xref: /openbmc/linux/Documentation/staging/tee.rst (revision 4bb1eb3c)
1=============
2TEE subsystem
3=============
4
5This document describes the TEE subsystem in Linux.
6
7A TEE (Trusted Execution Environment) is a trusted OS running in some
8secure environment, for example, TrustZone on ARM CPUs, or a separate
9secure co-processor etc. A TEE driver handles the details needed to
10communicate with the TEE.
11
12This subsystem deals with:
13
14- Registration of TEE drivers
15
16- Managing shared memory between Linux and the TEE
17
18- Providing a generic API to the TEE
19
20The TEE interface
21=================
22
23include/uapi/linux/tee.h defines the generic interface to a TEE.
24
25User space (the client) connects to the driver by opening /dev/tee[0-9]* or
26/dev/teepriv[0-9]*.
27
28- TEE_IOC_SHM_ALLOC allocates shared memory and returns a file descriptor
29  which user space can mmap. When user space doesn't need the file
30  descriptor any more, it should be closed. When shared memory isn't needed
31  any longer it should be unmapped with munmap() to allow the reuse of
32  memory.
33
34- TEE_IOC_VERSION lets user space know which TEE this driver handles and
35  its capabilities.
36
37- TEE_IOC_OPEN_SESSION opens a new session to a Trusted Application.
38
39- TEE_IOC_INVOKE invokes a function in a Trusted Application.
40
41- TEE_IOC_CANCEL may cancel an ongoing TEE_IOC_OPEN_SESSION or TEE_IOC_INVOKE.
42
43- TEE_IOC_CLOSE_SESSION closes a session to a Trusted Application.
44
45There are two classes of clients, normal clients and supplicants. The latter is
46a helper process for the TEE to access resources in Linux, for example file
47system access. A normal client opens /dev/tee[0-9]* and a supplicant opens
48/dev/teepriv[0-9].
49
50Much of the communication between clients and the TEE is opaque to the
51driver. The main job for the driver is to receive requests from the
52clients, forward them to the TEE and send back the results. In the case of
53supplicants the communication goes in the other direction, the TEE sends
54requests to the supplicant which then sends back the result.
55
56The TEE kernel interface
57========================
58
59Kernel provides a TEE bus infrastructure where a Trusted Application is
60represented as a device identified via Universally Unique Identifier (UUID) and
61client drivers register a table of supported device UUIDs.
62
63TEE bus infrastructure registers following APIs:
64
65match():
66  iterates over the client driver UUID table to find a corresponding
67  match for device UUID. If a match is found, then this particular device is
68  probed via corresponding probe API registered by the client driver. This
69  process happens whenever a device or a client driver is registered with TEE
70  bus.
71
72uevent():
73  notifies user-space (udev) whenever a new device is registered on
74  TEE bus for auto-loading of modularized client drivers.
75
76TEE bus device enumeration is specific to underlying TEE implementation, so it
77is left open for TEE drivers to provide corresponding implementation.
78
79Then TEE client driver can talk to a matched Trusted Application using APIs
80listed in include/linux/tee_drv.h.
81
82TEE client driver example
83-------------------------
84
85Suppose a TEE client driver needs to communicate with a Trusted Application
86having UUID: ``ac6a4085-0e82-4c33-bf98-8eb8e118b6c2``, so driver registration
87snippet would look like::
88
89	static const struct tee_client_device_id client_id_table[] = {
90		{UUID_INIT(0xac6a4085, 0x0e82, 0x4c33,
91			   0xbf, 0x98, 0x8e, 0xb8, 0xe1, 0x18, 0xb6, 0xc2)},
92		{}
93	};
94
95	MODULE_DEVICE_TABLE(tee, client_id_table);
96
97	static struct tee_client_driver client_driver = {
98		.id_table	= client_id_table,
99		.driver		= {
100			.name		= DRIVER_NAME,
101			.bus		= &tee_bus_type,
102			.probe		= client_probe,
103			.remove		= client_remove,
104		},
105	};
106
107	static int __init client_init(void)
108	{
109		return driver_register(&client_driver.driver);
110	}
111
112	static void __exit client_exit(void)
113	{
114		driver_unregister(&client_driver.driver);
115	}
116
117	module_init(client_init);
118	module_exit(client_exit);
119
120OP-TEE driver
121=============
122
123The OP-TEE driver handles OP-TEE [1] based TEEs. Currently it is only the ARM
124TrustZone based OP-TEE solution that is supported.
125
126Lowest level of communication with OP-TEE builds on ARM SMC Calling
127Convention (SMCCC) [2], which is the foundation for OP-TEE's SMC interface
128[3] used internally by the driver. Stacked on top of that is OP-TEE Message
129Protocol [4].
130
131OP-TEE SMC interface provides the basic functions required by SMCCC and some
132additional functions specific for OP-TEE. The most interesting functions are:
133
134- OPTEE_SMC_FUNCID_CALLS_UID (part of SMCCC) returns the version information
135  which is then returned by TEE_IOC_VERSION
136
137- OPTEE_SMC_CALL_GET_OS_UUID returns the particular OP-TEE implementation, used
138  to tell, for instance, a TrustZone OP-TEE apart from an OP-TEE running on a
139  separate secure co-processor.
140
141- OPTEE_SMC_CALL_WITH_ARG drives the OP-TEE message protocol
142
143- OPTEE_SMC_GET_SHM_CONFIG lets the driver and OP-TEE agree on which memory
144  range to used for shared memory between Linux and OP-TEE.
145
146The GlobalPlatform TEE Client API [5] is implemented on top of the generic
147TEE API.
148
149Picture of the relationship between the different components in the
150OP-TEE architecture::
151
152      User space                  Kernel                   Secure world
153      ~~~~~~~~~~                  ~~~~~~                   ~~~~~~~~~~~~
154   +--------+                                             +-------------+
155   | Client |                                             | Trusted     |
156   +--------+                                             | Application |
157      /\                                                  +-------------+
158      || +----------+                                           /\
159      || |tee-      |                                           ||
160      || |supplicant|                                           \/
161      || +----------+                                     +-------------+
162      \/      /\                                          | TEE Internal|
163   +-------+  ||                                          | API         |
164   + TEE   |  ||            +--------+--------+           +-------------+
165   | Client|  ||            | TEE    | OP-TEE |           | OP-TEE      |
166   | API   |  \/            | subsys | driver |           | Trusted OS  |
167   +-------+----------------+----+-------+----+-----------+-------------+
168   |      Generic TEE API        |       |     OP-TEE MSG               |
169   |      IOCTL (TEE_IOC_*)      |       |     SMCCC (OPTEE_SMC_CALL_*) |
170   +-----------------------------+       +------------------------------+
171
172RPC (Remote Procedure Call) are requests from secure world to kernel driver
173or tee-supplicant. An RPC is identified by a special range of SMCCC return
174values from OPTEE_SMC_CALL_WITH_ARG. RPC messages which are intended for the
175kernel are handled by the kernel driver. Other RPC messages will be forwarded to
176tee-supplicant without further involvement of the driver, except switching
177shared memory buffer representation.
178
179OP-TEE device enumeration
180-------------------------
181
182OP-TEE provides a pseudo Trusted Application: drivers/tee/optee/device.c in
183order to support device enumeration. In other words, OP-TEE driver invokes this
184application to retrieve a list of Trusted Applications which can be registered
185as devices on the TEE bus.
186
187AMD-TEE driver
188==============
189
190The AMD-TEE driver handles the communication with AMD's TEE environment. The
191TEE environment is provided by AMD Secure Processor.
192
193The AMD Secure Processor (formerly called Platform Security Processor or PSP)
194is a dedicated processor that features ARM TrustZone technology, along with a
195software-based Trusted Execution Environment (TEE) designed to enable
196third-party Trusted Applications. This feature is currently enabled only for
197APUs.
198
199The following picture shows a high level overview of AMD-TEE::
200
201                                             |
202    x86                                      |
203                                             |
204 User space            (Kernel space)        |    AMD Secure Processor (PSP)
205 ~~~~~~~~~~            ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~        |    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
206                                             |
207 +--------+                                  |       +-------------+
208 | Client |                                  |       | Trusted     |
209 +--------+                                  |       | Application |
210     /\                                      |       +-------------+
211     ||                                      |             /\
212     ||                                      |             ||
213     ||                                      |             \/
214     ||                                      |         +----------+
215     ||                                      |         |   TEE    |
216     ||                                      |         | Internal |
217     \/                                      |         |   API    |
218 +---------+           +-----------+---------+         +----------+
219 | TEE     |           | TEE       | AMD-TEE |         | AMD-TEE  |
220 | Client  |           | subsystem | driver  |         | Trusted  |
221 | API     |           |           |         |         |   OS     |
222 +---------+-----------+----+------+---------+---------+----------+
223 |   Generic TEE API        |      | ASP     |      Mailbox       |
224 |   IOCTL (TEE_IOC_*)      |      | driver  | Register Protocol  |
225 +--------------------------+      +---------+--------------------+
226
227At the lowest level (in x86), the AMD Secure Processor (ASP) driver uses the
228CPU to PSP mailbox regsister to submit commands to the PSP. The format of the
229command buffer is opaque to the ASP driver. It's role is to submit commands to
230the secure processor and return results to AMD-TEE driver. The interface
231between AMD-TEE driver and AMD Secure Processor driver can be found in [6].
232
233The AMD-TEE driver packages the command buffer payload for processing in TEE.
234The command buffer format for the different TEE commands can be found in [7].
235
236The TEE commands supported by AMD-TEE Trusted OS are:
237
238* TEE_CMD_ID_LOAD_TA          - loads a Trusted Application (TA) binary into
239                                TEE environment.
240* TEE_CMD_ID_UNLOAD_TA        - unloads TA binary from TEE environment.
241* TEE_CMD_ID_OPEN_SESSION     - opens a session with a loaded TA.
242* TEE_CMD_ID_CLOSE_SESSION    - closes session with loaded TA
243* TEE_CMD_ID_INVOKE_CMD       - invokes a command with loaded TA
244* TEE_CMD_ID_MAP_SHARED_MEM   - maps shared memory
245* TEE_CMD_ID_UNMAP_SHARED_MEM - unmaps shared memory
246
247AMD-TEE Trusted OS is the firmware running on AMD Secure Processor.
248
249The AMD-TEE driver registers itself with TEE subsystem and implements the
250following driver function callbacks:
251
252* get_version - returns the driver implementation id and capability.
253* open - sets up the driver context data structure.
254* release - frees up driver resources.
255* open_session - loads the TA binary and opens session with loaded TA.
256* close_session -  closes session with loaded TA and unloads it.
257* invoke_func - invokes a command with loaded TA.
258
259cancel_req driver callback is not supported by AMD-TEE.
260
261The GlobalPlatform TEE Client API [5] can be used by the user space (client) to
262talk to AMD's TEE. AMD's TEE provides a secure environment for loading, opening
263a session, invoking commands and clossing session with TA.
264
265References
266==========
267
268[1] https://github.com/OP-TEE/optee_os
269
270[2] http://infocenter.arm.com/help/topic/com.arm.doc.den0028a/index.html
271
272[3] drivers/tee/optee/optee_smc.h
273
274[4] drivers/tee/optee/optee_msg.h
275
276[5] http://www.globalplatform.org/specificationsdevice.asp look for
277    "TEE Client API Specification v1.0" and click download.
278
279[6] include/linux/psp-tee.h
280
281[7] drivers/tee/amdtee/amdtee_if.h
282