mirror of
https://github.com/Telecominfraproject/OpenCellular.git
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With this change, the firmware creates and initializes the kernel space first, then the firmware space. Thus, if the initialization is interrupted (by cutting power) in between the two spaces, at the next boot the initialization path will be taken again, since it is triggered by a missing firmware space. A space creation succeeds when the space already exists (the space is removed and recreated), so this eliminates two races. There is still the possibility that the power is cut between creating the firmware space and initializing it, but let's assume it's not a problem until proven otherwise. (It won't be a security problem anyhow.) BUG=chromium-os:17049 TEST=none (too hard to reproduce the race) Change-Id: Iae4c1cc2b9a5056cb5d858e71b680e27a442357e Reviewed-on: http://gerrit.chromium.org/gerrit/3520 Reviewed-by: Randall Spangler <rspangler@chromium.org> Tested-by: Luigi Semenzato <semenzato@chromium.org>
503 lines
17 KiB
C
503 lines
17 KiB
C
/* Copyright (c) 2010-2011 The Chromium OS Authors. All rights reserved.
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* Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style license that can be
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* found in the LICENSE file.
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*
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* Functions for querying, manipulating and locking rollback indices
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* stored in the TPM NVRAM.
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*/
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#include "rollback_index.h"
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#include "tlcl.h"
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#include "tpm_bootmode.h"
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#include "tss_constants.h"
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#include "utility.h"
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static int g_rollback_recovery_mode = 0;
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#ifdef TEGRA_SOFT_REBOOT_WORKAROUND
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static int soft_reset = 0;
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#endif
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/* disable MSVC warning on const logical expression (as in } while(0);) */
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__pragma(warning (disable: 4127))
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#define RETURN_ON_FAILURE(tpm_command) do { \
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uint32_t result; \
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if ((result = (tpm_command)) != TPM_SUCCESS) { \
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VBDEBUG(("Rollback: %08x returned by " #tpm_command "\n", (int)result)); \
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return result; \
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} \
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} while (0)
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uint32_t TPMClearAndReenable(void) {
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VBDEBUG(("TPM: Clear and re-enable\n"));
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RETURN_ON_FAILURE(TlclForceClear());
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RETURN_ON_FAILURE(TlclSetEnable());
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RETURN_ON_FAILURE(TlclSetDeactivated(0));
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return TPM_SUCCESS;
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}
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/* Like TlclWrite(), but checks for write errors due to hitting the 64-write
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* limit and clears the TPM when that happens. This can only happen when the
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* TPM is unowned, so it is OK to clear it (and we really have no choice).
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* This is not expected to happen frequently, but it could happen.
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*/
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static uint32_t SafeWrite(uint32_t index, const void* data, uint32_t length) {
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uint32_t result = TlclWrite(index, data, length);
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if (result == TPM_E_MAXNVWRITES) {
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RETURN_ON_FAILURE(TPMClearAndReenable());
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return TlclWrite(index, data, length);
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#ifdef TEGRA_SOFT_REBOOT_WORKAROUND
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} else if ((result == TPM_E_BAD_PRESENCE ||
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result == TPM_E_AREA_LOCKED) &&
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soft_reset == 1) {
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/* Ignore writes that failed because the TPM wasn't unlocked.
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*
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* This may have security implications. 1. It may delay updating the
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* version number, therefore widening the window for a rollback attack.
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* 2. It may prevent noticing transitions between developer mode and normal
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* mode, in which case the TPM owner will not be cleared when
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* transitioning. See crosbug.com/15759. Note that this code path is not
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* taken on systems where a CPU reset implies a TPM reset.
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*/
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return TPM_SUCCESS;
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#endif
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} else {
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return result;
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}
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}
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/* Similarly to SafeWrite(), this ensures we don't fail a DefineSpace because
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* we hit the TPM write limit. This is even less likely to happen than with
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* writes because we only define spaces once at initialization, but we'd rather
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* be paranoid about this.
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*/
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static uint32_t SafeDefineSpace(uint32_t index, uint32_t perm, uint32_t size) {
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uint32_t result = TlclDefineSpace(index, perm, size);
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if (result == TPM_E_MAXNVWRITES) {
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RETURN_ON_FAILURE(TPMClearAndReenable());
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return TlclDefineSpace(index, perm, size);
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} else {
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return result;
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}
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}
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/* Functions to read and write firmware and kernel spaces. */
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static uint32_t ReadSpaceFirmware(RollbackSpaceFirmware* rsf) {
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return TlclRead(FIRMWARE_NV_INDEX, rsf, sizeof(RollbackSpaceFirmware));
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}
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static uint32_t WriteSpaceFirmware(const RollbackSpaceFirmware* rsf) {
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return SafeWrite(FIRMWARE_NV_INDEX, rsf, sizeof(RollbackSpaceFirmware));
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}
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#ifndef DISABLE_ROLLBACK_TPM
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static uint32_t ReadSpaceKernel(RollbackSpaceKernel* rsk) {
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return TlclRead(KERNEL_NV_INDEX, rsk, sizeof(RollbackSpaceKernel));
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}
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#endif
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static uint32_t WriteSpaceKernel(const RollbackSpaceKernel* rsk) {
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return SafeWrite(KERNEL_NV_INDEX, rsk, sizeof(RollbackSpaceKernel));
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}
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/* Performs one-time initializations. Creates the NVRAM spaces, and sets their
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* initial values as needed. Sets the nvLocked bit and ensures the physical
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* presence command is enabled and locked.
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*/
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static uint32_t OneTimeInitializeTPM(RollbackSpaceFirmware* rsf,
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RollbackSpaceKernel* rsk) {
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static const RollbackSpaceFirmware rsf_init = {
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ROLLBACK_SPACE_FIRMWARE_VERSION, 0, 0, 0};
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static const RollbackSpaceKernel rsk_init = {
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ROLLBACK_SPACE_KERNEL_VERSION, ROLLBACK_SPACE_KERNEL_UID, 0, 0};
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TPM_PERMANENT_FLAGS pflags;
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uint32_t result;
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VBDEBUG(("TPM: One-time initialization\n"));
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/* Do a full test. This only happens the first time the device is turned on
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* in the factory, so performance is not an issue. This is almost certainly
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* not necessary, but it gives us more confidence about some code paths below
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* that are difficult to test---specifically the ones that set lifetime
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* flags, and are only executed once per physical TPM. */
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result = TlclSelfTestFull();
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if (result != TPM_SUCCESS)
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return result;
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result = TlclGetPermanentFlags(&pflags);
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if (result != TPM_SUCCESS)
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return result;
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/* TPM may come from the factory without physical presence finalized. Fix
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* if necessary. */
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VBDEBUG(("TPM: physicalPresenceLifetimeLock=%d\n",
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pflags.physicalPresenceLifetimeLock));
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if (!pflags.physicalPresenceLifetimeLock) {
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VBDEBUG(("TPM: Finalizing physical presence\n"));
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RETURN_ON_FAILURE(TlclFinalizePhysicalPresence());
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}
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/* The TPM will not enforce the NV authorization restrictions until the
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* execution of a TPM_NV_DefineSpace with the handle of TPM_NV_INDEX_LOCK.
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* Here we create that space if it doesn't already exist. */
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VBDEBUG(("TPM: nvLocked=%d\n", pflags.nvLocked));
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if (!pflags.nvLocked) {
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VBDEBUG(("TPM: Enabling NV locking\n"));
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RETURN_ON_FAILURE(TlclSetNvLocked());
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}
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/* Clear TPM owner, in case the TPM is already owned for some reason. */
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VBDEBUG(("TPM: Clearing owner\n"));
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RETURN_ON_FAILURE(TPMClearAndReenable());
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/* Initializes the firmware and kernel spaces */
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Memcpy(rsf, &rsf_init, sizeof(RollbackSpaceFirmware));
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Memcpy(rsk, &rsk_init, sizeof(RollbackSpaceKernel));
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/* Defines and sets firmware and kernel spaces */
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RETURN_ON_FAILURE(SafeDefineSpace(KERNEL_NV_INDEX, TPM_NV_PER_PPWRITE,
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sizeof(RollbackSpaceKernel)));
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RETURN_ON_FAILURE(WriteSpaceKernel(rsk));
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RETURN_ON_FAILURE(SafeDefineSpace(FIRMWARE_NV_INDEX,
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TPM_NV_PER_GLOBALLOCK | TPM_NV_PER_PPWRITE,
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sizeof(RollbackSpaceFirmware)));
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RETURN_ON_FAILURE(WriteSpaceFirmware(rsf));
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return TPM_SUCCESS;
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}
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/* SetupTPM starts the TPM and establishes the root of trust for the
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* anti-rollback mechanism. SetupTPM can fail for three reasons. 1 A bug. 2 a
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* TPM hardware failure. 3 An unexpected TPM state due to some attack. In
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* general we cannot easily distinguish the kind of failure, so our strategy is
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* to reboot in recovery mode in all cases. The recovery mode calls SetupTPM
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* again, which executes (almost) the same sequence of operations. There is a
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* good chance that, if recovery mode was entered because of a TPM failure, the
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* failure will repeat itself. (In general this is impossible to guarantee
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* because we have no way of creating the exact TPM initial state at the
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* previous boot.) In recovery mode, we ignore the failure and continue, thus
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* giving the recovery kernel a chance to fix things (that's why we don't set
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* bGlobalLock). The choice is between a knowingly insecure device and a
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* bricked device.
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*
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* As a side note, observe that we go through considerable hoops to avoid using
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* the STCLEAR permissions for the index spaces. We do this to avoid writing
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* to the TPM flashram at every reboot or wake-up, because of concerns about
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* the durability of the NVRAM.
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*/
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uint32_t SetupTPM(int recovery_mode, int developer_mode,
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RollbackSpaceFirmware* rsf) {
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int rsf_dirty = 0;
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uint8_t new_flags = 0;
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uint8_t disable;
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uint8_t deactivated;
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uint32_t result;
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VBDEBUG(("TPM: SetupTPM(r%d, d%d)\n", recovery_mode, developer_mode));
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if (recovery_mode)
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g_rollback_recovery_mode = 1; /* Global variables are usable in
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* recovery mode */
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RETURN_ON_FAILURE(TlclLibInit());
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#ifdef TEGRA_SOFT_REBOOT_WORKAROUND
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result = TlclStartup();
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if (result == TPM_E_INVALID_POSTINIT) {
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/* Some prototype hardware doesn't reset the TPM on a CPU reset. We try to
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* tolerate this failure, which is possible in most cases.
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*/
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VBDEBUG(("TPM: soft reset detected\n", result));
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soft_reset = 1;
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} else if (result != TPM_SUCCESS) {
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VBDEBUG(("TPM: TlclStartup returned %08x\n", result));
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return result;
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}
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#else
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RETURN_ON_FAILURE(TlclStartup());
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#endif
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/* Some TPMs start the self test automatically at power on. In that case we
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* don't need to call ContinueSelfTest. On some (other) TPMs,
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* ContinueSelfTest may block. In that case, we definitely don't want to
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* call it here. For TPMs in the intersection of these two sets, we're
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* screwed. (In other words: TPMs that require manually starting the
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* self-test AND block will have poor performance until we split
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* TlclSendReceive() into Send() and Receive(), and have a state machine to
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* control setup.)
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*
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* This comment is likely to become obsolete in the near future, so don't
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* trust it. It may have not been updated.
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*/
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#ifdef TPM_MANUAL_SELFTEST
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#ifdef TPM_BLOCKING_CONTINUESELFTEST
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#warning "lousy TPM!"
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#endif
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RETURN_ON_FAILURE(TlclContinueSelfTest());
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#endif
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result = TlclAssertPhysicalPresence();
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#ifdef TEGRA_SOFT_REBOOT_WORKAROUND
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/*
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* If soft_reset is true, the failure to assert PP is expected because the
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* TPM is locked from a previous boot. In this case we will never execute
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* the PhysicalPresenceCMDEnable below, but that's OK because this is a
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* warm boot and at some point in the past we must have cold-booted with
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* this firmware (one would hope), so that situation (TPM delivered with PP
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* disabled) has already been resolved.
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*/
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if (soft_reset) {
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result = TPM_SUCCESS;
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}
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#endif
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if (result != TPM_SUCCESS) {
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/* It is possible that the TPM was delivered with the physical presence
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* command disabled. This tries enabling it, then tries asserting PP
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* again.
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*/
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RETURN_ON_FAILURE(TlclPhysicalPresenceCMDEnable());
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RETURN_ON_FAILURE(TlclAssertPhysicalPresence());
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}
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/* Checks that the TPM is enabled and activated. */
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RETURN_ON_FAILURE(TlclGetFlags(&disable, &deactivated, NULL));
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if (disable || deactivated) {
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VBDEBUG(("TPM: disabled (%d) or deactivated (%d). Fixing...\n",
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disable, deactivated));
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RETURN_ON_FAILURE(TlclSetEnable());
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RETURN_ON_FAILURE(TlclSetDeactivated(0));
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VBDEBUG(("TPM: Must reboot to re-enable\n"));
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return TPM_E_MUST_REBOOT;
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}
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/* Reads the firmware space. */
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result = ReadSpaceFirmware(rsf);
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if (TPM_E_BADINDEX == result) {
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RollbackSpaceKernel rsk;
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/* This is the first time we've run, and the TPM has not been
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* initialized. This initializes it. */
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VBDEBUG(("TPM: Not initialized yet.\n"));
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RETURN_ON_FAILURE(OneTimeInitializeTPM(rsf, &rsk));
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} else if (TPM_SUCCESS != result) {
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VBDEBUG(("TPM: Firmware space in a bad state; giving up.\n"));
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return TPM_E_CORRUPTED_STATE;
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}
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VBDEBUG(("TPM: Firmware space sv%d f%x v%x\n",
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rsf->struct_version, rsf->flags, rsf->fw_versions));
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/* Clears ownership if developer flag has toggled */
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if ((developer_mode ? FLAG_LAST_BOOT_DEVELOPER : 0) !=
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(rsf->flags & FLAG_LAST_BOOT_DEVELOPER)) {
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VBDEBUG(("TPM: Developer flag changed; clearing owner.\n"));
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RETURN_ON_FAILURE(TPMClearAndReenable());
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}
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/* Updates flags */
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if (developer_mode)
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new_flags |= FLAG_LAST_BOOT_DEVELOPER;
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if (rsf->flags != new_flags) {
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rsf->flags = new_flags;
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rsf_dirty = 1;
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}
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/* If firmware space is dirty, this flushes it back to the TPM */
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if (rsf_dirty) {
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VBDEBUG(("TPM: Updating firmware space.\n"));
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RETURN_ON_FAILURE(WriteSpaceFirmware(rsf));
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}
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VBDEBUG(("TPM: SetupTPM() succeeded\n"));
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return TPM_SUCCESS;
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}
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/* disable MSVC warnings on unused arguments */
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__pragma(warning (disable: 4100))
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#ifdef DISABLE_ROLLBACK_TPM
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/* Dummy implementations which don't support TPM rollback protection */
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uint32_t RollbackS3Resume(void) {
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#ifndef CHROMEOS_ENVIRONMENT
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/* Initialize the TPM, but ignore return codes. In ChromeOS
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* environment, don't even talk to the TPM. */
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TlclLibInit();
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TlclResume();
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#endif
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return TPM_SUCCESS;
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}
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uint32_t RollbackFirmwareSetup(int developer_mode, uint32_t* version) {
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#ifndef CHROMEOS_ENVIRONMENT
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/* Initializes the TPM, but ignores return codes. In ChromeOS
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* environment, doesn't even talk to the TPM. */
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TlclLibInit();
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TlclStartup();
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TlclContinueSelfTest();
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#endif
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*version = 0;
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return TPM_SUCCESS;
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}
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uint32_t RollbackFirmwareRead(uint32_t* version) {
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*version = 0;
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return TPM_SUCCESS;
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}
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uint32_t RollbackFirmwareWrite(uint32_t version) {
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return TPM_SUCCESS;
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}
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uint32_t RollbackFirmwareLock(void) {
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return TPM_SUCCESS;
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}
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uint32_t RollbackKernelRecovery(int developer_mode) {
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#ifndef CHROMEOS_ENVIRONMENT
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/* Initializes the TPM, but ignore return codes. In ChromeOS
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* environment, doesn't even talk to the TPM. */
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TlclLibInit();
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TlclStartup();
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TlclSelfTestFull();
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#endif
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return TPM_SUCCESS;
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}
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uint32_t RollbackKernelRead(uint32_t* version) {
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*version = 0;
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return TPM_SUCCESS;
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}
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uint32_t RollbackKernelWrite(uint32_t version) {
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return TPM_SUCCESS;
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}
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uint32_t RollbackKernelLock(void) {
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return TPM_SUCCESS;
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}
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#else
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uint32_t RollbackS3Resume(void) {
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uint32_t result;
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RETURN_ON_FAILURE(TlclLibInit());
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result = TlclResume();
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if (result == TPM_E_INVALID_POSTINIT) {
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/* We're on a platform where the TPM maintains power in S3, so
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it's already initialized. */
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return TPM_SUCCESS;
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}
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return result;
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}
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uint32_t RollbackFirmwareSetup(int developer_mode, uint32_t* version) {
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RollbackSpaceFirmware rsf;
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RETURN_ON_FAILURE(SetupTPM(0, developer_mode, &rsf));
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*version = rsf.fw_versions;
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VBDEBUG(("TPM: RollbackFirmwareSetup %x\n", (int)rsf.fw_versions));
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return TPM_SUCCESS;
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}
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uint32_t RollbackFirmwareRead(uint32_t* version) {
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RollbackSpaceFirmware rsf;
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RETURN_ON_FAILURE(ReadSpaceFirmware(&rsf));
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VBDEBUG(("TPM: RollbackFirmwareRead %x --> %x\n", (int)rsf.fw_versions,
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(int)version));
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*version = rsf.fw_versions;
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VBDEBUG(("TPM: RollbackFirmwareRead %x\n", (int)rsf.fw_versions));
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return TPM_SUCCESS;
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}
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uint32_t RollbackFirmwareWrite(uint32_t version) {
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RollbackSpaceFirmware rsf;
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RETURN_ON_FAILURE(ReadSpaceFirmware(&rsf));
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VBDEBUG(("TPM: RollbackFirmwareWrite %x --> %x\n", (int)rsf.fw_versions,
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(int)version));
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rsf.fw_versions = version;
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return WriteSpaceFirmware(&rsf);
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}
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uint32_t RollbackFirmwareLock(void) {
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return TlclSetGlobalLock();
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}
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uint32_t RollbackKernelRecovery(int developer_mode) {
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uint32_t rvs, rve;
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RollbackSpaceFirmware rsf;
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/* In recovery mode we ignore TPM malfunctions or corruptions, and *
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* leave the TPM complelely unlocked; we call neither
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* TlclSetGlobalLock() nor TlclLockPhysicalPresence(). The recovery
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* kernel will fix the TPM (if needed) and lock it ASAP. We leave
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* Physical Presence on in either case. */
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rvs = SetupTPM(1, developer_mode, &rsf);
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rve = SetTPMBootModeState(developer_mode,
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1, /* Recovery Mode Status. */
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0); /* In recovery mode, there is no RW firmware
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* keyblock flag. */
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return (TPM_SUCCESS == rvs) ? rve : rvs;
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}
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uint32_t RollbackKernelRead(uint32_t* version) {
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RollbackSpaceKernel rsk;
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uint32_t perms;
|
|
|
|
/* Read the kernel space and verify its permissions. If the kernel
|
|
* space has the wrong permission, or it doesn't contain the right
|
|
* identifier, we give up. This will need to be fixed by the
|
|
* recovery kernel. We have to worry about this because at any time
|
|
* (even with PP turned off) the TPM owner can remove and redefine a
|
|
* PP-protected space (but not write to it). */
|
|
RETURN_ON_FAILURE(ReadSpaceKernel(&rsk));
|
|
RETURN_ON_FAILURE(TlclGetPermissions(KERNEL_NV_INDEX, &perms));
|
|
if (TPM_NV_PER_PPWRITE != perms || ROLLBACK_SPACE_KERNEL_UID != rsk.uid)
|
|
return TPM_E_CORRUPTED_STATE;
|
|
|
|
*version = rsk.kernel_versions;
|
|
VBDEBUG(("TPM: RollbackKernelRead %x\n", (int)rsk.kernel_versions));
|
|
return TPM_SUCCESS;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
uint32_t RollbackKernelWrite(uint32_t version) {
|
|
RollbackSpaceKernel rsk;
|
|
RETURN_ON_FAILURE(ReadSpaceKernel(&rsk));
|
|
VBDEBUG(("TPM: RollbackKernelWrite %x --> %x\n", (int)rsk.kernel_versions,
|
|
(int)version));
|
|
rsk.kernel_versions = version;
|
|
return WriteSpaceKernel(&rsk);
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
uint32_t RollbackKernelLock(void) {
|
|
if (g_rollback_recovery_mode) {
|
|
return TPM_SUCCESS;
|
|
} else {
|
|
#ifdef TEGRA_SOFT_REBOOT_WORKAROUND
|
|
TPM_STCLEAR_FLAGS flags;
|
|
uint32_t result = TlclLockPhysicalPresence();
|
|
if (result == TPM_SUCCESS) {
|
|
return result;
|
|
}
|
|
RETURN_ON_FAILURE(TlclGetSTClearFlags(&flags));
|
|
/* Ignore PP locking failure if PP is already locked. */
|
|
return flags.physicalPresenceLock == 1 ? TPM_SUCCESS : result;
|
|
#else
|
|
return TlclLockPhysicalPresence();
|
|
#endif
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
#endif // DISABLE_ROLLBACK_TPM
|