[PATCH v4 02/14] Add TSEM specific documentation.

Greg Wettstein greg at enjellic.com
Mon Aug 26 10:54:12 UTC 2024


An entry was added to the ABI testing documentation to document the API
definitions for the TSEM ontrol plane.

The file documenting the kernel command-line parameters was
updated to document the TSEM specific parameters that are
implemented.

The primary TSEM documentation file was added to the LSM
administration guide and the file was linked to the index of LSM
documentation.
---
 Documentation/ABI/testing/tsem                | 2420 +++++++++++++++++
 Documentation/admin-guide/LSM/index.rst       |    1 +
 Documentation/admin-guide/LSM/tsem.rst        | 1680 ++++++++++++
 .../admin-guide/kernel-parameters.txt         |   29 +
 4 files changed, 4130 insertions(+)
 create mode 100644 Documentation/ABI/testing/tsem
 create mode 100644 Documentation/admin-guide/LSM/tsem.rst

diff --git a/Documentation/ABI/testing/tsem b/Documentation/ABI/testing/tsem
new file mode 100644
index 000000000000..0e0e3201edf4
--- /dev/null
+++ b/Documentation/ABI/testing/tsem
@@ -0,0 +1,2420 @@
+This file contains descriptions of output generated by the TSEM
+control plane files and the role of the only write-only file in the
+control plane.
+
+It is highly recommended that the following document be read in order
+to fully understand the rationale and functioning of these files:
+
+Documentation/admin-guide/LSM/tsem.rst
+
+What:		/sys/kernel/security/tsem
+Date:		March 2024
+Contact:	Greg Wettstein <greg at enjellic.com>
+Description:
+		The /sys/kernel/security/tsem directory contains files
+		and directories that implement the control plane for
+		the Trusted Security Event Modeling (TSEM) LSM.
+
+		The files in this directory hierarchy, with the
+		exception of the aggregate file, when read, reflect
+		the values for the security modeling namespace that
+		the process reading the files is operating in.
+
+What:		/sys/kernel/security/tsem/id
+Date:		March 2024
+Contact:	Greg Wettstein <greg at enjellic.com>
+Description:
+		The id file outputs the ASCII base 10 representation
+		of the security modeling namespace that the reading
+		process is operating in.
+
+		The root security modeling namespace has a value of
+		zero, a non-zero value indicates a modeling namespace
+		subordinate to the root model.
+
+		Each externally modeled security namespace will have a
+		file, with this id number, created in the
+		/sys/kernel/security/tsem/external_tma that is
+		documented below.
+
+What:		/sys/kernel/security/tsem/aggregate
+Date:		March 2024
+Contact:	Greg Wettstein <greg at enjellic.com>
+Description:	
+		The aggregate file contains the ASCII base 16
+		representation of the Trusted Platform Module (TPM)
+		based hardware aggregate measurement.  The hardware
+		aggregate measurement is the linear extension sum,
+		using the digest function chosen for the root modeling
+		namespace, of PCR registers 0 through 8
+
+		The hardware aggregate measurement is a common concept
+		in trusted systems and is used to verify the integrity
+		and known good state of the hardware environment
+		leading up to the boot of the operating system.
+
+		The size of the measurement is equal in length to the
+		ASCII Base16 representation of the cryptographic
+		digest function being used for the root security
+		modeling namespace.  For example, if the default
+		sha256 digest function is being used, the aggregate
+		measurement will be 64 ASCII hexadecimal characters.
+
+		On a platform without a TPM this value will be all
+		ASCII 0 values.
+
+What:		/sys/kernel/security/tsem/control
+Date:		March 2024
+Contact:	Greg Wettstein <greg at enjellic.com>
+Description:
+		The control file is the only writable file in the
+		filesystem and is used by trust orchestrator's to
+		configure and control the behavior of the TSEM
+		implementation.
+
+		The following keyword and arguments are recognized:
+
+		internal
+			The internal keyword causes an internally
+			modeled namespace to be created for the
+			calling process.
+
+		external
+			The external keyword causes an externally
+			modeled namespace to be created for the
+			calling process.
+
+		A modeling namespace created by either of these
+		directives accepts the following key=value pairs that
+		configure the namespace:
+
+
+		model=MODULE_NAME
+			The model key specifies the name of a security
+			model that is to be used to conduct the event
+			processing for a security modeling namespace.
+
+			If the standard build practice of using the
+			KBUILD_MODNAME CPP define to set the name of
+			the security model the model name will match
+			the name of the module, as displayed by the
+			lsmod command.  There is no requirement that
+			the security model name match the module name.
+
+		nsref=initial|current
+			The nsref key specifies the namespace that is
+			to be referenced when determining the UID/GID
+			values used to characterize a COE or CELL
+			mapping.
+
+			The initial keyword specifies that the initial
+			user namespace is to be used.  The current
+			keyword specifies that the user namespace of
+			the process that is invoking a security event
+			handler is used.
+
+			The default is to use the initial user
+			namespace.
+
+		digest=digestname
+			The digest key value is used to specify the
+			cryptographic hash function that is to be used
+			for the generation of the security state
+			coefficients for the LSM events being modeled.
+
+			The digestname value is the name used by the
+			Linux kernel cryptographic API to identify the
+			hash function.  Examples would include;
+			sha256, sha3-256, sm3 etc.  The source files
+			for the various cryptographic hash functions in
+			the crypto directory of the kernel source has
+			the names for hash functions implemented in
+			the kernel.
+
+			The sha256 hash function is the default
+			function for the root modeling namespace.
+			This can be modified by the tsem_digest
+			command-line parameter.
+
+			A hash function, used by the root modeling
+			namespace, must be built into the kernel.
+
+		cache=NN
+			The cache key specifies the size of the caches
+			to be used for holding pointers to structures
+			used for the modeling or export of security
+			events that are called while the invoking
+			process is in atomic context.
+
+			The value NN is the ASCII base 10
+			representation of the number of entries in the
+			cache.
+
+			By default, the root modeling namespace and an
+			externally modeled namespace will have 96
+			entries.  An internally modeled namespace will
+			have 16 entries.
+
+		key=HEXID
+			The key argument is used to specify the
+			authentication key that will be used by a
+			trust orchestrator to authenticate trust
+			control requests to a process running in the
+			security modeling namespace.
+
+			The HEXID value is the ASCII base16 encoded
+			representation of the key that is to be used.
+			The length of this key, in binary, must be
+			equal to the size of the digest produced by
+			the cryptographic hash function that is being
+			used in the security modeling namespace.
+
+		enforce
+			The enforce keyword causes the modeling
+			namespace of the process to enter enforcing
+			mode.  In this mode, a value of -EPERM will be
+			returned for a security event coefficient that
+			does not map into the current set of allowed
+			coefficients for the security model being
+			implemented in the namespace.
+
+		seal
+			The seal keyword causes the security model
+			being implemented for the namespace to be
+			placed in a sealed state.  In this state, the
+			current set of security coefficients is
+			considered to be the only set of valid
+			coefficients for the model.  Any subsequent
+			events that map to a coefficient not in the
+			current model will be considered a violation
+			of the model.
+
+		trusted pid=PID key=HEXID
+			The trusted keyword is used by a trust
+			orchestrator to specify that a process being
+			woken up after model evaluation of a security
+			event should be allowed to run in trusted
+			status.
+
+			The pid argument is used to locate the process
+			that is sleeping on the modeling event.
+
+			The HEXID argument is the authentication key
+			that was configured by a trust orchestrator
+			for the namespace at the time of its creation.
+
+		untrusted pid=PID key=HEXID
+			The untrusted keyword is used by a trust
+			orchestrator to specify that a process being
+			woken up after model evaluation should be
+			placed in untrusted status.
+
+			The pid argument is used to locate the process
+			that is sleeping on the modeling event.
+
+			The HEXID argument is the authentication key
+			that was configured by a trust orchestrator
+			for the namespace at the time of its creation.
+
+		state value=HEXID
+			The state keyword is used to indicate that the
+			security state coefficient, identified by the
+			ASCII base 16 encoded value specified by HEXID,
+			should be loaded into the current security
+			model as a valid security event coefficient.
+
+			The HEXID value will be the length of the
+			digest value of the cryptographic hash
+			function specified for the security modeling
+			namespace.
+
+		pseudonym value=HEXID
+			The pseudonym keyword is used to indicate that
+			the pathname, identified by the ASCII base 16
+			encoded value HEXID, should be designated to
+			return a constant digest value for the
+			contents of the file named by the pseudonym.
+
+			The HEXID value is computed with the following
+			function:
+
+			HEXID = HF(PATHNAME_LENGTH || PATHNAME)
+
+			Where HF is the cryptographic hash function
+			that has been designated for use by the
+			security modeling namespace and || implies
+			concatenation of the byte stream fed to the
+			hash function.
+
+		base value=HEXID
+			The base keyword is used to indicate that the
+			ASCII base 16 encoded value HEXID should be
+			registered as the value used to generate
+			security state coefficients for the model
+			implemented in the modeling namespace.
+
+			The binary length of the value specified by
+			HEXID must match the digest size of the
+			cryptographic hash function specified for use
+			in the security modeling namespace.
+
+			A model specific base value is designed to be
+			used as a 'freshness' nonce, similar to an
+			attestation nonce, to prove that a model state
+			value or measurement is current and not being
+			replayed.
+
+		lock
+			This command is only valid when loadable
+			module support is available in the kernel.
+
+			When executed this command blocks any further
+			TSEM models from being registered.  In
+			addition the reference count on all currently
+			registered modeling modules is increased so
+			that it is impossible to remove currently
+			loaded models.
+
+What:		/sys/kernel/security/tsem/internal_tma
+Date:		March 2024
+Contact:	Greg Wettstein <greg at enjellic.com>
+Description:
+		This directory will contain directories that will be
+		used to hold files that surface model parameters for
+		Trusted Modeling Agents (TMA's) for internally modeled
+		security namespaces.
+
+		There is currently only one internal TMA that is
+		surfaced through the following directory:
+
+		/sys/kernel/security/tsem/internal_tma/model0
+
+		The subsequent descriptions for the files implemented
+		in this directory will use ROOTDIR to represent the
+		above directory for space conservation purposes.
+
+What:		ROOTDIR/measurement
+Date:		March 2024
+Contact:	Greg Wettstein <greg at enjellic.com>
+Description:
+		The measurement file contains the ASCII base 16
+		representation of the time dependent linear extension
+		value of all the security state coefficients in the
+		model implemented by the namespace of the calling
+		process.
+
+		This value is similar in concept to measurement values
+		generated by TPM PCR's.  In the case of TSEM, it can
+		be used to validate the order integrity of the
+		security state coefficients output in the
+		trajectory_coefficients file documented below.
+		
+What:		ROOTDIR/state
+Date:		March 2024
+Contact:	Greg Wettstein <greg at enjellic.com>
+Description:
+		The state file contains the ASCII base 16
+		representation of the functional value of a security
+		modeling namespace.
+
+		The state value is a time independent representation
+		of the measurement of a security model.  This value is
+		designed to be a single value that represents whether
+		or not a workload has deviated from a defined set of
+		known good behaviors.
+
+What:		ROOTDIR/trajectory
+Date:		March 2024
+Contact:	Greg Wettstein <greg at enjellic.com>
+Description:
+		The trajectory file contains a description of the
+		security events that have occurred in a security
+		modeling namespace
+
+		Each entry in this file represents a single security
+		event and consists of a JSON encoded record with keys
+		and associated values or structures that define the
+		characteristics of the event.
+
+		Examples and descriptions of the JSON structures are
+		provided at the end of this document.
+		
+What:		ROOTDIR/trajectory_coefficients
+Date:		March 2024
+Contact:	Greg Wettstein <greg at enjellic.com>
+Description:
+		The trajectory_coefficients file will output the ASCII
+		base16 representation of each security state
+		coefficient that has been generated by the security
+		modeling namespace of the calling process.
+
+		The length of each point will be the ASCII
+		representation of the size of the cryptographic hash
+		function that has been specified for the model.
+
+What:		ROOTDIR/trajectory_counts
+Date:		March 2024
+Contact:	Greg Wettstein <greg at enjellic.com>
+Description:
+		The trajectory_coefficients file will output the ASCII
+		base10 representation of the number of times each
+		security state coefficient has been generated by the
+		security modeling namespace of the calling process.
+
+What:		ROOTDIR/forensics
+Date:		March 2024
+Contact:	Greg Wettstein <greg at enjellic.com>
+Description:
+		The forensics file contains the descriptions of
+		security events that are inconsistent with the
+		security model that the security namespace is
+		implementing.  Forensics events are generated after a
+		security model is 'sealed' and the events represent
+		security state coefficients that have not already been
+		generated by the model.
+
+		The format of lines in this file are identical to the
+		output generated by the ROOTDIR/trajectory file
+		that is documented above.
+
+What:		ROOTDIR/forensics_coefficients
+Date:		March 2024
+Contact:	Greg Wettstein <greg at enjellic.com>
+Description:
+		The forensics_coefficients file will output the ASCII
+		base16 representation of each security state
+		coefficient that have been generated by forensics
+		events in the security modeling namespace of the
+		calling process.
+
+		The length of each point will be the ASCII
+		representation of the size of the cryptographic hash
+		function that has been specified for the model.
+
+What:		ROOTDIR/forensics_counts
+Date:		March 2024
+Contact:	Greg Wettstein <greg at enjellic.com>
+Description:
+		The forensics_counts file will output the ASCII base10
+		representation of the number of times each security
+		state coefficient, generated by a forensics event, has
+		been generated by the security modeling namespace of
+		the calling process.
+
+What:		/sys/kernel/security/tsem/external_tma
+Date:		March 2024
+Contact:	Greg Wettstein <greg at enjellic.com>
+Description:
+		The external_tma is a container directory that holds
+		files that will be used to export JSON encoded security
+		event descriptions for externally modeled security
+		modeling namespaces.
+
+		The files created in this directory will be named by
+		the base 10 ASCII representation of the id value
+		assigned to the security modeling namespace.  See the
+		documentation for the /sys/kernel/security/tsem/id
+		file in this documentation for more details on this
+		value.
+
+		This file will is a read-only file that can be polled
+		by a userspace trust orchestrator implementation to
+		obtain security events that are to be modeled by a
+		Trusted Modeling Agent implementation associated with
+		the trust orchestrator.
+
+		Each exported event is a JSON encoded record
+		describing an event that is to be externally
+		processed.  The encoding for these events are included
+		below.
+
+		
+JSON Security Event Description Encoding:
+
+Methodology:
+------------
+
+The security event descriptions maintained by the internal TMA and
+that are exported to external trust orchestrator's are encoded in
+JavaScript Object Notation (JSON).  This section of the document will
+describe the encoding strategy that is used.
+
+An encoding strategy was used where each non-structure key value is
+encoded as a JSON string type.  In the case of numeric values it is
+the responsibility of the TMA to convert the string value into an
+appropriate numeric value for the generation of the mapping values
+that contribute to a security state coefficient.
+
+The JSON string encodings for numeric values follow the conventions
+used by the strtol() and/or strtoll() functions to interpret how to
+convert a string encoded numeric value into an appropriate numeric
+binary type when the conversion function is called with the 'special'
+value of 0 for the base argument.
+
+The following nomenclature will be define the value member for numeric
+types:
+
+	0MM:	A base 8 ASCII value.
+	NN:	A base 10 ASCII value.
+	0xHEX	A base 16 ASCII value.
+
+The MM, NN and HEX labels above do not imply a length of the numeric
+string but are used instead to imply that numeric digits of the
+specified type will follow.
+
+When the documentation below specifies a value name of DIGEST it is
+referring to a string value containing the base 16 hexadecimal
+encoding of a cryptographic digest value.  The length of the value
+will be equal to the ASCII hexadecimal encoding length of a digest
+value for the cryptographic compression function that is in effect for
+the security modeling namespace.  A DIGEST value will NOT be preceded
+by the 0x prefix for these values.
+
+A value name of ASCII implies an ASCII string.
+
+
+Event descriptions:
+-------------------
+
+Each TSEM supported LSM event handler (hook) encodes a description of
+the characteristics of an event in the following general form:
+
+{"event": {}, "COE": {}, "CELL": {}}
+
+Where the event key is used to label a structure that characterizes
+the event type.  The COE key labels a structure that characterizes the
+Context Of Execution that is executing the event and the CELL key
+labels a structure that defines the characteristics of the security
+event that an LSM handler/hook is invoked with.
+
+The CELL label used above is a generic label for documentation
+purposes.  The "CELL" label in an actual security event description
+will be replaced with one of the following currently supported event
+type descriptions:
+
+	task_kill
+	task_setpgid
+	task_getpgid
+	task_getsid
+	task_setnice
+	task_setioprio
+	task_getioprio
+	task_prlimit
+	task_setrlimit
+	task_setscheduler
+	task_getscheduler
+	task_prctl
+	file_open
+	mmap_file
+	file_ioctl
+	file_lock
+	file_fcntl
+	file_receive
+	unix_stream_connect
+	unix_may_send
+	socket_create
+	socket_connect
+	socket_bind
+	socket_accept
+	socket_listen
+	socket_socketpair
+	socket_sendmsg"
+	socket_recvmsg
+	socket_getsockname
+	socket_getpeername
+	socket_setsockopt
+	socket_shutdown
+	ptrace_traceme
+	kernel_module_request
+	kernel_load_data
+	kernel_read_file
+	sb_mount
+	sb_umount
+	sb_remount
+	sb_pivotroot
+	sb_statfs
+	move_mount
+	shm_associate
+	shm_shmctl
+	shm_shmat
+	sem_associate
+	sem_semctl
+	sem_semop
+	syslog
+	settime
+	quotactl
+	quota_on
+	msg_queue_associate
+	msg_queue_msgctl
+	msg_queue_msgsnd
+	msg_queue_msgrcv
+	ipc_permission
+	key_alloc
+	key_permission
+	netlink_send
+	inode_create
+	inode_link
+	inode_unlink
+	inode_symlink
+	inode_mkdir
+	inode_rmdir
+	inode_mknod
+	inode_rename
+	inode_setattr
+	inode_getattr
+	inode_setxattr
+	inode_getxattr
+	inode_listxattr
+	inode_removexattr
+	inode_killpriv
+	tun_dev_create
+	tun_dev_attach_queue
+	tun_dev_attach
+	tun_dev_open
+	bpf
+	bpf_map
+	bpf_prog
+	ptrace_access_check
+	capable
+	capget
+	capset
+
+
+Event encoding:
+---------------
+
+The 'event' label encodes a value structure of the following form:
+
+	"event": {
+		"context": "NN",
+		"number": "NN",
+	        "process": "ASCII",
+	        "type": "ASCII",
+	        "ttd": "NN",
+	        "p_ttd": "NN",
+	        "task_id": "DIGEST",
+	        "p_task_id": "DIGEST",
+	        "ts": "NN"
+	{
+
+Where the value type for the individual keys is as follows:
+
+	context:	A 64-bit numeric value representing the identity
+			number of the security modeling namespace that
+			generated the event.
+
+	number:		A 64-bit numeric value representing the sequence
+			number of the event in the security modeling
+			namespace that generated the event.
+
+	process:	The name of the process (current->comm) that
+			is invoking the security handler.
+
+	type:		One of the security event description names
+			noted above.
+
+	ttd:		A 64-bit numeric value incremented each time
+			a TASK_ID is generated by the bprm_committed_creds
+			handler.  This value is used to separate unique
+			invocations of an executable corpus of code.
+
+	p_ttd:		The ttd value of the parent process of the process
+			generating the event.  This value and the ttd
+			value can be used to reproduce the order of
+			execution of executable code on a platform or
+			in a security modeling namespace.
+
+	task_id:	The TASK_ID of the process executing the event.
+
+	p_task_id:	The TASK_ID of the parent process of the process
+			executing the event.
+
+	ts: 		The timestamp for when the security event occurred.
+			The timestamp value is in monotonic nanoseconds
+			since the hardware platform was booted.
+			
+
+Context Of Execution encoding:
+------------------------------
+
+The 'COE' label encodes a structure of the following form:
+
+	"COE": {
+		"uid": "NN",
+		"euid": "NN",
+		"suid": "NN",
+		"gid": "NN",
+		"egid": "NN",
+		"sgid": "NN",
+		"fsuid": "NN",
+		"fsgid": "NN",
+		"capeff": "0xHEX"
+	}
+
+	Which describes the credentials of the process that is
+	executing the event.  The reference for the numeric values of
+	the discretionary access control values is either the initial
+	user namespace or the user namespace that the security
+	modeling namespace is running in.
+
+	The namespace reference is a selectable feature when the
+	security modeling namespace is created.  The root security
+	modeling namespace always uses the initial user namespace.
+
+	It is assumed that anyone developing security models will be
+	familiar with the common definitions for the uid, gid
+	etc. labels.
+
+	The 'capeff' label is the effective capability set possessed
+	by a process when the security event is executed.
+
+	
+CELL (event description) encoding:
+----------------------------------
+	
+The 'CELL' label encodes multiple different structures depending on
+the security event that is being encoded.  An understanding of the
+various LSM security event hooks and their arguments is recommended
+prerequisite for anyone wishing to develop security models using these
+event descriptions.
+
+The CELL event descriptions frequently have subordinate JSON
+structures embedded in them.  In some cases only a single instance of
+a structure is used for that event type, in which case the definition
+of that structure will be included inline with the description of the
+event itself.
+
+The following general event subordinate parameter descriptions are
+used:
+
+The 'creds' structure is used to define the standard discretionary
+access based security credentials for a process:
+
+	creds {
+		"uid": "NN",
+		"euid": "NN",
+		"suid": "NN",
+		"gid": "NN",
+		"egid": "NN",
+		"sgid": "NN",
+		"fsuid": "NN",
+		"fsgid": "NN",
+		"capeff": "0xHEX",
+		"securebits:" "NN"
+	}
+
+	As in the case for the COE encoding standard knowledge of
+	discretionary access controls is assumed with the capeff label
+	being previously described.
+
+	securebits:	A numeric value containing bit specific fields
+			that a file capability enabled kernel will use
+			to invoke special handling of capabilities for
+			the root user id.
+
+
+The 'perm' structure is used to describe the IPC permissions for
+shared memory primitives such as shared memory regions, message
+queues, semaphores etc.:
+
+	"perm": {
+		"uid": "NN",
+		"gid": "NN",
+		"cuid": "NN",
+		"cgid": "NN",
+		"mode": "0MM",
+		"owner": "DIGEST"
+	}
+
+	uid:		The user id requesting permission for access to the
+			memory area.
+
+	gid:		The group id requesting permission for access to
+			the memory area.
+
+	cuid:		The alternate user id requesting permission for
+			access to the memory area.
+
+	cgid:		The alternate group id requesting permission for
+			access to the memory area.
+
+	mode:		The permissions being requested for access.
+
+	owner:		The TASK_ID of the process requesting access
+			to the memory area.
+
+
+The 'inode' structure is used to describe an inode structure used in
+a security event description:
+
+	"inode": {
+		"uid": "NN",
+		"gid": "NN",
+		"mode": "0MM,
+		"s_magic": "0xHEX",
+		"s_id": "ASCII",
+		"s_uuid": "HEX"
+	}
+
+	uid:		The user id that owns the inode.
+
+	gid:		The group id that owns the inode.
+
+	mode:		The discretionary access control permissions
+			for the inode.
+
+	s_magic:	The magic number of the filesystem that the
+			inode is in.
+
+	s_id:		The informational name from the superblock
+			of the filesystem the inode is in.
+
+	s_uuid:		The UUID of the filesystem the inode is in.
+
+
+The 'inode' structure is used to describe an inode structure used in
+a security event description:
+
+	"inode": {
+		"uid": "NN",
+		"gid": "NN",
+		"mode": "0MM,
+		"s_magic": "0xHEX",
+		"s_id": "ASCII",
+		"s_uuid": "HEX"
+	}
+		
+
+The 'path' structure is used to describe a path definition for an
+inode:
+
+	"path": {
+		"dev": {
+			"major": "NN",
+			"minor": "NN"
+		},
+		"instance": "NN",  	/* Optional. */
+		"owner": "DIGEST", 	/* Optional. */
+		"pathname": "ASCII"
+	}
+
+	dev:		A structure used to encapsulate the major and minor
+			numbers of the device that the filesystem is based
+			on.  This structure will not be included if the
+			path is not on a block device.
+
+	instance:	This key/value pair is only reported for an
+			inode that is created in the context of the
+			security modeling namespace that is reporting
+			the path description.
+
+			If reported, the instance value is the
+			instance count of an inode created under the
+			containing directory by the TASK_ID of the
+			process creating the inode.
+
+	owner:		As with the instance key, this key/value pair
+			is only reported for an inode created in the
+			context of the security modeling namespace
+			that is reporting the path description.
+
+			If reported, the DIGEST value is the TASK_ID
+			of the process that created the inode.
+
+	pathname:	The pathname of the file.
+	
+
+The 'dentry' structure is used to describe a dentry argument:
+
+	"dentry": {
+		"inode": {},
+		"path": {}
+	}
+
+	inode:		A JSON inode structure that describes the backing
+			inode for the dentry.  In some instances a
+			dentry does not have an inode defined, in which
+			case this key/value structure will be omitted
+			from the security event description.
+
+	path:		A JSON path structure describing the pathname
+			implemented by the dentry.
+			
+
+The 'file' structure is used to describe a file structure used in
+a security event description:
+
+	"file": {
+		"flags": "NN",
+		"inode": {},
+		"path": {}
+		"digest": "DIGEST"
+	}
+
+	flags:	The f_flags member of the file structure describing
+		how the file was opened.
+
+	inode:	A structure describing the inode that is backing
+		the file.  The definition of the inode structure will
+		be included after the descriptions of the inode based
+		security handlers.
+
+	path:	A structure describing the path to the file.
+
+	digest:	The cryptographic digest of the file.  For files
+		on a pseudo-filesystem or files that are created in
+		the context of a security modeling namespace this
+		value will be the 'zero-value' digest for the
+		hash function being used in the security modeling
+		namespace.
+
+
+The 'sb' structure is used to describe a filesystem superblock.
+
+	"sb": {
+		"dev_name", "ASCII",
+		"path", {},
+		"type", "ASCII",
+		"flags", "NN"
+	}
+
+	dev_name:	The device name that the filesystem is mounted
+			on.
+
+	path:		A JSON path description describing where the
+			the superblock is mounted.
+
+	type:		An ASCII string describing the mounted filesystem.
+
+	flags:		The mount flags for the mountpoint.
+
+
+The 'sock' structure is used to describe a socket that is used in
+a security event description:
+
+	sock {
+		"family": "NN",
+		"type": "NN",
+		"protocol": "NN",
+		"owner": "DIGEST"
+	}
+
+	family:		A numeric value describing the protocol family
+			that the socket is to be created for, ie. AF_UNIX,
+			AF_INET etc.
+
+	type:		The type of communications the socket is to
+			be used for, ie. SOCKET_STREAM, SOCKET_DGRAM.
+
+	protocol:	An optional protocol to be used with the socket.
+
+
+The 'addr' structure is used is an enclosing structure to hold
+subordinate structures that describe the address of a socket.  The
+addr field will contain a subordinate structure that is specific to
+the address type:
+
+	addr {
+		"af_inet": {}
+		"af_inet6": {}
+		"af_unix": {}
+		"af_other": {}
+	}
+
+The 'af_inet' structure defines an IPV4 network address:
+
+	"af_inet": {
+		"port": "NN",
+		"address": "NN
+	{
+
+	port:		The port number of the address.
+
+	address:	The 32-bit IPV4 address.
+
+The 'af_inet6' structure defines an IPV6 network address:
+
+	"af_inet6": {
+		"port": "NN",
+		"flow":	"NN",
+		"scope": "NN",
+		"address": "HEXID"
+	}
+
+	port:		The port number of the address.
+
+	flow:		The IPV6 flow specifier.
+
+	scope:		The IPV6 scope designator.
+
+	address:	The 128 bit IPV6 address in ASCII hexadecimal.
+
+The 'af_unix' structure a UNIX domain address:
+
+	"af_unix": {
+		"address": "ASCII"
+	}
+
+	address:	The path to the filesystem object representing
+			the socket.
+
+The 'af_other' structure is used to define a socket address other
+than one of the three above:
+
+	"af_other": {
+		"address": "DIGEST"
+	}
+
+	address:	The DIGEST value is the cryptographic digest
+			value over the sa_data member of the
+			sockaddr structure.
+
+
+Event Specific Encodings:
+-------------------------
+
+The 'task_kill' event models a request to send a signal to a target
+task:
+
+	"task_kill": {
+		"target": "DIGEST",
+		"sig": "NN",
+		"cross_ns": "NN"
+	}
+
+	target:		The TASK_ID of the process that the signal is
+			being sent to.
+
+	sig:		The number of the signal being sent.
+
+	cross_ns:	A boolean flag variable of 0 or 1 indicating
+			whether or not the signal will be crossing a
+			security modeling namespace boundary.
+
+
+The 'task_setpgid' event models a request to set the process group id
+of a task:
+
+	"task_setpgid": {
+		"task": "DIGEST",
+		"source": "DIGEST"
+	}
+
+	task:		The TASK_ID of the process whose process group
+			id is to be set.
+
+	source:		The TASK_ID of the process whose process group
+			id the target task is to be placed into.
+
+
+The 'task_getpgid' event describes a request to obtain the process
+group id of a task:
+
+	"task_getpgid": {
+		"task": "DIGEST",
+	}
+
+	task:		The TASK_ID of the process whose process group
+			id is to be obtained.
+
+
+The 'task_getsid' event describes a request to obtain the session id of
+a task.
+	
+	"task_getsid": {
+		"task": "DIGEST",
+	}
+
+	task:		The TASK_ID of the process whose session id is
+			to be obtained.
+
+
+The 'task_setnice' event describes a request to set the execution
+priority of a task.
+
+	"task_setnice": {
+		"task": "DIGEST",
+		"nice": "NN"
+	}
+
+	task:		The TASK_ID of the process whose priority is
+			to be set.
+
+	nice:		The numerical priority value to be set.
+
+
+The 'task_setioprio' event describes a request to set the io priority
+of a task.
+
+	"task_setioprio": {
+		"task": "DIGEST",
+		"ioprio": "NN"
+	}
+
+	task:		The TASK_ID of the process whose I/O priority is
+			to be set.
+
+	ioprio:		The numerical priority value to be set.
+
+
+
+The 'task_getioprio' event describes a request to get the io priority
+of a task.
+
+	"task_getioprio": {
+		"task": "DIGEST"
+	}
+
+	task:		The TASK_ID of the process whose I/O priority is
+			to be obtained.
+
+
+The 'task_prlimit' event describes a request to get or set resource
+limits for a task
+
+	"task_prlimit": {
+		"cred": {}
+		"tcred": {}
+	}
+
+	cred:		A credential structure, defined below, that
+			describes the credentials of the task that
+			is requesting the right to set resource limits
+			for a task.
+
+	tcred:		A credential structure that describes the
+			credentials of the task whose resource limits
+			are to queried.
+
+
+The 'task_setrlimit' event describes a request to set a new resource
+limit for a task.
+
+	"task_setrlimit": {
+		"task": "DIGEST"
+		"new_rlim": {
+			"resource": "NN",
+			"current": "NN",
+			"max": "NN"
+		}
+	}
+
+	task:		The TASK_ID of the process whose resource limit
+			is to be set.
+
+	new_rlim:	A structure with the following key values that
+		 	describes the resource limit being set:
+
+			resource:	The numeric identifier for the
+					resource being set.
+
+			current:	The current numeric value of
+					the resource.
+
+			max:		The new numeric value for the
+					resource.
+	
+
+The 'task_setscheduler' event describes a request to set a new scheduler
+type for a task.
+
+	"task_setscheduler": {
+		"task": "DIGEST"
+	}
+
+	task:		The TASK_ID of the process whose scheduler is
+			to be set.
+
+
+The 'task_getscheduler' event describes a request to obtain the type of
+process scheduler that is set for a task.
+
+	"task_getscheduler": {
+		"task": "DIGEST"
+	}
+
+	task:		The TASK_ID of the process whose scheduler
+			type is to be queried.
+
+
+The 'task_prctl' event describes a request to perform a process control
+operation on the task that is executing the event.
+
+	"task_prctl": {
+		"option": "NN",
+		"arg2": "NN",
+		"arg3": "NN",
+		"arg4": "NN",
+		"arg5": "NN
+	}
+
+	option:		The type of process control operation that is
+			to be performed.
+
+	arg2-5:		A total of four numeric values that describe
+			the process control operation.
+
+
+The 'file_open' event describes a request to open a file.
+
+	"file_open": {
+		"file": {}
+	}
+
+	file:	A structure describing the file that is to be opened.
+		This structure is used as a parameter in multiple
+		events and will be documented later.
+
+
+The 'file_ioctl' event describes a request to issue an ioctl call against
+a file.
+
+	"file_ioctl": {
+		"file": {},
+		"cmd": "NN
+	}
+
+	file:	The description of the file that the ioctl call is
+		to be issued against.
+
+	prot:	The numeric value of the argument specifying the memory
+		protections that are to be implemented.
+
+	flags:	The flags argument specifying the type of mapping to be
+		implemented.  See the mmap(2) manpage for information
+		about the protection and flags argument to the mmap
+		system call.
+
+
+The 'file_lock' event describes a request for permission to issue a
+lock operation against the specified file.
+
+	"file_lock": {
+		"file": {},
+		"cmd": "NN"
+	}
+
+	file:	The description of the file that the lock is to be
+		placed on.
+
+	cmd:	The numeric coding of the lock operation that is to
+		be performed.
+
+
+The 'file_fcntl' event describes a request for permission to issue a
+perform a file operation on the designated file.
+
+	"file_fcntl": {
+		"file": {},
+		"cmd": "NN"
+	}
+
+	file:	The description of the file that the file operation is
+		to be conducted on.
+
+	cmd:	The numeric coding of the type of file operation that
+		is to be performed.
+
+
+The 'file_receive' event describes a request for permission to receive
+an open file descriptor though an InterProcess Communications (IPC)
+call.
+
+	"file_receive": {
+		"file": {},
+	}
+
+	file:	The description of the file whose file descriptor is to
+		be received.
+
+
+The 'unix_stream_connect' event describes a request for permission to
+establish a UNIX domain stream connection.  This request for
+permission is for AF_UNIX sockets that are not enumerated using the
+traditional filename model.
+
+	"unix_stream_connect": {
+		"sock": {},
+		"other": "{}"
+	}
+
+	sock:	A JSON socket structure describing the socket that is
+		to be connected to a second socket.  A socket description
+		structure is used by other socket operations and its
+		characteristics will be documented later.
+
+	other:	A JSON socket structure describing the socket that is
+		to be connected to.
+
+
+The 'unix_may_send' event describes a request for permission to send
+a datagram from an originating socket to a destination socket.  This
+permission check is associated with the non-filename based sockets
+described above.
+
+	"unix_may_send": {
+		"sock": {},
+		"other": "{}"
+	}
+
+	sock:	A structure describing the socket that is originating
+		the datagram.
+
+	other:	A structure describing the socket that is to receive
+		the datagram.
+
+
+The 'socket_create' event describes a request for permission to create
+a networking socket.
+
+	"socket_create": {
+		"family": NN,
+		"type": "NN",
+		"protocol": "NN",
+		"kern": "NN"
+	}
+
+	family:		A numeric value describing the protocol family
+			that the socket is to be created for, ie. AF_UNIX,
+			AF_INET etc.
+
+	type:		The type of communications the socket is to
+			be used for, ie. SOCKET_STREAM, SOCKET_DGRAM.
+
+	protocol:	An optional protocol to be used with the socket.
+
+	kern:		A boolean value used to indicate whether or
+			not the socket is kernel based.
+
+
+The 'socket_connect' event describes a request for permission to
+create connect a socket to a remote endpoint address.
+
+	"socket_connect": {
+		"sock": {},
+		"addr": {}
+	}
+
+	sock:		A JSON socket description of the socket making
+			the connection request.
+
+	addr:		A JSON socket structure describing the connection
+			endpoint address.
+
+
+The 'socket_bind' event describes a request for permission to bind a
+socket to a network endpoint address.
+
+	"socket_bind": {
+		"sock": {},
+		"addr": {}
+	}
+
+	sock:		A JSON socket description of the socket making
+			the request.
+
+	addr:		A JSON address description describing the address
+			that is being bound to.
+
+
+The 'socket_accept' event describes a request for permission for a
+socket to accept a connection from a remote address.
+
+	"socket_accept": {
+		"sock": {},
+		"addr": {}
+	}
+
+	sock:		A JSON socket description of the socket making
+			the request.
+
+	addr:		A JSON address description of the address being
+			accepted by the socket.
+
+
+The 'socket_listen' event describes a request for permission for a
+socket to listen for a connection.
+
+	"socket_listen": {
+		"sock": {},
+		"backlog": "NN"
+	}
+
+	sock:		A JSON socket description of the socket making
+			the request to listen.
+
+	backlog:	The maximum number of entries that will be
+			allowed to be queued waiting for acceptance.
+
+
+The 'socket_socketpair' event describes a request for permission to
+create a pair of connected sockets.
+
+	"socket_socketpair": {
+		"socka": {},
+		"sockb": {}"
+	}
+
+	socka:		A JSON socket description of the first socket in
+			the pair.
+
+	sockb:		A JSON socket description of the second socket in
+			the pair.
+
+
+The 'socket_sendmsg' event describes a request for permission to
+send a message over a socket.
+
+	"socket_sendmsg": {
+		"sock": {},
+		"addr": {}"
+	}
+
+	sock:		A JSON socket description of the socket sending
+			the message.
+
+	addr:		A JSON address description defining the address
+			to which the message is being sent.
+
+
+The 'socket_recvmsg' event describes a request for permission to
+receive a message over a socket.
+
+	"socket_recvmsg": {
+		"sock": {},
+		"addr": {}"
+	}
+
+	sock:		A JSON socket description of the socket receiving
+			the message.
+
+	addr:		A JSON address description the address from which
+			the message is being received.
+
+
+The 'socket_getsockname' event describes a request for permission to
+read the address of a socket.
+
+	"socket_getsockname": {
+		"sock": {}
+	}
+
+	sock:		A JSON socket description of the socket whose
+			address is to be read.
+
+
+The 'socket_getpeername' event describes a request for permission to
+read the address of the socket's peer.
+
+	"socket_getpeername": {
+		"sock": {}
+	}
+
+	sock:		A JSON socket description of the socket the
+			peer address is to be obtained from.
+
+
+The 'socket_setsockopt' event describes a request for permission to
+set an option on a socket.
+
+	"socket_setsockopt": {
+		"sock": {},
+		"level": "NN",
+		"optname": "NN"
+	}
+
+	sock:		A JSON socket description of the socket whose
+			options are to be set.
+
+	level:		The protocol level at which the option will be
+			set.
+
+	optname:	The numeric coding of the option that will be set.
+
+
+The 'socket_shutdown' event describes a request for permission to shutdown
+a socket.
+
+	"socket_shutdown": {
+		"sock": {},
+		"how": "NN"
+	}
+
+	sock:		A JSON socket description of the socket that is
+			to be shutdown.
+
+	how:		A numeric code specifying how send and receives
+			on the socket are to be handled by the shutdown.
+
+
+The 'ptrace_traceme' event describes a request for permission for the
+parent process to trace the process that is executing the security
+handler.
+
+	"ptrace_traceme": {
+		"source": "DIGEST"
+	}
+
+	source:		The TASK_ID of the process requesting tracing
+			permissions.
+
+
+The 'kernel_module_request' event describes a request for permission
+to load a kernel module.
+
+	"kernel_module_request": {
+		"kmod_name": "ASCII"
+	}
+
+	kmod_name:	The name of the kernel module being requested.
+
+
+The 'kernel_load_data' event describes a request for permission to
+load data into the kernel
+
+	"kernel_load_data": {
+		"id": "NN",
+		"contents": "NN"
+	}
+
+	id:		A numeric identifier value representing the
+			type of data to be loaded.
+
+	contents:	A flag variable indicating if post data
+			loading will be used.
+		
+
+The 'kernel_read_file' event describes a request for permission for the
+kernel to load a file specified by userspace.
+
+	"kernel_read_file": {
+		"file": {},
+		"contents": "NN"
+	}
+
+	file:		A JSON description of the file to be read.
+
+	id:		A numeric identifier value representing the
+			type of data to be loaded.
+
+
+The 'sb_mount' event describes a request for permission to mount a
+filesystem.
+
+	sb_mount {
+		"dev_name": "ASCII",
+		"path": {}
+		"type": "ASCII",
+		"flags": "NN"
+	}
+
+	dev_name:	The name of the device that is to be mounted.
+
+	path:		A JSON path description describing where the
+			device is to be mounted.
+
+	type:		The type of filesystem to be mounted.
+
+	flags:		The mount flags to be implemented.
+	
+
+The 'sb_umount' event describes a request to unmount a filesystem.
+
+	"sb_umount": {
+		"mnt", {},
+		"flags", "NN"
+	}
+
+	mnt:		A JSON dentry structure defining the mount point
+			that is to be unmounted.
+
+	flags:		A numerical value specifying the flags passed
+			to the unmount command.
+
+
+The 'sb_remount' event describes a request for permission to remount a
+filesystem.
+
+	"sb_remount": {
+		"sb": {}
+		"dentry": {},
+		"fstype": "ASCII",
+		"s_flags": "NN"
+	}
+
+	sb:		A JSON superblock structure describing the
+			mountpoint that is to be remounted.
+
+	dentry:		A JSON dentry structure describing the mountpoint
+			that is to be remounted.
+
+	fstype:		The name of the filesystem being remounted.
+
+	s_flags:	The superblock flags describing the mount.
+
+
+The 'sb_pivotroot' event describes a request for permission to pivot
+the root filesystem to a new mount point.
+
+	"sb_pivotroot": {
+		"old_path": {},
+		"new_path": {}
+	}
+
+	old_path:	A JSON path structure specifying the location
+			from which the root filesystem is to be moved.
+
+	new_path:	A JSON path structure specifying the location
+			to which the root filesystem is to be moved.
+
+
+The 'sb_statfs' event describes a request for permission to access
+filesystem statistics.
+
+	"sb_statfs": {
+		"dentry": {},
+	}
+
+	dentry:		A JSON dentry structure describing the superblock
+			location for the request.
+
+
+The 'move_mount' event describes a request for permission to move a
+mount from one location to another.
+
+	"move_mount": {
+		"from_path": {},
+		"to_path": {}
+	}
+
+	from_path:	A JSON path structure describing the location from
+			where the mount is to be moved from.
+
+	to_path:	A JSON path structure describing the location to
+			where the mount is to be moved to.
+
+
+The 'shm_associate' event structure describes a request for permission
+to access an existing shared memory region.
+
+	"shm_associate": {
+		"perm": {},
+		"shmflg": "NN"
+	}
+
+	perm: 		A JSON IPC permissions structure describing the
+			permissions of the shared memory region.
+
+	shmflg:		A numeric flag describing the shared memory
+			operations being requested.
+
+
+The 'shm_shmctl' event structure describes a request for permission to
+execute a command on a SYSV shared memory region.
+
+	"shm_shmctl": {
+		"perm": {},
+		"cmd": "NN"
+	}
+
+	perm: 		A JSON IPC permissions structure describing the
+			permissions of the shared memory region.
+
+	cmd:		The command whose permission is to be checked.
+
+
+The 'shm_shmat' event structure describes a request for permission to
+attach to a shared memory region.
+
+	"shm_shmat": {
+		"perm": {},
+		"shmflg": "NN"
+	}
+
+	perm: 		A JSON IPC permissions structure describing the
+			permissions of the shared memory region.
+
+	shmflg:		The shared memory attachment command being
+			requested.
+
+
+The 'sem_associate' event structure describes a request for permission
+to attach to an existing shared memory semaphore.
+
+	"sem_associate": {
+		"perm": {},
+		"shmflg": "NN"
+	}
+
+	perm: 		A JSON IPC permissions structure describing the
+			permissions of the semaphores that the
+			association request is being requested for.
+
+	semflg:		The semaphore operations flag.
+
+
+The 'sem_semctl' event structure describes a request for permission
+to execute a control operation on a shared memory semaphore.
+
+	"sem_semctl": {
+		"perm": {},
+		"cmd": "NN"
+	}
+
+	perm: 		A JSON IPC permissions structure describing the
+			permissions of on the semaphore that the control
+			command is being requested on.
+
+	cmd:		The semaphore command that is being requested.
+
+
+The 'sem_semop' event structure describes a request for permission to
+request an operation on a semaphore set.
+
+	"sem_semctl": {
+		"perm": {},
+		"nsops": "NN",
+		"alter": "NN"
+	}
+
+	perm: 		A JSON IPC permissions structure describing the
+			permissions of the semaphore set that the
+			operation is being requested on.
+
+	nsops:		The number of operations to be performed.
+
+	alter:		The changes that are to be made.
+
+
+The 'syslog' event structure describes a request for permission to
+access the kernel message buffers or change console logging.
+
+	"syslog": {
+		"type": NN
+	}
+
+	type: 		The action that is being requested.
+
+
+The 'settime' event structure describes a request for permission to
+access the kernel message buffers or change console logging.
+
+	"settime": {
+		"ts": {
+			"seconds", "NN",
+			"nsecs", "NN"
+		},
+		"tz": {
+			"minuteswest", "NN",
+			"dsttime", "NN"
+		}
+	}
+
+	ts: 		If the call to the security_settime handler was
+			to set the time this structure will be present.
+
+	seconds:	The time in seconds to set.
+
+	nsecs:		The time in nano-seconds to be set.
+
+	tz:		If the call to the security_settime handler was
+			to set the timezone this structure will be present.
+
+	minuteswest:	The offset of the timezone.
+
+	dsttime:	A flag variable to indicate if daylight savings
+			time is to be set.
+
+
+The 'quotactl' event structure describes a request for permission to
+control manipulate filesystem quotas.
+
+	"quotactl": {
+		"cmds": "NN",
+		"type": "NN",
+		"id": "NN",
+		"sb", {}
+	}
+
+	cmds:		The quota commands to be enforced.
+
+	type:		The type of quota to be enforced.
+
+	id:		The quota version to be enforced.
+
+	sb:		A JSON superblock structure describing the
+			filesystem on which the quota command is to
+			operate on.
+
+
+The 'quota_on' event structure describes a request to enable quotas
+for a filesystem.
+
+	"quota_on": {
+		"dentry": {}
+	}
+
+	dentry:		A JSON dentry description describing the
+			mountpoint that quotas are to be enabled on.
+
+
+The 'msg_queue_associate' event structure describes a request to
+access a previously defined message queue.
+
+	"msg_queue_associate": {
+		"perm": {}
+		"msgflg": "NN"
+	}
+
+	perm: 		A JSON IPC permissions structure describing the
+			permissions of the message queue that association
+			is being requested for.
+
+	msgflg:		A numeric flag indicating the operation that is
+			being requested.
+
+
+The 'msg_queue_msgctl' event structure describes a request to execute
+a control operation on a shared memory message queue region.
+
+	"msg_queue_msgctl": {
+		"perm": {}
+		"cmd": "NN"
+	}
+
+	perm: 		A JSON IPC permissions structure describing the
+			permissions of the shared memory message queue
+			region that the control command is being
+			requested on.
+
+	cmd:		A numeric flag indicating the control operation
+			that is to be executed.
+
+
+The 'msg_queue_msgsnd' event structure describes a request to send a
+message over a shared memory message queue.
+
+	"msg_queue_msgsnd": {
+		"perm": {}
+		"msqflg": "NN"
+	}
+
+	perm: 		A JSON IPC permissions structure describing the
+			permissions of the shared memory message queue
+			region that the message is being sent on.
+
+	msqflg:		A numeric coding of the operation that is to
+			be performed.
+
+
+The 'msg_queue_msgrcv' event structure describes a request to receive
+a message over a shared memory message queue.
+
+	"msg_queue_msgrcv": {
+		"perm": {}
+		"target": "DIGEST"
+		"type": "NN",
+		"mode": 
+	}
+
+	perm: 		A JSON IPC permissions structure describing the
+			permissions of the shared memory message queue
+			region that the message is being received on.
+
+	target:		The TASK_ID of the process that is to receive
+			the message.
+
+	type:		The type of message that is to be received.
+
+	mode:		The operations flag for the message.
+
+
+The 'ipc_permission' event structure describes a request to check if
+SYSV IPC access is to be allowed.
+
+	"ipc_permission": {
+		"perm": {}
+		"target": "DIGEST"
+		"type": "NN",
+		"mode": "NN"
+	}
+
+	ipcp: 		A JSON IPC permissions structure describing the
+			permissions on the SYSV shared memory region that
+			is to be checked.
+
+	flag:		The access permissions being requested.
+
+
+The 'key_alloc' event structure describes a request for permission to
+allocate and initialize a kernel key structure.
+
+	"key_alloc": {
+		"creds": {},
+		"flags": "NN"
+	}
+
+	creds: 		A JSON credentials structure describing the
+			the access controls for the key structure
+
+	flags:		A numeric control constant describing how the
+			key is to be created.
+
+
+The 'key_permission' event structure describes a request for
+permission to execute a control operation on a kernel key structure.
+
+	"key_permission": {
+		"key_refs": {
+			"possessed": "NN",
+			"uid": "NN",
+			"gid": "NN",
+			"flags": "NN"
+		}
+		"creds": {},
+		"perm", "NN"
+	}
+
+	key_refs:	A JSON structure describing the key to be
+			accessed.
+
+		possessed:	A flag indicating whether or not the key is
+				possessed by a process.
+
+		uid:		The user id that owns the key.
+
+		gid:		The group id that owns the key.
+
+		flags:		Flags describing the state of the key.
+
+	creds		A credentials structure describing the task that
+			is requesting access to the key.
+
+	perm:		The permissions that are being requested on the
+			key.
+
+
+The 'netlink_send' event structure describes the permissions that are
+to be set on a netlink socket.
+
+	"netlink_send": {
+		"sock": {},
+		"uid": "NN",
+		"gid": "NN"
+		"portid": "NN",
+		"dst_group": "NN",
+		"nsid_set": "NN",
+		"nsid": "NN"
+	}
+
+	sock:		A JSON socket description structure describing
+			the socket over which the message is to be sent.
+
+	uid:		The user id that the message is to be sent to.
+
+	gid:		The group id that the message is to be sent to.
+
+	portid:		The port identifier of the 	
+
+	dst_group:	The destination group for the message.
+
+	nsid_set:	A flag variable indicating that the nsid value
+			is valid.
+
+	nsid:		The namespace identifier.
+
+
+The 'inode_create' event structure describes a request to create an
+inode.
+
+	"inode_create": {
+		"dir":	{},
+		"dentry": {},
+		"mode": "0MM"
+	}
+
+	dir:		A JSON inode description describing the directory
+			the inode is to be created under.
+
+	dentry:		A JSON dentry description describing the location
+			where the inode is to be created.
+
+	mode:		The permissions to be assigned to the inode.
+
+
+The 'inode_link' event structure describes a request to link an inode
+to a new location.
+
+	"inode_link": {
+		"old_dentry": {},
+		"dir": {},
+		"new_dentry": {}
+	}
+
+	old_dentry:	A JSON dentry description describing the current
+			location of the inode.
+
+	dir		A JSON inode description describing the parent
+			directory under which the inode link will be
+			created.
+
+	new_dentry:	A JSON dentry description describing the location
+			of the new link.
+
+
+The 'inode_unlink' event structure describes a request to delete an
+inode.
+
+	"inode_unlink": {
+		"dir": {},
+		"dentry": {}
+	}
+
+	dir:		A JSON inode structure describing the parent
+			directory from which the inode is to be removed.
+
+	dentry:		A JSON dentry description describing the inode
+			to be removed.
+
+
+The inode_symlink event structure describes a request to delete an inode.
+
+	"inode_symlink": {
+		"dir": {},
+		"dentry": {},
+		"old_name": "ASCII"
+	}
+
+	dir:		A JSON inode structure describing the parent
+			directory in which the link is to be created.
+
+	dentry:		A JSON dentry description describing the inode
+			that is to be created as the link.
+
+	old_name:	The name of the existing filename to be linked.
+
+
+The 'inode_mkdir' event structure describes a request to create an
+directory.
+
+	"inode_mkdir": {
+		"dir": {},
+		"dentry": {},
+		"mode": "0MM"
+	}
+
+	dir:		A JSON inode structure describing the parent
+			directory in which the directory is to be created.
+
+	dentry:		A JSON dentry description describing the directory
+			inode that is to be created.
+
+	mode:		The permissions to be assigned to the new directory.
+
+
+The 'inode_rmdir' event structure describes a request to remove a
+directory inode.
+
+	"inode_rmdir": {
+		"dir": {},
+		"dentry": {},
+	}
+
+	dir:		A JSON inode structure describing the parent
+			directory of the directory being removed.
+
+	dentry:		A JSON dentry description describing the directory
+			inode that is to be removed.
+
+	mode:		The permissions to be assigned to the new directory.
+
+
+The 'inode_mknod' event structure describes a request to remove a directory
+inode.
+
+	"inode_mknod": {
+		"dir": {},
+		"dentry": {},
+		"mode": "0MM",
+		"dev": {
+			"major": "NN",
+			"minor": "NN"
+		}
+	}
+
+	dir:		A JSON inode structure describing the directory
+			under which the device node is being created.
+
+	dentry:		A JSON dentry description describing the location
+			of the device node inode.
+
+	mode:		The permissions to be assigned to the device node.
+
+	dev:		A JSON structure describing the device node
+			characteristics:
+
+		major:		The major number of the device to be
+				created.
+
+		minor:		The minor number of the device to be
+				created.
+
+
+The 'inode_rename' event structure describes a request to rename an
+inode.
+
+	"inode_rename": {
+		"old_dir": {},
+		"old_dentry": {},
+		"new_dir": {},
+		"new_dentry": {}
+	}
+
+	old_dir:	A JSON inode structure describing the parent
+			directory of the inode to be renamed.
+
+	old_dentry:	A JSON dentry description describing the location
+			of the inode to be renamed.
+
+	new_dir:	A JSON inode structure describing the parent
+			directory of the new location of the inode.
+
+	new_dentry:	A JSON dentry description describing the new
+			inode location.
+
+
+The 'inode_setattr' event structure describes a request to set the
+attributes of an inode.
+
+	"inode_setattr": {
+		"dentry": {},
+		"attr": {
+			"valid": "NN",
+			"mode": "0MM",
+			"uid": "NN",
+			"gid": "NN",
+			"size": "NN
+		}
+	}
+
+	dentry:		A JSON dentry structure describing the inode
+			whose characteristics are to be set.
+
+	attr:		A JSON structure describing the characteristics
+			that will be set:
+
+		valid:		A numeric encoding of what characteristics
+				of the inode should be set.
+
+		mode:		If requested, the permissions that are to
+				be set.
+
+		uid:		If requested, the new user id to be set.
+
+		gid:		If requested, the new group id to be set.
+
+		size:		If requested, the new size of the file.
+
+
+
+The 'inode_getattr' event structure describes a request to obtain the
+attributes of an inode.
+
+	"inode_getattr": {
+		"path": {}
+	}
+
+	path:		A JSON path structure describing the path to
+			the inode whose attributes are to be retrieved.
+
+
+The 'inode_setxattr' event structure describes a request to set the
+extended attributes of an inode.
+
+	"inode_setxattr": {
+		"dentry": {},
+		"name": "ASCII",
+		"value": "BASE64",
+		"flags": "NN"
+	}
+
+	dentry:		A JSON dentry structure describing the inode
+			whose extended attributes are to be set.
+
+	name:		The name of the attribute to be set.
+
+	value:		The value of the attribute to be set encoded
+			as a Base64 ASCII string.
+
+	flags:		The operations flag for how to set the attribute.
+
+
+The 'inode_getxattr' event structure describes a request to get the
+extended attributes of an inode.
+
+	"inode_getxattr": {
+		"dentry": {},
+		"name": "ASCII",
+	}
+
+	dentry:		A JSON dentry structure describing the inode
+			whose extended attributes are to be requested.
+
+	name:		The name of the attribute whose value is to
+			be requested.
+
+
+The 'inode_listxattr' event structure describes a request to list the
+extended attributes attached to an inode.
+
+	"inode_listxattr": {
+		"dentry": {}
+	}
+
+	dentry:		A JSON dentry structure describing the inode
+			whose extended attributes are to be listed.
+
+
+The 'inode_removexattr' event structure describes a request to remove
+an extended attributes attached to an inode.
+
+	"inode_removexattr": {
+		"dentry": {},
+		"name": "ASCII"
+	}
+
+	dentry:		A JSON dentry structure describing the inode
+			whose extended attribute are to be removed.
+
+	name:		The name of the extended attribute that is to
+			be removed.
+
+
+The 'inode_killpriv' event structure describes a request to remove
+privileges from an inode.
+
+	"inode_killpriv": {
+		"dentry": {}
+	}
+
+	dentry:		A JSON dentry structure describing the inode
+			whose privileges are to be removed.
+
+
+The 'tun_dev_create' event structure describes a request to create a
+TUN network device.
+
+	"tun_dev_create": {
+	}
+
+	No parameters are processed for this request.
+
+
+The 'tun_dev_attach_queue' event structure describes a request to
+attach a TUN device queue.
+
+	"tun_dev_attach_queue": {
+	}
+
+	No parameters are processed for this request.
+
+
+The 'tun_dev_attach' event structure describes a request to attach to
+a TUN device.
+
+	"tun_dev_attach": {
+		"sock": {}
+	}
+
+	sock:		A JSON socket description structure describing
+			the socket requesting access to the TUN device.
+
+
+The 'tun_dev_open' event structure describes a request to open a
+network TUN device.
+
+	"tun_dev_open": {
+	}
+
+	No parameters are processed for this request.
+
+
+The 'bpf' event structure describes a request to use the BPS system
+call.
+
+	"bpf": {
+		"cmd": "NN",
+		"attr": {
+			"size": "NN"
+		}
+	}
+
+	cmd:		The BPF command that is being requested.
+
+	attr:		A JSON structure describing the attributes for
+			the command:
+
+		size:		The size of the BPF attribute description
+				that will be passed to the BPF call.
+
+
+The 'bpf_map' event structure describes a request for permission to
+access a BPF map.
+
+	"bpf_map": {
+		"map": {
+			"map_type": "NN",
+			"fmode": "NN"
+		}
+	}
+
+	map:		A JSON description structure used to describe the
+			map that will be accessed.
+
+	fmode:		The permissions to be used for accessing the
+			map.
+
+
+The 'bpf_prog' event structure describes a request for permission to
+access a BPF program.
+
+	"bpf_prog": {
+		"prog": {
+			"type": "NN",
+			"attach_type": "NN"
+		}
+	}
+
+	prog:		A JSON description structure used to describe the
+			program that access is being requested to.
+
+		type:		The type of program being described.
+
+		attach_type:	The type of attachment to be used for the
+				program.
+
+
+The 'capable' event structure describes a request to check if a
+process has a specific capability.
+
+	"capable": {
+		"cap": "NN",
+		"opts": "NN"
+	}
+
+	cap:		The capability being requested.
+
+	opts:		The options directing how the check is to be
+			performed.
+
+
+The 'capget' event structure describes a request to return the
+capability sets that a process has.
+
+	"capget": {
+		"target": "DIGEST",
+		"effective": "0xHEX",
+		"inheritable": "0xHEX",
+		"permitted": "0xHEX"
+	}
+
+	target:		The TASK_ID of the process whose capability masks
+			are to be checked.
+
+	effective:	The effective capabilities of the process.
+
+	inheritable:	The inheritable capabilities of the process.
+
+	permitted:	The permitted capabilities of the process.
+
+
+The 'capset' event structure describes a request to set the
+capabilities of a target process.
+
+	"capset": {
+		"effective": "0xHEX",
+		"inheritable": "0xHEX",
+		"permitted": "0xHEX"
+	}
+
+	effective:	The effective capabilities to be set.
+
+	inheritable:	The inheritable capabilities to be set.
+
+	permitted:	The permitted capabilities to be set.
+
+
+Security event export encodings:
+--------------------------------
+
+External trust orchestrator's read security events from the control
+plane file created for an externally modeled security namespace.
+
+The encoding of the event is in the following form:
+
+{"export": {}, "event": {}}
+
+Where the event structure is the previously described event structure
+with the following additional key:
+
+	pid:		The process identifier (PID) of the task that
+			generated the event.
+
+			The primary TSEM documentation file documents why
+			this value can be safely used in this context.
+
+
+The 'export' structure encodes the characteristics type of the
+exported event.
+
+	"export:" {
+		"type": "ASCII",
+		"TYPE": {}
+	}
+
+The 'export' structure is a self-describing structure where the ASCII
+string that serves as the value of the 'type' key will serve as the
+key value that describes the payload structure of the event, ie. the
+TYPE key will be substituted with the ASCII string.
+
+The following payload labels are defined:
+
+	event
+	async_event
+	aggregate
+	log
+
+The event and async_event payload labels both resolve to the
+previously documented 'event' payload.  The use of different labels
+for the event is to provide a means for a trust orchestrator to know
+the context that the process was running in when the event was
+generated.
+
+The 'aggregate' structure defines the hardware boot measurement
+described previously in this documentation.
+
+	"aggregate": {
+		"value": "DIGEST"
+	}
+
+	value:		The hardware aggregate measurement.
+
+
+The 'log' structure is used to describe a security event that was
+requested while the task was running in untrusted status after a
+security model violating event:
+
+	"log": {
+		"process": "ASCII",
+		"event": "ASCII",
+		"action": "ASCII"
+	}
+
+	process:	The process name (current->comm) that invoked
+			the event.
+
+	event:		The CELL description name of the event that
+			was requested.
+
+	action:		A string value indicating how the event was
+			enforced, either DENY or LOG.
diff --git a/Documentation/admin-guide/LSM/index.rst b/Documentation/admin-guide/LSM/index.rst
index a6ba95fbaa9f..cebd3b02598d 100644
--- a/Documentation/admin-guide/LSM/index.rst
+++ b/Documentation/admin-guide/LSM/index.rst
@@ -47,3 +47,4 @@ subdirectories.
    tomoyo
    Yama
    SafeSetID
+   tsem
diff --git a/Documentation/admin-guide/LSM/tsem.rst b/Documentation/admin-guide/LSM/tsem.rst
new file mode 100644
index 000000000000..1c69a5cb7517
--- /dev/null
+++ b/Documentation/admin-guide/LSM/tsem.rst
@@ -0,0 +1,1680 @@
+====
+TSEM
+====
+
+	"This is the story of the wine of Brule, and it shows what
+	 men love is never money itself but their own way, and
+	 that human beings love sympathy and pageant above all
+	 things."
+				- Hilaire Belloc
+				  The Path to Rome
+
+TSEM is the Trusted Security Event Modeling system.  TSEM is the
+kernel LSM based infrastructure that provides a platform for
+implementing model based mandatory access controls.  TSEM is model
+agnostic and is designed to support deterministic, quasi-deterministic
+and machine learning models.
+
+TSEM also provides a framework for implementing Host Based Intrusion
+Detection (HIDS) and anomaly interdiction systems without the need to
+write kernel code or implement kernel loadable modules or BPF
+programs.
+
+The design and implementation of TSEM is inspired by the notion that
+the security behavior of a platform, or a workload, like all other
+physical phenomenon, can be mathematically modeled.
+
+Security, is at once, both a technical and economic problem.  One of
+the objectives of TSEM is to address inherent and structural economic
+barriers to security, by introducing technology that reduces the skill
+and time needed to implement a level of security, equivalent to what
+can be achieved by mandatory access controls, through unit testing of
+an application stack.
+
+A second objective is to reduce the skill, complexity and
+infrastructure needed to create trusted and remotely attestable
+platforms and/or workloads.
+
+To assist in achieving these objectives, TSEM implements the concept
+of a security modeling namespace that reduces the scope and hence
+complexity of a security model and allows it to be limited to the
+level of a single process hierarchy or a container.
+
+TSEM is the Linux kernel component of a new security architecture
+introduced by the Quixote Project, the notion of a Trust Orchestration
+System (TOS).  The Quixote Project provides a complete implementation
+of the userspace tools and utilities that are used in combination
+with the TSEM LSM.
+
+The Trusted Computed Base (TCB) for a platform or a subordinate
+workload is maintained and enforced by a Trust Orchestrator (TO).
+Paired with a Trust Orchestrator is a Trusted Modeling Agent (TMA)
+that maps the description of a security event into a security state
+coefficient.
+
+TSEM is implemented as a Linux Security Module (LSM) and is designed
+to be self-contained with little or no dependency on kernel
+infrastructure, other than the LSM hooks themselves.  It can be
+stacked in any order with existing LSM's.  It is implemented as the
+first LSM in the call sequence, since it provides infrastructure that
+can be used, for example, to validate extended attributes that may be
+used by subsequently invoked LSM's.
+
+TSEM implements mandatory access controls, without a requirement for
+extended attributes, filesystem labeling or the need to protect
+filesystem metadata against offline attack.  A mathematically defined
+security model, generated by unit testing of a workload, is the
+bearer's token that carries the security guarantee for a system or
+workload.
+
+TBDHTTRAD
+=========
+
+A quick summary for those interested in experimenting with trust
+orchestration and security modeling but are constrained by the concept
+of: 'Too Busy Don't Have Time To Read Any Documentation'.
+
+A kernel with TSEM support in its list of enabled LSM's must be
+available for use.  A TSEM enabled kernel will have the tsem keyword
+in the following file:
+
+/sys/kernel/security/lsm
+
+For experimentation, or integrating TSEM modeling into a Continuous
+Integration/Continous Development (CI/CD) workflow, modeling can be
+restricted to subordinate security modeling namespaces by booting a
+kernel with the following kernel command-line option:
+
+tsem_mode=no_root_modeling
+
+This disables modeling of the root security modeling namespace and
+only implements modeling for subordinate security namespaces.
+
+The Quixote trust orchestration utilities either need to be built or
+the statically compiled sample utilities need to be installed.  Source
+for the userspace utilities and compiled sample programs are available
+at the following location:
+
+https://github.com/Quixote-Project
+
+After installing the utilities, two shell sessions will be needed with
+root privileges in each shell.
+
+The following directories need to be in the PATH variable of each shell:
+
+/opt/Quixote/sbin
+/opt/Quixote/bin
+
+Execute the following command to start a process in an independent
+security namespace with the modeling being done in the kernel:
+
+quixote -P -c test -o test.model
+
+In the second shell session, run the following command to display the
+security execution trajectory of the model:
+
+quixote-console -p test -T
+
+In the shell session provided by the trust orchestrator, run the
+following command:
+
+grep SOME_STRING /etc/passwd
+
+Then exit the shell.
+
+The orchestrator will indicate that the security model definition has
+been written to the test.model file.
+
+Run the following command to execute a shell in an enforced security
+model obtained from the previous session:
+
+quixote -P -c test -m test.model -e
+
+In the shell that is provided, run the following command:
+
+cat /etc/passwd
+
+The command will fail.
+
+Running the following command in the second shell session will output
+forensics on the command that failed:
+
+quixote-console -p test -F
+
+Executing additional commands in the trust orchestrated shell will
+cause additional entries to be added to the forensics trajectory.
+
+The test can be repeated using the quixote-us trust orchestrator.
+This test will model the security namespace in a userspace process
+rather than in the kernel based trusted modeling agent.
+
+Mandatory Access Controls
+=========================
+
+	"If I have seen further it is by standing on the shoulders of
+	 Giants."
+				- Sir Isaac Newton
+
+It is assumed that astute readers will be familiar with classic
+subject/object based mandatory access controls; or at least astute
+enough to use a search engine to develop a modicum of secundem artem
+in the discipline.
+
+Very simplistically, subject/object based mandatory access controls
+can be thought of as being implemented with a two dimensional access
+vector matrix, with some type of a description of a process (subject)
+on one axis and a description of a data sync/source (object),
+typically an inode, on the second axis.  The descriptions are
+commonly referred to as subjects and objects.
+
+A security policy is developed that assigns a boolean value for each
+element of the matrix that specifies whether or not permission should
+be granted for the subject to access the object.
+
+These schemes are frequently referred to as 'mandatory access
+controls', since only the kernel has the ability to implement the
+labeling and decision processes.  In these systems, the root or
+administrative user has no ability to affect kernel decision making
+with respect to whether or not permission is granted or denied.
+
+These systems were derived from governmental and military information
+classification systems and are capable of delivering security
+guarantees appropriate to classified and high sensitivity assets.  The
+delivery of these security guarantees comes with it a reputation for
+complexity and fragility.
+
+Development of a system wide security policy is a complex process and
+administration of such systems is frequently done in an iterative
+fashion.  The system is monitored for permission denials with
+modifications to correct these false denials folded back into the
+policy.  In many cases, mandatory access control systems are run in
+warning rather than enforcing mode and used as an indicator for
+potential security violations.
+
+One of the additional challenges is that the integrity of labels is
+fundamental to the ability of these systems to deliver their security
+guarantees.  This requires that the labeling process be conducted
+under security controlled conditions, with the labels subsequently
+protected against offline modification by cryptographic integrity
+guarantees.
+
+Mandatory access controls had their origin in centralized multi-user
+platforms, and before the now widely accepted, strategy of using
+resource compartmentalization (namespaces) to isolate applications
+from each other and the system at large.  A legitimate technical
+argument can be made as to whether or not enforcement of a system wide
+security policy is suitable for these environments.
+
+At the other end of the spectrum, in embedded systems, structural
+economic barriers incent very little attention to security, where time
+to market is the primary goal.  These systems are pushed into the
+field, many time for multi-year operational lifetimes, with little
+prospect for upgrades or any notion of an iterative tuning process of
+a security policy.
+
+Security Event Modeling
+=======================
+
+	"We can no longer speak of the behavior of the particle
+	 independently of the process of observation. As a final
+	 consequence, the natural laws formulated mathematically in
+	 quantum theory no longer deal with the elementary particles
+	 themselves but with our knowledge of them. Nor is it any
+	 longer possible to ask whether or not these particles exist in
+	 space and time objectively ... When we speak of the picture of
+	 nature in the exact science of our age, we do not mean a
+	 picture of nature so much as a picture of our relationships
+	 with nature.  ...Science no longer confronts nature as an
+	 objective observer, but sees itself as an actor in this
+	 interplay between man and nature. The scientific method of
+	 analysing, explaining and classifying has become conscious of
+	 its limitations, which arise out of the fact that by its
+	 intervention science alters and refashions the object of
+	 investigation. In other words, method and object can no longer
+	 be separated."
+				- Werner Karl Heisenberg
+
+Security Event Modeling (SEM), is an alternative strategy to implement
+the security guarantees of mandatory access and integrity controls, in
+a manner that is consistent with emerging application development
+strategies such as namespaces and CI/CD workflows.
+
+As was noted at the start of this document, the premise for SEM is
+that the security behavior of a platform, or alternatively a workload,
+can be modeled like any other physical phenomenon in science and
+engineering.
+
+Inspiration for this came from the primary TSEM author/architect
+having trained as a quantum chemist, conducting very early research in
+the development of multi-scale modeling strategies for molecules of
+size to be of interest to pharmaceutical intents.
+
+SEM is premised on the theory that kernel security architects have
+instrumented the LSM security event hooks to be called in locations
+before security sensitive operations are conducted, with appropriate
+descriptive parameters, that are considered relevant to the security
+posture of the kernel.  With respect to modeling, the security event
+hooks are conceptualized as representing the independent variables of
+a basis set that yields a functional definition for the security state
+of an execution trajectory.
+
+SEM can be framed in the context of classic subject/object mandatory
+access controls, by the notion that a unique identity can be generated
+for each element of an access vector matrix, rather than a boolean
+value.  In SEM, a security execution trajectory is defined by the set
+of security state coefficients that a process hierarchy (workload)
+generates.  This execution trajectory produces a vector of identities,
+whose sum in an appropriate form, yields a functional definition of
+the security state of the system.
+
+Two subordinate identities are combined to yield a security event
+state coefficient.  These subordinate identities are referred to as
+the Context Of Execution (COE) and the CELL, which are conceptually
+similar to the subject and object in mandatory access control.  The
+COE identity is derived from the parameters that describe the security
+relevant characteristics (ie. credentials) of a process, while the
+CELL value is derived from the parameters used by a security event
+hook to describe the characteristics of the event.
+
+A security policy is implemented by a modeling algorithm that
+translates COE and CELL event parameters into their respective
+identities.  The COE and CELL are combined to yield a security state
+coefficient that uniquely describes the security event in the security
+model.  Different security policies and criteria can be developed by
+modifying how the modeling algorithm utilizes the COE and CELL
+characteristics.
+
+Since the security policy is implemented with a modeling algorithm, a
+single platform can support multiple and arbitrary security policies.
+The equivalent of a resource namespace in SEM is referred to as a
+security modeling namespace.
+
+The formation of the security state coefficients from existing kernel
+parameters eliminates the need for the use of extended attributes to
+hold security label definitions.  In SEM, a cryptographically signed
+security model definition, designed to be interpreted by a modeling
+algorithm, becomes the bearer's token for the security of the modeled
+workload, rather than information encoded in filesystem security
+attributes.
+
+Trusted Security Event Modeling
+===============================
+
+	"Do you see over yonder, friend Sancho, thirty or forty
+	 hulking giants?  I intend to do battle with them and slay
+	 them."
+				- Don Quixote
+
+In TSEM, the modeling algorithm is implemented in an entity known as a
+Trusted Modeling Agent (TMA), in a 'trusted' environment where
+modeling is immune from modification or alteration by any activity on
+the platform or in a workload.  The notion of a TMA provides a
+framework for such things as next generation security co-processors
+that extend functionality beyond what is defined by the concept of a
+Trusted Platform Module (TPM).
+
+In addition to providing an attestation of an execution trajectory, a
+TMA, in contrast to a TPM, has the ability to advise an operating
+system on whether or not an event being modeled is consistent with the
+security model that is being enforced.  In this manner, it introduces
+a prospective rather than a retrospective trust model.
+
+TSEM is designed to support Trust Orchestration Systems (TOS).  In a
+TOS, the trust orchestrators are supervisory programs that run
+workloads in independent security modeling namespaces , enforcing a
+workload specific security model.  Each trust orchestrator is paired
+with a 'trusted partner TMA', known as a Sancho, that implements the
+workload specific modeling algorithm.
+
+The root of trust for a security modeling namespace is based on where
+the TMA instance is implemented.  As an example, the Quixote TOS
+implementation currently offers orchestrators for the following TMA
+execution localities:
+
+- Kernel.
+
+- Userspace process.
+
+- SGX enclave.
+
+- Xen stub domain.
+
+- Micro-controller.
+
+This partitioning of trust results in the concept of security modeling
+namespaces being referred to as internally or externally modeled.  A
+TMA implementation run in the kernel is referred to as an internally
+modeled namespace; TMA's run outside of the kernel are referred to as
+an externally modeled namespace.
+
+The TMA, regardless of locality, is responsible for processing the
+characteristics that describe a security event, computing the identity
+for the COE and CELL and then combining these two identities to create
+a security state coefficient.  With respect to modeling theory, the
+coefficient is a task specific value representing the event in a
+security model.
+
+TSEM is dispassionate with respect to the type of algorithm that is
+implemented.  The processing of the security event characteristics and
+their conversion to security coefficients, is driven by the security
+model/policy that will be implemented for the workload.  The
+architecture is designed to support security modeling algorithms that
+are either deterministic or embrace approximations, stochastic
+inference and machine learning algorithms in response to specific
+workload, platform or device requirements.
+
+A security model, to be enforced by a trust orchestrator, is
+implemented by providing the TMA with a set of security state
+coefficients that are to be observed.  A TMA processes the
+characteristics of a security event and converts the characteristics
+to a security state coefficient that is evaluated against the
+coefficients provided to the TMA as the reference security model for a
+workload.
+
+A security event that translates to one of the provided 'good'
+coefficients, will cause the TMA to indicate to the trust orchestrator
+that the process is to be allowed to run as a trusted process.  A
+security event that does not map to a known good coefficient, results
+in the trust orchestrator designating that the process be labeled as
+an untrusted process.
+
+Trust orchestrators and their associated TMA's, are designed to
+support signed security models.  This results in the elimination of
+the requirement to verify or appraise extended attributes and other
+measures currently required to protect labeled security systems or
+filesystem metadata against offline attacks.
+
+The use of a cryptographic hash function to generate the security
+coefficient results in the definition of very specific security
+behaviors, that are sensitive to any variation in their
+characteristics.  Any offline modifications to files will result in a
+coefficient that is inconsistent with a signed model provided to a
+TMA.
+
+In order to support the development of TSEM based security models, a
+TMA is designed to run in one of the following three modes:
+
+- Free modeling.
+
+- Sealed.
+
+- Enforcing.
+
+In a free modeling configuration, the TMA adds the security state
+coefficient for the characteristics of a security event to the current
+set of known good states.  In addition, the description of the
+security event is retained as a member of the security execution
+trajectory for the model.  This mode is used, in combination with unit
+testing of a workload, to generate a security model for subsequent
+enforcement.
+
+Placing a TMA in 'sealed' mode implies that any subsequent security
+coefficients, that do not map into a known security state, are to be
+considered 'forensic' violations to the security state of the model.
+
+This mode is designed to provide the ability to either fine tune a
+model or provide early warning of a potential attempt to subvert the
+security status of a workload.  The characteristics of the violating
+event are registered in the forensics trajectory of the model for use
+in subsequent evaluation of the violating event and/or model
+refinement.
+
+Placing a TMA model in 'enforcing' status implies that the model is in
+a sealed state and any subsequent violations to the model will result
+in the violating process being placed in untrusted status and a
+permissions violation returned to the task invoking the security
+event.
+
+Process and Platform Trust Status
+=================================
+
+A fundamental concept in TSEM is the notion of providing a precise
+definition for what it means for a platform or workload to be trusted.
+A trusted platform or workload is one where there has not been an
+attempt by a process to execute a security relevant event that does
+not map into a known security state coefficient.
+
+The process trust status is a characteristic of the process that is
+passed to any subordinate processes that are descendants of that
+process.  Once a process is tagged as untrusted, that characteristic
+cannot be removed from the process.  In a 'fruit from the poisoned
+vine' paradigm, all subordinate processes created by an untrusted
+process are untrusted as well.
+
+On entry into each TSEM security event handler, the trust status of a
+process is checked before an attempt to model the event is made.  An
+attempt to execute a security event by an untrusted process will cause
+the event, and its characteristics, to be logged.  The return status
+of the hook will be determined by the enforcement state of the model.
+A permission denial is only returned if the TMA is running in
+enforcing mode.
+
+If the platform running the TSEM LSM has a TPM, the hardware aggregate
+value is computed at the time that TSEM is initialized.  This hardware
+aggregate value is the linear extension sum over Platform
+Configuration Registers (PCR's) 0 through 7.  This is the same
+aggregate value that is computed by the Integrity Measurement
+Architecture (IMA) and is the industry standard method of providing an
+evaluation measurement of the hardware platform state.
+
+Internally modeled namespaces have the hardware aggregate measurement
+included as the first event in the security model.  Externally modeled
+namespaces export the hardware aggregate value to the TMA for
+inclusion as the first event of the model maintained by the external
+TMA.
+
+The root security model extends each security state coefficient into a
+PCR.  The default PCR is 11 but is configurable through the kernel
+compilation configuration process.  The use of a separate PCR from IMA
+allows hardware based TSEM measurements to coexist with IMA
+measurement values.  This hardware measurement value is designed to
+allow attestation to the hardware state that the root model is running
+in.
+
+TSEM is designed to support a philosophy where the root security
+modeling namespace will be a minimum Trusted Computing Base
+implementation that will only be running trust orchestrators and any
+other infrastructure needed to support running workloads in
+subordinate security namespaces.
+
+The subordinate security modeling namespaces are designed to decrease
+model complexity in order to support a single functional value
+describing the 'known good' security state of a subordinate security
+workload.  Subordinate security modeling namespaces are
+non-hierarchical, ie. a security modeling namespace cannot itself
+parent an additional security modeling namespace.
+
+The Linux TSEM Implementation
+=============================
+
+	"Sometimes the questions are complicated and the answers are
+	 simple."
+				- Dr. Seuss
+
+The Linux TSEM implementation is deliberately simplistic and consists
+of the following two generic components:
+
+- Security modeling namespace and security event export functionality.
+
+- Internal trusted modeling agent implementation.
+
+The security modeling namespace and export functionality is designed
+to be generic infrastructure that allows security namespaces to be
+created that are either internally or externally modeled.  The TSEM
+implementation does not pose any constraints on what type of modeling
+can or should be implemented in these namespaces.
+
+On the theory that security event handlers represent all of the
+security relevant action points in the kernel, any security or
+integrity model can be implemented using the TSEM infrastructure.  For
+example, basic IMA functionality could be implemented by a TMA that
+maps the digests of files accessed, or mapped executable, by the root
+user as the security state coefficients.
+
+A primary intent of the Linux TSEM implementation is to provide a
+generic method for implementing security policy in userspace rather
+than the kernel.  This is consistent with what has been the historic
+understanding in Linux architecture, that policy decisions should be
+delegated, when possible, to userspace rather than to kernel based
+implementations.
+
+The model is extremely simplistic; a TMA interprets a security event
+and its characteristics and advises whether or not the kernel should
+designate the process as trusted or untrusted after event processing
+is complete.
+
+The following sections discuss various aspects of the infrastructure
+used to implement this architecture.
+
+Internal vs external modeling
+-----------------------------
+
+When a TSEM security modeling namespace is created, a designation is
+made as to whether the namespace is to be internally or externally
+modeled.
+
+In an internally modeled namespace, the security event handlers pass the
+event type and its characteristics to the designated internal trusted
+modeling agent.  The agent provides the permission value for the
+security event handler to return as the result of the event and sets
+the trust status of the process executing the event.
+
+In an externally modeled namespace, the event type and parameters are
+exported to userspace for processing by a trust orchestrator with an
+associated TMA.  The trust orchestrator communicates the result of the
+modeling back to the kernel to support the setting of the process
+trust status.
+
+The exception to this model are for security event handlers that are
+called in atomic, ie. non-sleeping context.  The export of these
+security event descriptions are done asynchronously in order to avoid
+having the TSEM implementation attempt to sleep in atomic context
+while the userspace trust orchestrator is scheduled for execution.
+
+It is up to the trust orchestrator and its security policy to
+determine how it handles events that violate the security model being
+enforced in this model.  The Quixote trust orchestrators shut down the
+entire workload running in the security namespace if an asynchronously
+modeled event violates the security model being enforced and the model
+is running in enforcing mode.
+
+Internally modeled domains are able to provide immediate interception
+and modification of the trust status of a process that is violating
+the security model.  This has implications for the root security
+namespace that is running on a system with a TPM, since the security
+event coefficients are logged to the Platform Configuration Register
+that is being used by TSEM.
+
+Issuing the TPM transaction would cause the process to attempt to
+sleep while it waits for the TPM command to complete.  In order to
+address this issue, the TPM transactions are deferred to an ordered
+workqueue for execution.  The use of an ordered workqueue maintains
+the time dependency of the security coefficients being registered.
+
+In order to handle modeling of security events in atomic context, the
+TSEM implementation maintains caches (magazines) of structures that
+are needed to implement the modeling and export of events.  The size
+of this cache can be configured independently for each individual
+security modeling namespace that is created.  The default
+implementation is for a cache size of 32 for internally modeled
+namespaces and 128 for externally modeled namespaces.
+
+By default the root security namespace uses a cache size of 128.  This
+value can be configured by the 'tsem_cache' kernel command-line
+parameter to an alternate value.
+
+Trust Orchestrator/Process authentication
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+The process identifier values (PID's) that are exported in the
+security event descriptions are the unique global PID values, not the
+value as seen through the lens of a PID namespace.
+
+PID values are, by default, not considered to be a stable identifier
+between the kernel and userspace.  In the case of TSEM external
+modeling, the threat model for a namespace is whether or not an
+adversarial process, running in either the root security modeling
+namespace or another subordinate security modeling namespace, can kill
+a process that is being orchestrated and substitute an alternate
+process with an identical PID value.
+
+The suggested threat model would be that the orchestrator would set
+the trust status of the adversarial process rather than the one that
+had emitted the security event characteristics.  The threat interval
+is the latency time required for the processing of the security event
+description by the trust orchestrator and its associated TMA.
+
+Exploiting this theoretical race is extremely complex and requires an
+in depth understanding of the TSEM architecture.  Rather than discuss
+the conditions that must be met and their implications, this
+discussion will first focus on the generic threat model and its
+generic utility to an adversary followed by a treatment of the
+mechanisms that TSEM implements in order to mitigate this threat.
+
+In short, a process in an adversarial security modeling namespace
+would want to execute security events that are barred from its
+security model with the hope of having them approved by an alternate
+namespace.
+
+A process waiting for the external modeling of a security event
+description can only be placed back into run state by two methods:
+reception of a fatal signal or the TRUST_PENDING status bit being
+cleared from its TSEM specific task control structure by a trust
+orchestrator.
+
+If a process being evaluated receives a fatal signal, its trust status
+will be set to untrusted and an error will be returned to the trust
+orchestrator.  The error would cause a trust violation to be
+registered for the workload.  In addition, the evaluation of the event
+would be terminated, so a replacement process would not receive an
+incorrect trust assessment for an event that was initiated by its
+predecessor.
+
+The second issue that limits the utility of a PID substitution attack
+is that from the point of substitution forward it would place the
+replacement process in the context of the security model that the
+trust orchestrator is enforcing.  As a result, a substituted process
+would not be allowed to exhibit any security behaviors inconsistent
+with the model being enforced.
+
+If an attempt to exploit this race would be considered, an adversarial
+process would have to force the termination of a process in the target
+namespace and then fork and exit a process a sufficient number of
+times in order to have a process under its control match the PID value
+of the process that was waiting for an orchestration response.
+
+Measured modeling latency times for a trust orchestrator running the
+deterministic Quixote TMA in userspace, on current generation x86_64
+hardware, averages 170 micro-seconds.  In a worst case scenario from
+the perspective of an adversary, there would be a need to force the
+termination of the target process and then fork and execute a
+sufficient number of times to force the PID collision during this time
+interval.
+
+As a generic protection, TSEM in the tsem_task_kill() handler, blocks
+the notion of 'cross-model' signals, ie. a signal originating from an
+external security modeling namespace.  This would require the
+adversary to reliably force a process termination through a mechanism
+other than signaling, for example, through the OOM killer whose signal
+transmission would not be blocked by this policy control.
+
+When a subordinate security modeling namespace is created, the id
+number of the namespace is registered in the tsem_task structure of
+the trust orchestrator that is creating the namespace.  The TSEM
+driver will refuse to honor control plane requests affecting the trust
+status of a process whose trust orchestrator security namespace id
+does not match the namespace identifier of the process that it is
+being asked to act on.
+
+As an additional protection, TSEM uses an authentication strategy that
+allows a process running in a security modeling namespace to verify
+that a control request is coming from the trust orchestrator that
+initiated the namespace the process is running in.  As part of the
+setup of a security modeling namespace, a trust orchestrator is
+required to provide an ASCII hexadecimally encoded authentication key
+that matches the length of a digest value of cryptographic hash
+function being used to generate security state coefficient in the
+security modeling namespace.  This authentication key must be provided
+by the trust orchestrator for every subsequent control plane request.
+
+The process that is being transferred to a subordinate security
+modeling namespace generates a second random key that is hashed with
+the authentication key provided by the trust orchestrator, using the
+hash function that has been defined for the security namespace.  The
+resultant digest value is compared to a list of authentication keys
+for all currently executing namespaces.  The selection of the second
+random key is repeated until a globally unique key is generated.
+
+This randomly generated authentication key is stored in the tsem_task
+structure of the process and propagated to any subsequent processes
+that are created in the namespace.  The hash product of this key and
+the orchestration authentication key, ie. the globally unique key, is
+placed in the tsem_task control structure of the orchestration
+process.
+
+When a control plane request is received, the authentication key
+provided by the trust orchestrator is used to re-generate an
+authentication key based on the randomly generated namespace key held
+by the process whose trust status is being updated.  The generated
+authentication key is compared to the key in the tsem_task structure
+of the process issuing the orchestration call.  The control plane will
+refuse to honor a control plane request if the call specific key that
+is generated does not match the key generated at the time the security
+namespace was created.
+
+Event modeling
+--------------
+
+The generation of security state coefficients is a functional process
+that uses a cryptographic hash function for the creation of the
+individual identity mappings that contribute to the generation of the
+security state coefficient.
+
+TSEM can use any cryptographic hash function available to the Linux
+kernel for this purpose.  The hash function to be used for a security
+modeling namespace is specified as a parameter to the namespace
+creation process.
+
+By default, the root security namespace uses sha256.  This value can
+be modified through the tsem_digest kernel command-line parameter.
+
+Since TSEM is active before the kernel has the ability to load
+modules, the root modeling domain must be a cryptographic hash
+function that is statically compiled into the kernel.  By default the
+TSEM configuration selects for the presence of the sha256 hash
+function.
+
+TSEM security event modeling is based on the following functional
+definition for a security event coefficient:
+
+Coeff = HF(HF(EVENT_ID) || PTASK_ID || TASK_ID || HF(COE) || HF(CELL))
+
+	Where:
+		Coeff	 = A security state coefficient that is equal
+			   in length to the digest value of the
+			   cryptographic hash function in use for the
+			   security modeling namespace.
+
+		HF	 = Security namespace specific hash function.
+
+		||       = Concatenation operator.
+
+		EVENT_ID = The ASCII name of event.
+
+		PTASK_ID = The TASK_ID of the parent process of the
+			   process represented by TASK_ID.
+
+		TASK_ID  = The process specific identity of the
+			   executable code that is calling the security
+			   event handler.
+
+		COE      = Characteristics of the context of execution
+			   of the event.
+
+		CELL	 = Characteristics of the LSM event that is being
+			   modeled.
+
+Workload or platform specific security state coefficient definitions
+are generated by a TMA, using the COE or CELL characteristics that are
+considered relevant for the model being implemented.  These
+coefficients are used to determine whether or not an event should lead
+to the process being considered trusted or untrusted.
+
+The TASK_ID component of the function above is important with respect
+to the generation of the security state coefficients.  The notion of a
+task identity serves to link the concepts of system integrity and
+security access control.
+
+The TASK_ID is defined by the following function:
+
+TASK_ID = HF(HF(EVENT) || PTASK_ID || NULL_ID || HF(COE) || HF(CELL))
+
+	Where:
+		TASK_ID	  = The executable identity of the process
+			    expressed as a digest value of length
+			    equal to the cryptographic hash function
+			    the security modeling namespace is using.
+
+		HF	  = Security namespace specific hash function.
+
+		||        = Concatenation operator.
+
+		EVENT	  = The string "bprm_committed_creds".
+
+		PTASK_ID  = The TASK_ID of the parent process of the
+			    process whose TASK_ID is being generated.
+
+		NULL_ID	  = A buffer of null bytes equal to the digest
+			    size of the hash function being used for
+			    the namespace.
+
+		COE	  = Characteristics of the context of execution
+			    calling the bprm_committed_creds LSM hook.
+
+		CELL	  = The characteristics of the file provided
+			    by the linux_binprm structure passed to
+			    the security_bprm_committed_creds handler.
+
+An attentive reader will quickly conclude, correctly, that the TASK_ID
+function generates an executable specific security coefficient for the
+bprm_committed_creds security hook.  The generative function for the
+TASK_ID is the same as the standard security state coefficient; with
+the exception that the task identity is replaced with a 'null id',
+consisting of the number of null bytes in the digest size of the
+namespace specific hash function.
+
+One of the CELL characteristics used in the computation of the task
+identity is the digest of the executable file.  Modifying an
+executable, or attempting to execute a binary not considered in the
+security model, will result in an alteration of the task identity that
+propagates to the generation of invalid state coefficients.
+
+The task identity is saved in the TSEM specific task structure and is
+used to compute the state coefficients for any security events that
+the task subsequently executes.  As noted in the previous paragraph,
+incorporating the TASK_ID into the computation of security state
+coefficients results in the security state coefficient values becoming
+specific to the corpus of executable code that initiated a process.
+This affords a very high degree of specificity with respect to the
+security models that can be implemented.
+
+As was demonstrated in the TBDHTTRAD section, in contrast to standard
+digest based controls, TSEM will discriminate the following commands
+as different events/coefficients in a security model:
+
+cat /etc/shadow
+
+grep something /etc/shadow
+
+while read input
+do
+	echo $input;
+done < /etc/shadow
+
+An important, and perhaps subtle issue to note, is how these events
+result in the change of process trust status.  In the first two cases,
+if access to the /etc/shadow file is not permitted by the operative
+security model, the cat and grep process will become untrusted.
+
+In the third example, the shell process itself would become untrusted.
+This would cause any subsequent attempts to execute a binary to be
+considered untrusted events, even if access to the binary is a
+permitted coefficient in the model.
+
+The integration of the PTASK_ID in the generation of the security
+state coefficients causes the coefficients to be dependent on the
+chain of execution of executable code.  This concept generates
+extremely specific security coefficients that yield the high
+sensitivity of TSEM based security models.
+
+For example, consider the following chain of execution:
+
+init/systemd -> sshd -> bash
+
+init/systemd -> getty -> bash
+
+Even if the COE characteristics (credentials) of the two bash
+processes are identical, the security coefficients generated by the
+two bash shells will be different.  This is secondary to the fact that
+the TASK_ID of the two bash processes will be different by virtue of
+the fact that the first bash process will have a PTASK_ID that
+represents the TASK_ID of the ssh process, while the second process
+will have a PTASK_ID that represents the TASK_ID of the getty process.
+
+This generative functions provides a framework for modeling that
+yields very precise tracking of security relevant events.  This is
+significant with respect to detecting and addressing adversarial
+techniques such as Living Off The Land (LOTL).
+
+Since the modeling operates at the level of a mandatory security
+control, these permission denials would occur even if the process is
+running with classic root privilege levels.  This is secondary to the
+notion that security and trust status are invested in the trust
+orchestrator and ultimately the TMA.
+
+From a hardware perspective, this is important with respect to the
+notion of a TMA being a model for a successor to the TPM.  From a
+system trust or integrity perspective, a TPM is designed to provide a
+retrospective assessment of the actions that have occurred on a
+platform.  A verifying party uses the TPM event log and a PCR based
+summary measurement, to verify what actions have occurred on the host,
+in order to allow a determination of whether or not the platform
+should be 'trusted'.
+
+In contrast, a TSEM/TMA based system enforces, on a real time basis,
+that a platform or workload remains in a trusted state.  Security
+relevant actions cannot be conducted unless the TMA authorizes the
+actions as being trusted.
+
+This is particularly important with respect to embedded systems.  A
+TPM based architecture would not prevent a system from having its
+trust status altered.  Maintaining the system in a trusted state would
+require attestation polling of the system, and presumably, executing
+actions if the platform has engaged in untrusted behavior.
+
+Conversely, a trust orchestrated software implementation enforces that
+a system or workload remain in a security/trust state that it's
+security model was unit tested to.
+
+Security model functional definitions
+-------------------------------------
+
+Previously, classic trusted system implementations supported the
+notion of the 'measurement' of the system.  The measurement is the
+value of a linear extension function of all the security relevant
+actions recorded by a trust measurement system such as IMA.
+
+In TPM based trust architectures, this measurement is maintained in a
+PCR.  A measurement value is submitted to the TPM that extends the
+current measurement using the following formula:
+
+MEASUREMENT = HF(CURRENT || NEW)
+
+	Where:
+		MEASUREMENT = The new measurement value to be maintained
+			      in the register for the system.
+
+		HF	    = A cryptographic hash function supported
+			      by the TPM device.
+
+		||	    = Concatenation operator.
+
+		CURRENT     = The current measurement value.
+
+		NEW	    = A new measurement value to be added to
+			      the current measurement.
+
+The use of a cryptographic function produces a non-commutative sum
+that can be used to verify the integrity of a series of measurements.
+With respect to security modeling theory, this can be thought of as a
+'time-dependent' measurement of the system.  Stated more simply, the
+measurement value is sensitive to the order in which the measurements
+were made.
+
+In systems such as IMA, the measurement value reflects the sum of
+digest values of what are considered to be security critical entities,
+most principally, files that are accessed or memory that is mapped
+executable, based on various policies.
+
+In TSEM based TMA's, the measurement of a security modeling namespace
+is the sum of the unique security state coefficients generated by the
+security model being enforced.  As previously noted, on systems with a
+TPM, the root security modeling namespace measurement is maintained by
+default in PCR 11 or the PCR that was selected at kernel configuration
+time.
+
+The challenge associated with classic integrity measurements is the
+time dependent nature of using a non-commutative summing function.
+The almost universal embrace of SMP based hardware architectures, in
+addition to standard kernel task scheduling issues, makes the
+measurement values non-deterministic.  This requires a verifying party
+to evaluate an event log, verified by a measurement value, to
+determine whether or not the system is in a security appropriate or
+trusted state.
+
+TSEM addresses this issue by implementing a strategy designed to
+produce a single functional value that represents the functional
+security state of a model.  This allows a TMA to attest to the
+trust/security status of a platform or workload by signing this
+singular value and presenting it to a verifying party.
+
+In TSEM nomenclature, this functional value is referred to as the
+'state' of the model.  The attestation model is to use trust
+orchestrators to generate the state value of a workload by unit
+testing.  This state value can be packaged with a utility or container
+to represent a summary trust characteristic that can be attested by a
+TMA, eliminating the need for a verifying partner to review and verify
+an event log.
+
+TMA's implement this architecture by maintaining a single instance
+vector of the set of unique security state coefficients that have been
+experienced in a security modeling namespace.  The state measurement
+is generated by sorting the security state coefficient vector in
+big-endian hash format and then generating a standard linear extension
+measurement over this new vector.
+
+Any security event that generates an associated state coefficient that
+is not in the model will resulted in a perturbed state function value.
+That perturbed value would be interpreted by a verifying party as an
+indication of an untrusted system.
+
+Since the TMA maintains the security event descriptions in time
+ordered form, the option to provide a classic event log and
+measurement are preserved and available.  Extensive experience in the
+development of TSEM modeled systems has demonstrated the superiority
+of state value interpretation over classic measurement schemes.
+
+A TMA may choose to incorporate a 'base nonce' into a security model
+that it is implementing, this base nonce is designed to serve in a
+manner similar to an attestation nonce.  If used, the trust
+orchestrator is responsible for negotiating a random base nonce with a
+verifying party at the time of initialization of a security modeling
+namespace and providing it to the TMA.
+
+The TMA uses the base nonce to extend each security event coefficient
+that is generated by the model.  This causes the state and measurement
+values of the model to become dependent on this base nonce, a process
+that can be used to defeat a replay attack against the security model.
+
+Control plane
+-------------
+
+Both primary functions of TSEM: security modeling namespace management
+and the internal TMA modeling implementation, are controlled by
+pseudo-files in the securityfs filesystem.  The following directory
+is the top level implementation directory for the TSEM control plane:
+
+/sys/kernel/security/tsem
+
+The following file in the kernel source tree documents, in detail,
+the interfaces provided by the filesystem:
+
+Documentation/ABI/testing/tsem
+
+This filesystem is primarily intended for use by trust orchestrators
+to create and manage security modeling namespaces.
+
+The files are process context sensitive.  Writing to the control file,
+or reading from the informational files, will act on or reference the
+security modeling namespace that the accessing process is assigned to.
+
+The following files are provided in the root directory of the TSEM
+control plane and implement global controls for the TSEM LSM:
+
+	aggregate
+	id
+	control
+
+The 'aggregate' file is used by trust orchestrators for internally
+modeled namespaces to obtain the hardware measurement value for
+inclusion in a security model.  A trust orchestrator for an externally
+modeled namespace capture this value as the first event generated by a
+security modeling namespace.
+
+The 'id' file is used to determine the security modeling namespace
+that the process is running in.  The namespace id value of 0 is
+reserved for the root security modeling namespace, a non-zero value
+indicates that the process is running in a subordinate security
+modeling namespace.
+
+The TSEM implementation is controlled by the only writable file, which
+is the 'control' file.
+
+The following keywords are used by trust orchestrators to place the
+process writing to the file in an internally or externally modeled
+security namespace:
+
+	internal
+	external
+
+Each argument accepts key=value pairs that configure the namespace.
+The following key values are currently accepted:
+
+	model
+	nsref
+	digest
+	cache
+	key
+
+The 'model' keyword takes as an argument the name of a loadable module
+that will be used to implement the event processing for a security
+modeling namespace.  If the module has not already been loaded, TSEM
+will attempt to dynamically load the module.  If the standard practice
+is followed of using the KBUILD_MODNAME CPP define to set the name of
+the security model, the argument to the model keyword will be that
+name, a value that will match the name that is displayed by the lsmod
+command.  It should be noted that there is no requirement that the
+security model name match the name of the module generated by the
+build process.
+
+The 'nsref' keyword takes one of the following two values:
+
+	initial
+	current
+
+The initial argument indicates that the UID/GID values for the COE and
+CELL characteristics are derived from the initial user namespace.
+This is the default characteristic if the nsref key is not specified.
+
+The current argument indicates that the UID/GID values are derived
+from the user namespace that the process is running in, when the
+request is made to model an event.
+
+The 'digest' keyword is used to specify the cryptographic hash
+function that is to be used to create the functional values for the
+security state coefficients for the namespace.  The value to this
+keyword is the name by which the hash function is defined by the
+cryptographic API in the kernel.
+
+Examples of suitable strings are as follows:
+
+	sha256
+	sha3-256
+	sm3
+
+Definitions for the names of the cryptographic hashes can be found in
+the source files for the various cryptographic hash functions in the
+'crypto' directory of the Linux source tree.
+
+The 'cache' keyword is used to specify the size of the caches used to
+hold pointers to data structures used for the internal modeling of
+security events or the export of the security event to external trust
+orchestrators.  These pre-allocated structures are used to service
+security event hooks that are called while the process is running in
+atomic context and thus cannot sleep in order to allocate memory.
+
+The argument to this keyword is a numeric value specifying the number
+of structures that are to be held in reserve for the namespace.
+
+By default the root security modeling namespace and externally modeled
+namespaces have a default value of 128 entries.  An internally modeled
+namespace has a default value of 32 entries.  The size requirements of
+these caches can be highly dependent on the characteristics of the
+modeled workload and may require tuning to the needs of the platform
+or workload.
+
+The structures that are used by security events generated in atomic
+context are replenished by work requests submitted to the high
+priority system workqueue.  The refill latency will also affect the
+magazine sizes that are needed.
+
+The 'key' keyword is used to specify the authentication key that is to
+be used to support the authentication of trust control requests from a
+trust orchestrator to processes running in a security modeling
+namespace.  The argument to this keyword is the ASCII base16
+representation of the key that is to be used.  The length of the key
+must be equal to the length of the ASCII base16 representation of the
+digest value of the cryptographic digest function defined for the
+security modeling namespace.
+
+The following keywords and arguments are used by trust orchestrators
+to set the trust status of a process after the processing of a
+security event by an external TMA:
+
+	trusted pid=PID key=HEXID
+	untrusted pid=PID key=HEXID
+
+	PID is the process identifier that is provided to the TMA in
+	the security event description.  HEXID is the base16 ASCII
+	representation of the authentication key that the security
+	modeling namespace was configured with when the namespace was
+	created.  The length of the ASCII representation of HEXID must
+	equal the size of the base16 ASCII representation of a digest
+	value for the cryptographic hash function selected for the
+	security modeling namespace.
+
+By default a security modeling namespace runs in free modeling mode.
+The modeling mode is changed by writing the following keywords to the
+control file:
+
+	seal
+	enforce
+
+The seal value is used to specify that any further security state
+coefficients are to be considered outside the bounds of a desired
+security model.  The security event descriptions that generate these
+coefficients will be considered forensics events for the model.
+
+The enforce key is used to specify that invalid security events
+generate permission denials as the return value for the LSM security
+event handler that generates the invalid events.
+
+The following keyword and argument are used to load a security model
+into an internal TMA modeling implementation:
+
+	state value=HEXID
+
+	Where HEXID is the ASCII base 16 representation of a security
+	state coefficient that represents a valid security event in
+	the model.  The length of the HEXID string must be equal to
+	the size of the ASCII base 16 representation of the digest
+	value of the cryptographic hash function defined for the
+	security modeling namespace.
+
+	After writing a series of state values the trust orchestrator
+	writes the 'seal' keyword to the control file to complete
+	creation of a security model.
+
+	Writing the 'enforce' keyword to the control file will place
+	the defined model in enforcing mode.
+
+	Defining a security model to be enforced will affect the
+	output of the 'trajectory' file.  The 'trajectory' file will
+	have no event descriptions for a sealed model, since the event
+	description list is only populated when a new state
+	coefficient is added to the model.
+
+	In a sealed model the security event descriptions will be
+	surfaced in the 'forensics' file instead to indicate they are
+	violations against the security model being enforced.
+
+	Since the state state coefficients are generated with a
+	cryptographic hash function, the first pre-image resistance
+	characteristics of the function prevents a security model
+	description from disclosing information, a-priori, about the
+	desired characteristics of the workload.
+
+The following keyword and argument is used to set a base nonce for the
+internal TMA:
+
+	base value=HEXID
+
+	Where HEXID is the ASCII base 16 representation of a value
+	that each security state event mapping is to be extended with
+	before being committed as a security state coefficient value
+	for the model.  The size of the HEXID string must equal the
+	size of the ASCII base 16 representation of a digest value of
+	the cryptographic hash function defined for the security
+	modeling namespace.
+
+The following keyword and argument is used to create a file digest
+pseudonym for the internal TMA:
+
+	pseudonym value=HEXID
+
+	Where HEXID is the ASCII base 16 representation of a file
+	digest pseudonym that is to be maintained by the model.  See
+	the ABI documentation for how the argument to this verb is
+	generated.
+	
+	The size of the HEXID string must equal the size of the ASCII
+	base 16 representation of a digest value of the cryptographic
+	hash function defined for the security modeling namespace.
+
+The following keyword is used to lock the current TSEM modeling
+configuration:
+
+	lock
+
+This command is only valid when loadable module support is available
+in the kernel.  When executed this command blocks any further TSEM
+models from being registered.  In addition the reference count on all
+currently registgered modeling modules is increased so that it is not
+possible to remove currently loaded modules.
+
+The following two directories are implemented in the top level TSEM
+control directory in order to support interfaces to internally and
+externally modeled namespaces:
+
+	external_tma
+	internal_tma
+
+The external_tma directory holds a file, that is created when the
+request to create an externally modeled namespace is made.  The filename
+is the ASCII base 10 representation of the id number of the security
+modeling namespace.  The descriptions for security events that occur
+in the context of the namespace are exported in JSON format through
+this file to the external trust orchestrator that is controlling the
+security modeling namespace.
+
+The internal_tma directory is a container directory that holds
+directories for the control of each internal TMA that is implemented
+in the kernel.
+
+There is currently only a single kernel based TMA that is managed
+through the following directory:
+
+/sys/kernel/security/tsem/internal_tma/model0
+
+The following files are implemented for this model:
+
+	measurement
+	state
+
+	trajectory
+	trajectory_coefficients
+	trajectory_counts
+
+	forensics
+	forensics_coefficient
+	forensics_counts
+
+The 'measurement' file outputs the classic linear extension value of
+the security state coefficients that are generated in the context of
+the security modeling namespace.  This value is time dependent and can
+be used to verify the order of the security events that occurred in
+the model.
+
+The 'state' file outputs the time independent functional value of
+security state of the security modeling namespace.  This value and its
+generation and motivation are discussed in the 'Security model
+functional definitions' section of this document.
+
+The 'trajectory' file outputs the description of each security event
+recorded by the model in time dependent form.  The ABI documentation
+file contains a complete description of the output that is generated
+by this file and the 'forensics' file described below.
+
+The 'trajectory_coefficients' file outputs the set of security state
+coefficients in the model.  These coefficients match the entries of
+the event descriptions that are output in the 'trajectory' file.
+
+The security state coefficients can be paired with the security state
+descriptions with the following shell command, where DIR is the path
+to the individual files:
+
+paste DIR/trajectory_coefficients DIR/trajectory
+
+The 'trajectory_counts" file outputs the number of times that each
+security state coefficient, output by the 'trajectory_coefficients'
+file, has been experienced in the security modeling namespace.  This
+value can be used to verify that a security sensitive event has
+occurred or for statistical inference as to the anomaly status of an
+event.
+
+The 'forensics' file outputs the description of security events that
+have occurred when the namespace security model is running in a sealed
+state.  These events are useful for characterizing a security
+intrusion that has occurred or for refinement of a security model.
+
+The 'forensics_coefficients' file outputs the security state
+coefficients that are generated by the forensics events that have
+been captured by the model and available through the 'forensics' file.
+
+The 'forensics_counts" file outputs the number of times that each
+security state coefficient output by the 'forensics_coefficients' file
+has been experienced in the security namespace.  This value can can be
+used for statistical inference as to the anomaly status of the
+namespace.
+
+Trust orchestrators
+===================
+
+In security modeling, the need for a trust orchestrator is embodied in
+Heisenberg's reflections on quantum mechanical modeling.  A modeled
+system cannot model itself without affecting the functional value of
+the security model being implemented.  An external entity is needed to
+setup, configure and monitor the state of a modeled system, in a
+manner that does affect the state of the modeled system itself.
+
+After creating and configuring a security modeling namespace, the
+orchestrator is responsible for executing and monitoring a process
+that is run in the context of the namespace.  The trust orchestrator
+is also responsible for providing access to the status of the security
+model being implemented by the TMA associated with the orchestrator.
+
+Trust orchestrators for externally modeled namespaces, have an
+associated external TMA that is responsible for implementing the
+security model for a namespace.  The TMA represents the the root of
+trust for the modeled namespace.  The TMA advises the trust
+orchestrator as to what the trust status for a process should be set
+to, based on the modeling of the security event characteristics that
+are presented to it by the trust orchestrator.
+
+In a trust orchestration architecture, secondary to their integral
+role in maintaining the trust state of the system, the trust
+orchestrators are the highest value security asset running on the
+system.  The CAP_MAC_ADMIN capability must be held by a trust
+orchestrator in order to access the TSEM control plane.
+
+Trust orchestrators are designed to drop the CAP_MAC_ADMIN capability
+before forking the process that will be responsible for launching a
+security modeled workload.  This provides an architecture where the
+root of trust for the system can be predicated on a small body of well
+audited orchestration utilities, that can be linked to a hardware root
+of trust implemented by a TPM or a hardware based TMA.
+
+Quixote
+=======
+
+	"He is awkward, past his prime and engaged in a task beyond his
+	 capacities."
+				- Don Quixote's able mount Rocinante
+
+The Quixote Trust Orchestration System, released in concert with TSEM,
+is an implementation of a trust orchestration environment that
+implements the characteristics described in the previous section.  It
+provides all off the basic functionality needed to build and run
+security architectures based on TSEM using either internal or external
+TMA implementations.
+
+It is anticipated that Quixote would not be the only such system to
+take advantage of TSEM.  Given the burgeoning capability set of
+systemd, it would be an architecturally valid concept to have systemd,
+or other system init equivalents, gain the ability to launch critical
+system services in security modeled environments.
+
+Source code, in GIT form, for all Quixote and TSEM components are
+available at the Quixote project site:
+
+https://github.com/Quixote-Project
+
+The build of Quixote is somewhat formidable, given that it spans the
+range from system programming though SGX programming and into embedded
+micro-controller systems.  In order to facilitate experimentation,
+Quixote projects binaries statically compiled against MUSL libc, are
+provided that have virtually no system dependencies, other than a TSEM
+enabled kernel.
+
+Sample utilities
+----------------
+
+The Quixote TSEM implementation implements a separate trust
+orchestration utility for each TMA environment, nee Sancho partner,
+that is supported:
+
+quixote		 -> TMA run in the kernel for internally modeled namespaces.
+
+quixote-us	 -> TMA run in a userspace process.
+
+quixote-xen	 -> TMA run in a Xen based stub domain.
+
+quixote-sgx	 -> TMA run in an SGX enclave.
+
+quixote-export*  -> Utility for exporting security event descriptions.
+
+quixote-mcu**	 -> TMA run in a micro-controller implementation.
+
+* = See discussion below.
+
+Each modeling utility runs in one of two modes: process or container
+
+In process mode, a shell process is run as the workload process in a
+security modeling namespace.  This mode is selected with the -P
+command-line option.
+
+In container mode, the default, the OCI runc utility is run as the
+workload process, with a 'bundle' argument that specifies a directory
+that contains a JSON container definition for a directory hierarchy in
+the bundle directory.  The /var/lib/Quixote/Magazine directory
+contains the bundle directories.
+
+The -c command-line option selects container mode, the argument to the
+option specifies the bundle directory for the runc utility.
+
+In order to support the creation of security models, each utility
+supports the -o command-line option to specify that a security model
+description be output when the modeled workload terminates.  The model
+is written to the name of the file supplied via the command-line
+option.
+
+If the -t command-line option is also specified, the security
+execution trajectory, rather than a model consisting of security state
+coefficients, is written to the output file.  This trajectory
+represents the description of the security events that were modeled.
+This trajectory can be converted to security state coefficients with
+the generate-states utility that is provided in the utilities package.
+
+The -m command-line option is used to specify a model that is to be
+loaded into the TMA and optionally enforced.  By default, a security
+model output with the -o command-line option will place the TMA in a
+sealed modeling state.  Any security events that are non-compliant
+with the model will be registered as forensics events.
+
+Adding the -e command-line option, with the '-m FILENAME' option, will
+cause the loaded model to be enforced.  Any forensic events will cause
+a permission denial to be returned to the caller of a TSEM LSM hook
+implementation.
+
+The Quixote package also includes the quixote-console utility, for
+interrogating the model state of both external and internal TMA's.
+The following command-line options request output of the following
+characteristics of the model:
+
+-C -> The current execution trajectory coefficient counts.
+
+-E -> The log of denied events.
+
+-F -> The current forensics execution trajectory.
+
+-M -> A definition for the current security model.
+
+-P -> The current security state coefficients.
+
+-S -> The state value of the model.
+
+-T -> The current security execution trajectory.
+
+Executing the utility, without these arguments, will cause a
+command-line version of the utility to be presented that takes the
+following arguments:
+
+show trajectory
+
+show coefficients
+
+show counts
+
+show forensics
+
+show forensics_coefficients
+
+show forensics_counts
+
+show state
+
+show model
+
+quit
+
+It is important to note that any of the values output, represent the
+current state of the model and do not reflect a cumulative model of
+the workload.  Capturing a complete workload model requires the use of
+the -m command-line option to the trust orchestrators to capture a
+model that is representative of the entire execution trajectory of the
+workload after it completes.
+
+As an example, the following security model definition represents the
+execution and termination of a shell session run on a system with a
+hardware TPM:
+
+aggregate de2b9c37eb1ceefa4bcbc6d8412920693d3272f30eb5ba98d51d2f898d620289
+state 97b29769580b412fbf55e326a98d6a1b97c6ebf446aaf78ea38c884e954ca5b2
+state 7c435854b4fa421175ec0a5d3ca7c156480913d85c03155ea3305afa56c9717d
+state 554d9f62693d522c9a43acf40780065f99cea3d67ca629ac4eaab4e22d4e63c2
+state 1b228046c4c2e7aa14db9a29fcff6f718f4f852afbfb76c8a45af7bf0485f9ce
+state 24fd04b10e2b5016e0061952f3bdea959e0fa80a55ff0f4e8e13f9f72ede7498
+state da6038511db71b08c49a838d178ed055e0b7bfc42548b4c2d71eca046e9a222e
+state 94b24ad4c8902f8ecb578a702408e8458e72c0774c402c3bd09ec5f390c4d0ae
+state 5ffa5a2a38f42d89ae74a6d58be8b687c1baed9746d9c6a7ae3c632a2e7c082f
+state a2e309d84bd4a52466c22779a622254c65ad1208583d70113751c4624baa7804
+state e93ceb0b1bf3cd58373a9e9ab4aca11a507782bbfde395ff68f8bfaf1678ed43
+state bf42388d63887368605fac9816134bc67314762c3a97b440cc48c5a30c07fdb9
+state eaa342599d682d63be4b64e159b98f21d85f0133ef5b28588e444ad12e446bf6
+state 2b9c86bc34202504c398c2f177d1dcf807b2f267c160bf8ebda863a9b427917f
+state 686fc3c958f2e4f2ce3b2c6a2cb3fff44ccc4db98869bd377b14e557a5191231
+state 613c39fd2a58413b32f448c13ea4d6bc38b77966dfc5560e39e4b37d2b2f5675
+state 70e276bfd7c20262cd9c9f5b09a922f11d16d1e3a602e8005d68e9ed6afc9b5d
+state 456aaedc5c1fc63f852ee97ae9561aba2a06c416154ecb9d7a1bf9d9a8c9c064
+state 97507c4c91af4a9b34b4d66118f6cc0ba1f8b55b8bb6e623dcafe27b100aea07
+state ea635c48031f81140b3561ed2291a3b1790a302e6adf5244320593b08a5af924
+state 2fd6a4d6ea1869a193926e998fbdf855916b510257d379762f48a1df63a810d4
+state 9c4cb7ef4848be1e29f9eb35fadaf5bfdc1fa3cbb22b6407cbd31b7088257026
+state 66640cbf9ae772515070f8613182b6852bf46220df0833fbe6b330a418fad95b
+state 6b0d1890cbd78c627e23d7a564e77a5ee88fb20e0662ce5e66f3727ebf75fa1d
+state bd28fa43b34850591fdf6fb2aa5542f33c21c20ee91b4bc2034e199b4e09edc1
+state 04425354419e53e6e73cde7d61856ff27763c2be01934e9990c1ae9f8d2a0b6e
+state 2650d86382f6404367b7fdeec07f873b67b9ce26caef09d035b4dff09fce04d5
+state df2f91f5fd84ca4621092420eaf1b0a3743b328a95e3f9e0b7b1281468462aa2
+state c730c66ecfabe99480e61a7f25962582ca7bb6f2b17983048e77adde1fe7f72b
+state 0fc937b71d0067fcc2c2f37c060763de250b3142e621174ffedc1b2520cdf6fd
+state 7f267400a3ccf462c77ae5129799558c2c62d8bc5b388882caec813ab4cf7b7f
+seal
+end
+
+As was previously discussed, the model output is cryptographically
+secure against the elucidation of the security events that resulted in
+the described security states.
+
+The Quixote userspace implementation also contains utilities for
+generating signed versions of these security models.
+
+Quixote Export Utility
+----------------------
+
+The quixote-export utility is used to implement security modeling
+namespaces that are running in 'export only' mode.  In this mode the
+security event descriptions for a security modeling namespace are
+exported asynchronously and do not wait approval.  This utility and
+modeling mode can be used to implement kernel native security
+surveillance systems.
+
+The root security modeling namespace can be placed in 'export only'
+mode through the following kernel command-line option:
+
+tsem_mode=root_export_only
+
+The supplied quixote-export utility operates in a manner similar to
+the trust orchestrators for externally modeled namespaces.
+
+Workloads can be run in either 'cartridge' or 'process' modes that are
+specified with the -C or -P command-line options.
+
+Processing of events from the root security modeling namespace is
+specified with the -R command-line option.
+
+By default the quixote-export utility will run in 'one-shot' mode
+where all of the buffered security event descriptions are read and
+output, after which the utility terminates.
+
+Specifying the -f command-line option places the utility in 'follow'
+mode where the utility will first output all of the buffered security
+event descriptions and then wait for subsequent descriptions to be
+generated.  This mode can be terminated by issuing a CNTRL-C key
+sequence to the utility.
+
+The -q command-line option is used to specify the queuing factor or
+the number of events that will be held by the export utility before
+flushing the events to the output device.  This increases the
+efficiency of the utility and decreases the impact the export utility
+has on the security modeling namespace that it is running in, see the
+discussion of the 'Heisenberg' effect in security modeling.  The
+default queue size is 100 entries.
+
+By default the security event descriptions are written to standard
+out.   The -o command-line option can be used to specify that the
+events are to be written to a file.
+
+The quixote-export utility has native support for exporting security
+event descriptions as MQTT encoded messages.  This facilitates the use
+of cloud based assets for security monitoring/surveillance.  MQTT mode
+is specified with the -b command-line option.  The argument to the -b
+option is the hostname of an MQTT broker that is to receive the
+encoded security event descriptions.
+
+In MQTT broker mode the -t command-line option is used to specify a
+'topic' that the descriptions are to published to in the target
+broker.
+
+An important issue that should be noted with 'export only' mode is
+that security event descriptions are buffered in the kernel until read
+by an export orchestrator.  These events are not subject to
+'uniqueness' compression, as is the case with internally modeled
+namespaces, this can result in large kernel descriptions, particularly
+during the boot of a kernel whose root security modeling namespace is
+configured for export only mode.
+
+In addition there are no latency delays since the security event
+descriptions are asynchronously exported.  This may require an
+increase in the kernel event magazine sizes in order to avoid security
+failures caused by the inability to allocate structures for security
+events running in atomic context.
+
+** MCU TMA's
+------------
+
+One of the objectives of TSEM/Quixote is to explore architectures for
+trusted systems that extend beyond what is provided by the TPM model
+for security co-processors.  The MCU based reference implementations
+allow experimentation with hardware based TMA's.
+
+The Quixote TSEM utilities include TMA implementations for the
+following following ARM32 based micro-controller platforms:
+
+STM32L496
+
+STM32L562
+
+NRF52840-DK
+
+NRF52840-DONGLE
+
+The STM32L496 platform, in addition to the base TMA implementation,
+includes support for a CAT1-M based cellular modem.  This demonstrates
+the ability of an external TMA to conduct remote, out-of-band,
+signaling of security violations for modeled platforms/workloads and
+the downloading of security models outside the context of the platform
+itself.
+
+The STM32L562 platform is a low power MCU designed for security
+focused IOT implementations.  It includes hardware hashing, hardware
+asymmetric encryption and Trust Zone support.
+
+Of primary interest may be the NRF52840-DONGLE implementation.  This
+is a 'USB fob' form factor board that GOOGLE uses as the basis for
+their OpenSK security key implementation.  This form factor allows the
+development and experimentation with easily deployable hardware based
+TMA implementations.
+
+The NRF52840-DONGLE architecture was chosen by the NLnet sponsored
+'FobNail' project, that is developing a hardware based attestation
+server:
+
+https://fobnail.3mdeb.com/
+
+The Fobnail projects discusses the notion of their architecture
+expanding to provide protection for a Linux system at large.
+Quixote/TSEM, running on the NRF52840-DONGLE micro-controller, is a
+demonstration of such an implementation.
+
+===============
+Closing Remarks
+===============
+
+	"Sometimes it is the people no one can imagine anything of who
+	 do the things no one can imagine.
+				- Alan Turing
+
+While this document is of some length and detail, it hopefully
+fulfills its obligation to provide sufficient prose for the
+justification of the security model that TSEM addresses, and in
+combination with trust orchestrators, implements.
+
+The MAINTAINERS file has contact information for feedback, patches
+and/or questions regarding TSEM and its reference TOS implementation.
+
+     The Quixote Team - Flailing at the Travails of Cybersecurity
+
+	With all due respect to Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra.
+
+   From the glacial moraine lake country of West-Central Minnesota.
diff --git a/Documentation/admin-guide/kernel-parameters.txt b/Documentation/admin-guide/kernel-parameters.txt
index 27ec49af1bf2..36460e179793 100644
--- a/Documentation/admin-guide/kernel-parameters.txt
+++ b/Documentation/admin-guide/kernel-parameters.txt
@@ -6856,6 +6856,35 @@
 			with CPUID.16h support and partial CPUID.15h support.
 			Format: <unsigned int>
 
+	tsem_cache=	[TSEM] Define the size of the caches used to hold
+			pointers to structures that will be used to model
+			security events occurring in the root modeling
+			namespace that are called in atomic context.  The
+			value is the size of the arrays of pointers to the
+			pre-allocated structures that will be maintained.
+			For example, a value of 16 means each array would
+			have 16 entries in it.
+			Format: <integer>
+			Default: 96
+
+	tsem_digest=	[TSEM] Define the cryptographic hash function that
+			will be used to generate the security event
+			coefficients in the root modeling namespace.
+			Format: {name of the cryptographic hash function}
+			Default: sha256
+
+	tsem_lock	[TSEM] Lock the TSEM model state so that no kernel
+			module based security models can be registered.
+
+	tsem_mode=	[TSEM] Set the mode that the Trusted Security Event
+			Modeling LSM is to run in.
+			Format: <string>
+			no_root_modeling - Disable root security namespace
+					   modeling
+			root_export_only - Do not model the root security
+					   modeling namespace, only export
+					   the security event descriptions.
+
 	tsx=		[X86] Control Transactional Synchronization
 			Extensions (TSX) feature in Intel processors that
 			support TSX control.
-- 
2.39.1




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