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authorJames Bottomley <James.Bottomley@HansenPartnership.com>2024-04-29 16:28:03 -0400
committerJarkko Sakkinen <jarkko@kernel.org>2024-05-09 22:30:51 +0300
commit699e3efd6c645c741ea4d6d58282c56b6d108cf7 (patch)
treed18c0bf357bbef9fc5adfc6bfd51cc3a4a4aa769 /drivers/char/tpm
parent033ee84e5f01c86997cde29947805e9781ddf233 (diff)
tpm: Add HMAC session start and end functions
Add session based HMAC authentication plus parameter decryption and response encryption using AES. The basic design is to segregate all the nasty crypto, hash and hmac code into tpm2-sessions.c and export a usable API. The API first of all starts off by gaining a session with tpm2_start_auth_session() which initiates a session with the TPM and allocates an opaque tpm2_auth structure to handle the session parameters. The design is that session use will be single threaded from start to finish under the ops lock, so the tpm2_auth structure is stored in struct tpm2_chip to simpify the externally visible API. The session can be ended with tpm2_end_auth_session() which is designed only to be used in error legs. Ordinarily the further session API (future patches) will end or continue the session appropriately without having to call this. Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <James.Bottomley@HansenPartnership.com> Reviewed-by: Ard Biesheuvel <ard.biesheuvel@linaro.org> # crypto API parts Reviewed-by: Jarkko Sakkinen <jarkko@kernel.org> Tested-by: Jarkko Sakkinen <jarkko@kernel.org> Signed-off-by: Jarkko Sakkinen <jarkko@kernel.org>
Diffstat (limited to 'drivers/char/tpm')
-rw-r--r--drivers/char/tpm/Kconfig2
-rw-r--r--drivers/char/tpm/tpm-buf.c1
-rw-r--r--drivers/char/tpm/tpm-chip.c3
-rw-r--r--drivers/char/tpm/tpm2-sessions.c285
4 files changed, 291 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/drivers/char/tpm/Kconfig b/drivers/char/tpm/Kconfig
index c3996786f9bf..e63a6a17793c 100644
--- a/drivers/char/tpm/Kconfig
+++ b/drivers/char/tpm/Kconfig
@@ -30,6 +30,8 @@ if TCG_TPM
config TCG_TPM2_HMAC
bool "Use HMAC and encrypted transactions on the TPM bus"
default y
+ select CRYPTO_ECDH
+ select CRYPTO_LIB_AESCFB
select CRYPTO_LIB_SHA256
help
Setting this causes us to deploy a scheme which uses request
diff --git a/drivers/char/tpm/tpm-buf.c b/drivers/char/tpm/tpm-buf.c
index 6e4595cc98bc..647c6ca92ac3 100644
--- a/drivers/char/tpm/tpm-buf.c
+++ b/drivers/char/tpm/tpm-buf.c
@@ -44,6 +44,7 @@ void tpm_buf_reset(struct tpm_buf *buf, u16 tag, u32 ordinal)
head->tag = cpu_to_be16(tag);
head->length = cpu_to_be32(sizeof(*head));
head->ordinal = cpu_to_be32(ordinal);
+ buf->handles = 0;
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(tpm_buf_reset);
diff --git a/drivers/char/tpm/tpm-chip.c b/drivers/char/tpm/tpm-chip.c
index 42b1062e33cd..d93937326b2e 100644
--- a/drivers/char/tpm/tpm-chip.c
+++ b/drivers/char/tpm/tpm-chip.c
@@ -275,6 +275,9 @@ static void tpm_dev_release(struct device *dev)
kfree(chip->work_space.context_buf);
kfree(chip->work_space.session_buf);
kfree(chip->allocated_banks);
+#ifdef CONFIG_TCG_TPM2_HMAC
+ kfree(chip->auth);
+#endif
kfree(chip);
}
diff --git a/drivers/char/tpm/tpm2-sessions.c b/drivers/char/tpm/tpm2-sessions.c
index fd121dea614c..1c8d50a501d7 100644
--- a/drivers/char/tpm/tpm2-sessions.c
+++ b/drivers/char/tpm/tpm2-sessions.c
@@ -3,14 +3,102 @@
/*
* Copyright (C) 2018 James.Bottomley@HansenPartnership.com
*
+ * Cryptographic helper routines for handling TPM2 sessions for
+ * authorization HMAC and request response encryption.
+ *
+ * The idea is to ensure that every TPM command is HMAC protected by a
+ * session, meaning in-flight tampering would be detected and in
+ * addition all sensitive inputs and responses should be encrypted.
+ *
+ * The basic way this works is to use a TPM feature called salted
+ * sessions where a random secret used in session construction is
+ * encrypted to the public part of a known TPM key. The problem is we
+ * have no known keys, so initially a primary Elliptic Curve key is
+ * derived from the NULL seed (we use EC because most TPMs generate
+ * these keys much faster than RSA ones). The curve used is NIST_P256
+ * because that's now mandated to be present in 'TCG TPM v2.0
+ * Provisioning Guidance'
+ *
+ * Threat problems: the initial TPM2_CreatePrimary is not (and cannot
+ * be) session protected, so a clever Man in the Middle could return a
+ * public key they control to this command and from there intercept
+ * and decode all subsequent session based transactions. The kernel
+ * cannot mitigate this threat but, after boot, userspace can get
+ * proof this has not happened by asking the TPM to certify the NULL
+ * key. This certification would chain back to the TPM Endorsement
+ * Certificate and prove the NULL seed primary had not been tampered
+ * with and thus all sessions must have been cryptographically secure.
+ * To assist with this, the initial NULL seed public key name is made
+ * available in a sysfs file.
+ *
+ * Use of these functions:
+ *
+ * The design is all the crypto, hash and hmac gunk is confined in this
+ * file and never needs to be seen even by the kernel internal user. To
+ * the user there's an init function tpm2_sessions_init() that needs to
+ * be called once per TPM which generates the NULL seed primary key.
+ *
+ * These are the usage functions:
+ *
+ * tpm2_start_auth_session() which allocates the opaque auth structure
+ * and gets a session from the TPM. This must be called before
+ * any of the following functions. The session is protected by a
+ * session_key which is derived from a random salt value
+ * encrypted to the NULL seed.
+ * tpm2_end_auth_session() kills the session and frees the resources.
+ * Under normal operation this function is done by
+ * tpm_buf_check_hmac_response(), so this is only to be used on
+ * error legs where the latter is not executed.
*/
#include "tpm.h"
+#include <linux/random.h>
+#include <linux/scatterlist.h>
#include <asm/unaligned.h>
+#include <crypto/kpp.h>
+#include <crypto/ecdh.h>
#include <crypto/hash.h>
#include <crypto/hmac.h>
/*
+ * This is the structure that carries all the auth information (like
+ * session handle, nonces, session key and auth) from use to use it is
+ * designed to be opaque to anything outside.
+ */
+struct tpm2_auth {
+ u32 handle;
+ /*
+ * This has two meanings: before tpm_buf_fill_hmac_session()
+ * it marks the offset in the buffer of the start of the
+ * sessions (i.e. after all the handles). Once the buffer has
+ * been filled it markes the session number of our auth
+ * session so we can find it again in the response buffer.
+ *
+ * The two cases are distinguished because the first offset
+ * must always be greater than TPM_HEADER_SIZE and the second
+ * must be less than or equal to 5.
+ */
+ u32 session;
+ /*
+ * the size here is variable and set by the size of our_nonce
+ * which must be between 16 and the name hash length. we set
+ * the maximum sha256 size for the greatest protection
+ */
+ u8 our_nonce[SHA256_DIGEST_SIZE];
+ u8 tpm_nonce[SHA256_DIGEST_SIZE];
+ /*
+ * the salt is only used across the session command/response
+ * after that it can be used as a scratch area
+ */
+ union {
+ u8 salt[EC_PT_SZ];
+ /* scratch for key + IV */
+ u8 scratch[AES_KEY_BYTES + AES_BLOCK_SIZE];
+ };
+ u8 session_key[SHA256_DIGEST_SIZE];
+};
+
+/*
* It turns out the crypto hmac(sha256) is hard for us to consume
* because it assumes a fixed key and the TPM seems to change the key
* on every operation, so we weld the hmac init and final functions in
@@ -113,6 +201,199 @@ static void tpm2_KDFe(u8 z[EC_PT_SZ], const char *str, u8 *pt_u, u8 *pt_v,
sha256_final(&sctx, out);
}
+static void tpm_buf_append_salt(struct tpm_buf *buf, struct tpm_chip *chip)
+{
+ struct crypto_kpp *kpp;
+ struct kpp_request *req;
+ struct scatterlist s[2], d[1];
+ struct ecdh p = {0};
+ u8 encoded_key[EC_PT_SZ], *x, *y;
+ unsigned int buf_len;
+
+ /* secret is two sized points */
+ tpm_buf_append_u16(buf, (EC_PT_SZ + 2)*2);
+ /*
+ * we cheat here and append uninitialized data to form
+ * the points. All we care about is getting the two
+ * co-ordinate pointers, which will be used to overwrite
+ * the uninitialized data
+ */
+ tpm_buf_append_u16(buf, EC_PT_SZ);
+ x = &buf->data[tpm_buf_length(buf)];
+ tpm_buf_append(buf, encoded_key, EC_PT_SZ);
+ tpm_buf_append_u16(buf, EC_PT_SZ);
+ y = &buf->data[tpm_buf_length(buf)];
+ tpm_buf_append(buf, encoded_key, EC_PT_SZ);
+ sg_init_table(s, 2);
+ sg_set_buf(&s[0], x, EC_PT_SZ);
+ sg_set_buf(&s[1], y, EC_PT_SZ);
+
+ kpp = crypto_alloc_kpp("ecdh-nist-p256", CRYPTO_ALG_INTERNAL, 0);
+ if (IS_ERR(kpp)) {
+ dev_err(&chip->dev, "crypto ecdh allocation failed\n");
+ return;
+ }
+
+ buf_len = crypto_ecdh_key_len(&p);
+ if (sizeof(encoded_key) < buf_len) {
+ dev_err(&chip->dev, "salt buffer too small needs %d\n",
+ buf_len);
+ goto out;
+ }
+ crypto_ecdh_encode_key(encoded_key, buf_len, &p);
+ /* this generates a random private key */
+ crypto_kpp_set_secret(kpp, encoded_key, buf_len);
+
+ /* salt is now the public point of this private key */
+ req = kpp_request_alloc(kpp, GFP_KERNEL);
+ if (!req)
+ goto out;
+ kpp_request_set_input(req, NULL, 0);
+ kpp_request_set_output(req, s, EC_PT_SZ*2);
+ crypto_kpp_generate_public_key(req);
+ /*
+ * we're not done: now we have to compute the shared secret
+ * which is our private key multiplied by the tpm_key public
+ * point, we actually only take the x point and discard the y
+ * point and feed it through KDFe to get the final secret salt
+ */
+ sg_set_buf(&s[0], chip->null_ec_key_x, EC_PT_SZ);
+ sg_set_buf(&s[1], chip->null_ec_key_y, EC_PT_SZ);
+ kpp_request_set_input(req, s, EC_PT_SZ*2);
+ sg_init_one(d, chip->auth->salt, EC_PT_SZ);
+ kpp_request_set_output(req, d, EC_PT_SZ);
+ crypto_kpp_compute_shared_secret(req);
+ kpp_request_free(req);
+
+ /*
+ * pass the shared secret through KDFe for salt. Note salt
+ * area is used both for input shared secret and output salt.
+ * This works because KDFe fully consumes the secret before it
+ * writes the salt
+ */
+ tpm2_KDFe(chip->auth->salt, "SECRET", x, chip->null_ec_key_x,
+ chip->auth->salt);
+
+ out:
+ crypto_free_kpp(kpp);
+}
+/**
+ * tpm2_end_auth_session() - kill the allocated auth session
+ * @chip: the TPM chip structure
+ *
+ * ends the session started by tpm2_start_auth_session and frees all
+ * the resources. Under normal conditions,
+ * tpm_buf_check_hmac_response() will correctly end the session if
+ * required, so this function is only for use in error legs that will
+ * bypass the normal invocation of tpm_buf_check_hmac_response().
+ */
+void tpm2_end_auth_session(struct tpm_chip *chip)
+{
+ tpm2_flush_context(chip, chip->auth->handle);
+ memzero_explicit(chip->auth, sizeof(*chip->auth));
+}
+EXPORT_SYMBOL(tpm2_end_auth_session);
+
+static int tpm2_parse_start_auth_session(struct tpm2_auth *auth,
+ struct tpm_buf *buf)
+{
+ struct tpm_header *head = (struct tpm_header *)buf->data;
+ u32 tot_len = be32_to_cpu(head->length);
+ off_t offset = TPM_HEADER_SIZE;
+ u32 val;
+
+ /* we're starting after the header so adjust the length */
+ tot_len -= TPM_HEADER_SIZE;
+
+ /* should have handle plus nonce */
+ if (tot_len != 4 + 2 + sizeof(auth->tpm_nonce))
+ return -EINVAL;
+
+ auth->handle = tpm_buf_read_u32(buf, &offset);
+ val = tpm_buf_read_u16(buf, &offset);
+ if (val != sizeof(auth->tpm_nonce))
+ return -EINVAL;
+ memcpy(auth->tpm_nonce, &buf->data[offset], sizeof(auth->tpm_nonce));
+ /* now compute the session key from the nonces */
+ tpm2_KDFa(auth->salt, sizeof(auth->salt), "ATH", auth->tpm_nonce,
+ auth->our_nonce, sizeof(auth->session_key),
+ auth->session_key);
+
+ return 0;
+}
+
+/**
+ * tpm2_start_auth_session() - create a HMAC authentication session with the TPM
+ * @chip: the TPM chip structure to create the session with
+ *
+ * This function loads the NULL seed from its saved context and starts
+ * an authentication session on the null seed, fills in the
+ * @chip->auth structure to contain all the session details necessary
+ * for performing the HMAC, encrypt and decrypt operations and
+ * returns. The NULL seed is flushed before this function returns.
+ *
+ * Return: zero on success or actual error encountered.
+ */
+int tpm2_start_auth_session(struct tpm_chip *chip)
+{
+ struct tpm_buf buf;
+ struct tpm2_auth *auth = chip->auth;
+ int rc;
+ /* null seed context has no offset, but we must provide one */
+ unsigned int offset = 0;
+ u32 nullkey;
+
+ rc = tpm2_load_context(chip, chip->null_key_context, &offset,
+ &nullkey);
+ if (rc)
+ goto out;
+
+ auth->session = TPM_HEADER_SIZE;
+
+ rc = tpm_buf_init(&buf, TPM2_ST_NO_SESSIONS, TPM2_CC_START_AUTH_SESS);
+ if (rc)
+ goto out;
+
+ /* salt key handle */
+ tpm_buf_append_u32(&buf, nullkey);
+ /* bind key handle */
+ tpm_buf_append_u32(&buf, TPM2_RH_NULL);
+ /* nonce caller */
+ get_random_bytes(auth->our_nonce, sizeof(auth->our_nonce));
+ tpm_buf_append_u16(&buf, sizeof(auth->our_nonce));
+ tpm_buf_append(&buf, auth->our_nonce, sizeof(auth->our_nonce));
+
+ /* append encrypted salt and squirrel away unencrypted in auth */
+ tpm_buf_append_salt(&buf, chip);
+ /* session type (HMAC, audit or policy) */
+ tpm_buf_append_u8(&buf, TPM2_SE_HMAC);
+
+ /* symmetric encryption parameters */
+ /* symmetric algorithm */
+ tpm_buf_append_u16(&buf, TPM_ALG_AES);
+ /* bits for symmetric algorithm */
+ tpm_buf_append_u16(&buf, AES_KEY_BITS);
+ /* symmetric algorithm mode (must be CFB) */
+ tpm_buf_append_u16(&buf, TPM_ALG_CFB);
+ /* hash algorithm for session */
+ tpm_buf_append_u16(&buf, TPM_ALG_SHA256);
+
+ rc = tpm_transmit_cmd(chip, &buf, 0, "start auth session");
+ tpm2_flush_context(chip, nullkey);
+
+ if (rc == TPM2_RC_SUCCESS)
+ rc = tpm2_parse_start_auth_session(auth, &buf);
+
+ tpm_buf_destroy(&buf);
+
+ if (rc)
+ goto out;
+
+ out:
+ return rc;
+}
+EXPORT_SYMBOL(tpm2_start_auth_session);
+
/**
* tpm2_parse_create_primary() - parse the data returned from TPM_CC_CREATE_PRIMARY
*
@@ -423,5 +704,9 @@ int tpm2_sessions_init(struct tpm_chip *chip)
if (rc)
dev_err(&chip->dev, "TPM: security failed (NULL seed derivation): %d\n", rc);
+ chip->auth = kmalloc(sizeof(*chip->auth), GFP_KERNEL);
+ if (!chip->auth)
+ return -ENOMEM;
+
return rc;
}