xref: /openbmc/qemu/docs/specs/tpm.rst (revision bb9c998c)
1===============
2QEMU TPM Device
3===============
4
5Guest-side hardware interface
6=============================
7
8TIS interface
9-------------
10
11The QEMU TPM emulation implements a TPM TIS hardware interface
12following the Trusted Computing Group's specification "TCG PC Client
13Specific TPM Interface Specification (TIS)", Specification Version
141.3, 21 March 2013. (see the `TIS specification`_, or a later version
15of it).
16
17The TIS interface makes a memory mapped IO region in the area
180xfed40000-0xfed44fff available to the guest operating system.
19
20QEMU files related to TPM TIS interface:
21 - ``hw/tpm/tpm_tis_common.c``
22 - ``hw/tpm/tpm_tis_isa.c``
23 - ``hw/tpm/tpm_tis_sysbus.c``
24 - ``hw/tpm/tpm_tis_i2c.c``
25 - ``hw/tpm/tpm_tis.h``
26
27Both an ISA device and a sysbus device are available. The former is
28used with pc/q35 machine while the latter can be instantiated in the
29Arm virt machine.
30
31An I2C device support is also provided which can be instantiated in the Arm
32based emulation machines. This device only supports the TPM 2 protocol.
33
34CRB interface
35-------------
36
37QEMU also implements a TPM CRB interface following the Trusted
38Computing Group's specification "TCG PC Client Platform TPM Profile
39(PTP) Specification", Family "2.0", Level 00 Revision 01.03 v22, May
4022, 2017. (see the `CRB specification`_, or a later version of it)
41
42The CRB interface makes a memory mapped IO region in the area
430xfed40000-0xfed40fff (1 locality) available to the guest
44operating system.
45
46QEMU files related to TPM CRB interface:
47 - ``hw/tpm/tpm_crb.c``
48
49SPAPR interface
50---------------
51
52pSeries (ppc64) machines offer a tpm-spapr device model.
53
54QEMU files related to the SPAPR interface:
55 - ``hw/tpm/tpm_spapr.c``
56
57fw_cfg interface
58================
59
60The bios/firmware may read the ``"etc/tpm/config"`` fw_cfg entry for
61configuring the guest appropriately.
62
63The entry of 6 bytes has the following content, in little-endian:
64
65.. code-block:: c
66
67    #define TPM_VERSION_UNSPEC          0
68    #define TPM_VERSION_1_2             1
69    #define TPM_VERSION_2_0             2
70
71    #define TPM_PPI_VERSION_NONE        0
72    #define TPM_PPI_VERSION_1_30        1
73
74    struct FwCfgTPMConfig {
75        uint32_t tpmppi_address;         /* PPI memory location */
76        uint8_t tpm_version;             /* TPM version */
77        uint8_t tpmppi_version;          /* PPI version */
78    };
79
80ACPI interface
81==============
82
83The TPM device is defined with ACPI ID "PNP0C31". QEMU builds a SSDT
84and passes it into the guest through the fw_cfg device. The device
85description contains the base address of the TIS interface 0xfed40000
86and the size of the MMIO area (0x5000). In case a TPM2 is used by
87QEMU, a TPM2 ACPI table is also provided.  The device is described to
88be used in polling mode rather than interrupt mode primarily because
89no unused IRQ could be found.
90
91To support measurement logs to be written by the firmware,
92e.g. SeaBIOS, a TCPA table is implemented. This table provides a 64kb
93buffer where the firmware can write its log into. For TPM 2 only a
94more recent version of the TPM2 table provides support for
95measurements logs and a TCPA table does not need to be created.
96
97The TCPA and TPM2 ACPI tables follow the Trusted Computing Group
98specification "TCG ACPI Specification" Family "1.2" and "2.0", Level
9900 Revision 00.37. (see the `ACPI specification`_, or a later version
100of it)
101
102ACPI PPI Interface
103------------------
104
105QEMU supports the Physical Presence Interface (PPI) for TPM 1.2 and
106TPM 2. This interface requires ACPI and firmware support. (see the
107`PPI specification`_)
108
109PPI enables a system administrator (root) to request a modification to
110the TPM upon reboot. The PPI specification defines the operation
111requests and the actions the firmware has to take. The system
112administrator passes the operation request number to the firmware
113through an ACPI interface which writes this number to a memory
114location that the firmware knows. Upon reboot, the firmware finds the
115number and sends commands to the TPM. The firmware writes the TPM
116result code and the operation request number to a memory location that
117ACPI can read from and pass the result on to the administrator.
118
119The PPI specification defines a set of mandatory and optional
120operations for the firmware to implement. The ACPI interface also
121allows an administrator to list the supported operations. In QEMU the
122ACPI code is generated by QEMU, yet the firmware needs to implement
123support on a per-operations basis, and different firmwares may support
124a different subset. Therefore, QEMU introduces the virtual memory
125device for PPI where the firmware can indicate which operations it
126supports and ACPI can enable the ones that are supported and disable
127all others. This interface lies in main memory and has the following
128layout:
129
130 +-------------+--------+--------+-------------------------------------------+
131 |  Field      | Length | Offset | Description                               |
132 +=============+========+========+===========================================+
133 | ``func``    |  0x100 |  0x000 | Firmware sets values for each supported   |
134 |             |        |        | operation. See defined values below.      |
135 +-------------+--------+--------+-------------------------------------------+
136 | ``ppin``    |   0x1  |  0x100 | SMI interrupt to use. Set by firmware.    |
137 |             |        |        | Not supported.                            |
138 +-------------+--------+--------+-------------------------------------------+
139 | ``ppip``    |   0x4  |  0x101 | ACPI function index to pass to SMM code.  |
140 |             |        |        | Set by ACPI. Not supported.               |
141 +-------------+--------+--------+-------------------------------------------+
142 | ``pprp``    |   0x4  |  0x105 | Result of last executed operation. Set by |
143 |             |        |        | firmware. See function index 5 for values.|
144 +-------------+--------+--------+-------------------------------------------+
145 | ``pprq``    |   0x4  |  0x109 | Operation request number to execute. See  |
146 |             |        |        | 'Physical Presence Interface Operation    |
147 |             |        |        | Summary' tables in specs. Set by ACPI.    |
148 +-------------+--------+--------+-------------------------------------------+
149 | ``pprm``    |   0x4  |  0x10d | Operation request optional parameter.     |
150 |             |        |        | Values depend on operation. Set by ACPI.  |
151 +-------------+--------+--------+-------------------------------------------+
152 | ``lppr``    |   0x4  |  0x111 | Last executed operation request number.   |
153 |             |        |        | Copied from pprq field by firmware.       |
154 +-------------+--------+--------+-------------------------------------------+
155 | ``fret``    |   0x4  |  0x115 | Result code from SMM function.            |
156 |             |        |        | Not supported.                            |
157 +-------------+--------+--------+-------------------------------------------+
158 | ``res1``    |  0x40  |  0x119 | Reserved for future use                   |
159 +-------------+--------+--------+-------------------------------------------+
160 |``next_step``|   0x1  |  0x159 | Operation to execute after reboot by      |
161 |             |        |        | firmware. Used by firmware.               |
162 +-------------+--------+--------+-------------------------------------------+
163 | ``movv``    |   0x1  |  0x15a | Memory overwrite variable                 |
164 +-------------+--------+--------+-------------------------------------------+
165
166The following values are supported for the ``func`` field. They
167correspond to the values used by ACPI function index 8.
168
169 +----------+-------------------------------------------------------------+
170 | Value    | Description                                                 |
171 +==========+=============================================================+
172 | 0        | Operation is not implemented.                               |
173 +----------+-------------------------------------------------------------+
174 | 1        | Operation is only accessible through firmware.              |
175 +----------+-------------------------------------------------------------+
176 | 2        | Operation is blocked for OS by firmware configuration.      |
177 +----------+-------------------------------------------------------------+
178 | 3        | Operation is allowed and physically present user required.  |
179 +----------+-------------------------------------------------------------+
180 | 4        | Operation is allowed and physically present user is not     |
181 |          | required.                                                   |
182 +----------+-------------------------------------------------------------+
183
184The location of the table is given by the fw_cfg ``tpmppi_address``
185field.  The PPI memory region size is 0x400 (``TPM_PPI_ADDR_SIZE``) to
186leave enough room for future updates.
187
188QEMU files related to TPM ACPI tables:
189 - ``hw/i386/acpi-build.c``
190 - ``include/hw/acpi/tpm.h``
191
192TPM backend devices
193===================
194
195The TPM implementation is split into two parts, frontend and
196backend. The frontend part is the hardware interface, such as the TPM
197TIS interface described earlier, and the other part is the TPM backend
198interface. The backend interfaces implement the interaction with a TPM
199device, which may be a physical or an emulated device. The split
200between the front- and backend devices allows a frontend to be
201connected with any available backend. This enables the TIS interface
202to be used with the passthrough backend or the swtpm backend.
203
204QEMU files related to TPM backends:
205 - ``backends/tpm.c``
206 - ``include/sysemu/tpm.h``
207 - ``include/sysemu/tpm_backend.h``
208
209The QEMU TPM passthrough device
210-------------------------------
211
212In case QEMU is run on Linux as the host operating system it is
213possible to make the hardware TPM device available to a single QEMU
214guest. In this case the user must make sure that no other program is
215using the device, e.g., /dev/tpm0, before trying to start QEMU with
216it.
217
218The passthrough driver uses the host's TPM device for sending TPM
219commands and receiving responses from. Besides that it accesses the
220TPM device's sysfs entry for support of command cancellation. Since
221none of the state of a hardware TPM can be migrated between hosts,
222virtual machine migration is disabled when the TPM passthrough driver
223is used.
224
225Since the host's TPM device will already be initialized by the host's
226firmware, certain commands, e.g. ``TPM_Startup()``, sent by the
227virtual firmware for device initialization, will fail. In this case
228the firmware should not use the TPM.
229
230Sharing the device with the host is generally not a recommended usage
231scenario for a TPM device. The primary reason for this is that two
232operating systems can then access the device's single set of
233resources, such as platform configuration registers
234(PCRs). Applications or kernel security subsystems, such as the Linux
235Integrity Measurement Architecture (IMA), are not expecting to share
236PCRs.
237
238QEMU files related to the TPM passthrough device:
239 - ``backends/tpm/tpm_passthrough.c``
240 - ``backends/tpm/tpm_util.c``
241 - ``include/sysemu/tpm_util.h``
242
243
244Command line to start QEMU with the TPM passthrough device using the host's
245hardware TPM ``/dev/tpm0``:
246
247.. code-block:: console
248
249  qemu-system-x86_64 -display sdl -accel kvm \
250  -m 1024 -boot d -bios bios-256k.bin -boot menu=on \
251  -tpmdev passthrough,id=tpm0,path=/dev/tpm0 \
252  -device tpm-tis,tpmdev=tpm0 test.img
253
254
255The following commands should result in similar output inside the VM
256with a Linux kernel that either has the TPM TIS driver built-in or
257available as a module (assuming a TPM 2 is passed through):
258
259.. code-block:: console
260
261  # dmesg | grep -i tpm
262  [    0.012560] ACPI: TPM2 0x000000000BFFD1900 00004C (v04 BOCHS  \
263      BXPC     0000001 BXPC 00000001)
264
265  # ls -l /dev/tpm*
266  crw-rw----. 1 tss root  10,   224 Sep  6 12:36 /dev/tpm0
267  crw-rw----. 1 tss rss  253, 65536 Sep  6 12:36 /dev/tpmrm0
268
269  Starting with Linux 5.12 there are PCR entries for TPM 2 in sysfs:
270  # find /sys/devices/ -type f | grep pcr-sha
271  ...
272  /sys/devices/LNXSYSTEM:00/LNXSYBUS:00/MSFT0101:00/tpm/tpm0/pcr-sha256/1
273  ...
274  /sys/devices/LNXSYSTEM:00/LNXSYBUS:00/MSFT0101:00/tpm/tpm0/pcr-sha256/9
275  ...
276
277The QEMU TPM emulator device
278----------------------------
279
280The TPM emulator device uses an external TPM emulator called 'swtpm'
281for sending TPM commands to and receiving responses from. The swtpm
282program must have been started before trying to access it through the
283TPM emulator with QEMU.
284
285The TPM emulator implements a command channel for transferring TPM
286commands and responses as well as a control channel over which control
287commands can be sent. (see the `SWTPM protocol`_ specification)
288
289The control channel serves the purpose of resetting, initializing, and
290migrating the TPM state, among other things.
291
292The swtpm program behaves like a hardware TPM and therefore needs to
293be initialized by the firmware running inside the QEMU virtual
294machine.  One necessary step for initializing the device is to send
295the TPM_Startup command to it. SeaBIOS, for example, has been
296instrumented to initialize a TPM 1.2 or TPM 2 device using this
297command.
298
299QEMU files related to the TPM emulator device:
300 - ``backends/tpm/tpm_emulator.c``
301 - ``backends/tpm/tpm_util.c``
302 - ``include/sysemu/tpm_util.h``
303
304The following commands start the swtpm with a UnixIO control channel over
305a socket interface. They do not need to be run as root.
306
307.. code-block:: console
308
309  mkdir /tmp/mytpm1
310  swtpm socket --tpmstate dir=/tmp/mytpm1 \
311    --ctrl type=unixio,path=/tmp/mytpm1/swtpm-sock \
312    --tpm2 \
313    --log level=20
314
315Command line to start QEMU with the TPM emulator device communicating
316with the swtpm (x86):
317
318.. code-block:: console
319
320  qemu-system-x86_64 -display sdl -accel kvm \
321    -m 1024 -boot d -bios bios-256k.bin -boot menu=on \
322    -chardev socket,id=chrtpm,path=/tmp/mytpm1/swtpm-sock \
323    -tpmdev emulator,id=tpm0,chardev=chrtpm \
324    -device tpm-tis,tpmdev=tpm0 test.img
325
326In case a pSeries machine is emulated, use the following command line:
327
328.. code-block:: console
329
330  qemu-system-ppc64 -display sdl -machine pseries,accel=kvm \
331    -m 1024 -bios slof.bin -boot menu=on \
332    -nodefaults -device VGA -device pci-ohci -device usb-kbd \
333    -chardev socket,id=chrtpm,path=/tmp/mytpm1/swtpm-sock \
334    -tpmdev emulator,id=tpm0,chardev=chrtpm \
335    -device tpm-spapr,tpmdev=tpm0 \
336    -device spapr-vscsi,id=scsi0,reg=0x00002000 \
337    -device virtio-blk-pci,scsi=off,bus=pci.0,addr=0x3,drive=drive-virtio-disk0,id=virtio-disk0 \
338    -drive file=test.img,format=raw,if=none,id=drive-virtio-disk0
339
340In case an Arm virt machine is emulated, use the following command line:
341
342.. code-block:: console
343
344  qemu-system-aarch64 -machine virt,gic-version=3,accel=kvm \
345    -cpu host -m 4G \
346    -nographic -no-acpi \
347    -chardev socket,id=chrtpm,path=/tmp/mytpm1/swtpm-sock \
348    -tpmdev emulator,id=tpm0,chardev=chrtpm \
349    -device tpm-tis-device,tpmdev=tpm0 \
350    -device virtio-blk-pci,drive=drv0 \
351    -drive format=qcow2,file=hda.qcow2,if=none,id=drv0 \
352    -drive if=pflash,format=raw,file=flash0.img,readonly=on \
353    -drive if=pflash,format=raw,file=flash1.img
354
355In case a ast2600-evb bmc machine is emulated and you want to use a TPM device
356attached to I2C bus, use the following command line:
357
358.. code-block:: console
359
360  qemu-system-arm -M ast2600-evb -nographic \
361    -kernel arch/arm/boot/zImage \
362    -dtb arch/arm/boot/dts/aspeed-ast2600-evb.dtb \
363    -initrd rootfs.cpio \
364    -chardev socket,id=chrtpm,path=/tmp/mytpm1/swtpm-sock \
365    -tpmdev emulator,id=tpm0,chardev=chrtpm \
366    -device tpm-tis-i2c,tpmdev=tpm0,bus=aspeed.i2c.bus.12,address=0x2e
367
368  For testing, use this command to load the driver to the correct address
369
370  echo tpm_tis_i2c 0x2e > /sys/bus/i2c/devices/i2c-12/new_device
371
372In case SeaBIOS is used as firmware, it should show the TPM menu item
373after entering the menu with 'ESC'.
374
375.. code-block:: console
376
377  Select boot device:
378  1. DVD/CD [ata1-0: QEMU DVD-ROM ATAPI-4 DVD/CD]
379  [...]
380  5. Legacy option rom
381
382  t. TPM Configuration
383
384The following commands should result in similar output inside the VM
385with a Linux kernel that either has the TPM TIS driver built-in or
386available as a module:
387
388.. code-block:: console
389
390  # dmesg | grep -i tpm
391  [    0.012560] ACPI: TPM2 0x000000000BFFD1900 00004C (v04 BOCHS  \
392      BXPC     0000001 BXPC 00000001)
393
394  # ls -l /dev/tpm*
395  crw-rw----. 1 tss root  10,   224 Sep  6 12:36 /dev/tpm0
396  crw-rw----. 1 tss rss  253, 65536 Sep  6 12:36 /dev/tpmrm0
397
398  Starting with Linux 5.12 there are PCR entries for TPM 2 in sysfs:
399  # find /sys/devices/ -type f | grep pcr-sha
400  ...
401  /sys/devices/LNXSYSTEM:00/LNXSYBUS:00/MSFT0101:00/tpm/tpm0/pcr-sha256/1
402  ...
403  /sys/devices/LNXSYSTEM:00/LNXSYBUS:00/MSFT0101:00/tpm/tpm0/pcr-sha256/9
404  ...
405
406Migration with the TPM emulator
407===============================
408
409The TPM emulator supports the following types of virtual machine
410migration:
411
412- VM save / restore (migration into a file)
413- Network migration
414- Snapshotting (migration into storage like QoW2 or QED)
415
416The following command sequences can be used to test VM save / restore.
417
418In a 1st terminal start an instance of a swtpm using the following command:
419
420.. code-block:: console
421
422  mkdir /tmp/mytpm1
423  swtpm socket --tpmstate dir=/tmp/mytpm1 \
424    --ctrl type=unixio,path=/tmp/mytpm1/swtpm-sock \
425    --tpm2 \
426    --log level=20
427
428In a 2nd terminal start the VM:
429
430.. code-block:: console
431
432  qemu-system-x86_64 -display sdl -accel kvm \
433    -m 1024 -boot d -bios bios-256k.bin -boot menu=on \
434    -chardev socket,id=chrtpm,path=/tmp/mytpm1/swtpm-sock \
435    -tpmdev emulator,id=tpm0,chardev=chrtpm \
436    -device tpm-tis,tpmdev=tpm0 \
437    -monitor stdio \
438    test.img
439
440Verify that the attached TPM is working as expected using applications
441inside the VM.
442
443To store the state of the VM use the following command in the QEMU
444monitor in the 2nd terminal:
445
446.. code-block:: console
447
448  (qemu) migrate "exec:cat > testvm.bin"
449  (qemu) quit
450
451At this point a file called ``testvm.bin`` should exists and the swtpm
452and QEMU processes should have ended.
453
454To test 'VM restore' you have to start the swtpm with the same
455parameters as before. If previously a TPM 2 [--tpm2] was saved, --tpm2
456must now be passed again on the command line.
457
458In the 1st terminal restart the swtpm with the same command line as
459before:
460
461.. code-block:: console
462
463  swtpm socket --tpmstate dir=/tmp/mytpm1 \
464    --ctrl type=unixio,path=/tmp/mytpm1/swtpm-sock \
465    --log level=20 --tpm2
466
467In the 2nd terminal restore the state of the VM using the additional
468'-incoming' option.
469
470.. code-block:: console
471
472  qemu-system-x86_64 -display sdl -accel kvm \
473    -m 1024 -boot d -bios bios-256k.bin -boot menu=on \
474    -chardev socket,id=chrtpm,path=/tmp/mytpm1/swtpm-sock \
475    -tpmdev emulator,id=tpm0,chardev=chrtpm \
476    -device tpm-tis,tpmdev=tpm0 \
477    -incoming "exec:cat < testvm.bin" \
478    test.img
479
480Troubleshooting migration
481-------------------------
482
483There are several reasons why migration may fail. In case of problems,
484please ensure that the command lines adhere to the following rules
485and, if possible, that identical versions of QEMU and swtpm are used
486at all times.
487
488VM save and restore:
489
490 - QEMU command line parameters should be identical apart from the
491   '-incoming' option on VM restore
492
493 - swtpm command line parameters should be identical
494
495VM migration to 'localhost':
496
497 - QEMU command line parameters should be identical apart from the
498   '-incoming' option on the destination side
499
500 - swtpm command line parameters should point to two different
501   directories on the source and destination swtpm (--tpmstate dir=...)
502   (especially if different versions of libtpms were to be used on the
503   same machine).
504
505VM migration across the network:
506
507 - QEMU command line parameters should be identical apart from the
508   '-incoming' option on the destination side
509
510 - swtpm command line parameters should be identical
511
512VM Snapshotting:
513 - QEMU command line parameters should be identical
514
515 - swtpm command line parameters should be identical
516
517
518Besides that, migration failure reasons on the swtpm level may include
519the following:
520
521 - the versions of the swtpm on the source and destination sides are
522   incompatible
523
524   - downgrading of TPM state may not be supported
525
526   - the source and destination libtpms were compiled with different
527     compile-time options and the destination side refuses to accept the
528     state
529
530 - different migration keys are used on the source and destination side
531   and the destination side cannot decrypt the migrated state
532   (swtpm ... --migration-key ... )
533
534
535.. _TIS specification:
536   https://trustedcomputinggroup.org/pc-client-work-group-pc-client-specific-tpm-interface-specification-tis/
537
538.. _CRB specification:
539   https://trustedcomputinggroup.org/resource/pc-client-platform-tpm-profile-ptp-specification/
540
541
542.. _ACPI specification:
543   https://trustedcomputinggroup.org/tcg-acpi-specification/
544
545.. _PPI specification:
546   https://trustedcomputinggroup.org/resource/tcg-physical-presence-interface-specification/
547
548.. _SWTPM protocol:
549   https://github.com/stefanberger/swtpm/blob/master/man/man3/swtpm_ioctls.pod
550