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- .. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0
- .. _inline_encryption:
- =================
- Inline Encryption
- =================
- Background
- ==========
- Inline encryption hardware sits logically between memory and disk, and can
- en/decrypt data as it goes in/out of the disk. For each I/O request, software
- can control exactly how the inline encryption hardware will en/decrypt the data
- in terms of key, algorithm, data unit size (the granularity of en/decryption),
- and data unit number (a value that determines the initialization vector(s)).
- Some inline encryption hardware accepts all encryption parameters including raw
- keys directly in low-level I/O requests. However, most inline encryption
- hardware instead has a fixed number of "keyslots" and requires that the key,
- algorithm, and data unit size first be programmed into a keyslot. Each
- low-level I/O request then just contains a keyslot index and data unit number.
- Note that inline encryption hardware is very different from traditional crypto
- accelerators, which are supported through the kernel crypto API. Traditional
- crypto accelerators operate on memory regions, whereas inline encryption
- hardware operates on I/O requests. Thus, inline encryption hardware needs to be
- managed by the block layer, not the kernel crypto API.
- Inline encryption hardware is also very different from "self-encrypting drives",
- such as those based on the TCG Opal or ATA Security standards. Self-encrypting
- drives don't provide fine-grained control of encryption and provide no way to
- verify the correctness of the resulting ciphertext. Inline encryption hardware
- provides fine-grained control of encryption, including the choice of key and
- initialization vector for each sector, and can be tested for correctness.
- Objective
- =========
- We want to support inline encryption in the kernel. To make testing easier, we
- also want support for falling back to the kernel crypto API when actual inline
- encryption hardware is absent. We also want inline encryption to work with
- layered devices like device-mapper and loopback (i.e. we want to be able to use
- the inline encryption hardware of the underlying devices if present, or else
- fall back to crypto API en/decryption).
- Constraints and notes
- =====================
- - We need a way for upper layers (e.g. filesystems) to specify an encryption
- context to use for en/decrypting a bio, and device drivers (e.g. UFSHCD) need
- to be able to use that encryption context when they process the request.
- Encryption contexts also introduce constraints on bio merging; the block layer
- needs to be aware of these constraints.
- - Different inline encryption hardware has different supported algorithms,
- supported data unit sizes, maximum data unit numbers, etc. We call these
- properties the "crypto capabilities". We need a way for device drivers to
- advertise crypto capabilities to upper layers in a generic way.
- - Inline encryption hardware usually (but not always) requires that keys be
- programmed into keyslots before being used. Since programming keyslots may be
- slow and there may not be very many keyslots, we shouldn't just program the
- key for every I/O request, but rather keep track of which keys are in the
- keyslots and reuse an already-programmed keyslot when possible.
- - Upper layers typically define a specific end-of-life for crypto keys, e.g.
- when an encrypted directory is locked or when a crypto mapping is torn down.
- At these times, keys are wiped from memory. We must provide a way for upper
- layers to also evict keys from any keyslots they are present in.
- - When possible, device-mapper devices must be able to pass through the inline
- encryption support of their underlying devices. However, it doesn't make
- sense for device-mapper devices to have keyslots themselves.
- Basic design
- ============
- We introduce ``struct blk_crypto_key`` to represent an inline encryption key and
- how it will be used. This includes the type of the key (standard or
- hardware-wrapped); the actual bytes of the key; the size of the key; the
- algorithm and data unit size the key will be used with; and the number of bytes
- needed to represent the maximum data unit number the key will be used with.
- We introduce ``struct bio_crypt_ctx`` to represent an encryption context. It
- contains a data unit number and a pointer to a blk_crypto_key. We add pointers
- to a bio_crypt_ctx to ``struct bio`` and ``struct request``; this allows users
- of the block layer (e.g. filesystems) to provide an encryption context when
- creating a bio and have it be passed down the stack for processing by the block
- layer and device drivers. Note that the encryption context doesn't explicitly
- say whether to encrypt or decrypt, as that is implicit from the direction of the
- bio; WRITE means encrypt, and READ means decrypt.
- We also introduce ``struct blk_crypto_profile`` to contain all generic inline
- encryption-related state for a particular inline encryption device. The
- blk_crypto_profile serves as the way that drivers for inline encryption hardware
- advertise their crypto capabilities and provide certain functions (e.g.,
- functions to program and evict keys) to upper layers. Each device driver that
- wants to support inline encryption will construct a blk_crypto_profile, then
- associate it with the disk's request_queue.
- The blk_crypto_profile also manages the hardware's keyslots, when applicable.
- This happens in the block layer, so that users of the block layer can just
- specify encryption contexts and don't need to know about keyslots at all, nor do
- device drivers need to care about most details of keyslot management.
- Specifically, for each keyslot, the block layer (via the blk_crypto_profile)
- keeps track of which blk_crypto_key that keyslot contains (if any), and how many
- in-flight I/O requests are using it. When the block layer creates a
- ``struct request`` for a bio that has an encryption context, it grabs a keyslot
- that already contains the key if possible. Otherwise it waits for an idle
- keyslot (a keyslot that isn't in-use by any I/O), then programs the key into the
- least-recently-used idle keyslot using the function the device driver provided.
- In both cases, the resulting keyslot is stored in the ``crypt_keyslot`` field of
- the request, where it is then accessible to device drivers and is released after
- the request completes.
- ``struct request`` also contains a pointer to the original bio_crypt_ctx.
- Requests can be built from multiple bios, and the block layer must take the
- encryption context into account when trying to merge bios and requests. For two
- bios/requests to be merged, they must have compatible encryption contexts: both
- unencrypted, or both encrypted with the same key and contiguous data unit
- numbers. Only the encryption context for the first bio in a request is
- retained, since the remaining bios have been verified to be merge-compatible
- with the first bio.
- To make it possible for inline encryption to work with request_queue based
- layered devices, when a request is cloned, its encryption context is cloned as
- well. When the cloned request is submitted, it is then processed as usual; this
- includes getting a keyslot from the clone's target device if needed.
- blk-crypto-fallback
- ===================
- It is desirable for the inline encryption support of upper layers (e.g.
- filesystems) to be testable without real inline encryption hardware, and
- likewise for the block layer's keyslot management logic. It is also desirable
- to allow upper layers to just always use inline encryption rather than have to
- implement encryption in multiple ways.
- Therefore, we also introduce *blk-crypto-fallback*, which is an implementation
- of inline encryption using the kernel crypto API. blk-crypto-fallback is built
- into the block layer, so it works on any block device without any special setup.
- Essentially, when a bio with an encryption context is submitted to a
- block_device that doesn't support that encryption context, the block layer will
- handle en/decryption of the bio using blk-crypto-fallback.
- For encryption, the data cannot be encrypted in-place, as callers usually rely
- on it being unmodified. Instead, blk-crypto-fallback allocates bounce pages,
- fills a new bio with those bounce pages, encrypts the data into those bounce
- pages, and submits that "bounce" bio. When the bounce bio completes,
- blk-crypto-fallback completes the original bio. If the original bio is too
- large, multiple bounce bios may be required; see the code for details.
- For decryption, blk-crypto-fallback "wraps" the bio's completion callback
- (``bi_complete``) and private data (``bi_private``) with its own, unsets the
- bio's encryption context, then submits the bio. If the read completes
- successfully, blk-crypto-fallback restores the bio's original completion
- callback and private data, then decrypts the bio's data in-place using the
- kernel crypto API. Decryption happens from a workqueue, as it may sleep.
- Afterwards, blk-crypto-fallback completes the bio.
- In both cases, the bios that blk-crypto-fallback submits no longer have an
- encryption context. Therefore, lower layers only see standard unencrypted I/O.
- blk-crypto-fallback also defines its own blk_crypto_profile and has its own
- "keyslots"; its keyslots contain ``struct crypto_skcipher`` objects. The reason
- for this is twofold. First, it allows the keyslot management logic to be tested
- without actual inline encryption hardware. Second, similar to actual inline
- encryption hardware, the crypto API doesn't accept keys directly in requests but
- rather requires that keys be set ahead of time, and setting keys can be
- expensive; moreover, allocating a crypto_skcipher can't happen on the I/O path
- at all due to the locks it takes. Therefore, the concept of keyslots still
- makes sense for blk-crypto-fallback.
- Note that regardless of whether real inline encryption hardware or
- blk-crypto-fallback is used, the ciphertext written to disk (and hence the
- on-disk format of data) will be the same (assuming that both the inline
- encryption hardware's implementation and the kernel crypto API's implementation
- of the algorithm being used adhere to spec and function correctly).
- blk-crypto-fallback is optional and is controlled by the
- ``CONFIG_BLK_INLINE_ENCRYPTION_FALLBACK`` kernel configuration option.
- API presented to users of the block layer
- =========================================
- ``blk_crypto_config_supported()`` allows users to check ahead of time whether
- inline encryption with particular crypto settings will work on a particular
- block_device -- either via hardware or via blk-crypto-fallback. This function
- takes in a ``struct blk_crypto_config`` which is like blk_crypto_key, but omits
- the actual bytes of the key and instead just contains the algorithm, data unit
- size, etc. This function can be useful if blk-crypto-fallback is disabled.
- ``blk_crypto_init_key()`` allows users to initialize a blk_crypto_key.
- Users must call ``blk_crypto_start_using_key()`` before actually starting to use
- a blk_crypto_key on a block_device (even if ``blk_crypto_config_supported()``
- was called earlier). This is needed to initialize blk-crypto-fallback if it
- will be needed. This must not be called from the data path, as this may have to
- allocate resources, which may deadlock in that case.
- Next, to attach an encryption context to a bio, users should call
- ``bio_crypt_set_ctx()``. This function allocates a bio_crypt_ctx and attaches
- it to a bio, given the blk_crypto_key and the data unit number that will be used
- for en/decryption. Users don't need to worry about freeing the bio_crypt_ctx
- later, as that happens automatically when the bio is freed or reset.
- Finally, when done using inline encryption with a blk_crypto_key on a
- block_device, users must call ``blk_crypto_evict_key()``. This ensures that
- the key is evicted from all keyslots it may be programmed into and unlinked from
- any kernel data structures it may be linked into.
- In summary, for users of the block layer, the lifecycle of a blk_crypto_key is
- as follows:
- 1. ``blk_crypto_config_supported()`` (optional)
- 2. ``blk_crypto_init_key()``
- 3. ``blk_crypto_start_using_key()``
- 4. ``bio_crypt_set_ctx()`` (potentially many times)
- 5. ``blk_crypto_evict_key()`` (after all I/O has completed)
- 6. Zeroize the blk_crypto_key (this has no dedicated function)
- If a blk_crypto_key is being used on multiple block_devices, then
- ``blk_crypto_config_supported()`` (if used), ``blk_crypto_start_using_key()``,
- and ``blk_crypto_evict_key()`` must be called on each block_device.
- API presented to device drivers
- ===============================
- A device driver that wants to support inline encryption must set up a
- blk_crypto_profile in the request_queue of its device. To do this, it first
- must call ``blk_crypto_profile_init()`` (or its resource-managed variant
- ``devm_blk_crypto_profile_init()``), providing the number of keyslots.
- Next, it must advertise its crypto capabilities by setting fields in the
- blk_crypto_profile, e.g. ``modes_supported`` and ``max_dun_bytes_supported``.
- It then must set function pointers in the ``ll_ops`` field of the
- blk_crypto_profile to tell upper layers how to control the inline encryption
- hardware, e.g. how to program and evict keyslots. Most drivers will need to
- implement ``keyslot_program`` and ``keyslot_evict``. For details, see the
- comments for ``struct blk_crypto_ll_ops``.
- Once the driver registers a blk_crypto_profile with a request_queue, I/O
- requests the driver receives via that queue may have an encryption context. All
- encryption contexts will be compatible with the crypto capabilities declared in
- the blk_crypto_profile, so drivers don't need to worry about handling
- unsupported requests. Also, if a nonzero number of keyslots was declared in the
- blk_crypto_profile, then all I/O requests that have an encryption context will
- also have a keyslot which was already programmed with the appropriate key.
- If the driver implements runtime suspend and its blk_crypto_ll_ops don't work
- while the device is runtime-suspended, then the driver must also set the ``dev``
- field of the blk_crypto_profile to point to the ``struct device`` that will be
- resumed before any of the low-level operations are called.
- If there are situations where the inline encryption hardware loses the contents
- of its keyslots, e.g. device resets, the driver must handle reprogramming the
- keyslots. To do this, the driver may call ``blk_crypto_reprogram_all_keys()``.
- Finally, if the driver used ``blk_crypto_profile_init()`` instead of
- ``devm_blk_crypto_profile_init()``, then it is responsible for calling
- ``blk_crypto_profile_destroy()`` when the crypto profile is no longer needed.
- Layered Devices
- ===============
- Request queue based layered devices like dm-rq that wish to support inline
- encryption need to create their own blk_crypto_profile for their request_queue,
- and expose whatever functionality they choose. When a layered device wants to
- pass a clone of that request to another request_queue, blk-crypto will
- initialize and prepare the clone as necessary; see
- ``blk_crypto_insert_cloned_request()``.
- Interaction between inline encryption and blk integrity
- =======================================================
- At the time of this patch, there is no real hardware that supports both these
- features. However, these features do interact with each other, and it's not
- completely trivial to make them both work together properly. In particular,
- when a WRITE bio wants to use inline encryption on a device that supports both
- features, the bio will have an encryption context specified, after which
- its integrity information is calculated (using the plaintext data, since
- the encryption will happen while data is being written), and the data and
- integrity info is sent to the device. Obviously, the integrity info must be
- verified before the data is encrypted. After the data is encrypted, the device
- must not store the integrity info that it received with the plaintext data
- since that might reveal information about the plaintext data. As such, it must
- re-generate the integrity info from the ciphertext data and store that on disk
- instead. Another issue with storing the integrity info of the plaintext data is
- that it changes the on disk format depending on whether hardware inline
- encryption support is present or the kernel crypto API fallback is used (since
- if the fallback is used, the device will receive the integrity info of the
- ciphertext, not that of the plaintext).
- Because there isn't any real hardware yet, it seems prudent to assume that
- hardware implementations might not implement both features together correctly,
- and disallow the combination for now. Whenever a device supports integrity, the
- kernel will pretend that the device does not support hardware inline encryption
- (by setting the blk_crypto_profile in the request_queue of the device to NULL).
- When the crypto API fallback is enabled, this means that all bios with and
- encryption context will use the fallback, and IO will complete as usual. When
- the fallback is disabled, a bio with an encryption context will be failed.
- .. _hardware_wrapped_keys:
- Hardware-wrapped keys
- =====================
- Motivation and threat model
- ---------------------------
- Linux storage encryption (dm-crypt, fscrypt, eCryptfs, etc.) traditionally
- relies on the raw encryption key(s) being present in kernel memory so that the
- encryption can be performed. This traditionally isn't seen as a problem because
- the key(s) won't be present during an offline attack, which is the main type of
- attack that storage encryption is intended to protect from.
- However, there is an increasing desire to also protect users' data from other
- types of attacks (to the extent possible), including:
- - Cold boot attacks, where an attacker with physical access to a system suddenly
- powers it off, then immediately dumps the system memory to extract recently
- in-use encryption keys, then uses these keys to decrypt user data on-disk.
- - Online attacks where the attacker is able to read kernel memory without fully
- compromising the system, followed by an offline attack where any extracted
- keys can be used to decrypt user data on-disk. An example of such an online
- attack would be if the attacker is able to run some code on the system that
- exploits a Meltdown-like vulnerability but is unable to escalate privileges.
- - Online attacks where the attacker fully compromises the system, but their data
- exfiltration is significantly time-limited and/or bandwidth-limited, so in
- order to completely exfiltrate the data they need to extract the encryption
- keys to use in a later offline attack.
- Hardware-wrapped keys are a feature of inline encryption hardware that is
- designed to protect users' data from the above attacks (to the extent possible),
- without introducing limitations such as a maximum number of keys.
- Note that it is impossible to **fully** protect users' data from these attacks.
- Even in the attacks where the attacker "just" gets read access to kernel memory,
- they can still extract any user data that is present in memory, including
- plaintext pagecache pages of encrypted files. The focus here is just on
- protecting the encryption keys, as those instantly give access to **all** user
- data in any following offline attack, rather than just some of it (where which
- data is included in that "some" might not be controlled by the attacker).
- Solution overview
- -----------------
- Inline encryption hardware typically has "keyslots" into which software can
- program keys for the hardware to use; the contents of keyslots typically can't
- be read back by software. As such, the above security goals could be achieved
- if the kernel simply erased its copy of the key(s) after programming them into
- keyslot(s) and thereafter only referred to them via keyslot number.
- However, that naive approach runs into the problem that it limits the number of
- unlocked keys to the number of keyslots, which typically is a small number. In
- cases where there is only one encryption key system-wide (e.g., a full-disk
- encryption key), that can be tolerable. However, in general there can be many
- logged-in users with many different keys, and/or many running applications with
- application-specific encrypted storage areas. This is especially true if
- file-based encryption (e.g. fscrypt) is being used.
- Thus, it is important for the kernel to still have a way to "remind" the
- hardware about a key, without actually having the raw key itself. This would
- ensure that the number of hardware keyslots only limits the number of active I/O
- requests, not other things such as the number of logged-in users, the number of
- running apps, or the number of encrypted storage areas that apps can create.
- Somewhat less importantly, it is also desirable that the raw keys are never
- visible to software at all, even while being initially unlocked. This would
- ensure that a read-only compromise of system memory will never allow a key to be
- extracted to be used off-system, even if it occurs when a key is being unlocked.
- To solve all these problems, some vendors of inline encryption hardware have
- made their hardware support *hardware-wrapped keys*. Hardware-wrapped keys
- are encrypted keys that can only be unwrapped (decrypted) and used by hardware
- -- either by the inline encryption hardware itself, or by a dedicated hardware
- block that can directly provision keys to the inline encryption hardware.
- (We refer to them as "hardware-wrapped keys" rather than simply "wrapped keys"
- to add some clarity in cases where there could be other types of wrapped keys,
- such as in file-based encryption. Key wrapping is a commonly used technique.)
- The key which wraps (encrypts) hardware-wrapped keys is a hardware-internal key
- that is never exposed to software; it is either a persistent key (a "long-term
- wrapping key") or a per-boot key (an "ephemeral wrapping key"). The long-term
- wrapped form of the key is what is initially unlocked, but it is erased from
- memory as soon as it is converted into an ephemerally-wrapped key. In-use
- hardware-wrapped keys are always ephemerally-wrapped, not long-term wrapped.
- As inline encryption hardware can only be used to encrypt/decrypt data on-disk,
- the hardware also includes a level of indirection; it doesn't use the unwrapped
- key directly for inline encryption, but rather derives both an inline encryption
- key and a "software secret" from it. Software can use the "software secret" for
- tasks that can't use the inline encryption hardware, such as filenames
- encryption. The software secret is not protected from memory compromise.
- Key hierarchy
- -------------
- Here is the key hierarchy for a hardware-wrapped key::
- Hardware-wrapped key
- |
- |
- <Hardware KDF>
- |
- -----------------------------
- | |
- Inline encryption key Software secret
- The components are:
- - *Hardware-wrapped key*: a key for the hardware's KDF (Key Derivation
- Function), in ephemerally-wrapped form. The key wrapping algorithm is a
- hardware implementation detail that doesn't impact kernel operation, but a
- strong authenticated encryption algorithm such as AES-256-GCM is recommended.
- - *Hardware KDF*: a KDF (Key Derivation Function) which the hardware uses to
- derive subkeys after unwrapping the wrapped key. The hardware's choice of KDF
- doesn't impact kernel operation, but it does need to be known for testing
- purposes, and it's also assumed to have at least a 256-bit security strength.
- All known hardware uses the SP800-108 KDF in Counter Mode with AES-256-CMAC,
- with a particular choice of labels and contexts; new hardware should use this
- already-vetted KDF.
- - *Inline encryption key*: a derived key which the hardware directly provisions
- to a keyslot of the inline encryption hardware, without exposing it to
- software. In all known hardware, this will always be an AES-256-XTS key.
- However, in principle other encryption algorithms could be supported too.
- Hardware must derive distinct subkeys for each supported encryption algorithm.
- - *Software secret*: a derived key which the hardware returns to software so
- that software can use it for cryptographic tasks that can't use inline
- encryption. This value is cryptographically isolated from the inline
- encryption key, i.e. knowing one doesn't reveal the other. (The KDF ensures
- this.) Currently, the software secret is always 32 bytes and thus is suitable
- for cryptographic applications that require up to a 256-bit security strength.
- Some use cases (e.g. full-disk encryption) won't require the software secret.
- Example: in the case of fscrypt, the fscrypt master key (the key that protects a
- particular set of encrypted directories) is made hardware-wrapped. The inline
- encryption key is used as the file contents encryption key, while the software
- secret (rather than the master key directly) is used to key fscrypt's KDF
- (HKDF-SHA512) to derive other subkeys such as filenames encryption keys.
- Note that currently this design assumes a single inline encryption key per
- hardware-wrapped key, without any further key derivation. Thus, in the case of
- fscrypt, currently hardware-wrapped keys are only compatible with the "inline
- encryption optimized" settings, which use one file contents encryption key per
- encryption policy rather than one per file. This design could be extended to
- make the hardware derive per-file keys using per-file nonces passed down the
- storage stack, and in fact some hardware already supports this; future work is
- planned to remove this limitation by adding the corresponding kernel support.
- Kernel support
- --------------
- The inline encryption support of the kernel's block layer ("blk-crypto") has
- been extended to support hardware-wrapped keys as an alternative to standard
- keys, when hardware support is available. This works in the following way:
- - A ``key_types_supported`` field is added to the crypto capabilities in
- ``struct blk_crypto_profile``. This allows device drivers to declare that
- they support standard keys, hardware-wrapped keys, or both.
- - ``struct blk_crypto_key`` can now contain a hardware-wrapped key as an
- alternative to a standard key; a ``key_type`` field is added to
- ``struct blk_crypto_config`` to distinguish between the different key types.
- This allows users of blk-crypto to en/decrypt data using a hardware-wrapped
- key in a way very similar to using a standard key.
- - A new method ``blk_crypto_ll_ops::derive_sw_secret`` is added. Device drivers
- that support hardware-wrapped keys must implement this method. Users of
- blk-crypto can call ``blk_crypto_derive_sw_secret()`` to access this method.
- - The programming and eviction of hardware-wrapped keys happens via
- ``blk_crypto_ll_ops::keyslot_program`` and
- ``blk_crypto_ll_ops::keyslot_evict``, just like it does for standard keys. If
- a driver supports hardware-wrapped keys, then it must handle hardware-wrapped
- keys being passed to these methods.
- blk-crypto-fallback doesn't support hardware-wrapped keys. Therefore,
- hardware-wrapped keys can only be used with actual inline encryption hardware.
- Currently, the kernel only works with hardware-wrapped keys in
- ephemerally-wrapped form. No generic kernel interfaces are provided for
- generating or importing hardware-wrapped keys in the first place, or converting
- them to ephemerally-wrapped form. In Android, SoC vendors are required to
- support these operations in their KeyMint implementation (a hardware abstraction
- layer in userspace); for details, see the `Android documentation
- <https://source.android.com/security/encryption/hw-wrapped-keys>`_.
- Testability
- -----------
- Both the hardware KDF and the inline encryption itself are well-defined
- algorithms that don't depend on any secrets other than the unwrapped key.
- Therefore, if the unwrapped key is known to software, these algorithms can be
- reproduced in software in order to verify the ciphertext that is written to disk
- by the inline encryption hardware.
- However, the unwrapped key will only be known to software for testing if the
- "import" functionality is used. Proper testing is not possible in the
- "generate" case where the hardware generates the key itself. The correct
- operation of the "generate" mode thus relies on the security and correctness of
- the hardware RNG and its use to generate the key, as well as the testing of the
- "import" mode as that should cover all parts other than the key generation.
- For an example of a test that verifies the ciphertext written to disk in the
- "import" mode, see the fscrypt hardware-wrapped key tests in xfstests, or
- `Android's vts_kernel_encryption_test
- <https://android.googlesource.com/platform/test/vts-testcase/kernel/+/refs/heads/master/encryption/>`_.
|