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1 | The trusted boot framework on Marvell Armada 38x |
2 | ================================================ | |
3 | ||
4 | Contents: | |
5 | ||
6 | 1. Overview of the trusted boot | |
7 | 2. Terminology | |
8 | 3. Boot image layout | |
9 | 4. The secured header | |
10 | 5. The secured boot flow | |
11 | 6. Usage example | |
12 | 7. Work to be done | |
13 | 8. Bibliography | |
14 | ||
15 | 1. Overview of the trusted boot | |
16 | ------------------------------- | |
17 | ||
18 | The Armada's trusted boot framework enables the SoC to cryptographically verify | |
19 | a specially prepared boot image. This can be used to establish a chain of trust | |
20 | from the boot firmware all the way to the OS. | |
21 | ||
22 | To achieve this, the Armada SoC requires a specially prepared boot image, which | |
23 | contains the relevant cryptographic data, as well as other information | |
24 | pertaining to the boot process. Furthermore, a eFuse structure (a | |
25 | one-time-writeable memory) need to be configured in the correct way. | |
26 | ||
27 | Roughly, the secure boot process works as follows: | |
28 | ||
29 | * Load the header block of the boot image, extract a special "root" public RSA | |
30 | key from it, and verify its SHA-256 hash against a SHA-256 stored in a eFuse | |
31 | field. | |
32 | * Load an array of code signing public RSA keys from the header block, and | |
33 | verify its RSA signature (contained in the header block as well) using the | |
34 | "root" RSA key. | |
35 | * Choose a code signing key, and use it to verify the header block (excluding | |
36 | the key array). | |
37 | * Verify the binary image's signature (contained in the header block) using the | |
38 | code signing key. | |
39 | * If all checks pass successfully, boot the image. | |
40 | ||
41 | The chain of trust is thus as follows: | |
42 | ||
43 | * The SHA-256 value in the eFuse field verifies the "root" public key. | |
44 | * The "root" public key verifies the code signing key array. | |
45 | * The selected code signing key verifies the header block and the binary image. | |
46 | ||
47 | In the special case of building a boot image containing U-Boot as the binary | |
48 | image, which employs this trusted boot framework, the following tasks need to | |
49 | be addressed: | |
50 | ||
51 | 1. Creation of the needed cryptographic key material. | |
52 | 2. Creation of a conforming boot image containing the U-Boot image as binary | |
53 | image. | |
54 | 3. Burning the necessary eFuse values. | |
55 | ||
56 | (1) will be addressed later, (2) will be taken care of by U-Boot's build | |
57 | system (some user configuration is required, though), and for (3) the necessary | |
58 | data (essentially a series of U-Boot commands to be entered at the U-Boot | |
59 | command prompt) will be created by the build system as well. | |
60 | ||
61 | The documentation of the trusted boot mode is contained in part 1, chapter | |
62 | 7.2.5 in the functional specification [1], and in application note [2]. | |
63 | ||
64 | 2. Terminology | |
65 | -------------- | |
66 | ||
67 | CSK - Code Signing Key(s): An array of RSA key pairs, which | |
68 | are used to sign and verify the secured header and the | |
69 | boot loader image. | |
70 | KAK - Key Authentication Key: A RSA key pair, which is used | |
71 | to sign and verify the array of CSKs. | |
72 | Header block - The first part of the boot image, which contains the | |
73 | image's headers (also known as "headers block", "boot | |
74 | header", and "image header") | |
75 | eFuse - A one-time-writeable memory. | |
76 | BootROM - The Armada's built-in boot firmware, which is | |
77 | responsible for verifying and starting secure images. | |
78 | Boot image - The complete image the SoC's boot firmware loads | |
79 | (contains the header block and the binary image) | |
80 | Main header - The header in the header block containing information | |
81 | and data pertaining to the boot process (used for both | |
82 | the regular and secured boot processes) | |
83 | Binary image - The binary code payload of the boot image; in this | |
84 | case the U-Boot's code (also known as "source image", | |
85 | or just "image") | |
86 | Secured header - The specialized header in the header block that | |
87 | contains information and data pertaining to the | |
88 | trusted boot (also known as "security header") | |
89 | Secured boot mode - A special boot mode of the Armada SoC in which secured | |
90 | images are verified (non-secure images won't boot); | |
91 | the mode is activated by setting a eFuse field. | |
92 | Trusted debug mode - A special mode for the trusted boot that allows | |
93 | debugging of devices employing the trusted boot | |
94 | framework in a secure manner (untested in the current | |
95 | implementation). | |
96 | Trusted boot framework - The ARMADA SoC's implementation of a secure verified | |
97 | boot process. | |
98 | ||
99 | 3. Boot image layout | |
100 | -------------------- | |
101 | ||
102 | +-- Boot image --------------------------------------------+ | |
103 | | | | |
104 | | +-- Header block --------------------------------------+ | | |
105 | | | Main header | | | |
106 | | +------------------------------------------------------+ | | |
107 | | | Secured header | | | |
108 | | +------------------------------------------------------+ | | |
109 | | | BIN header(s) | | | |
110 | | +------------------------------------------------------+ | | |
111 | | | REG header(s) | | | |
112 | | +------------------------------------------------------+ | | |
113 | | | Padding | | | |
114 | | +------------------------------------------------------+ | | |
115 | | | | |
116 | | +------------------------------------------------------+ | | |
117 | | | Binary image + checksum | | | |
118 | | +------------------------------------------------------+ | | |
119 | +----------------------------------------------------------+ | |
120 | ||
121 | 4. The secured header | |
122 | --------------------- | |
123 | ||
124 | For the trusted boot framework, a additional header is added to the boot image. | |
125 | The following data are relevant for the secure boot: | |
126 | ||
127 | KAK: The KAK is contained in the secured header in the form | |
128 | of a RSA-2048 public key in DER format with a length of | |
129 | 524 bytes. | |
130 | Header block signature: The RSA signature of the header block (excluding the | |
131 | CSK array), created using the selected CSK. | |
132 | Binary image signature: The RSA signature of the binary image, created using | |
133 | the selected CSK. | |
134 | CSK array: The array of the 16 CSKs as RSA-2048 public keys in DER | |
135 | format with a length of 8384 = 16 * 524 bytes. | |
136 | CSK block signature: The RSA signature of the CSK array, created using the | |
137 | KAK. | |
138 | ||
139 | NOTE: The JTAG delay, Box ID, and Flash ID header fields do play a role in the | |
140 | trusted boot process to enable and configure secure debugging, but they were | |
141 | not tested in the current implementation of the trusted boot in U-Boot. | |
142 | ||
143 | 5. The secured boot flow | |
144 | ------------------------ | |
145 | ||
146 | The steps in the boot flow that are relevant for the trusted boot framework | |
147 | proceed as follows: | |
148 | ||
149 | 1) Check if trusted boot is enabled, and perform regular boot if it is not. | |
150 | 2) Load the secured header, and verify its checksum. | |
151 | 3) Select the lowest valid CSK from CSK0 to CSK15. | |
152 | 4) Verify the SHA-256 hash of the KAK embedded in the secured header. | |
153 | 5) Verify the RSA signature of the CSK block from the secured header with the | |
154 | KAK. | |
155 | 6) Verify the header block signature (which excludes the CSK block) from the | |
156 | secured header with the selected CSK. | |
157 | 7) Load the binary image to the main memory and verify its checksum. | |
158 | 8) Verify the binary image's RSA signature from the secured header with the | |
159 | selected CSK. | |
160 | 9) Continue the boot process as in the case of the regular boot. | |
161 | ||
162 | NOTE: All RSA signatures are verified according to the PKCS #1 v2.1 standard | |
163 | described in [3]. | |
164 | ||
165 | NOTE: The Box ID and Flash ID are checked after step 6, and the trusted debug | |
166 | mode may be entered there, but since this mode is untested in the current | |
167 | implementation, it is not described further. | |
168 | ||
169 | 6. Usage example | |
170 | ---------------- | |
171 | ||
172 | ### Create key material | |
173 | ||
174 | To employ the trusted boot framework, cryptographic key material needs to be | |
175 | created. In the current implementation, two keys are needed to build a valid | |
176 | secured boot image: The KAK private key and a CSK private key (both have to be | |
177 | 2048 bit RSA keys in PEM format). Note that the usage of more than one CSK is | |
178 | currently not supported. | |
179 | ||
180 | NOTE: Since the public key can be generated from the private key, it is | |
181 | sufficient to store the private key for each key pair. | |
182 | ||
183 | OpenSSL can be used to generate the needed files kwb_kak.key and kwb_csk.key | |
184 | (the names of these files have to be configured, see the next section on | |
185 | kwbimage.cfg settings): | |
186 | ||
187 | openssl genrsa -out kwb_kak.key 2048 | |
188 | openssl genrsa -out kwb_csk.key 2048 | |
189 | ||
190 | The generated files have to be placed in the U-Boot root directory. | |
191 | ||
192 | Alternatively, instead of copying the files, symlinks to the private keys can | |
193 | be placed in the U-Boot root directory. | |
194 | ||
195 | WARNING: Knowledge of the KAK or CSK private key would enable an attacker to | |
196 | generate secured boot images containing arbitrary code. Hence, the private keys | |
197 | should be carefully guarded. | |
198 | ||
199 | ### Create/Modifiy kwbimage.cfg | |
200 | ||
201 | The Kirkwook architecture in U-Boot employs a special board-specific | |
202 | configuration file (kwbimage.cfg), which controls various boot image settings | |
203 | that are interpreted by the BootROM, such as the boot medium. The support the | |
204 | trusted boot framework, several new options were added to faciliate | |
205 | configuration of the secured boot. | |
206 | ||
207 | The configuration file's layout has been retained, only the following new | |
208 | options were added: | |
209 | ||
210 | KAK - The name of the KAK RSA private key file in the U-Boot | |
211 | root directory, without the trailing extension of ".key". | |
212 | CSK - The name of the (active) CSK RSA private key file in the | |
213 | U-Boot root directory, without the trailing extension of | |
214 | ".key". | |
215 | BOX_ID - The BoxID to be used for trusted debugging (a integer | |
216 | value). | |
217 | FLASH_ID - The FlashID to be used for trusted debugging (a integer | |
218 | value). | |
219 | JTAG_DELAY - The JTAG delay to be used for trusted debugging (a | |
220 | integer value). | |
221 | CSK_INDEX - The index of the active CSK (a integer value). | |
222 | SEC_SPECIALIZED_IMG - Flag to indicate whether to include the BoxID and FlashID | |
223 | in the image (that is, whether to use the trusted debug | |
224 | mode or not); no parameters. | |
225 | SEC_BOOT_DEV - The boot device from which the trusted boot is allowed to | |
226 | proceed, identified via a numeric ID. The tested values | |
227 | are 0x34 = NOR flash, 0x31 = SDIO/MMC card; for | |
228 | additional ID values, consult the documentation in [1]. | |
229 | SEC_FUSE_DUMP - Dump the "fuse prog" commands necessary for writing the | |
230 | correct eFuse values to a text file in the U-Boot root | |
231 | directory. The parameter is the architecture for which to | |
232 | dump the commands (currently only "a38x" is supported). | |
233 | ||
234 | The parameter values may be hardcoded into the file, but it is also possible to | |
235 | employ a dynamic approach of creating a Autoconf-like kwbimage.cfg.in, then | |
236 | reading configuration values from Kconfig options or from the board config | |
237 | file, and generating the actual kwbimage.cfg from this template using Makefile | |
238 | mechanisms (see board/gdsys/a38x/Makefile as an example for this approach). | |
239 | ||
240 | ### Set config options | |
241 | ||
242 | To enable the generation of trusted boot images, the corresponding support | |
243 | needs to be activated, and a index for the active CSK needs to be selected as | |
244 | well. | |
245 | ||
246 | Furthermore, eFuse writing support has to be activated in order to burn the | |
247 | eFuse structure's values (this option is just needed for programming the eFuse | |
248 | structure; production boot images may disable it). | |
249 | ||
250 | ARM architecture | |
251 | -> [*] Build image for trusted boot | |
252 | (0) Index of active CSK | |
253 | -> [*] Enable eFuse support | |
254 | [ ] Fake eFuse access (dry run) | |
255 | ||
256 | ### Build and test boot image | |
257 | ||
258 | The creation of the boot image is done via the usual invocation of make (with a | |
259 | suitably set CROSS_COMPILE environment variable, of course). The resulting boot | |
87ac4b4b | 260 | image u-boot-with-spl.kwb can then be tested, if so desired. The hdrparser from [5] |
a1b6b0a9 MS |
261 | can be used for this purpose. To build the tool, invoke make in the |
262 | 'tools/marvell/doimage_mv' directory of [5], which builds a stand-alone | |
263 | hdrparser executable. A test can be conducted by calling hdrparser with the | |
264 | produced boot image and the following (mandatory) parameters: | |
265 | ||
87ac4b4b | 266 | ./hdrparser -k 0 -t u-boot-with-spl.kwb |
a1b6b0a9 MS |
267 | |
268 | Here we assume that the CSK index is 0 and the boot image file resides in the | |
269 | same directory (adapt accordingly if needed). The tool should report that all | |
270 | checksums are valid ("GOOD"), that all signature verifications succeed | |
271 | ("PASSED"), and, finally, that the overall test was successful | |
272 | ("T E S T S U C C E E D E D" in the last line of output). | |
273 | ||
274 | ### Burn eFuse structure | |
275 | ||
276 | +----------------------------------------------------------+ | |
277 | | WARNING: Burning the eFuse structure is a irreversible | | |
278 | | operation! Should wrong or corrupted values be used, the | | |
279 | | board won't boot anymore, and recovery is likely | | |
280 | | impossible! | | |
281 | +----------------------------------------------------------+ | |
282 | ||
283 | After the build process has finished, and the SEC_FUSE_DUMP option was set in | |
284 | the kwbimage.cfg was set, a text file kwb_fuses_a38x.txt should be present in | |
285 | the U-Boot top-level directory. It contains all the necessary commands to set | |
286 | the eFuse structure to the values needed for the used KAK digest, as well as | |
287 | the CSK index, Flash ID and Box ID that were selected in kwbimage.cfg. | |
288 | ||
289 | Sequentially executing the commands in this file at the U-Boot command prompt | |
290 | will write these values to the eFuse structure. | |
291 | ||
292 | If the SEC_FUSE_DUMP option was not set, the commands needed to burn the fuses | |
293 | have to be crafted by hand. The needed fuse lines can be looked up in [1]; a | |
294 | rough overview of the process is: | |
295 | ||
296 | * Burn the KAK public key hash. The hash itself can be found in the file | |
297 | pub_kak_hash.txt in the U-Boot top-level directory; be careful to account for | |
298 | the endianness! | |
299 | * Burn the CSK selection, BoxID, and FlashID | |
300 | * Enable trusted boot by burning the corresponding fuse (WARNING: this must be | |
301 | the last fuse line written!) | |
302 | * Lock the unused fuse lines | |
303 | ||
304 | The command to employ is the "fuse prog" command previously enabled by setting | |
305 | the corresponding configuration option. | |
306 | ||
307 | For the trusted boot, the fuse prog command has a special syntax, since the | |
308 | ARMADA SoC demands that whole fuse lines (64 bit values) have to be written as | |
309 | a whole. The fuse prog command itself allows lists of 32 bit words to be | |
310 | written at a time, but this is translated to a series of single 32 bit write | |
311 | operations to the fuse line, where the individual 32 bit words are identified | |
312 | by a "word" counter that is increased for each write. | |
313 | ||
314 | To work around this restriction, we interpret each line to have three "words" | |
315 | (0-2): The first and second words are the values to be written to the fuse | |
316 | line, and the third is a lock flag, which is supposed to lock the fuse line | |
317 | when set to 1. Writes to the first and second words are memoized between | |
318 | function calls, and the fuse line is only really written and locked (on writing | |
319 | the third word) if both words were previously set, so that "incomplete" writes | |
320 | are prevented. An exception to this is a single write to the third word (index | |
321 | 2) without previously writing neither the first nor the second word, which | |
322 | locks the fuse line without setting any value; this is needed to lock the | |
323 | unused fuse lines. | |
324 | ||
325 | As an example, to write the value 0011223344556677 to fuse line 10, we would | |
326 | use the following command: | |
327 | ||
328 | fuse prog -y 10 0 00112233 44556677 1 | |
329 | ||
330 | Here 10 is the fuse line number, 0 is the index of the first word to be | |
331 | written, 00112233 and 44556677 are the values to be written to the fuse line | |
332 | (first and second word) and the trailing 1 is the value for the third word | |
333 | responsible for locking the line. | |
334 | ||
335 | A "lock-only" command would look like this: | |
336 | ||
337 | fuse prog -y 11 2 1 | |
338 | ||
339 | Here 11 is the fuse number, 2 is the index of the first word to be written | |
340 | (notice that we only write to word 2 here; the third word for fuse line | |
341 | locking), and the 1 is the value for the word we are writing to. | |
342 | ||
343 | WARNING: According to application note [4], the VHV pin of the SoC must be | |
344 | connected to a 1.8V source during eFuse programming, but *must* be disconnected | |
345 | for normal operation. The AN [4] describes a software-controlled circuit (based | |
346 | on a N-channel or P-channel FET and a free GPIO pin of the SoC) to achieve | |
347 | this, but a jumper-based circuit should suffice as well. Regardless of the | |
348 | chosen circuit, the issue needs to be addressed accordingly! | |
349 | ||
350 | 7. Work to be done | |
351 | ------------------ | |
352 | ||
353 | * Add the ability to populate more than one CSK | |
354 | * Test secure debug | |
355 | * Test on Armada XP | |
356 | ||
357 | 8. Bibliography | |
358 | --------------- | |
359 | ||
360 | [1] ARMADA(R) 38x Family High-Performance Single/Dual CPU System on Chip | |
361 | Functional Specification; MV-S109094-00, Rev. C; August 2, 2015, | |
362 | Preliminary | |
363 | [2] AN-383: ARMADA(R) 38x Families Secure Boot Mode Support; MV-S302501-00 | |
364 | Rev. A; March 11, 2015, Preliminary | |
365 | [3] Public-Key Cryptography Standards (PKCS) #1: RSA Cryptography | |
366 | Specifications Version 2.1; February 2003; | |
367 | https://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc3447.txt | |
368 | [4] AN-389: ARMADA(R) VHV Power; MV-S302545-00 Rev. B; January 28, 2016, | |
369 | Released | |
370 | [5] Marvell Armada 38x U-Boot support; November 25, 2015; | |
371 | https://github.com/MarvellEmbeddedProcessors/u-boot-marvell | |
372 | ||
373 | 2017-01-05, Mario Six <[email protected]> |