189a0885d9722d9e1dd03f76cac1aceb0e25ed
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- 25 Jun, 2015 1 commit
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Juan Castillo authored
This patch adds a CoT based on the Trusted Board Boot Requirements document*. The CoT consists of an array of authentication image descriptors indexed by the image identifiers. A new header file with TBBR image identifiers has been added. Platforms that use the TBBR (i.e. ARM platforms) may reuse these definitions as part of their platform porting. PLATFORM PORT - IMPORTANT: Default image IDs have been removed from the platform common definitions file (common_def.h). As a consequence, platforms that used those common definitons must now either include the IDs provided by the TBBR header file or define their own IDs. *The NVCounter authentication method has not been implemented yet. Change-Id: I7c4d591863ef53bb0cd4ce6c52a60b06fa0102d5
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