audk/MdeModulePkg/Universal/MonotonicCounterRuntimeDxe/MonotonicCounter.c

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/** @file
Produce the UEFI boot service GetNextMonotonicCount() and runtime service
GetNextHighMonotonicCount().
Copyright (c) 2006 - 2008, Intel Corporation
All rights reserved. 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.h>
#include <Protocol/MonotonicCounter.h>
#include <Library/BaseLib.h>
#include <Library/UefiDriverEntryPoint.h>
#include <Library/UefiRuntimeLib.h>
#include <Library/DebugLib.h>
#include <Library/UefiBootServicesTableLib.h>
#include <Library/UefiRuntimeServicesTableLib.h>
//
// The handle to install Monotonic Counter Architctural Protocol
//
EFI_HANDLE mMonotonicCounterHandle = NULL;
//
// The current monotonic counter value
//
UINT64 mEfiMtc;
//
// Event to update the monotonic Counter's high part when low part overflows.
//
EFI_EVENT mEfiMtcEvent;
//
// Name of the variable for the high part of monotonic counter
//
CHAR16 *mEfiMtcName = (CHAR16 *) L"MTC";
//
// Vendor GUID of the variable for the high part of monotonic counter
//
EFI_GUID mEfiMtcGuid = { 0xeb704011, 0x1402, 0x11d3, { 0x8e, 0x77, 0x0, 0xa0, 0xc9, 0x69, 0x72, 0x3b } };
/**
Returns a monotonically increasing count for the platform.
This function returns a 64-bit value that is numerically larger then the last
time the function was called.
The platforms monotonic counter is comprised of two parts: the high 32 bits
and the low 32 bits. The low 32-bit value is volatile and is reset to zero on
every system reset. It is increased by 1 on every call to GetNextMonotonicCount().
The high 32-bit value is nonvolatile and is increased by one on whenever the
system resets or the low 32-bit counter overflows.
@param Count Pointer to returned value.
@retval EFI_SUCCESS The next monotonic count was returned.
@retval EFI_DEVICE_ERROR The device is not functioning properly.
@retval EFI_INVALID_PARAMETER Count is NULL.
@retval EFI_UNSUPPORTED This function is called at runtime.
**/
EFI_STATUS
EFIAPI
MonotonicCounterDriverGetNextMonotonicCount (
OUT UINT64 *Count
)
{
EFI_TPL OldTpl;
//
// Cannot be called after ExitBootServices()
//
if (EfiAtRuntime ()) {
return EFI_UNSUPPORTED;
}
//
// Check input parameters
//
if (Count == NULL) {
return EFI_INVALID_PARAMETER;
}
//
// Update the monotonic counter with a lock
//
OldTpl = gBS->RaiseTPL (TPL_HIGH_LEVEL);
*Count = mEfiMtc;
mEfiMtc++;
gBS->RestoreTPL (OldTpl);
//
// If the low 32-bit counter overflows (MSB bit toggled),
// then signal that the high part needs update now.
//
if ((((UINT32) mEfiMtc) ^ ((UINT32) *Count)) & BIT31) {
gBS->SignalEvent (mEfiMtcEvent);
}
return EFI_SUCCESS;
}
/**
Returns the next high 32 bits of the platform's monotonic counter.
The GetNextHighMonotonicCount() function returns the next high 32 bits
of the platform's monotonic counter. The platform's monotonic counter is
comprised of two 32 bit quantities: the high 32 bits and the low 32 bits.
During boot service time the low 32 bit value is volatile: it is reset to
zero on every system reset and is increased by 1 on every call to GetNextMonotonicCount().
The high 32 bit value is non-volatile and is increased by 1 whenever the system resets
or whenever the low 32 bit count [returned by GetNextMonoticCount()] overflows.
The GetNextMonotonicCount() function is only available at boot services time.
If the operating system wishes to extend the platform monotonic counter to runtime,
it may do so by utilizing GetNextHighMonotonicCount(). To do this, before calling
ExitBootServices() the operating system would call GetNextMonotonicCount() to obtain
the current platform monotonic count. The operating system would then provide an
interface that returns the next count by:
Adding 1 to the last count.
Before the lower 32 bits of the count overflows, call GetNextHighMonotonicCount().
This will increase the high 32 bits of the platform's non-volatile portion of the monotonic
count by 1.
This function may only be called at Runtime.
@param HighCount Pointer to returned value.
@retval EFI_SUCCESS The next high monotonic count was returned.
@retval EFI_INVALID_PARAMETER HighCount is NULL.
@retval EFI_DEVICE_ERROR The variable could not be saved due to a hardware failure.
@retval EFI_OUT_OF_RESOURCES If variable service reports that not enough storage
is available to hold the variable and its data.
**/
EFI_STATUS
EFIAPI
MonotonicCounterDriverGetNextHighMonotonicCount (
OUT UINT32 *HighCount
)
{
EFI_TPL OldTpl;
//
// Check input parameters
//
if (HighCount == NULL) {
return EFI_INVALID_PARAMETER;
}
if (!EfiAtRuntime ()) {
//
// Use a lock if called before ExitBootServices()
//
OldTpl = gBS->RaiseTPL (TPL_HIGH_LEVEL);
*HighCount = (UINT32) RShiftU64 (mEfiMtc, 32) + 1;
mEfiMtc = LShiftU64 (*HighCount, 32);
gBS->RestoreTPL (OldTpl);
} else {
*HighCount = (UINT32) RShiftU64 (mEfiMtc, 32) + 1;
mEfiMtc = LShiftU64 (*HighCount, 32);
}
//
// Update the NV variable to match the new high part
//
return EfiSetVariable (
mEfiMtcName,
&mEfiMtcGuid,
EFI_VARIABLE_NON_VOLATILE | EFI_VARIABLE_RUNTIME_ACCESS | EFI_VARIABLE_BOOTSERVICE_ACCESS,
sizeof (UINT32),
HighCount
);
}
/**
Monotonic counter event handler. This handler updates the high part of monotonic counter.
@param Event The event to handle.
@param Context The event context.
**/
VOID
EFIAPI
EfiMtcEventHandler (
IN EFI_EVENT Event,
IN VOID *Context
)
{
UINT32 HighCount;
MonotonicCounterDriverGetNextHighMonotonicCount (&HighCount);
}
/**
Entry point of monotonic counter driver.
@param ImageHandle The image handle of this driver.
@param SystemTable The pointer of EFI_SYSTEM_TABLE.
@retval EFI_SUCCESS The initialization is successful.
**/
EFI_STATUS
EFIAPI
MonotonicCounterDriverInitialize (
IN EFI_HANDLE ImageHandle,
IN EFI_SYSTEM_TABLE *SystemTable
)
{
EFI_STATUS Status;
UINT32 HighCount;
UINTN BufferSize;
//
// Make sure the Monotonic Counter Architectural Protocol has not been installed in the system yet.
//
ASSERT_PROTOCOL_ALREADY_INSTALLED (NULL, &gEfiMonotonicCounterArchProtocolGuid);
//
// Initialize event to handle low-part overflow
//
Status = gBS->CreateEvent (
EVT_NOTIFY_SIGNAL,
TPL_CALLBACK,
EfiMtcEventHandler,
NULL,
&mEfiMtcEvent
);
ASSERT_EFI_ERROR (Status);
//
// Read the last high part
//
BufferSize = sizeof (UINT32);
Status = EfiGetVariable (
mEfiMtcName,
&mEfiMtcGuid,
NULL,
&BufferSize,
&HighCount
);
if (EFI_ERROR (Status)) {
HighCount = 0;
}
//
// Set the current value
//
mEfiMtc = LShiftU64 (HighCount, 32);
//
// Increment the upper 32 bits for this boot
// Continue even if it fails. It will only fail if the variable services are
// not functional.
//
MonotonicCounterDriverGetNextHighMonotonicCount (&HighCount);
//
// Fill in the EFI Boot Services and EFI Runtime Services Monotonic Counter Fields
//
gBS->GetNextMonotonicCount = MonotonicCounterDriverGetNextMonotonicCount;
gRT->GetNextHighMonotonicCount = MonotonicCounterDriverGetNextHighMonotonicCount;
//
// Install the Monotonic Counter Architctural Protocol onto a new handle
//
Status = gBS->InstallMultipleProtocolInterfaces (
&mMonotonicCounterHandle,
&gEfiMonotonicCounterArchProtocolGuid,
NULL,
NULL
);
ASSERT_EFI_ERROR (Status);
return EFI_SUCCESS;
}