Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Now that key names are UUIDs generated by the HSM, there's no real
need to specify type key type when looking up a key, and removing the
`type` argument allows a few simplifications of both the internal
keystore API and of client code calling the public RPC API.
|
|
|
|
Fixes for various minor issues found while integrating with sw/stm32.
Moving the in-memory keystore (PKCS #11 session objects, etc) from the
client library to the HSM was on the near term to-do list in any case,
doing it now turned out to be the easiest way to solve one of the
build problems.
|
|
Changes to implement a revised keystore API. This code probably won't
even compile properly yet, and almost certainly will not run, but most
of the expected changes are complete at this point. Main points:
* Key names are now UUIDs, and are generated by the HSM, not the client.
* Keystore API no longer assumes that key database is resident in
memory (original API was written on the assumption that the keystore
flash would be mapped into the HSM CPU's address space, but
apparently the board and flash drivers don't really support that).
A few other changes have probably crept in, but the bulk of this
changeset is just following through implications of the above, some of
which percolate all the way back to the public RPC API.
|
|
|
|
|
|
The KEK (Key Encryption Key) is first fetched from the FPGA that gets it
from the volatile Master Key Memory (that in theory has tamper*kek_len =
len protection with wiping), and secondly from flash.
The flash option is meant for development/evaluation use using an Alpha
board where the Master Key Memory is not battery backed. For any serious
use of an Alpha, an option is to enter the master key into the volatile
MKM on each power-on as a way to unlock the keystore.
|
|
|
|
Thanks Rob!
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
are secure (the one in ks_flash.c is a stub, and the others are for
cases where we have no secure hardware in which to store the KEK).
These are primarily for testing, since in the long run the entire
software implementation of AES-keywrap will be replaced by Verilog
which never lets software see the unwrapped key. Or so says current
theory. For the moment, we just need something that will let us test
the rest of the RPC and keystore mechanisms.
|
|
|
|
public key extraction functions on hold pending ASN.1 cleanup.
|