[PATCH v7 0/5] Allow guest access to EFI confidential computing secret area

Dr. David Alan Gilbert dgilbert at redhat.com
Tue Feb 1 18:07:41 UTC 2022


* James Bottomley (jejb at linux.ibm.com) wrote:
> [cc's added]
> On Tue, 2022-02-01 at 14:50 +0100, Greg KH wrote:
> > On Tue, Feb 01, 2022 at 12:44:08PM +0000, Dov Murik wrote:
> [...]
> > > # ls -la /sys/kernel/security/coco/efi_secret
> > > total 0
> > > drwxr-xr-x 2 root root 0 Jun 28 11:55 .
> > > drwxr-xr-x 3 root root 0 Jun 28 11:54 ..
> > > -r--r----- 1 root root 0 Jun 28 11:54 736870e5-84f0-4973-92ec-
> > > 06879ce3da0b
> > > -r--r----- 1 root root 0 Jun 28 11:54 83c83f7f-1356-4975-8b7e-
> > > d3a0b54312c6
> > > -r--r----- 1 root root 0 Jun 28 11:54 9553f55d-3da2-43ee-ab5d-
> > > ff17f78864d2
> > 
> > Please see my comments on the powerpc version of this type of thing:
> > 	
> > https://lore.kernel.org/r/20220122005637.28199-1-nayna@linux.ibm.com
> 
> If you want a debate, actually cc'ing the people on the other thread
> would have been a good start ...
> 
> For those added, this patch series is at:
> 
> https://lore.kernel.org/all/20220201124413.1093099-1-dovmurik@linux.ibm.com/
> 
> > You all need to work together to come up with a unified place for
> > this and stop making it platform-specific.
> 
> I'm not entirely sure of that.  If you look at the differences between
> EFI variables and the COCO proposal: the former has an update API
> which, in the case of signed variables, is rather complex and a UC16
> content requirement.  The latter is binary data with read only/delete. 
> Plus each variable in EFI is described by a GUID, so having a directory
> of random guids, some of which behave like COCO secrets and some of
> which are EFI variables is going to be incredibly confusing (and also
> break all our current listing tools which seems somewhat undesirable).
> 
> So we could end up with 
> 
> <common path prefix>/efivar
> <common path prefix>/coco
> 
> To achieve the separation, but I really don't see what this buys us. 
> Both filesystems would likely end up with different backends because of
> the semantic differences and we can easily start now in different
> places (effectively we've already done this for efi variables) and
> unify later if that is the chosen direction, so it doesn't look like a
> blocker.
> 
> > Until then, we can't take this.
> 
> I don't believe anyone was asking you to take it.

I have some sympathy in wanting some unification; (I'm not sure that
list of comparison even includes the TDX world).
But I'm not sure if they're the same thing - these are strictly
constants, they're not changable.

But it is a messy list of differences - especially things like the
UTF-16 stuff
I guess the PowerVM key naming contains nul and / can be ignored
- if anyone is silly enough to create keys with those names then they
can not access them; so at least that would solve that problem.

I don't really understand the talk of 32bit attributes in either the
uEFI or PowerVM key store case.

Is that GOOGLE_SMI stuff already there? If so I guess there's not much
we can do  - but it's a shame that there's the directory per variable.

Dave



> James
> 
> 
-- 
Dr. David Alan Gilbert / dgilbert at redhat.com / Manchester, UK



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