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Diffstat (limited to 'doc/uImage.FIT')
| -rw-r--r-- | doc/uImage.FIT/verified-boot.txt | 104 | 
1 files changed, 104 insertions, 0 deletions
| diff --git a/doc/uImage.FIT/verified-boot.txt b/doc/uImage.FIT/verified-boot.txt new file mode 100644 index 000000000..3c83fbc2c --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/uImage.FIT/verified-boot.txt @@ -0,0 +1,104 @@ +U-Boot Verified Boot +==================== + +Introduction +------------ +Verified boot here means the verification of all software loaded into a +machine during the boot process to ensure that it is authorised and correct +for that machine. + +Verified boot extends from the moment of system reset to as far as you wish +into the boot process. An example might be loading U-Boot from read-only +memory, then loading a signed kernel, then using the kernel's dm-verity +driver to mount a signed root filesystem. + +A key point is that it is possible to field-upgrade the software on machines +which use verified boot. Since the machine will only run software that has +been correctly signed, it is safe to read software from an updatable medium. +It is also possible to add a secondary signed firmware image, in read-write +memory, so that firmware can easily be upgraded in a secure manner. + + +Signing +------- +Verified boot uses cryptographic algorithms to 'sign' software images. +Images are signed using a private key known only to the signer, but can +be verified using a public key. As its name suggests the public key can be +made available without risk to the verification process. The private and +public keys are mathematically related. For more information on how this +works look up "public key cryptography" and "RSA" (a particular algorithm). + +The signing and verification process looks something like this: + + +      Signing                                      Verification +      =======                                      ============ + + +--------------+                   * + | RSA key pair |                   *             +---------------+ + | .key  .crt   |                   *             | Public key in | + +--------------+       +------> public key ----->| trusted place | +       |                |           *             +---------------+ +       |                |           *                    | +       v                |           *                    v +   +---------+          |           *              +--------------+ +   |         |----------+           *              |              | +   | signer  |                      *              |    U-Boot    | +   |         |----------+           *              |  signature   |--> yes/no +   +---------+          |           *              | verification | +      ^                 |           *              |              | +      |                 |           *              +--------------+ +      |                 |           *                    ^ + +----------+           |           *                    | + | Software |           +----> signed image -------------+ + |  image   |                       * + +----------+                       * + + +The signature algorithm relies only on the public key to do its work. Using +this key it checks the signature that it finds in the image. If it verifies +then we know that the image is OK. + +The public key from the signer allows us to verify and therefore trust +software from updatable memory. + +It is critical that the public key be secure and cannot be tampered with. +It can be stored in read-only memory, or perhaps protected by other on-chip +crypto provided by some modern SOCs. If the public key can ben changed, then +the verification is worthless. + + +Chaining Images +--------------- +The above method works for a signer providing images to a run-time U-Boot. +It is also possible to extend this scheme to a second level, like this: + +1. Master private key is used by the signer to sign a first-stage image. +2. Master public key is placed in read-only memory. +2. Secondary private key is created and used to sign second-stage images. +3. Secondary public key is placed in first stage images +4. We use the master public key to verify the first-stage image. We then +use the secondary public key in the first-stage image to verify the second- +state image. +5. This chaining process can go on indefinitely. It is recommended to use a +different key at each stage, so that a compromise in one place will not +affect the whole change. + + +Flattened Image Tree (FIT) +-------------------------- +The FIT format is alreay widely used in U-Boot. It is a flattened device +tree (FDT) in a particular format, with images contained within. FITs +include hashes to verify images, so it is relatively straightforward to +add signatures as well. + +The public key can be stored in U-Boot's CONFIG_OF_CONTROL device tree in +a standard place. Then when a FIT it loaded it can be verified using that +public key. Multiple keys and multiple signatures are supported. + +See signature.txt for more information. + + +Simon Glass +sjg@chromium.org +1-1-13 |