cachepc-linux

Fork of AMDESE/linux with modifications for CachePC side-channel attack
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asymmetric-keys.rst (16306B)


      1.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0
      2
      3=============================================
      4Asymmetric / Public-key Cryptography Key Type
      5=============================================
      6
      7.. Contents:
      8
      9  - Overview.
     10  - Key identification.
     11  - Accessing asymmetric keys.
     12    - Signature verification.
     13  - Asymmetric key subtypes.
     14  - Instantiation data parsers.
     15  - Keyring link restrictions.
     16
     17
     18Overview
     19========
     20
     21The "asymmetric" key type is designed to be a container for the keys used in
     22public-key cryptography, without imposing any particular restrictions on the
     23form or mechanism of the cryptography or form of the key.
     24
     25The asymmetric key is given a subtype that defines what sort of data is
     26associated with the key and provides operations to describe and destroy it.
     27However, no requirement is made that the key data actually be stored in the
     28key.
     29
     30A completely in-kernel key retention and operation subtype can be defined, but
     31it would also be possible to provide access to cryptographic hardware (such as
     32a TPM) that might be used to both retain the relevant key and perform
     33operations using that key.  In such a case, the asymmetric key would then
     34merely be an interface to the TPM driver.
     35
     36Also provided is the concept of a data parser.  Data parsers are responsible
     37for extracting information from the blobs of data passed to the instantiation
     38function.  The first data parser that recognises the blob gets to set the
     39subtype of the key and define the operations that can be done on that key.
     40
     41A data parser may interpret the data blob as containing the bits representing a
     42key, or it may interpret it as a reference to a key held somewhere else in the
     43system (for example, a TPM).
     44
     45
     46Key Identification
     47==================
     48
     49If a key is added with an empty name, the instantiation data parsers are given
     50the opportunity to pre-parse a key and to determine the description the key
     51should be given from the content of the key.
     52
     53This can then be used to refer to the key, either by complete match or by
     54partial match.  The key type may also use other criteria to refer to a key.
     55
     56The asymmetric key type's match function can then perform a wider range of
     57comparisons than just the straightforward comparison of the description with
     58the criterion string:
     59
     60  1) If the criterion string is of the form "id:<hexdigits>" then the match
     61     function will examine a key's fingerprint to see if the hex digits given
     62     after the "id:" match the tail.  For instance::
     63
     64	keyctl search @s asymmetric id:5acc2142
     65
     66     will match a key with fingerprint::
     67
     68	1A00 2040 7601 7889 DE11  882C 3823 04AD 5ACC 2142
     69
     70  2) If the criterion string is of the form "<subtype>:<hexdigits>" then the
     71     match will match the ID as in (1), but with the added restriction that
     72     only keys of the specified subtype (e.g. tpm) will be matched.  For
     73     instance::
     74
     75	keyctl search @s asymmetric tpm:5acc2142
     76
     77Looking in /proc/keys, the last 8 hex digits of the key fingerprint are
     78displayed, along with the subtype::
     79
     80	1a39e171 I-----     1 perm 3f010000     0     0 asymmetric modsign.0: DSA 5acc2142 []
     81
     82
     83Accessing Asymmetric Keys
     84=========================
     85
     86For general access to asymmetric keys from within the kernel, the following
     87inclusion is required::
     88
     89	#include <crypto/public_key.h>
     90
     91This gives access to functions for dealing with asymmetric / public keys.
     92Three enums are defined there for representing public-key cryptography
     93algorithms::
     94
     95	enum pkey_algo
     96
     97digest algorithms used by those::
     98
     99	enum pkey_hash_algo
    100
    101and key identifier representations::
    102
    103	enum pkey_id_type
    104
    105Note that the key type representation types are required because key
    106identifiers from different standards aren't necessarily compatible.  For
    107instance, PGP generates key identifiers by hashing the key data plus some
    108PGP-specific metadata, whereas X.509 has arbitrary certificate identifiers.
    109
    110The operations defined upon a key are:
    111
    112  1) Signature verification.
    113
    114Other operations are possible (such as encryption) with the same key data
    115required for verification, but not currently supported, and others
    116(eg. decryption and signature generation) require extra key data.
    117
    118
    119Signature Verification
    120----------------------
    121
    122An operation is provided to perform cryptographic signature verification, using
    123an asymmetric key to provide or to provide access to the public key::
    124
    125	int verify_signature(const struct key *key,
    126			     const struct public_key_signature *sig);
    127
    128The caller must have already obtained the key from some source and can then use
    129it to check the signature.  The caller must have parsed the signature and
    130transferred the relevant bits to the structure pointed to by sig::
    131
    132	struct public_key_signature {
    133		u8 *digest;
    134		u8 digest_size;
    135		enum pkey_hash_algo pkey_hash_algo : 8;
    136		u8 nr_mpi;
    137		union {
    138			MPI mpi[2];
    139			...
    140		};
    141	};
    142
    143The algorithm used must be noted in sig->pkey_hash_algo, and all the MPIs that
    144make up the actual signature must be stored in sig->mpi[] and the count of MPIs
    145placed in sig->nr_mpi.
    146
    147In addition, the data must have been digested by the caller and the resulting
    148hash must be pointed to by sig->digest and the size of the hash be placed in
    149sig->digest_size.
    150
    151The function will return 0 upon success or -EKEYREJECTED if the signature
    152doesn't match.
    153
    154The function may also return -ENOTSUPP if an unsupported public-key algorithm
    155or public-key/hash algorithm combination is specified or the key doesn't
    156support the operation; -EBADMSG or -ERANGE if some of the parameters have weird
    157data; or -ENOMEM if an allocation can't be performed.  -EINVAL can be returned
    158if the key argument is the wrong type or is incompletely set up.
    159
    160
    161Asymmetric Key Subtypes
    162=======================
    163
    164Asymmetric keys have a subtype that defines the set of operations that can be
    165performed on that key and that determines what data is attached as the key
    166payload.  The payload format is entirely at the whim of the subtype.
    167
    168The subtype is selected by the key data parser and the parser must initialise
    169the data required for it.  The asymmetric key retains a reference on the
    170subtype module.
    171
    172The subtype definition structure can be found in::
    173
    174	#include <keys/asymmetric-subtype.h>
    175
    176and looks like the following::
    177
    178	struct asymmetric_key_subtype {
    179		struct module		*owner;
    180		const char		*name;
    181
    182		void (*describe)(const struct key *key, struct seq_file *m);
    183		void (*destroy)(void *payload);
    184		int (*query)(const struct kernel_pkey_params *params,
    185			     struct kernel_pkey_query *info);
    186		int (*eds_op)(struct kernel_pkey_params *params,
    187			      const void *in, void *out);
    188		int (*verify_signature)(const struct key *key,
    189					const struct public_key_signature *sig);
    190	};
    191
    192Asymmetric keys point to this with their payload[asym_subtype] member.
    193
    194The owner and name fields should be set to the owning module and the name of
    195the subtype.  Currently, the name is only used for print statements.
    196
    197There are a number of operations defined by the subtype:
    198
    199  1) describe().
    200
    201     Mandatory.  This allows the subtype to display something in /proc/keys
    202     against the key.  For instance the name of the public key algorithm type
    203     could be displayed.  The key type will display the tail of the key
    204     identity string after this.
    205
    206  2) destroy().
    207
    208     Mandatory.  This should free the memory associated with the key.  The
    209     asymmetric key will look after freeing the fingerprint and releasing the
    210     reference on the subtype module.
    211
    212  3) query().
    213
    214     Mandatory.  This is a function for querying the capabilities of a key.
    215
    216  4) eds_op().
    217
    218     Optional.  This is the entry point for the encryption, decryption and
    219     signature creation operations (which are distinguished by the operation ID
    220     in the parameter struct).  The subtype may do anything it likes to
    221     implement an operation, including offloading to hardware.
    222
    223  5) verify_signature().
    224
    225     Optional.  This is the entry point for signature verification.  The
    226     subtype may do anything it likes to implement an operation, including
    227     offloading to hardware.
    228
    229Instantiation Data Parsers
    230==========================
    231
    232The asymmetric key type doesn't generally want to store or to deal with a raw
    233blob of data that holds the key data.  It would have to parse it and error
    234check it each time it wanted to use it.  Further, the contents of the blob may
    235have various checks that can be performed on it (eg. self-signatures, validity
    236dates) and may contain useful data about the key (identifiers, capabilities).
    237
    238Also, the blob may represent a pointer to some hardware containing the key
    239rather than the key itself.
    240
    241Examples of blob formats for which parsers could be implemented include:
    242
    243 - OpenPGP packet stream [RFC 4880].
    244 - X.509 ASN.1 stream.
    245 - Pointer to TPM key.
    246 - Pointer to UEFI key.
    247 - PKCS#8 private key [RFC 5208].
    248 - PKCS#5 encrypted private key [RFC 2898].
    249
    250During key instantiation each parser in the list is tried until one doesn't
    251return -EBADMSG.
    252
    253The parser definition structure can be found in::
    254
    255	#include <keys/asymmetric-parser.h>
    256
    257and looks like the following::
    258
    259	struct asymmetric_key_parser {
    260		struct module	*owner;
    261		const char	*name;
    262
    263		int (*parse)(struct key_preparsed_payload *prep);
    264	};
    265
    266The owner and name fields should be set to the owning module and the name of
    267the parser.
    268
    269There is currently only a single operation defined by the parser, and it is
    270mandatory:
    271
    272  1) parse().
    273
    274     This is called to preparse the key from the key creation and update paths.
    275     In particular, it is called during the key creation _before_ a key is
    276     allocated, and as such, is permitted to provide the key's description in
    277     the case that the caller declines to do so.
    278
    279     The caller passes a pointer to the following struct with all of the fields
    280     cleared, except for data, datalen and quotalen [see
    281     Documentation/security/keys/core.rst]::
    282
    283	struct key_preparsed_payload {
    284		char		*description;
    285		void		*payload[4];
    286		const void	*data;
    287		size_t		datalen;
    288		size_t		quotalen;
    289	};
    290
    291     The instantiation data is in a blob pointed to by data and is datalen in
    292     size.  The parse() function is not permitted to change these two values at
    293     all, and shouldn't change any of the other values _unless_ they are
    294     recognise the blob format and will not return -EBADMSG to indicate it is
    295     not theirs.
    296
    297     If the parser is happy with the blob, it should propose a description for
    298     the key and attach it to ->description, ->payload[asym_subtype] should be
    299     set to point to the subtype to be used, ->payload[asym_crypto] should be
    300     set to point to the initialised data for that subtype,
    301     ->payload[asym_key_ids] should point to one or more hex fingerprints and
    302     quotalen should be updated to indicate how much quota this key should
    303     account for.
    304
    305     When clearing up, the data attached to ->payload[asym_key_ids] and
    306     ->description will be kfree()'d and the data attached to
    307     ->payload[asm_crypto] will be passed to the subtype's ->destroy() method
    308     to be disposed of.  A module reference for the subtype pointed to by
    309     ->payload[asym_subtype] will be put.
    310
    311
    312     If the data format is not recognised, -EBADMSG should be returned.  If it
    313     is recognised, but the key cannot for some reason be set up, some other
    314     negative error code should be returned.  On success, 0 should be returned.
    315
    316     The key's fingerprint string may be partially matched upon.  For a
    317     public-key algorithm such as RSA and DSA this will likely be a printable
    318     hex version of the key's fingerprint.
    319
    320Functions are provided to register and unregister parsers::
    321
    322	int register_asymmetric_key_parser(struct asymmetric_key_parser *parser);
    323	void unregister_asymmetric_key_parser(struct asymmetric_key_parser *subtype);
    324
    325Parsers may not have the same name.  The names are otherwise only used for
    326displaying in debugging messages.
    327
    328
    329Keyring Link Restrictions
    330=========================
    331
    332Keyrings created from userspace using add_key can be configured to check the
    333signature of the key being linked.  Keys without a valid signature are not
    334allowed to link.
    335
    336Several restriction methods are available:
    337
    338  1) Restrict using the kernel builtin trusted keyring
    339
    340     - Option string used with KEYCTL_RESTRICT_KEYRING:
    341       - "builtin_trusted"
    342
    343     The kernel builtin trusted keyring will be searched for the signing key.
    344     If the builtin trusted keyring is not configured, all links will be
    345     rejected.  The ca_keys kernel parameter also affects which keys are used
    346     for signature verification.
    347
    348  2) Restrict using the kernel builtin and secondary trusted keyrings
    349
    350     - Option string used with KEYCTL_RESTRICT_KEYRING:
    351       - "builtin_and_secondary_trusted"
    352
    353     The kernel builtin and secondary trusted keyrings will be searched for the
    354     signing key.  If the secondary trusted keyring is not configured, this
    355     restriction will behave like the "builtin_trusted" option.  The ca_keys
    356     kernel parameter also affects which keys are used for signature
    357     verification.
    358
    359  3) Restrict using a separate key or keyring
    360
    361     - Option string used with KEYCTL_RESTRICT_KEYRING:
    362       - "key_or_keyring:<key or keyring serial number>[:chain]"
    363
    364     Whenever a key link is requested, the link will only succeed if the key
    365     being linked is signed by one of the designated keys.  This key may be
    366     specified directly by providing a serial number for one asymmetric key, or
    367     a group of keys may be searched for the signing key by providing the
    368     serial number for a keyring.
    369
    370     When the "chain" option is provided at the end of the string, the keys
    371     within the destination keyring will also be searched for signing keys.
    372     This allows for verification of certificate chains by adding each
    373     certificate in order (starting closest to the root) to a keyring.  For
    374     instance, one keyring can be populated with links to a set of root
    375     certificates, with a separate, restricted keyring set up for each
    376     certificate chain to be validated::
    377
    378	# Create and populate a keyring for root certificates
    379	root_id=`keyctl add keyring root-certs "" @s`
    380	keyctl padd asymmetric "" $root_id < root1.cert
    381	keyctl padd asymmetric "" $root_id < root2.cert
    382
    383	# Create and restrict a keyring for the certificate chain
    384	chain_id=`keyctl add keyring chain "" @s`
    385	keyctl restrict_keyring $chain_id asymmetric key_or_keyring:$root_id:chain
    386
    387	# Attempt to add each certificate in the chain, starting with the
    388	# certificate closest to the root.
    389	keyctl padd asymmetric "" $chain_id < intermediateA.cert
    390	keyctl padd asymmetric "" $chain_id < intermediateB.cert
    391	keyctl padd asymmetric "" $chain_id < end-entity.cert
    392
    393     If the final end-entity certificate is successfully added to the "chain"
    394     keyring, we can be certain that it has a valid signing chain going back to
    395     one of the root certificates.
    396
    397     A single keyring can be used to verify a chain of signatures by
    398     restricting the keyring after linking the root certificate::
    399
    400	# Create a keyring for the certificate chain and add the root
    401	chain2_id=`keyctl add keyring chain2 "" @s`
    402	keyctl padd asymmetric "" $chain2_id < root1.cert
    403
    404	# Restrict the keyring that already has root1.cert linked.  The cert
    405	# will remain linked by the keyring.
    406	keyctl restrict_keyring $chain2_id asymmetric key_or_keyring:0:chain
    407
    408	# Attempt to add each certificate in the chain, starting with the
    409	# certificate closest to the root.
    410	keyctl padd asymmetric "" $chain2_id < intermediateA.cert
    411	keyctl padd asymmetric "" $chain2_id < intermediateB.cert
    412	keyctl padd asymmetric "" $chain2_id < end-entity.cert
    413
    414     If the final end-entity certificate is successfully added to the "chain2"
    415     keyring, we can be certain that there is a valid signing chain going back
    416     to the root certificate that was added before the keyring was restricted.
    417
    418
    419In all of these cases, if the signing key is found the signature of the key to
    420be linked will be verified using the signing key.  The requested key is added
    421to the keyring only if the signature is successfully verified.  -ENOKEY is
    422returned if the parent certificate could not be found, or -EKEYREJECTED is
    423returned if the signature check fails or the key is blacklisted.  Other errors
    424may be returned if the signature check could not be performed.