- 23 Oct, 2015 2 commits
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Juan Castillo authored
This patch introduces a new API that allows to specify command line options in the Chain of Trust description. These command line options may be used to specify parameters related to the CoT (i.e. keys or certificates), instead of keeping a hardcoded list of options in main.c. Change-Id: I282b0b01cb9add557b26bddc238a28253ce05e44
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Juan Castillo authored
The certificate generation tool currently checks if all command line options required to create all certificates in the CoT have been specified. This prevents using the tool to create individual certificates when the whole CoT is not required. This patch improves the checking function so only those options required by the certificates specified in the command line are verified. Change-Id: I2c426a8e2e2dec85b15f2d98fd4ba949c1aed385
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- 16 Jul, 2015 1 commit
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Juan Castillo authored
This patch reworks the certificate generation tool to follow a data driven approach. The user may specify at build time the certificates, keys and extensions defined in the CoT, register them using the appropiate macros and the tool will take care of creating the certificates corresponding to the CoT specified. Change-Id: I29950b39343c3e1b71718fce0e77dcf2a9a0be2f
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- 01 Jul, 2015 1 commit
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Juan Castillo authored
Some Linux distributions include an OpenSSL library which has been built without ECDSA support. Trying to build the certificate generation tool on those distributions will result in a build error. This patch fixes that issue by including ECDSA support only if OpenSSL has been built with ECDSA. In that case, the OpenSSL configuration file does not define the OPENSSL_NO_EC macro. The tool will build successfully, although the resulting binary will not support ECDSA keys. Change-Id: I4627d1abd19eef7ad3251997d8218599187eb902
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- 25 Jun, 2015 2 commits
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Juan Castillo authored
This patch extends the 'cert_create' tool to support ECDSA keys to sign the certificates. The '--key-alg' command line option can be used to specify the key algorithm when invoking the tool. Available options are: * 'rsa': create RSA-2048 keys (default option) * 'ecdsa': create ECDSA-SECP256R1 keys The TF Makefile has been updated to allow the platform to specify the key algorithm by declaring the 'KEY_ALG' variable in the platform makefile. The behaviour regarding key management has changed. After applying this patch, the tool will try first to open the keys from disk. If one key does not exist or no key is specified, and the command line option to create keys has been specified, new keys will be created. Otherwise an error will be generated and the tool will exit. This way, the user may specify certain keys while the tool will create the remaining ones. This feature is useful for testing purposes and CI infrastructures. The OpenSSL directory may be specified using the build option 'OPENSSL_DIR' when building the certificate generation tool. Default is '/usr'. Change-Id: I98bcc2bfab28dd7179f17f1177ea7a65698df4e7
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Juan Castillo authored
The cert_create tool calculates the hash of each BL image and includes it as an ASN.1 OCTET STRING in the corresponding certificate extension. Without additional information, the firmware running on the platform has to know in advance the algorithm used to generate the hash. This patch modifies the cert_create tool so the certificate extensions that include an image hash are generated according to the following ASN.1 structure: DigestInfo ::= SEQUENCE { digestAlgorithm AlgorithmIdentifier, digest OCTET STRING } AlgorithmIdentifier ::= SEQUENCE { algorithm OBJECT IDENTIFIER, parameters ANY DEFINED BY algorithm OPTIONAL } The PolarSSL module has been updated to extract the image hash from the certificate extension according to this structure. Change-Id: I6d83430f12a8a0eea8447bec7c936e903f644c85
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- 28 Jan, 2015 1 commit
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Juan Castillo authored
This patch adds a tool that generates all the necessary elements to establish the chain of trust (CoT) between the images. The tool reads the binary images and signing keys and outputs the corresponding certificates that will be used by the target at run time to verify the authenticity of the images. Note: the platform port must provide the file platform_oid.h. This file will define the OIDs of the x509 extensions that will be added to the certificates in order to establish the CoT. Change-Id: I2734d6808b964a2107ab3a4805110698066a04be
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