| ============================================= |
| Virtual TPM Proxy Driver for Linux Containers |
| ============================================= |
| |
| | Authors: |
| | Stefan Berger <stefanb@linux.vnet.ibm.com> |
| |
| This document describes the virtual Trusted Platform Module (vTPM) |
| proxy device driver for Linux containers. |
| |
| Introduction |
| ============ |
| |
| The goal of this work is to provide TPM functionality to each Linux |
| container. This allows programs to interact with a TPM in a container |
| the same way they interact with a TPM on the physical system. Each |
| container gets its own unique, emulated, software TPM. |
| |
| Design |
| ====== |
| |
| To make an emulated software TPM available to each container, the container |
| management stack needs to create a device pair consisting of a client TPM |
| character device ``/dev/tpmX`` (with X=0,1,2...) and a 'server side' file |
| descriptor. The former is moved into the container by creating a character |
| device with the appropriate major and minor numbers while the file descriptor |
| is passed to the TPM emulator. Software inside the container can then send |
| TPM commands using the character device and the emulator will receive the |
| commands via the file descriptor and use it for sending back responses. |
| |
| To support this, the virtual TPM proxy driver provides a device ``/dev/vtpmx`` |
| that is used to create device pairs using an ioctl. The ioctl takes as |
| an input flags for configuring the device. The flags for example indicate |
| whether TPM 1.2 or TPM 2 functionality is supported by the TPM emulator. |
| The result of the ioctl are the file descriptor for the 'server side' |
| as well as the major and minor numbers of the character device that was created. |
| Besides that the number of the TPM character device is returned. If for |
| example ``/dev/tpm10`` was created, the number (``dev_num``) 10 is returned. |
| |
| Once the device has been created, the driver will immediately try to talk |
| to the TPM. All commands from the driver can be read from the file descriptor |
| returned by the ioctl. The commands should be responded to immediately. |
| |
| UAPI |
| ==== |
| |
| .. kernel-doc:: include/uapi/linux/vtpm_proxy.h |
| |
| .. kernel-doc:: drivers/char/tpm/tpm_vtpm_proxy.c |
| :functions: vtpmx_ioc_new_dev |