/* * Copyright (c) 2016, NVIDIA CORPORATION. All rights reserved. * * Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a * copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), * to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation * the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, * and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the * Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions: * * The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in * all copies or substantial portions of the Software. * * THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR * IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, * FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL * THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER * LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING * FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER * DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE. */ /* * Secure boot is the process by which NVIDIA-signed firmware is loaded into * some of the falcons of a GPU. For production devices this is the only way * for the firmware to access useful (but sensitive) registers. * * A Falcon microprocessor supporting advanced security modes can run in one of * three modes: * * - Non-secure (NS). In this mode, functionality is similar to Falcon * architectures before security modes were introduced (pre-Maxwell), but * capability is restricted. In particular, certain registers may be * inaccessible for reads and/or writes, and physical memory access may be * disabled (on certain Falcon instances). This is the only possible mode that * can be used if you don't have microcode cryptographically signed by NVIDIA. * * - Heavy Secure (HS). In this mode, the microprocessor is a black box - it's * not possible to read or write any Falcon internal state or Falcon registers * from outside the Falcon (for example, from the host system). The only way * to enable this mode is by loading microcode that has been signed by NVIDIA. * (The loading process involves tagging the IMEM block as secure, writing the * signature into a Falcon register, and starting execution. The hardware will * validate the signature, and if valid, grant HS privileges.) * * - Light Secure (LS). In this mode, the microprocessor has more privileges * than NS but fewer than HS. Some of the microprocessor state is visible to * host software to ease debugging. The only way to enable this mode is by HS * microcode enabling LS mode. Some privileges available to HS mode are not * available here. LS mode is introduced in GM20x. * * Secure boot consists in temporarily switching a HS-capable falcon (typically * PMU) into HS mode in order to validate the LS firmwares of managed falcons, * load them, and switch managed falcons into LS mode. Once secure boot * completes, no falcon remains in HS mode. * * Secure boot requires a write-protected memory region (WPR) which can only be * written by the secure falcon. On dGPU, the driver sets up the WPR region in * video memory. On Tegra, it is set up by the bootloader and its location and * size written into memory controller registers. * * The secure boot process takes place as follows: * * 1) A LS blob is constructed that contains all the LS firmwares we want to * load, along with their signatures and bootloaders. * * 2) A HS blob (also called ACR) is created that contains the signed HS * firmware in charge of loading the LS firmwares into their respective * falcons. * * 3) The HS blob is loaded (via its own bootloader) and executed on the * HS-capable falcon. It authenticates itself, switches the secure falcon to * HS mode and setup the WPR region around the LS blob (dGPU) or copies the * LS blob into the WPR region (Tegra). * * 4) The LS blob is now secure from all external tampering. The HS falcon * checks the signatures of the LS firmwares and, if valid, switches the * managed falcons to LS mode and makes them ready to run the LS firmware. * * 5) The managed falcons remain in LS mode and can be started. * */ #include "priv.h" #include "acr.h" #include #include #include #include const char * nvkm_secboot_falcon_name[] = { [NVKM_SECBOOT_FALCON_PMU] = "PMU", [NVKM_SECBOOT_FALCON_RESERVED] = "", [NVKM_SECBOOT_FALCON_FECS] = "FECS", [NVKM_SECBOOT_FALCON_GPCCS] = "GPCCS", [NVKM_SECBOOT_FALCON_SEC2] = "SEC2", [NVKM_SECBOOT_FALCON_END] = "", }; /** * nvkm_secboot_reset() - reset specified falcon */ int nvkm_secboot_reset(struct nvkm_secboot *sb, unsigned long falcon_mask) { /* Unmanaged falcon? */ if ((falcon_mask | sb->acr->managed_falcons) != sb->acr->managed_falcons) { nvkm_error(&sb->subdev, "cannot reset unmanaged falcon!\n"); return -EINVAL; } return sb->acr->func->reset(sb->acr, sb, falcon_mask); } /** * nvkm_secboot_is_managed() - check whether a given falcon is securely-managed */ bool nvkm_secboot_is_managed(struct nvkm_secboot *sb, enum nvkm_secboot_falcon fid) { if (!sb) return false; return sb->acr->managed_falcons & BIT(fid); } static int nvkm_secboot_oneinit(struct nvkm_subdev *subdev) { struct nvkm_secboot *sb = nvkm_secboot(subdev); int ret = 0; switch (sb->acr->boot_falcon) { case NVKM_SECBOOT_FALCON_PMU: sb->halt_falcon = sb->boot_falcon = subdev->device->pmu->falcon; break; case NVKM_SECBOOT_FALCON_SEC2: /* we must keep SEC2 alive forever since ACR will run on it */ nvkm_engine_ref(&subdev->device->sec2->engine); sb->boot_falcon = subdev->device->sec2->falcon; sb->halt_falcon = subdev->device->pmu->falcon; break; default: nvkm_error(subdev, "Unmanaged boot falcon %s!\n", nvkm_secboot_falcon_name[sb->acr->boot_falcon]); return -EINVAL; } nvkm_debug(subdev, "using %s falcon for ACR\n", sb->boot_falcon->name); /* Call chip-specific init function */ if (sb->func->oneinit) ret = sb->func->oneinit(sb); if (ret) { nvkm_error(subdev, "Secure Boot initialization failed: %d\n", ret); return ret; } return 0; } static int nvkm_secboot_fini(struct nvkm_subdev *subdev, bool suspend) { struct nvkm_secboot *sb = nvkm_secboot(subdev); int ret = 0; if (sb->func->fini) ret = sb->func->fini(sb, suspend); return ret; } static void * nvkm_secboot_dtor(struct nvkm_subdev *subdev) { struct nvkm_secboot *sb = nvkm_secboot(subdev); void *ret = NULL; if (sb->func->dtor) ret = sb->func->dtor(sb); return ret; } static const struct nvkm_subdev_func nvkm_secboot = { .oneinit = nvkm_secboot_oneinit, .fini = nvkm_secboot_fini, .dtor = nvkm_secboot_dtor, }; int nvkm_secboot_ctor(const struct nvkm_secboot_func *func, struct nvkm_acr *acr, struct nvkm_device *device, int index, struct nvkm_secboot *sb) { unsigned long fid; nvkm_subdev_ctor(&nvkm_secboot, device, index, &sb->subdev); sb->func = func; sb->acr = acr; acr->subdev = &sb->subdev; nvkm_debug(&sb->subdev, "securely managed falcons:\n"); for_each_set_bit(fid, &sb->acr->managed_falcons, NVKM_SECBOOT_FALCON_END) nvkm_debug(&sb->subdev, "- %s\n", nvkm_secboot_falcon_name[fid]); return 0; }