1.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 2 3================= 4Inline Encryption 5================= 6 7Background 8========== 9 10Inline encryption hardware sits logically between memory and the disk, and can 11en/decrypt data as it goes in/out of the disk. Inline encryption hardware has a 12fixed number of "keyslots" - slots into which encryption contexts (i.e. the 13encryption key, encryption algorithm, data unit size) can be programmed by the 14kernel at any time. Each request sent to the disk can be tagged with the index 15of a keyslot (and also a data unit number to act as an encryption tweak), and 16the inline encryption hardware will en/decrypt the data in the request with the 17encryption context programmed into that keyslot. This is very different from 18full disk encryption solutions like self encrypting drives/TCG OPAL/ATA 19Security standards, since with inline encryption, any block on disk could be 20encrypted with any encryption context the kernel chooses. 21 22 23Objective 24========= 25 26We want to support inline encryption (IE) in the kernel. 27To allow for testing, we also want a crypto API fallback when actual 28IE hardware is absent. We also want IE to work with layered devices 29like dm and loopback (i.e. we want to be able to use the IE hardware 30of the underlying devices if present, or else fall back to crypto API 31en/decryption). 32 33 34Constraints and notes 35===================== 36 37- IE hardware has a limited number of "keyslots" that can be programmed 38 with an encryption context (key, algorithm, data unit size, etc.) at any time. 39 One can specify a keyslot in a data request made to the device, and the 40 device will en/decrypt the data using the encryption context programmed into 41 that specified keyslot. When possible, we want to make multiple requests with 42 the same encryption context share the same keyslot. 43 44- We need a way for upper layers like filesystems to specify an encryption 45 context to use for en/decrypting a struct bio, and a device driver (like UFS) 46 needs to be able to use that encryption context when it processes the bio. 47 48- We need a way for device drivers to expose their inline encryption 49 capabilities in a unified way to the upper layers. 50 51 52Design 53====== 54 55We add a struct bio_crypt_ctx to struct bio that can 56represent an encryption context, because we need to be able to pass this 57encryption context from the upper layers (like the fs layer) to the 58device driver to act upon. 59 60While IE hardware works on the notion of keyslots, the FS layer has no 61knowledge of keyslots - it simply wants to specify an encryption context to 62use while en/decrypting a bio. 63 64We introduce a keyslot manager (KSM) that handles the translation from 65encryption contexts specified by the FS to keyslots on the IE hardware. 66This KSM also serves as the way IE hardware can expose its capabilities to 67upper layers. The generic mode of operation is: each device driver that wants 68to support IE will construct a KSM and set it up in its struct request_queue. 69Upper layers that want to use IE on this device can then use this KSM in 70the device's struct request_queue to translate an encryption context into 71a keyslot. The presence of the KSM in the request queue shall be used to mean 72that the device supports IE. 73 74The KSM uses refcounts to track which keyslots are idle (either they have no 75encryption context programmed, or there are no in-flight struct bios 76referencing that keyslot). When a new encryption context needs a keyslot, it 77tries to find a keyslot that has already been programmed with the same 78encryption context, and if there is no such keyslot, it evicts the least 79recently used idle keyslot and programs the new encryption context into that 80one. If no idle keyslots are available, then the caller will sleep until there 81is at least one. 82 83 84blk-mq changes, other block layer changes and blk-crypto-fallback 85================================================================= 86 87We add a pointer to a ``bi_crypt_context`` and ``keyslot`` to 88struct request. These will be referred to as the ``crypto fields`` 89for the request. This ``keyslot`` is the keyslot into which the 90``bi_crypt_context`` has been programmed in the KSM of the ``request_queue`` 91that this request is being sent to. 92 93We introduce ``block/blk-crypto-fallback.c``, which allows upper layers to remain 94blissfully unaware of whether or not real inline encryption hardware is present 95underneath. When a bio is submitted with a target ``request_queue`` that doesn't 96support the encryption context specified with the bio, the block layer will 97en/decrypt the bio with the blk-crypto-fallback. 98 99If the bio is a ``WRITE`` bio, a bounce bio is allocated, and the data in the bio 100is encrypted stored in the bounce bio - blk-mq will then proceed to process the 101bounce bio as if it were not encrypted at all (except when blk-integrity is 102concerned). ``blk-crypto-fallback`` sets the bounce bio's ``bi_end_io`` to an 103internal function that cleans up the bounce bio and ends the original bio. 104 105If the bio is a ``READ`` bio, the bio's ``bi_end_io`` (and also ``bi_private``) 106is saved and overwritten by ``blk-crypto-fallback`` to 107``bio_crypto_fallback_decrypt_bio``. The bio's ``bi_crypt_context`` is also 108overwritten with ``NULL``, so that to the rest of the stack, the bio looks 109as if it was a regular bio that never had an encryption context specified. 110``bio_crypto_fallback_decrypt_bio`` will decrypt the bio, restore the original 111``bi_end_io`` (and also ``bi_private``) and end the bio again. 112 113Regardless of whether real inline encryption hardware is used or the 114blk-crypto-fallback is used, the ciphertext written to disk (and hence the 115on-disk format of data) will be the same (assuming the hardware's implementation 116of the algorithm being used adheres to spec and functions correctly). 117 118If a ``request queue``'s inline encryption hardware claimed to support the 119encryption context specified with a bio, then it will not be handled by the 120``blk-crypto-fallback``. We will eventually reach a point in blk-mq when a 121struct request needs to be allocated for that bio. At that point, 122blk-mq tries to program the encryption context into the ``request_queue``'s 123keyslot_manager, and obtain a keyslot, which it stores in its newly added 124``keyslot`` field. This keyslot is released when the request is completed. 125 126When the first bio is added to a request, ``blk_crypto_rq_bio_prep`` is called, 127which sets the request's ``crypt_ctx`` to a copy of the bio's 128``bi_crypt_context``. bio_crypt_do_front_merge is called whenever a subsequent 129bio is merged to the front of the request, which updates the ``crypt_ctx`` of 130the request so that it matches the newly merged bio's ``bi_crypt_context``. In particular, the request keeps a copy of the ``bi_crypt_context`` of the first 131bio in its bio-list (blk-mq needs to be careful to maintain this invariant 132during bio and request merges). 133 134To make it possible for inline encryption to work with request queue based 135layered devices, when a request is cloned, its ``crypto fields`` are cloned as 136well. When the cloned request is submitted, blk-mq programs the 137``bi_crypt_context`` of the request into the clone's request_queue's keyslot 138manager, and stores the returned keyslot in the clone's ``keyslot``. 139 140 141API presented to users of the block layer 142========================================= 143 144``struct blk_crypto_key`` represents a crypto key (the raw key, size of the 145key, the crypto algorithm to use, the data unit size to use, and the number of 146bytes required to represent data unit numbers that will be specified with the 147``bi_crypt_context``). 148 149``blk_crypto_init_key`` allows upper layers to initialize such a 150``blk_crypto_key``. 151 152``bio_crypt_set_ctx`` should be called on any bio that a user of 153the block layer wants en/decrypted via inline encryption (or the 154blk-crypto-fallback, if hardware support isn't available for the desired 155crypto configuration). This function takes the ``blk_crypto_key`` and the 156data unit number (DUN) to use when en/decrypting the bio. 157 158``blk_crypto_config_supported`` allows upper layers to query whether or not the 159an encryption context passed to request queue can be handled by blk-crypto 160(either by real inline encryption hardware, or by the blk-crypto-fallback). 161This is useful e.g. when blk-crypto-fallback is disabled, and the upper layer 162wants to use an algorithm that may not supported by hardware - this function 163lets the upper layer know ahead of time that the algorithm isn't supported, 164and the upper layer can fallback to something else if appropriate. 165 166``blk_crypto_start_using_key`` - Upper layers must call this function on 167``blk_crypto_key`` and a ``request_queue`` before using the key with any bio 168headed for that ``request_queue``. This function ensures that either the 169hardware supports the key's crypto settings, or the crypto API fallback has 170transforms for the needed mode allocated and ready to go. Note that this 171function may allocate an ``skcipher``, and must not be called from the data 172path, since allocating ``skciphers`` from the data path can deadlock. 173 174``blk_crypto_evict_key`` *must* be called by upper layers before a 175``blk_crypto_key`` is freed. Further, it *must* only be called only once 176there are no more in-flight requests that use that ``blk_crypto_key``. 177``blk_crypto_evict_key`` will ensure that a key is removed from any keyslots in 178inline encryption hardware that the key might have been programmed into (or the blk-crypto-fallback). 179 180API presented to device drivers 181=============================== 182 183A :c:type:``struct blk_keyslot_manager`` should be set up by device drivers in 184the ``request_queue`` of the device. The device driver needs to call 185``blk_ksm_init`` (or its resource-managed variant ``devm_blk_ksm_init``) on the 186``blk_keyslot_manager``, while specifying the number of keyslots supported by 187the hardware. 188 189The device driver also needs to tell the KSM how to actually manipulate the 190IE hardware in the device to do things like programming the crypto key into 191the IE hardware into a particular keyslot. All this is achieved through the 192struct blk_ksm_ll_ops field in the KSM that the device driver 193must fill up after initing the ``blk_keyslot_manager``. 194 195The KSM also handles runtime power management for the device when applicable 196(e.g. when it wants to program a crypto key into the IE hardware, the device 197must be runtime powered on) - so the device driver must also set the ``dev`` 198field in the ksm to point to the `struct device` for the KSM to use for runtime 199power management. 200 201``blk_ksm_reprogram_all_keys`` can be called by device drivers if the device 202needs each and every of its keyslots to be reprogrammed with the key it 203"should have" at the point in time when the function is called. This is useful 204e.g. if a device loses all its keys on runtime power down/up. 205 206If the driver used ``blk_ksm_init`` instead of ``devm_blk_ksm_init``, then 207``blk_ksm_destroy`` should be called to free up all resources used by a 208``blk_keyslot_manager`` once it is no longer needed. 209 210Layered Devices 211=============== 212 213Request queue based layered devices like dm-rq that wish to support IE need to 214create their own keyslot manager for their request queue, and expose whatever 215functionality they choose. When a layered device wants to pass a clone of that 216request to another ``request_queue``, blk-crypto will initialize and prepare the 217clone as necessary - see ``blk_crypto_insert_cloned_request`` in 218``blk-crypto.c``. 219 220 221Future Optimizations for layered devices 222======================================== 223 224Creating a keyslot manager for a layered device uses up memory for each 225keyslot, and in general, a layered device merely passes the request on to a 226"child" device, so the keyslots in the layered device itself are completely 227unused, and don't need any refcounting or keyslot programming. We can instead 228define a new type of KSM; the "passthrough KSM", that layered devices can use 229to advertise an unlimited number of keyslots, and support for any encryption 230algorithms they choose, while not actually using any memory for each keyslot. 231Another use case for the "passthrough KSM" is for IE devices that do not have a 232limited number of keyslots. 233 234 235Interaction between inline encryption and blk integrity 236======================================================= 237 238At the time of this patch, there is no real hardware that supports both these 239features. However, these features do interact with each other, and it's not 240completely trivial to make them both work together properly. In particular, 241when a WRITE bio wants to use inline encryption on a device that supports both 242features, the bio will have an encryption context specified, after which 243its integrity information is calculated (using the plaintext data, since 244the encryption will happen while data is being written), and the data and 245integrity info is sent to the device. Obviously, the integrity info must be 246verified before the data is encrypted. After the data is encrypted, the device 247must not store the integrity info that it received with the plaintext data 248since that might reveal information about the plaintext data. As such, it must 249re-generate the integrity info from the ciphertext data and store that on disk 250instead. Another issue with storing the integrity info of the plaintext data is 251that it changes the on disk format depending on whether hardware inline 252encryption support is present or the kernel crypto API fallback is used (since 253if the fallback is used, the device will receive the integrity info of the 254ciphertext, not that of the plaintext). 255 256Because there isn't any real hardware yet, it seems prudent to assume that 257hardware implementations might not implement both features together correctly, 258and disallow the combination for now. Whenever a device supports integrity, the 259kernel will pretend that the device does not support hardware inline encryption 260(by essentially setting the keyslot manager in the request_queue of the device 261to NULL). When the crypto API fallback is enabled, this means that all bios with 262and encryption context will use the fallback, and IO will complete as usual. 263When the fallback is disabled, a bio with an encryption context will be failed. 264