audk/OvmfPkg/Library/TlsAuthConfigLib/TlsAuthConfigLib.c

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OvmfPkg/TlsAuthConfigLib: configure trusted CA certs for HTTPS boot Introduce TlsAuthConfigLib to read the list of trusted CA certificates from fw_cfg and to store it to EFI_TLS_CA_CERTIFICATE_VARIABLE. The fw_cfg file is formatted by the "p11-kit" and "update-ca-trust" utilities on the host side, so that the host settings take effect in guest HTTPS boot as well. QEMU forwards the file intact to the firmware. The contents are sanity-checked by NetworkPkg/HttpDxe code that was added in commit 0fd13678a681. Link TlsAuthConfigLib via NULL resolution into TlsAuthConfigDxe. This sets EFI_TLS_CA_CERTIFICATE_VARIABLE in time for both NetworkPkg/TlsAuthConfigDxe (for possible HII interaction with the user) and for NetworkPkg/HttpDxe (for the effective TLS configuration). The file formatted by "p11-kit" can be large. On a RHEL-7 host, the the Mozilla CA root certificate bundle -- installed with the "ca-certificates" package -- is processed into a 182KB file. Thus, create EFI_TLS_CA_CERTIFICATE_VARIABLE as a volatile & boot-time only variable. Also, in TLS_ENABLE builds, set the cumulative limit for volatile variables (PcdVariableStoreSize) to 512KB, and the individual limit for the same (PcdMaxVolatileVariableSize) to 256KB. Cc: Ard Biesheuvel <ard.biesheuvel@linaro.org> Cc: Gary Ching-Pang Lin <glin@suse.com> Cc: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com> Contributed-under: TianoCore Contribution Agreement 1.1 Signed-off-by: Laszlo Ersek <lersek@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Gary Lin <glin@suse.com> Tested-by: Gary Lin <glin@suse.com> Reviewed-by: Ard Biesheuvel <ard.biesheuvel@linaro.org>
2018-03-28 03:04:06 +02:00
/** @file
A hook-in library for NetworkPkg/TlsAuthConfigDxe, in order to set volatile
variables related to TLS configuration, before TlsAuthConfigDxe or HttpDxe
(which is a UEFI_DRIVER) consume them.
Copyright (C) 2013, 2015, 2018, Red Hat, Inc.
Copyright (c) 2008 - 2012, Intel Corporation. All rights reserved.<BR>
This program and the accompanying materials are licensed and made available
under the terms and conditions of the BSD License which accompanies this
distribution. The full text of the license may be found at
http://opensource.org/licenses/bsd-license.php
THE PROGRAM IS DISTRIBUTED UNDER THE BSD LICENSE ON AN "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT
WARRANTIES OR REPRESENTATIONS OF ANY KIND, EITHER EXPRESS OR IMPLIED.
**/
#include <Uefi/UefiBaseType.h>
#include <Uefi/UefiSpec.h>
#include <Guid/HttpTlsCipherList.h>
OvmfPkg/TlsAuthConfigLib: configure trusted CA certs for HTTPS boot Introduce TlsAuthConfigLib to read the list of trusted CA certificates from fw_cfg and to store it to EFI_TLS_CA_CERTIFICATE_VARIABLE. The fw_cfg file is formatted by the "p11-kit" and "update-ca-trust" utilities on the host side, so that the host settings take effect in guest HTTPS boot as well. QEMU forwards the file intact to the firmware. The contents are sanity-checked by NetworkPkg/HttpDxe code that was added in commit 0fd13678a681. Link TlsAuthConfigLib via NULL resolution into TlsAuthConfigDxe. This sets EFI_TLS_CA_CERTIFICATE_VARIABLE in time for both NetworkPkg/TlsAuthConfigDxe (for possible HII interaction with the user) and for NetworkPkg/HttpDxe (for the effective TLS configuration). The file formatted by "p11-kit" can be large. On a RHEL-7 host, the the Mozilla CA root certificate bundle -- installed with the "ca-certificates" package -- is processed into a 182KB file. Thus, create EFI_TLS_CA_CERTIFICATE_VARIABLE as a volatile & boot-time only variable. Also, in TLS_ENABLE builds, set the cumulative limit for volatile variables (PcdVariableStoreSize) to 512KB, and the individual limit for the same (PcdMaxVolatileVariableSize) to 256KB. Cc: Ard Biesheuvel <ard.biesheuvel@linaro.org> Cc: Gary Ching-Pang Lin <glin@suse.com> Cc: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com> Contributed-under: TianoCore Contribution Agreement 1.1 Signed-off-by: Laszlo Ersek <lersek@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Gary Lin <glin@suse.com> Tested-by: Gary Lin <glin@suse.com> Reviewed-by: Ard Biesheuvel <ard.biesheuvel@linaro.org>
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#include <Guid/TlsAuthentication.h>
#include <Library/BaseLib.h>
#include <Library/DebugLib.h>
#include <Library/MemoryAllocationLib.h>
#include <Library/QemuFwCfgLib.h>
#include <Library/UefiRuntimeServicesTableLib.h>
/**
Read the list of trusted CA certificates from the fw_cfg file
"etc/edk2/https/cacerts", and store it to
gEfiTlsCaCertificateGuid:EFI_TLS_CA_CERTIFICATE_VARIABLE.
The contents are validated (for well-formedness) by NetworkPkg/HttpDxe.
**/
STATIC
VOID
SetCaCerts (
VOID
)
{
EFI_STATUS Status;
FIRMWARE_CONFIG_ITEM HttpsCaCertsItem;
UINTN HttpsCaCertsSize;
VOID *HttpsCaCerts;
Status = QemuFwCfgFindFile ("etc/edk2/https/cacerts", &HttpsCaCertsItem,
&HttpsCaCertsSize);
if (EFI_ERROR (Status)) {
DEBUG ((DEBUG_VERBOSE, "%a:%a: not touching CA cert list\n",
gEfiCallerBaseName, __FUNCTION__));
return;
}
//
// Delete the current EFI_TLS_CA_CERTIFICATE_VARIABLE if it exists. This
// serves two purposes:
//
// (a) If the variable exists with EFI_VARIABLE_NON_VOLATILE attribute, we
// cannot make it volatile without deleting it first.
//
// (b) If we fail to recreate the variable later, deleting the current one is
// still justified if the fw_cfg file exists. Emptying the set of trusted
// CA certificates will fail HTTPS boot, which is better than trusting
// any certificate that's possibly missing from the fw_cfg file.
//
Status = gRT->SetVariable (
EFI_TLS_CA_CERTIFICATE_VARIABLE, // VariableName
&gEfiTlsCaCertificateGuid, // VendorGuid
0, // Attributes
0, // DataSize
NULL // Data
);
if (EFI_ERROR (Status) && (Status != EFI_NOT_FOUND)) {
//
// This is fatal.
//
DEBUG ((DEBUG_ERROR, "%a:%a: failed to delete %g:\"%s\"\n",
gEfiCallerBaseName, __FUNCTION__, &gEfiTlsCaCertificateGuid,
EFI_TLS_CA_CERTIFICATE_VARIABLE));
ASSERT_EFI_ERROR (Status);
CpuDeadLoop ();
}
if (HttpsCaCertsSize == 0) {
DEBUG ((DEBUG_VERBOSE, "%a:%a: applied empty CA cert list\n",
gEfiCallerBaseName, __FUNCTION__));
return;
}
HttpsCaCerts = AllocatePool (HttpsCaCertsSize);
if (HttpsCaCerts == NULL) {
DEBUG ((DEBUG_ERROR, "%a:%a: failed to allocate HttpsCaCerts\n",
gEfiCallerBaseName, __FUNCTION__));
return;
}
QemuFwCfgSelectItem (HttpsCaCertsItem);
QemuFwCfgReadBytes (HttpsCaCertsSize, HttpsCaCerts);
Status = gRT->SetVariable (
EFI_TLS_CA_CERTIFICATE_VARIABLE, // VariableName
&gEfiTlsCaCertificateGuid, // VendorGuid
EFI_VARIABLE_BOOTSERVICE_ACCESS, // Attributes
HttpsCaCertsSize, // DataSize
HttpsCaCerts // Data
);
if (EFI_ERROR (Status)) {
DEBUG ((DEBUG_ERROR, "%a:%a: failed to set %g:\"%s\": %r\n",
gEfiCallerBaseName, __FUNCTION__, &gEfiTlsCaCertificateGuid,
EFI_TLS_CA_CERTIFICATE_VARIABLE, Status));
goto FreeHttpsCaCerts;
}
DEBUG ((DEBUG_VERBOSE, "%a:%a: stored CA cert list (%Lu byte(s))\n",
gEfiCallerBaseName, __FUNCTION__, (UINT64)HttpsCaCertsSize));
FreeHttpsCaCerts:
FreePool (HttpsCaCerts);
}
/**
Read the list of trusted cipher suites from the fw_cfg file
"etc/edk2/https/ciphers", and store it to
gEdkiiHttpTlsCipherListGuid:EDKII_HTTP_TLS_CIPHER_LIST_VARIABLE.
The contents are propagated by NetworkPkg/HttpDxe to NetworkPkg/TlsDxe; the
list is processed by the latter.
**/
STATIC
VOID
SetCipherSuites (
VOID
)
{
EFI_STATUS Status;
FIRMWARE_CONFIG_ITEM HttpsCiphersItem;
UINTN HttpsCiphersSize;
VOID *HttpsCiphers;
Status = QemuFwCfgFindFile ("etc/edk2/https/ciphers", &HttpsCiphersItem,
&HttpsCiphersSize);
if (EFI_ERROR (Status)) {
DEBUG ((DEBUG_VERBOSE, "%a:%a: not touching cipher suites\n",
gEfiCallerBaseName, __FUNCTION__));
return;
}
//
// From this point on, any failure is fatal. An ordered cipher preference
// list is available from QEMU, thus we cannot let the firmware attempt HTTPS
// boot with either pre-existent or non-existent preferences. An empty set of
// cipher suites does not fail HTTPS boot automatically; the default cipher
// suite preferences would take effect, and we must prevent that.
//
// Delete the current EDKII_HTTP_TLS_CIPHER_LIST_VARIABLE if it exists. If
// the variable exists with EFI_VARIABLE_NON_VOLATILE attribute, we cannot
// make it volatile without deleting it first.
//
Status = gRT->SetVariable (
EDKII_HTTP_TLS_CIPHER_LIST_VARIABLE, // VariableName
&gEdkiiHttpTlsCipherListGuid, // VendorGuid
0, // Attributes
0, // DataSize
NULL // Data
);
if (EFI_ERROR (Status) && (Status != EFI_NOT_FOUND)) {
DEBUG ((DEBUG_ERROR, "%a:%a: failed to delete %g:\"%s\"\n",
gEfiCallerBaseName, __FUNCTION__, &gEdkiiHttpTlsCipherListGuid,
EDKII_HTTP_TLS_CIPHER_LIST_VARIABLE));
goto Done;
}
if (HttpsCiphersSize == 0) {
DEBUG ((DEBUG_ERROR, "%a:%a: list of cipher suites must not be empty\n",
gEfiCallerBaseName, __FUNCTION__));
Status = EFI_INVALID_PARAMETER;
goto Done;
}
HttpsCiphers = AllocatePool (HttpsCiphersSize);
if (HttpsCiphers == NULL) {
DEBUG ((DEBUG_ERROR, "%a:%a: failed to allocate HttpsCiphers\n",
gEfiCallerBaseName, __FUNCTION__));
Status = EFI_OUT_OF_RESOURCES;
goto Done;
}
QemuFwCfgSelectItem (HttpsCiphersItem);
QemuFwCfgReadBytes (HttpsCiphersSize, HttpsCiphers);
Status = gRT->SetVariable (
EDKII_HTTP_TLS_CIPHER_LIST_VARIABLE, // VariableName
&gEdkiiHttpTlsCipherListGuid, // VendorGuid
EFI_VARIABLE_BOOTSERVICE_ACCESS, // Attributes
HttpsCiphersSize, // DataSize
HttpsCiphers // Data
);
if (EFI_ERROR (Status)) {
DEBUG ((DEBUG_ERROR, "%a:%a: failed to set %g:\"%s\"\n",
gEfiCallerBaseName, __FUNCTION__, &gEdkiiHttpTlsCipherListGuid,
EDKII_HTTP_TLS_CIPHER_LIST_VARIABLE));
goto FreeHttpsCiphers;
}
DEBUG ((DEBUG_VERBOSE, "%a:%a: stored list of cipher suites (%Lu byte(s))\n",
gEfiCallerBaseName, __FUNCTION__, (UINT64)HttpsCiphersSize));
FreeHttpsCiphers:
FreePool (HttpsCiphers);
Done:
if (EFI_ERROR (Status)) {
ASSERT_EFI_ERROR (Status);
CpuDeadLoop ();
}
}
OvmfPkg/TlsAuthConfigLib: configure trusted CA certs for HTTPS boot Introduce TlsAuthConfigLib to read the list of trusted CA certificates from fw_cfg and to store it to EFI_TLS_CA_CERTIFICATE_VARIABLE. The fw_cfg file is formatted by the "p11-kit" and "update-ca-trust" utilities on the host side, so that the host settings take effect in guest HTTPS boot as well. QEMU forwards the file intact to the firmware. The contents are sanity-checked by NetworkPkg/HttpDxe code that was added in commit 0fd13678a681. Link TlsAuthConfigLib via NULL resolution into TlsAuthConfigDxe. This sets EFI_TLS_CA_CERTIFICATE_VARIABLE in time for both NetworkPkg/TlsAuthConfigDxe (for possible HII interaction with the user) and for NetworkPkg/HttpDxe (for the effective TLS configuration). The file formatted by "p11-kit" can be large. On a RHEL-7 host, the the Mozilla CA root certificate bundle -- installed with the "ca-certificates" package -- is processed into a 182KB file. Thus, create EFI_TLS_CA_CERTIFICATE_VARIABLE as a volatile & boot-time only variable. Also, in TLS_ENABLE builds, set the cumulative limit for volatile variables (PcdVariableStoreSize) to 512KB, and the individual limit for the same (PcdMaxVolatileVariableSize) to 256KB. Cc: Ard Biesheuvel <ard.biesheuvel@linaro.org> Cc: Gary Ching-Pang Lin <glin@suse.com> Cc: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com> Contributed-under: TianoCore Contribution Agreement 1.1 Signed-off-by: Laszlo Ersek <lersek@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Gary Lin <glin@suse.com> Tested-by: Gary Lin <glin@suse.com> Reviewed-by: Ard Biesheuvel <ard.biesheuvel@linaro.org>
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RETURN_STATUS
EFIAPI
TlsAuthConfigInit (
VOID
)
{
SetCaCerts ();
SetCipherSuites ();
OvmfPkg/TlsAuthConfigLib: configure trusted CA certs for HTTPS boot Introduce TlsAuthConfigLib to read the list of trusted CA certificates from fw_cfg and to store it to EFI_TLS_CA_CERTIFICATE_VARIABLE. The fw_cfg file is formatted by the "p11-kit" and "update-ca-trust" utilities on the host side, so that the host settings take effect in guest HTTPS boot as well. QEMU forwards the file intact to the firmware. The contents are sanity-checked by NetworkPkg/HttpDxe code that was added in commit 0fd13678a681. Link TlsAuthConfigLib via NULL resolution into TlsAuthConfigDxe. This sets EFI_TLS_CA_CERTIFICATE_VARIABLE in time for both NetworkPkg/TlsAuthConfigDxe (for possible HII interaction with the user) and for NetworkPkg/HttpDxe (for the effective TLS configuration). The file formatted by "p11-kit" can be large. On a RHEL-7 host, the the Mozilla CA root certificate bundle -- installed with the "ca-certificates" package -- is processed into a 182KB file. Thus, create EFI_TLS_CA_CERTIFICATE_VARIABLE as a volatile & boot-time only variable. Also, in TLS_ENABLE builds, set the cumulative limit for volatile variables (PcdVariableStoreSize) to 512KB, and the individual limit for the same (PcdMaxVolatileVariableSize) to 256KB. Cc: Ard Biesheuvel <ard.biesheuvel@linaro.org> Cc: Gary Ching-Pang Lin <glin@suse.com> Cc: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com> Contributed-under: TianoCore Contribution Agreement 1.1 Signed-off-by: Laszlo Ersek <lersek@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Gary Lin <glin@suse.com> Tested-by: Gary Lin <glin@suse.com> Reviewed-by: Ard Biesheuvel <ard.biesheuvel@linaro.org>
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return RETURN_SUCCESS;
}