Re: [tpmdd-devel] [PATCH] TPM: Fixup pubek sysfs file
From: Greg KH
Date: Mon Sep 14 2009 - 15:52:19 EST
On Mon, Sep 14, 2009 at 01:46:26PM -0600, Jason Gunthorpe wrote:
> On Mon, Sep 14, 2009 at 03:23:09PM -0400, Jonathan M. McCune wrote:
>
> >> Can anyone think of a reason why the PCRs should be accessed from
> >> sysfs? I can't. They are only really useful in connection with other
> >> complex TPM operations. Userspace can fully access them using the
> >> relevant TPM calls.
> >
> > Fair enough, though they are useful in combination with IMA and as a
> > sanity check that the driver is working correctly.
> [..]
> > IMA can leverage the ability to read and extend PCRs, and its security
> > properties derive from that functionality being a part of the kernel.
> > PCR reading is currently part of the TPM driver in
> > drivers/char/tpm/tpm.c.
>
> Sanzzy
>
> > Thus, to the question, "Can we remove the ability of the kernel to send
> > TPM commands such as GetCapability and PCRRead?" I believe the answer is
> > no. Or at least, not without causing a lot of work for the IMA system.
> > Although it may be worth discussing whether this functionality should be
> > moved from the driver into IMA.
>
> Fair enough, fortunately TPM_PCRRead and TPM_Extend are two of the
> simplest commands. As has been done special casing the fixed size
> messages is easy and robust.
>
> The pcrs file really isn't that offsensive to me, the PCR registers
> can reasonably thought of as a single memory space. If it wasn't for
> the PCR-%u prefix I think it would be fine for sysfs??
>
> Ie:
>
> BD ED 7B B2 EB AE BE 31 4E CC 57 82 81 64 FC 8A 09 FA 19 25
> 05 37 25 B5 24 59 14 A5 94 1A 42 97 39 E6 07 40 27 3A 7D 48
> 3A 3F 78 0F 11 A4 B4 99 69 FC AA 80 CD 6E 39 57 C3 3B 22 75
>
> not:
>
> PCR-00: BD ED 7B B2 EB AE BE 31 4E CC 57 82 81 64 FC 8A 09 FA 19 25
> PCR-01: 05 37 25 B5 24 59 14 A5 94 1A 42 97 39 E6 07 40 27 3A 7D 48
> PCR-02: 3A 3F 78 0F 11 A4 B4 99 69 FC AA 80 CD 6E 39 57 C3 3B 22 75
>
> Greg?
That should just be a binary sysfs file, as it shows something that is
represented in hardware, not anything that is modified by the kernel,
right?
thanks,
greg k-h
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