1What:		/sys/firmware/secvar
2Date:		August 2019
3Contact:	Nayna Jain <nayna@linux.ibm.com>
4Description:	This directory is created if the POWER firmware supports OS
5		secureboot, thereby secure variables. It exposes interface
6		for reading/writing the secure variables
7
8What:		/sys/firmware/secvar/vars
9Date:		August 2019
10Contact:	Nayna Jain <nayna@linux.ibm.com>
11Description:	This directory lists all the secure variables that are supported
12		by the firmware.
13
14What:		/sys/firmware/secvar/format
15Date:		August 2019
16Contact:	Nayna Jain <nayna@linux.ibm.com>
17Description:	A string indicating which backend is in use by the firmware.
18		This determines the format of the variable and the accepted
19		format of variable updates.
20
21What:		/sys/firmware/secvar/vars/<variable name>
22Date:		August 2019
23Contact:	Nayna Jain <nayna@linux.ibm.com>
24Description:	Each secure variable is represented as a directory named as
25		<variable_name>. The variable name is unique and is in ASCII
26		representation. The data and size can be determined by reading
27		their respective attribute files.
28
29What:		/sys/firmware/secvar/vars/<variable_name>/size
30Date:		August 2019
31Contact:	Nayna Jain <nayna@linux.ibm.com>
32Description:	An integer representation of the size of the content of the
33		variable. In other words, it represents the size of the data.
34
35What:		/sys/firmware/secvar/vars/<variable_name>/data
36Date:		August 2019
37Contact:	Nayna Jain h<nayna@linux.ibm.com>
38Description:	A read-only file containing the value of the variable. The size
39		of the file represents the maximum size of the variable data.
40
41What:		/sys/firmware/secvar/vars/<variable_name>/update
42Date:		August 2019
43Contact:	Nayna Jain <nayna@linux.ibm.com>
44Description:	A write-only file that is used to submit the new value for the
45		variable. The size of the file represents the maximum size of
46		the variable data that can be written.
47