[PATCH v8 3/4] efi: Load efi_secret module if EFI secret area is populated

Ard Biesheuvel ardb at kernel.org
Mon Feb 28 13:15:38 UTC 2022


On Mon, 28 Feb 2022 at 14:07, Dov Murik <dovmurik at linux.ibm.com> wrote:
>
>
>
> On 28/02/2022 14:49, Ard Biesheuvel wrote:
> > On Mon, 28 Feb 2022 at 12:43, Dov Murik <dovmurik at linux.ibm.com> wrote:
> >>
> >> If the efi_secret module is built, register a late_initcall in the EFI
> >> driver which checks whether the EFI secret area is available and
> >> populated, and then requests to load the efi_secret module.
> >>
> >> This will cause the <securityfs>/secrets/coco directory to appear in
> >> guests into which secrets were injected; in other cases, the module is
> >> not loaded.
> >>
> >> Signed-off-by: Dov Murik <dovmurik at linux.ibm.com>
> >> Reviewed-by: Gerd Hoffmann <kraxel at redhat.com>
> >
> > It would be better to simply expose a platform device and associated
> > driver, instead of hooking into the module machinery directly.
> >
> > We already do something similar for the EFI rtc and the efivars
> > subsystem, using platform_device_register_simple()
> >
>
> Thanks Ard, I'll look into this.
>
> I hope the mechanism you suggest allows me to perform complex check to
> see if the device is really there (in this case: check for an efi
> variable, map memory as encrypted, verify it starts with a specific GUID
> -- everything before request_module() in the code below).
>

There is the device part and the driver part. Some of this belongs in
the core code that registers the platform device, and some of it
belongs in the driver. At this point, it probably does not matter that
much which side does what, as the platform driver simply probes and
can perform whatever check it needs, as long as it can back out
gracefully (although I understand that, in this particular case, there
are reasons why the driver may decide to wipe the secret)



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