mirror of
https://github.com/linuxboot/heads.git
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c3a5359a85
Signed-off-by: Thierry Laurion <insurgo@riseup.net>
772 lines
23 KiB
Bash
Executable File
772 lines
23 KiB
Bash
Executable File
#!/bin/bash
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# TPM Wrapper - to unify tpm and tpm2 subcommands
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. /etc/functions
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SECRET_DIR="/tmp/secret"
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PRIMARY_HANDLE="0x81000000"
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ENC_SESSION_FILE="enc.ctx"
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DEC_SESSION_FILE="dec.ctx"
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PRIMARY_HANDLE_FILE="primary.handle"
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# PCR size in bytes. Set when we determine what TPM version is in use.
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# TPM1 PCRs are always 20 bytes. TPM2 is allowed to provide multiple PCR banks
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# with different algorithms - we always use SHA-256, so they are 32 bytes.
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PCR_SIZE=
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# Export CONFIG_TPM2_CAPTURE_PCAP=y from your board config to capture tpm2 pcaps to
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# /tmp/tpm0.pcap; Wireshark can inspect these. (This must be enabled at build
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# time so the pcap TCTI driver is included.)
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if [ -n "$CONFIG_TPM2_CAPTURE_PCAP" ]; then
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export TPM2TOOLS_TCTI="pcap:device:/dev/tpmrm0"
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export TCTI_PCAP_FILE="/tmp/tpm0.pcap"
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fi
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set -e -o pipefail
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if [ -r "/tmp/config" ]; then
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. /tmp/config
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else
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. /etc/config
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fi
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TRACE "Under /bin/tpmr"
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# Busybox xxd lacks -r, and we get hex dumps from TPM1 commands. This converts
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# a hex dump to binary data using sed and printf
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hex2bin() {
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sed 's/\([0-9A-F]\{2\}\)/\\\\\\x\1/gI' | xargs printf
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}
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# Render a password as 'hex:<hexdump>' for use with tpm2-tools. Passwords
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# should always be passed this way to avoid ambiguity. (Passing with no prefix
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# would choke if the password happened to start with 'file:' or 'hex:'. Passing
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# as a file still chokes if the password begins with 'hex:', oddly tpm2-tools
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# accepts 'hex:' in the file content.)
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tpm2_password_hex() {
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echo "hex:$(echo -n "$1" | xxd -p | tr -d ' \n')"
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}
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# usage: tpmr pcrread [-a] <index> <file>
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# Reads PCR binary data and writes to file.
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# -a: Append to file. Default is to overwrite.
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tpm2_pcrread() {
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TRACE "Under /bin/tpmr:tpm2_pcrread"
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if [ "$1" = "-a" ]; then
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APPEND=y
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shift
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fi
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index="$1"
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file="$2"
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if [ -z "$APPEND" ]; then
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# Don't append - truncate file now so real command always
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# appends
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true >"$file"
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fi
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DO_WITH_DEBUG tpm2 pcrread -Q -o >(cat >>"$file") "sha256:$index"
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}
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tpm1_pcrread() {
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TRACE "Under /bin/tpmr:tpm1_pcrread"
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if [ "$1" = "-a" ]; then
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APPEND=y
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shift
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fi
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index="$1"
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file="$2"
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if [ -z "$APPEND" ]; then
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# Don't append - truncate file now so real command always
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# appends
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true >"$file"
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fi
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DO_WITH_DEBUG tpm pcrread -ix "$index" | hex2bin >>"$file"
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}
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# is_hash - Check if a value is a valid hash of a given type
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# usage: is_hash <alg> <value>
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is_hash() {
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# Must only contain 0-9a-fA-F
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if [ "$(echo -n "$2" | tr -d '0-9a-fA-F' | wc -c)" -ne 0 ]; then return 1; fi
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# SHA-1 hashes are 40 chars
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if [ "$1" = "sha1" ] && [ "${#2}" -eq 40 ]; then return 0; fi
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# SHA-256 hashes are 64 chars
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if [ "$1" = "sha256" ] && [ "${#2}" -eq 64 ]; then return 0; fi
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return 1
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}
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# extend_pcr_state - extend a PCR state value with more hashes or raw data (which is hashed)
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# usage:
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# extend_pcr_state <alg> <initial_state> <files/hashes...>
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# alg - either 'sha1' or 'sha256' to specify algorithm
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# initial_state - a hash value setting the initial state
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# files/hashes... - any number of files or hashes, state is extended once for each item
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extend_pcr_state() {
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local alg="$1"
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local state="$2"
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local next extend
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shift 2
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while [ "$#" -gt 0 ]; do
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next="$1"
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shift
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if is_hash "$alg" "$next"; then
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extend="$next"
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else
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extend="$("${alg}sum" <"$next" | cut -d' ' -f1)"
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fi
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state="$(echo "$state$extend" | hex2bin | "${alg}sum" | cut -d' ' -f1)"
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done
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echo "$state"
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}
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# There are 3 (and a half) possible formats of event log, each of them requires
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# different arguments for grep. Those formats are shown below as heredocs to
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# keep all the data, including whitespaces:
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# 1) TPM2 log, which can hold multiple hash algorithms at once:
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: << 'EOF'
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TPM2 log:
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Specification: 2.00
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Platform class: PC Client
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TPM2 log entry 1:
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PCR: 2
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Event type: Action
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Digests:
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SHA256: de73053377e1ae5ba5d2b637a4f5bfaeb410137722f11ef135e7a1be524e3092
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SHA1: 27c4f1fa214480c8626397a15981ef3a9323717f
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Event data: FMAP: FMAP
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EOF
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# 2) TPM1.2 log (aka TCPA), digest is always SHA1:
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: << 'EOF'
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TCPA log:
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Specification: 1.21
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Platform class: PC Client
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TCPA log entry 1:
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PCR: 2
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Event type: Action
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Digest: 27c4f1fa214480c8626397a15981ef3a9323717f
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Event data: FMAP: FMAP
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EOF
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# 3) coreboot-specific format:
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# 3.5) older versions printed 'coreboot TCPA log', even though it isn't TCPA
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: << 'EOF'
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coreboot TPM log:
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PCR-2 27c4f1fa214480c8626397a15981ef3a9323717f SHA1 [FMAP: FMAP]
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EOF
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# awk script to handle all of the above. Note this gets squashed to one line so
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# semicolons are required.
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AWK_PROG='
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BEGIN {
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getline;
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hash_regex="([a-fA-F0-9]{40,})";
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if ($0 == "TPM2 log:") {
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RS="\n[^[:space:]]";
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pcr="PCR: " pcr;
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alg=toupper(alg) ": " hash_regex;
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} else if ($0 == "TCPA log:") {
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RS="\n[^[:space:]]";
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pcr="PCR: " pcr;
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alg="Digest: " hash_regex;
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} else if ($0 ~ /^coreboot (TCPA|TPM) log:$/) {
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pcr="PCR-" pcr;
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alg=hash_regex " " toupper(alg) " ";
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} else {
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print "Unknown TPM event log format:", $0 > "/dev/stderr";
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exit -1;
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}
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}
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$0 ~ pcr {
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match($0, alg);
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print gensub(alg, "\\1", "g", substr($0, RSTART, RLENGTH));
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}
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'
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# usage: replay_pcr <alg> <pcr_num> [ <input_file>|<input_hash> ... ]
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# Replays PCR value from CBMEM event log. Note that this contains only the
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# measurements performed by firmware, without those performed by Heads (USB
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# modules, LUKS header etc). First argument is PCR number, followed by optional
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# hashes and/or files extended to given PCR after firmware. Resulting PCR value
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# is returned in binary form.
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replay_pcr() {
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TRACE "Under /bin/tpmr:replay_pcr"
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if [ -z "$2" ] ; then
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>&2 echo "No PCR number passed"
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return
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fi
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if [ "$2" -ge 8 ] ; then
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>&2 echo "Illegal PCR number ($2)"
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return
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fi
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local log=`cbmem -L`
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local alg="$1"
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local pcr="$2"
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local alg_digits=0
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# SHA-1 hashes are 40 chars
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if [ "$alg" = "sha1" ] ; then alg_digits=40; fi
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# SHA-256 hashes are 64 chars
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if [ "$alg" = "sha256" ] ; then alg_digits=64; fi
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shift 2
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replayed_pcr=$(extend_pcr_state $alg $(printf "%.${alg_digits}d" 0) \
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$(echo "$log" | awk -v alg=$alg -v pcr=$pcr -f <(echo $AWK_PROG)) $@)
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echo $replayed_pcr | hex2bin
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DEBUG "Replayed cbmem -L clean boot state of PCR=$pcr ALG=$alg : $replayed_pcr"
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# To manually introspect current PCR values:
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# PCR-2:
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# tpmr calcfuturepcr 2 | xxd -p
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# PCR-4, in case of recovery shell (bash used for process substitution):
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# bash -c "tpmr calcfuturepcr 4 <(echo -n recovery)" | xxd -p
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# PCR-4, in case of normal boot passing through kexec-select-boot:
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# bash -c "tpmr calcfuturepcr 4 <(echo -n generic)" | xxd -p
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# PCR-5, depending on which modules are loaded for given board:
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# tpmr calcfuturepcr 5 module0.ko module1.ko module2.ko | xxd -p
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# PCR-6 and PCR-7: similar to 5, but with different files passed
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# (6: LUKS header, 7: user related cbfs files loaded from cbfs-init)
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}
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tpm2_extend() {
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TRACE "Under /bin/tpmr:tpm2_extend"
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while true; do
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case "$1" in
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-ix)
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index="$2"
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shift 2;;
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-ic)
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hash="$(echo -n "$2"|sha256sum|cut -d' ' -f1)"
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shift 2;;
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-if)
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hash="$(sha256sum "$2"|cut -d' ' -f1)"
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shift 2;;
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*)
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break;;
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esac
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done
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tpm2 pcrextend "$index:sha256=$hash"
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DO_WITH_DEBUG tpm2 pcrread "sha256:$index"
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}
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tpm2_counter_read() {
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TRACE "Under /bin/tpmr:tpm2_counter_read"
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while true; do
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case "$1" in
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-ix)
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index="$2"
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shift 2;;
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*)
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break;;
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esac
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done
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echo "$index: `tpm2 nvread 0x$index | xxd -pc8`"
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}
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tpm2_counter_inc() {
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TRACE "Under /bin/tpmr:tpm2_counter_inc"
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while true; do
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case "$1" in
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-ix)
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index="$2"
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shift 2;;
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-pwdc)
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pwd="$2"
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shift 2;;
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*)
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break;;
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esac
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done
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tpm2 nvincrement "0x$index" > /dev/console
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echo "$index: `tpm2 nvread 0x$index | xxd -pc8`"
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}
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tpm2_counter_cre() {
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TRACE "Under /bin/tpmr:tpm2_counter_cre"
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while true; do
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case "$1" in
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-pwdo)
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pwdo="$2"
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shift 2;;
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-pwdof)
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pwdo="file:$2"
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shift 2;;
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-pwdc)
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pwd="$2"
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shift 2;;
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-la)
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label="$2"
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shift 2;;
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*)
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break;;
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esac
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done
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rand_index="1`dd if=/dev/urandom bs=1 count=3 | xxd -pc3`"
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tpm2 nvdefine -C o -s 8 -a "ownerread|authread|authwrite|nt=1" \
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-P "$(tpm2_password_hex "$pwdo")" "0x$rand_index" > /dev/console
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echo "$rand_index: (valid after an increment)"
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}
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tpm2_startsession() {
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TRACE "Under /bin/tpmr:tpm2_startsession"
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mkdir -p "$SECRET_DIR"
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tpm2 flushcontext -Q \
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--transient-object \
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|| die "tpm2_flushcontext: unable to flush transient handles"
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tpm2 flushcontext -Q \
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--loaded-session \
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|| die "tpm2_flushcontext: unable to flush sessions"
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tpm2 flushcontext -Q \
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--saved-session \
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|| die "tpm2_flushcontext: unable to flush saved session"
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tpm2 readpublic -Q -c "$PRIMARY_HANDLE" -t "/tmp/$PRIMARY_HANDLE_FILE"
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tpm2 startauthsession -Q -c "/tmp/$PRIMARY_HANDLE_FILE" --hmac-session -S "/tmp/$ENC_SESSION_FILE"
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tpm2 startauthsession -Q -c "/tmp/$PRIMARY_HANDLE_FILE" --hmac-session -S "/tmp/$DEC_SESSION_FILE"
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tpm2 sessionconfig -Q --disable-encrypt "/tmp/$DEC_SESSION_FILE"
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}
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# Use cleanup_session() with at_exit to release a TPM2 session and delete the
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# session file. E.g.:
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# at_exit cleanup_session "$SESSION_FILE"
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cleanup_session() {
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TRACE "Under /bin/tpmr:cleanup_session"
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session_file="$1"
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if [ -f "$session_file" ]; then
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DEBUG "Clean up session: $session_file"
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# Nothing else we can do if this fails, still remove the file
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tpm2 flushcontext -Q "$session_file" || DEBUG "Flush failed for session $session_file"
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rm -f "$session_file"
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else
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DEBUG "No need to clean up session: $session_file"
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fi
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}
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# Clean up a file by shredding it. No-op if the file wasn't created. Use with
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# at_exit, e.g.:
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# at_exit cleanup_shred "$FILE"
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cleanup_shred() {
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TRACE "Under /bin/tpmr:cleanup_shred"
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shred -n 10 -z -u "$1" 2>/dev/null || true
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}
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# tpm2_destroy: Destroy a sealed file in the TPM. The mechanism differs by
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# TPM version - TPM2 evicts the file object, so it no longer exists.
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tpm2_destroy() {
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index="$1" # Index of the sealed file
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size="$2" # Size of zeroes to overwrite for TPM1 (unused in TPM2)
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# Pad with up to 6 zeros, i.e. '0x81000001', '0x81001234', etc.
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handle="$(printf "0x81%6s" "$index" | tr ' ' 0)"
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# remove possible data occupying this handle
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tpm2 evictcontrol -Q -C p -c "$handle" 2>/dev/null \
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|| die "Unable to evict secret"
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}
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# tpm1_destroy: Destroy a sealed file in the TPM. The mechanism differs by
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# TPM version - TPM1 overwrites the file with zeroes, since this can be done
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# without authorization. (Deletion requires authorization.)
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tpm1_destroy() {
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index="$1" # Index of the sealed file
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size="$2" # Size of zeroes to overwrite for TPM1
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dd if=/dev/zero bs="$size" count=1 of=/tmp/wipe-totp-zero
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tpm nv_writevalue -in "$index" -if /tmp/wipe-totp-zero \
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|| die "Unable to wipe sealed secret"
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}
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# tpm2_seal: Seal a file against PCR values and, optionally, a password.
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# If a password is given, both the PCRs and password are required to unseal the
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# file. PCRs are provided as a PCR list and data file. PCR data must be
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# provided - TPM2 allows the TPM to fall back to current PCR values, but it is
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# not required to support this.
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tpm2_seal() {
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TRACE "Under /bin/tpmr:tpm2_seal"
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file="$1" #$KEY_FILE
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index="$2"
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pcrl="$3" #0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7 (does not include algorithm prefix)
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pcrf="$4"
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sealed_size="$5" # Not used for TPM2
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pass="$6" # May be empty to seal with no password
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tpm_password="$7" # Owner password - will prompt if needed and not empty
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# TPM Owner Password is always needed for TPM2.
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mkdir -p "$SECRET_DIR"
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bname="`basename $file`"
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# Pad with up to 6 zeros, i.e. '0x81000001', '0x81001234', etc.
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handle="$(printf "0x81%6s" "$index" | tr ' ' 0)"
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DEBUG "tpm2_seal: file=$file handle=$handle pcrl=$pcrl pcrf=$pcrf pass=$(mask_param "$pass")"
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# Create a policy requiring both PCRs and the object's authentication
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# value using a trial session.
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TRIAL_SESSION=/tmp/sealfile_trial.session
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AUTH_POLICY=/tmp/sealfile_auth.policy
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rm -f "$TRIAL_SESSION" "$AUTH_POLICY"
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tpm2 startauthsession -g sha256 -S "$TRIAL_SESSION"
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# We have to clean up the session
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at_exit cleanup_session "$TRIAL_SESSION"
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# Save the policy hash in case the password policy is not used (we have
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# to get this from the last step, whichever it is).
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tpm2 policypcr -Q -l "sha256:$pcrl" -f "$pcrf" -S "$TRIAL_SESSION" -L "$AUTH_POLICY"
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CREATE_PASS_ARGS=()
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if [ "$pass" ]; then
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# Add an object authorization policy (the object authorization
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# will be the password). Save the digest, this is the resulting
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# policy.
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tpm2 policypassword -Q -S "$TRIAL_SESSION" -L "$AUTH_POLICY"
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# Pass the password to create later. Pass the sha256sum of the
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# password to the TPM so the password is not limited to 32 chars
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# in length.
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CREATE_PASS_ARGS=(-p "$(tpm2_password_hex "$pass")")
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fi
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# Create the object with this policy and the auth value.
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# NOTE: We disable USERWITHAUTH and enable ADMINWITHPOLICY so the
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# password cannot be used on its own, the PCRs are also required.
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# (The default is to allow either policy auth _or_ password auth. In
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# this case the policy includes the password, and we don't want to allow
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# the password on its own.)
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tpm2 create -Q -C "/tmp/$PRIMARY_HANDLE_FILE" \
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-i "$file" \
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-u "$SECRET_DIR/$bname.priv" \
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-r "$SECRET_DIR/$bname.pub" \
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-L "$AUTH_POLICY" \
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-S "/tmp/$DEC_SESSION_FILE" \
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-a "fixedtpm|fixedparent|adminwithpolicy" \
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"${CREATE_PASS_ARGS[@]}"
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tpm2 load -Q -C "/tmp/$PRIMARY_HANDLE_FILE" \
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-u "$SECRET_DIR/$bname.priv" -r "$SECRET_DIR/$bname.pub" \
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-c "$SECRET_DIR/$bname.seal.ctx"
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prompt_tpm_owner_password
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# remove possible data occupying this handle
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tpm2 evictcontrol -Q -C o -P "$(tpm2_password_hex "$tpm_owner_password")" \
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-c "$handle" 2>/dev/null || true
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DO_WITH_DEBUG --mask-position 6 \
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tpm2 evictcontrol -Q -C o -P "$(tpm2_password_hex "$tpm_owner_password")" \
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-c "$SECRET_DIR/$bname.seal.ctx" "$handle"
|
|
}
|
|
tpm1_seal() {
|
|
TRACE "Under /bin/tpmr:tpm1_seal"
|
|
file="$1"
|
|
index="$2"
|
|
pcrl="$3" #0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7 (does not include algorithm prefix)
|
|
pcrf="$4"
|
|
sealed_size="$5"
|
|
pass="$6" # May be empty to seal with no password
|
|
tpm_password="$7" # Owner password - will prompt if needed and not empty
|
|
|
|
sealed_file="$SECRET_DIR/tpm1_seal_sealed.bin"
|
|
at_exit cleanup_shred "$sealed_file"
|
|
|
|
POLICY_ARGS=()
|
|
|
|
# If a password was given, add it to the policy arguments
|
|
if [ "$pass" ]; then
|
|
POLICY_ARGS+=(-pwdd "$pass")
|
|
fi
|
|
|
|
# Transform the PCR list and PCR file to discrete arguments
|
|
IFS=',' read -r -a PCR_LIST <<<"$pcrl"
|
|
pcr_file_index=0
|
|
for pcr in "${PCR_LIST[@]}"; do
|
|
# Read each PCR_SIZE block from the file and pass as hex
|
|
POLICY_ARGS+=(-ix "$pcr"
|
|
"$(dd if="$pcrf" skip="$pcr_file_index" bs="$PCR_SIZE" count=1 status=none | xxd -p | tr -d ' ')"
|
|
)
|
|
pcr_file_index=$((pcr_file_index+1))
|
|
done
|
|
|
|
tpm sealfile2 \
|
|
-if "$file" \
|
|
-of "$sealed_file" \
|
|
-hk 40000000 \
|
|
"${POLICY_ARGS[@]}"
|
|
|
|
# try it without the owner password first
|
|
if ! tpm nv_writevalue -in "$index" -if "$sealed_file"; then
|
|
# to create an nvram space we need the TPM Owner Password
|
|
# and the TPM physical presence must be asserted.
|
|
#
|
|
# The permissions are 0 since there is nothing special
|
|
# about the sealed file
|
|
tpm physicalpresence -s \
|
|
|| warn "Unable to assert physical presence"
|
|
|
|
prompt_tpm_owner_password
|
|
|
|
tpm nv_definespace -in "$index" -sz "$sealed_size" \
|
|
-pwdo "$tpm_password" -per 0 \
|
|
|| warn "Unable to define NVRAM space; trying anyway"
|
|
|
|
|
|
tpm nv_writevalue -in "$index" -if "$sealed_file" \
|
|
|| die "Unable to write sealed secret to NVRAM"
|
|
fi
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
# Unseal a file sealed by tpm2_seal. The PCR list must be provided, the
|
|
# password must be provided if one was used to seal (and cannot be provided if
|
|
# no password was used to seal).
|
|
tpm2_unseal() {
|
|
TRACE "Under /bin/tpmr:tpm2_unseal"
|
|
index="$1"
|
|
pcrl="$2" #0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7 (does not include algorithm prefix)
|
|
sealed_size="$3"
|
|
file="$4"
|
|
pass="$5"
|
|
|
|
# TPM2 doesn't care about sealed_size, only TPM1 needs that. We don't
|
|
# have to separately read the sealed file on TPM2.
|
|
|
|
# Pad with up to 6 zeros, i.e. '0x81000001', '0x81001234', etc.
|
|
handle="$(printf "0x81%6s" "$index" | tr ' ' 0)"
|
|
|
|
DEBUG "tpm2_unseal: handle=$handle pcrl=$pcrl file=$file pass=$(mask_param "$pass")"
|
|
|
|
# If we don't have the primary handle (TPM hasn't been reset), tpm2 will
|
|
# print nonsense error messages about an unexpected handle value. We
|
|
# can't do anything without a primary handle.
|
|
if [ ! -f "/tmp/$PRIMARY_HANDLE_FILE" ]; then
|
|
DEBUG "tpm2_unseal: No primary handle, cannot attempt to unseal"
|
|
warn "No TPM primary handle. You must reset TPM to seal secret"
|
|
exit 1
|
|
fi
|
|
|
|
POLICY_SESSION=/tmp/unsealfile_policy.session
|
|
rm -f "$POLICY_SESSION"
|
|
tpm2 startauthsession -Q -g sha256 -S "$POLICY_SESSION" --policy-session
|
|
at_exit cleanup_session "$POLICY_SESSION"
|
|
# Check the PCR policy
|
|
tpm2 policypcr -Q -l "sha256:$pcrl" -S "$POLICY_SESSION"
|
|
UNSEAL_PASS_SUFFIX=""
|
|
|
|
if [ "$pass" ]; then
|
|
# Add the object authorization policy (the actual password is
|
|
# provided later, but we must include this so the policy we
|
|
# attempt to use is correct).
|
|
tpm2 policypassword -Q -S "$POLICY_SESSION"
|
|
# When unsealing, include the password with the auth session
|
|
UNSEAL_PASS_SUFFIX="+$(tpm2_password_hex "$pass")"
|
|
fi
|
|
|
|
tpm2 unseal -Q -c "$handle" -p "session:$POLICY_SESSION$UNSEAL_PASS_SUFFIX" \
|
|
-S "/tmp/$ENC_SESSION_FILE" > "$file"
|
|
}
|
|
tpm1_unseal() {
|
|
TRACE "Under /bin/tpmr:tpm1_unseal"
|
|
index="$1"
|
|
pcrl="$2"
|
|
sealed_size="$3"
|
|
file="$4"
|
|
pass="$5"
|
|
|
|
# pcrl (the PCR list) is unused in TPM1. The TPM itself knows which
|
|
# PCRs were used to seal and checks them. We can't verify that it's
|
|
# correct either, so just ignore it in TPM1.
|
|
|
|
sealed_file="$SECRET_DIR/tpm1_unseal_sealed.bin"
|
|
at_exit cleanup_shred "$sealed_file"
|
|
|
|
rm -f "$sealed_file"
|
|
|
|
tpm nv_readvalue \
|
|
-in "$index" \
|
|
-sz "$sealed_size" \
|
|
-of "$sealed_file" \
|
|
|| die "Unable to read sealed file from TPM NVRAM"
|
|
|
|
PASS_ARGS=()
|
|
if [ "$pass" ]; then
|
|
PASS_ARGS=(-pwdd "$pass")
|
|
fi
|
|
|
|
tpm unsealfile \
|
|
-if "$sealed_file" \
|
|
-of "$file" \
|
|
"${PASS_ARGS[@]}" \
|
|
-hk 40000000
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
tpm2_reset() {
|
|
TRACE "Under /bin/tpmr:tpm2_reset"
|
|
tpm_owner_password="$1"
|
|
mkdir -p "$SECRET_DIR"
|
|
# output TPM Owner Password key_password to a file to be reused in this boot session until recovery shell/reboot
|
|
DEBUG "Caching TPM Owner Password to $SECRET_DIR/tpm_owner_password"
|
|
echo -n "$tpm_owner_password" > "$SECRET_DIR/tpm_owner_password"
|
|
tpm2 clear -c platform || warn "Unable to clear TPM on platform hierarchy"
|
|
tpm2 changeauth -c owner "$(tpm2_password_hex "$tpm_owner_password")"
|
|
tpm2 changeauth -c endorsement "$(tpm2_password_hex "$tpm_owner_password")"
|
|
tpm2 createprimary -C owner -g sha256 -G "${CONFIG_PRIMARY_KEY_TYPE:-rsa}" \
|
|
-c "$SECRET_DIR/primary.ctx" -P "$(tpm2_password_hex "$tpm_owner_password")"
|
|
tpm2 evictcontrol -C owner -c "$SECRET_DIR/primary.ctx" "$PRIMARY_HANDLE" \
|
|
-P "$(tpm2_password_hex "$tpm_owner_password")"
|
|
shred -u "$SECRET_DIR/primary.ctx"
|
|
tpm2_startsession
|
|
|
|
# Set the dictionary attack parameters. TPM2 defaults vary widely, we
|
|
# want consistent behavior on any TPM.
|
|
# * --max-tries=10: Allow 10 failures before lockout. This allows the
|
|
# user to quickly "burst" 10 failures without significantly impacting
|
|
# the rate allowed for a dictionary attacker.
|
|
# Most TPM2 flows ask for the owner password 2-4 times, so this allows
|
|
# a handful of mistypes and some headroom for an expected unseal
|
|
# failure if firmware is updated.
|
|
# Remember that an auth failure is also counted any time an unclean
|
|
# shutdown occurs (see TPM2 spec part 1, section 19.8.6, "Non-orderly
|
|
# Shutdown").
|
|
# * --recovery-time=3600: Forget an auth failure every 1 hour.
|
|
# * --lockout-recovery-time: After a failed lockout recovery auth, the
|
|
# TPM must be reset to try again.
|
|
#
|
|
# Heads does not offer a way to reset dictionary attack lockout, instead
|
|
# the TPM can be reset and new secrets sealed.
|
|
tpm2 dictionarylockout -Q --setup-parameters \
|
|
--max-tries=10 \
|
|
--recovery-time=3600 \
|
|
--lockout-recovery-time=0 \
|
|
--auth="session:/tmp/$ENC_SESSION_FILE"
|
|
|
|
# Set a random DA lockout password, so the DA lockout can't be cleared
|
|
# with a password. Heads doesn't offer dictionary attach reset, instead
|
|
# the TPM can be reset and new secrets sealed.
|
|
#
|
|
# The default lockout password is empty, so we must set this, and we
|
|
# don't need to provide any auth (use the default empty password).
|
|
tpm2 changeauth -Q -c lockout \
|
|
"hex:$(dd if=/dev/urandom bs=32 count=1 status=none | xxd -p | tr -d ' \n')"
|
|
}
|
|
tpm1_reset() {
|
|
TRACE "Under /bin/tpmr:tpm1_reset"
|
|
tpm_owner_password="$1"
|
|
mkdir -p "$SECRET_DIR"
|
|
# output tpm_owner_password to a file to be reused in this boot session until recovery shell/reboot
|
|
DEBUG "Caching TPM Owner Password to $SECRET_DIR/tpm_owner_password"
|
|
echo -n "$tpm_owner_password" > "$SECRET_DIR/tpm_owner_password"
|
|
# Make sure the TPM is ready to be reset
|
|
tpm physicalpresence -s
|
|
tpm physicalenable
|
|
tpm physicalsetdeactivated -c
|
|
tpm forceclear
|
|
tpm physicalenable
|
|
tpm takeown -pwdo "$tpm_owner_password"
|
|
|
|
# And now turn it all back on
|
|
tpm physicalpresence -s
|
|
tpm physicalenable
|
|
tpm physicalsetdeactivated -c
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
# Perform final cleanup before boot and lock the platform heirarchy.
|
|
tpm2_kexec_finalize() {
|
|
TRACE "Under /bin/tpmr:tpm2_kexec_finalize"
|
|
|
|
# Flush sessions and transient objects
|
|
tpm2 flushcontext -Q --transient-object \
|
|
|| warn "tpm2_flushcontext: unable to flush transient handles"
|
|
tpm2 flushcontext -Q --loaded-session \
|
|
|| warn "tpm2_flushcontext: unable to flush sessions"
|
|
tpm2 flushcontext -Q --saved-session \
|
|
|| warn "tpm2_flushcontext: unable to flush saved session"
|
|
|
|
# Add a random passphrase to platform hierarchy to prevent TPM2 from
|
|
# being cleared in the OS.
|
|
# This passphrase is only effective before the next boot.
|
|
echo "Locking TPM2 platform hierarchy..."
|
|
randpass=$(dd if=/dev/urandom bs=4 count=1 status=none | xxd -p)
|
|
tpm2 changeauth -c platform "$randpass" \
|
|
|| warn "Failed to lock platform hierarchy of TPM2"
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
tpm2_shutdown() {
|
|
TRACE "Under /bin/tpmr:tpm2_shutdown"
|
|
|
|
# Prepare for shutdown.
|
|
# This is a "clear" shutdown (do not preserve runtime state) since we
|
|
# are not going to resume later, we are powering off (or rebooting).
|
|
tpm2 shutdown -Q --clear
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
if [ "$CONFIG_TPM" != "y" ]; then
|
|
echo >&2 "No TPM!"
|
|
exit 1
|
|
fi
|
|
|
|
# TPM1 - most commands forward directly to tpm, but some are still wrapped for
|
|
# consistency with tpm2.
|
|
if [ "$CONFIG_TPM2_TOOLS" != "y" ]; then
|
|
PCR_SIZE=20 # TPM1 PCRs are always SHA-1
|
|
subcmd="$1"
|
|
# Don't shift yet, for most commands we will just forward to tpm.
|
|
case "$subcmd" in
|
|
pcrread)
|
|
shift; tpm1_pcrread "$@";;
|
|
pcrsize)
|
|
echo "$PCR_SIZE";;
|
|
calcfuturepcr)
|
|
shift; replay_pcr "sha1" "$@";;
|
|
destroy)
|
|
shift; tpm1_destroy "$@";;
|
|
seal)
|
|
shift; tpm1_seal "$@";;
|
|
startsession)
|
|
;; # Nothing on TPM1.
|
|
unseal)
|
|
shift; tpm1_unseal "$@";;
|
|
reset)
|
|
shift; tpm1_reset "$@";;
|
|
kexec_finalize)
|
|
;; # Nothing on TPM1.
|
|
shutdown)
|
|
;; # Nothing on TPM1.
|
|
*)
|
|
DEBUG "Direct translation from tpmr to tpm1 call"
|
|
DO_WITH_DEBUG exec tpm "$@"
|
|
;;
|
|
esac
|
|
exit 0
|
|
fi
|
|
|
|
# TPM2 - all commands implemented as wrappers around tpm2
|
|
PCR_SIZE=32 # We use the SHA-256 PCRs
|
|
subcmd="$1"
|
|
shift 1
|
|
case "$subcmd" in
|
|
pcrread)
|
|
tpm2_pcrread "$@";;
|
|
pcrsize)
|
|
echo "$PCR_SIZE";;
|
|
calcfuturepcr)
|
|
replay_pcr "sha256" "$@";;
|
|
extend)
|
|
tpm2_extend "$@";;
|
|
counter_read)
|
|
tpm2_counter_read "$@";;
|
|
counter_increment)
|
|
tpm2_counter_inc "$@";;
|
|
counter_create)
|
|
tpm2_counter_cre "$@";;
|
|
destroy)
|
|
tpm2_destroy "$@";;
|
|
seal)
|
|
tpm2_seal "$@";;
|
|
startsession)
|
|
tpm2_startsession "$@";;
|
|
unseal)
|
|
tpm2_unseal "$@";;
|
|
reset)
|
|
tpm2_reset "$@";;
|
|
kexec_finalize)
|
|
tpm2_kexec_finalize "$@";;
|
|
shutdown)
|
|
tpm2_shutdown "$@";;
|
|
*)
|
|
echo "Command $subcmd not wrapped!"
|
|
exit 1
|
|
esac
|