[PATCH v6 1/9] dt-bindings: ibm, secureboot: secure boot specific properties for PowerNV

Rob Herring robh at kernel.org
Tue Oct 1 23:33:30 AEST 2019


On Fri, Sep 27, 2019 at 10:25:52AM -0400, Nayna Jain wrote:
> PowerNV represents both the firmware and Host OS secureboot state of the
> system via device tree. This patch adds the documentation to give
> the definition of the nodes and the properties.
> 
> Signed-off-by: Nayna Jain <nayna at linux.ibm.com>
> ---
>  .../bindings/powerpc/ibm,secureboot.rst       | 76 ++++++++++++++++
>  .../devicetree/bindings/powerpc/secvar.rst    | 89 +++++++++++++++++++
>  2 files changed, 165 insertions(+)
>  create mode 100644 Documentation/devicetree/bindings/powerpc/ibm,secureboot.rst
>  create mode 100644 Documentation/devicetree/bindings/powerpc/secvar.rst
> 
> diff --git a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/powerpc/ibm,secureboot.rst b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/powerpc/ibm,secureboot.rst
> new file mode 100644
> index 000000000000..03d32099d2eb
> --- /dev/null
> +++ b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/powerpc/ibm,secureboot.rst
> @@ -0,0 +1,76 @@
> +# SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0

Not the right form for reST files.

> +*** NOTE ***
> +This document is copied from OPAL firmware
> +(skiboot/doc/device-tree/ibm,secureboot.rst)

Why copy into the kernel?

Plus, the bindings are in the process of being converted to schema. What 
would I do with these files?

> +************
> +.. _device-tree/ibm,secureboot:
> +
> +ibm,secureboot
> +==============
> +
> +The ``ìbm,secureboot`` node provides secure boot and trusted boot information
> +up to the target OS. Further information can be found in :ref:`stb-overview`.
> +
> +Required properties
> +-------------------
> +
> +.. code-block:: none
> +
> +    compatible:         Either one of the following values:
> +
> +                        ibm,secureboot-v1  :  The container-verification-code
> +                                              is stored in a secure ROM memory.
> +
> +                        ibm,secureboot-v2  :  The container-verification-code
> +                                              is stored in a reserved memory.
> +                                              It described by the ibm,cvc child
> +                                              node.
> +
> +                        ibm,secureboot-v3  :  The container-verification-code
> +                                              is stored in a reserved memory.
> +                                              It described by the ibm,cvc child
> +                                              node. Secure variables are
> +                                              supported. `secvar` node should
> +                                              be created.
> +
> +    secure-enabled:     this property exists when the firmware stack is booting
> +                        in secure mode (hardware secure boot jumper asserted).
> +
> +    trusted-enabled:    this property exists when the firmware stack is booting
> +                        in trusted mode.
> +
> +    hw-key-hash:        hash of the three hardware public keys trusted by the
> +                        platformw owner. This is used to verify if a firmware
> +                        code is signed with trusted keys.
> +
> +    hw-key-hash-size:   hw-key-hash size
> +
> +    secvar:             this node is created if the platform supports secure
> +                        variables. Contains information about the current
> +                        secvar status, see 'secvar.rst'.
> +
> +Obsolete properties
> +-------------------
> +
> +.. code-block:: none
> +
> +    hash-algo:          Superseded by the hw-key-hash-size property in
> +                        'ibm,secureboot-v2'.
> +
> +Example
> +-------
> +
> +.. code-block:: dts
> +
> +    ibm,secureboot {
> +        compatible = "ibm,secureboot-v2";
> +        secure-enabled;
> +        trusted-enabled;
> +        hw-key-hash-size = <0x40>;
> +        hw-key-hash = <0x40d487ff 0x7380ed6a 0xd54775d5 0x795fea0d 0xe2f541fe
> +                       0xa9db06b8 0x466a42a3 0x20e65f75 0xb4866546 0x0017d907
> +                       0x515dc2a5 0xf9fc5095 0x4d6ee0c9 0xb67d219d 0xfb708535
> +                       0x1d01d6d1>;
> +        phandle = <0x100000fd>;
> +        linux,phandle = <0x100000fd>;
> +    };
> diff --git a/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/powerpc/secvar.rst b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/powerpc/secvar.rst
> new file mode 100644
> index 000000000000..47793ab9c2a7
> --- /dev/null
> +++ b/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/powerpc/secvar.rst
> @@ -0,0 +1,89 @@
> +# SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0
> +*** NOTE ***
> +This document is copied from OPAL firmware
> +(skiboot/doc/device-tree/secvar.rst)
> +************
> +.. _device-tree/ibm,secureboot/secvar:
> +
> +secvar
> +======
> +
> +The ``secvar`` node provides secure variable information for the secure
> +boot of the target OS.
> +
> +Required properties
> +-------------------
> +
> +.. code-block:: none
> +
> +    compatible:         this property is set based on the current secure
> +                        variable scheme as set by the platform.
> +
> +    status:             set to "fail" if the secure variables could not
> +                        be initialized, validated, or some other
> +                        catastrophic failure.
> +
> +    update-status:      contains the return code of the update queue
> +                        process run during initialization. Signifies if
> +                        updates were processed or not, and if there was
> +                        an error. See table below
> +
> +    secure-mode:        a u64 bitfield set by the backend to determine
> +                        what secure mode we should be in, and if host
> +                        secure boot should be enforced.
> +
> +Example
> +-------
> +
> +.. code-block:: dts
> +
> +    secvar {
> +        compatible = "ibm,edk2-compat-v1";
> +        status = "okay";
> +        secure-mode = "1";
> +    };
> +
> +Update Status
> +-------------
> +
> +The update status property should be set by the backend driver to a value
> +that best fits its error condtion. The following table defines the
> +general intent of each error code, check backend specific documentation
> +for more detail.
> +
> ++-----------------+-----------------------------------------------+
> +| update-status   | Generic Reason                                |
> ++-----------------|-----------------------------------------------+
> +| OPAL_SUCCESS    | Updates were found and processed successfully |
> ++-----------------|-----------------------------------------------+
> +| OPAL_EMPTY      | No updates were found, none processed         |
> ++-----------------|-----------------------------------------------+
> +| OPAL_PARAMETER  | Unable to parse data in the update section    |
> ++-----------------|-----------------------------------------------+
> +| OPAL_PERMISSION | Update failed to apply, possible auth failure |
> ++-----------------|-----------------------------------------------+
> +| OPAL_HARDWARE   | Misc. storage-related error                   |
> ++-----------------|-----------------------------------------------+
> +| OPAL_RESOURCE   | Out of space (somewhere)                      |
> ++-----------------|-----------------------------------------------+
> +| OPAL_NO_MEM     | Out of memory                                 |
> ++-----------------+-----------------------------------------------+
> +
> +Secure Mode
> +-----------
> +
> ++-----------------------+------------------------+
> +| backend specific-bits |      generic mode bits |
> ++-----------------------+------------------------+
> +64                     32                        0
> +
> +The secure mode property should be set by the backend driver. The least
> +significant 32 bits are reserved for generic modes, shared across all
> +possible backends. The other 32 bits are open for backends to determine
> +their own modes. Any kernel must be made aware of any custom modes.
> +
> +At the moment, only one general-purpose bit is defined:
> +
> +``#define SECVAR_SECURE_MODE_ENFORCING  0x1``
> +
> +which signals that a kernel should enforce host secure boot.
> -- 
> 2.20.1
> 


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