| .. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0-only |
| |
| TPM Security |
| ============ |
| |
| The object of this document is to describe how we make the kernel's |
| use of the TPM reasonably robust in the face of external snooping and |
| packet alteration attacks (called passive and active interposer attack |
| in the literature). The current security document is for TPM 2.0. |
| |
| Introduction |
| ------------ |
| |
| The TPM is usually a discrete chip attached to a PC via some type of |
| low bandwidth bus. There are exceptions to this such as the Intel |
| PTT, which is a software TPM running inside a software environment |
| close to the CPU, which are subject to different attacks, but right at |
| the moment, most hardened security environments require a discrete |
| hardware TPM, which is the use case discussed here. |
| |
| Snooping and Alteration Attacks against the bus |
| ----------------------------------------------- |
| |
| The current state of the art for snooping the `TPM Genie`_ hardware |
| interposer which is a simple external device that can be installed in |
| a couple of seconds on any system or laptop. Recently attacks were |
| successfully demonstrated against the `Windows Bitlocker TPM`_ system. |
| Most recently the same `attack against TPM based Linux disk |
| encryption`_ schemes. The next phase of research seems to be hacking |
| existing devices on the bus to act as interposers, so the fact that |
| the attacker requires physical access for a few seconds might |
| evaporate. However, the goal of this document is to protect TPM |
| secrets and integrity as far as we are able in this environment and to |
| try to insure that if we can't prevent the attack then at least we can |
| detect it. |
| |
| Unfortunately, most of the TPM functionality, including the hardware |
| reset capability can be controlled by an attacker who has access to |
| the bus, so we'll discuss some of the disruption possibilities below. |
| |
| Measurement (PCR) Integrity |
| --------------------------- |
| |
| Since the attacker can send their own commands to the TPM, they can |
| send arbitrary PCR extends and thus disrupt the measurement system, |
| which would be an annoying denial of service attack. However, there |
| are two, more serious, classes of attack aimed at entities sealed to |
| trust measurements. |
| |
| 1. The attacker could intercept all PCR extends coming from the system |
| and completely substitute their own values, producing a replay of |
| an untampered state that would cause PCR measurements to attest to |
| a trusted state and release secrets |
| |
| 2. At some point in time the attacker could reset the TPM, clearing |
| the PCRs and then send down their own measurements which would |
| effectively overwrite the boot time measurements the TPM has |
| already done. |
| |
| The first can be thwarted by always doing HMAC protection of the PCR |
| extend and read command meaning measurement values cannot be |
| substituted without producing a detectable HMAC failure in the |
| response. However, the second can only really be detected by relying |
| on some sort of mechanism for protection which would change over TPM |
| reset. |
| |
| Secrets Guarding |
| ---------------- |
| |
| Certain information passing in and out of the TPM, such as key sealing |
| and private key import and random number generation, is vulnerable to |
| interception which HMAC protection alone cannot protect against, so |
| for these types of command we must also employ request and response |
| encryption to prevent the loss of secret information. |
| |
| Establishing Initial Trust with the TPM |
| --------------------------------------- |
| |
| In order to provide security from the beginning, an initial shared or |
| asymmetric secret must be established which must also be unknown to |
| the attacker. The most obvious avenues for this are the endorsement |
| and storage seeds, which can be used to derive asymmetric keys. |
| However, using these keys is difficult because the only way to pass |
| them into the kernel would be on the command line, which requires |
| extensive support in the boot system, and there's no guarantee that |
| either hierarchy would not have some type of authorization. |
| |
| The mechanism chosen for the Linux Kernel is to derive the primary |
| elliptic curve key from the null seed using the standard storage seed |
| parameters. The null seed has two advantages: firstly the hierarchy |
| physically cannot have an authorization, so we are always able to use |
| it and secondly, the null seed changes across TPM resets, meaning if |
| we establish trust on the null seed at start of day, all sessions |
| salted with the derived key will fail if the TPM is reset and the seed |
| changes. |
| |
| Obviously using the null seed without any other prior shared secrets, |
| we have to create and read the initial public key which could, of |
| course, be intercepted and substituted by the bus interposer. |
| However, the TPM has a key certification mechanism (using the EK |
| endorsement certificate, creating an attestation identity key and |
| certifying the null seed primary with that key) which is too complex |
| to run within the kernel, so we keep a copy of the null primary key |
| name, which is what is exported via sysfs so user-space can run the |
| full certification when it boots. The definitive guarantee here is |
| that if the null primary key certifies correctly, you know all your |
| TPM transactions since start of day were secure and if it doesn't, you |
| know there's an interposer on your system (and that any secret used |
| during boot may have been leaked). |
| |
| Stacking Trust |
| -------------- |
| |
| In the current null primary scenario, the TPM must be completely |
| cleared before handing it on to the next consumer. However the kernel |
| hands to user-space the name of the derived null seed key which can |
| then be verified by certification in user-space. Therefore, this chain |
| of name handoff can be used between the various boot components as |
| well (via an unspecified mechanism). For instance, grub could use the |
| null seed scheme for security and hand the name off to the kernel in |
| the boot area. The kernel could make its own derivation of the key |
| and the name and know definitively that if they differ from the handed |
| off version that tampering has occurred. Thus it becomes possible to |
| chain arbitrary boot components together (UEFI to grub to kernel) via |
| the name handoff provided each successive component knows how to |
| collect the name and verifies it against its derived key. |
| |
| Session Properties |
| ------------------ |
| |
| All TPM commands the kernel uses allow sessions. HMAC sessions may be |
| used to check the integrity of requests and responses and decrypt and |
| encrypt flags may be used to shield parameters and responses. The |
| HMAC and encryption keys are usually derived from the shared |
| authorization secret, but for a lot of kernel operations that is well |
| known (and usually empty). Thus, every HMAC session used by the |
| kernel must be created using the null primary key as the salt key |
| which thus provides a cryptographic input into the session key |
| derivation. Thus, the kernel creates the null primary key once (as a |
| volatile TPM handle) and keeps it around in a saved context stored in |
| tpm_chip for every in-kernel use of the TPM. Currently, because of a |
| lack of de-gapping in the in-kernel resource manager, the session must |
| be created and destroyed for each operation, but, in future, a single |
| session may also be reused for the in-kernel HMAC, encryption and |
| decryption sessions. |
| |
| Protection Types |
| ---------------- |
| |
| For every in-kernel operation we use null primary salted HMAC to |
| protect the integrity. Additionally, we use parameter encryption to |
| protect key sealing and parameter decryption to protect key unsealing |
| and random number generation. |
| |
| Null Primary Key Certification in Userspace |
| =========================================== |
| |
| Every TPM comes shipped with a couple of X.509 certificates for the |
| primary endorsement key. This document assumes that the Elliptic |
| Curve version of the certificate exists at 01C00002, but will work |
| equally well with the RSA certificate (at 01C00001). |
| |
| The first step in the certification is primary creation using the |
| template from the `TCG EK Credential Profile`_ which allows comparison |
| of the generated primary key against the one in the certificate (the |
| public key must match). Note that generation of the EK primary |
| requires the EK hierarchy password, but a pre-generated version of the |
| EC primary should exist at 81010002 and a TPM2_ReadPublic() may be |
| performed on this without needing the key authority. Next, the |
| certificate itself must be verified to chain back to the manufacturer |
| root (which should be published on the manufacturer website). Once |
| this is done, an attestation key (AK) is generated within the TPM and |
| it's name and the EK public key can be used to encrypt a secret using |
| TPM2_MakeCredential. The TPM then runs TPM2_ActivateCredential which |
| will only recover the secret if the binding between the TPM, the EK |
| and the AK is true. the generated AK may now be used to run a |
| certification of the null primary key whose name the kernel has |
| exported. Since TPM2_MakeCredential/ActivateCredential are somewhat |
| complicated, a more simplified process involving an externally |
| generated private key is described below. |
| |
| This process is a simplified abbreviation of the usual privacy CA |
| based attestation process. The assumption here is that the |
| attestation is done by the TPM owner who thus has access to only the |
| owner hierarchy. The owner creates an external public/private key |
| pair (assume elliptic curve in this case) and wraps the private key |
| for import using an inner wrapping process and parented to the EC |
| derived storage primary. The TPM2_Import() is done using a parameter |
| decryption HMAC session salted to the EK primary (which also does not |
| require the EK key authority) meaning that the inner wrapping key is |
| the encrypted parameter and thus the TPM will not be able to perform |
| the import unless is possesses the certified EK so if the command |
| succeeds and the HMAC verifies on return we know we have a loadable |
| copy of the private key only for the certified TPM. This key is now |
| loaded into the TPM and the Storage primary flushed (to free up space |
| for the null key generation). |
| |
| The null EC primary is now generated using the Storage profile |
| outlined in the `TCG TPM v2.0 Provisioning Guidance`_; the name of |
| this key (the hash of the public area) is computed and compared to the |
| null seed name presented by the kernel in |
| /sys/class/tpm/tpm0/null_name. If the names do not match, the TPM is |
| compromised. If the names match, the user performs a TPM2_Certify() |
| using the null primary as the object handle and the loaded private key |
| as the sign handle and providing randomized qualifying data. The |
| signature of the returned certifyInfo is verified against the public |
| part of the loaded private key and the qualifying data checked to |
| prevent replay. If all of these tests pass, the user is now assured |
| that TPM integrity and privacy was preserved across the entire boot |
| sequence of this kernel. |
| |
| .. _TPM Genie: https://www.nccgroup.trust/globalassets/about-us/us/documents/tpm-genie.pdf |
| .. _Windows Bitlocker TPM: https://dolosgroup.io/blog/2021/7/9/from-stolen-laptop-to-inside-the-company-network |
| .. _attack against TPM based Linux disk encryption: https://www.secura.com/blog/tpm-sniffing-attacks-against-non-bitlocker-targets |
| .. _TCG EK Credential Profile: https://trustedcomputinggroup.org/resource/tcg-ek-credential-profile-for-tpm-family-2-0/ |
| .. _TCG TPM v2.0 Provisioning Guidance: https://trustedcomputinggroup.org/resource/tcg-tpm-v2-0-provisioning-guidance/ |