@@ -235,3 +235,32 @@ about the usage can be found in the file
Another new format 'enc32' has been defined in order to support encrypted keys
with payload size of 32 bytes. This will initially be used for nvdimm security
but may expand to other usages that require 32 bytes payload.
+
+Appendix
+--------
+
+TPM 2.0 Policies
+----------------
+
+The current TPM supports PCR lock policies as documented above and
+CounterTimer policies which can be used to create expiring keys. One
+caveat with expiring keys is that the TPM millisecond counter does not
+update while a system is powered off and Linux does not sync the TPM
+millisecond count with its internal clock, so the best you can expire
+in is in terms of how long any given TPM has been powered on. (FIXME:
+Linux should simply update the millisecond clock to the current number
+of seconds past the epoch on boot).
+
+A CounterTimer policy is expressed in terms of length and offset
+against the TPM clock structure (TPMS_TIME_INFO), which looks like the
+packed structure::
+
+ struct tpms_time_info {
+ u64 uptime; /* time in ms since last start or reset */
+ u64 clock; /* cumulative uptime in ms */
+ u32 resetcount; /* numer of times the TPM has been reset */
+ u32 restartcount; /* number of times the TPM has been restarted */
+ u8 safe /* time was safely loaded from NVRam */
+ };
+
+The usual comparison for expiring keys is against clock, at offset 8.
@@ -322,6 +322,25 @@ int tpm2_get_policy_session(struct tpm_chip *chip, struct tpm2_policies *pols,
tpm_buf_append(&buf, pols->policies[i],
pols->len[i] - pols->hash_size);
break;
+ case TPM2_CC_POLICY_COUNTER_TIMER: {
+ /*
+ * the format of this is the last two u16
+ * quantities are the offset and operation
+ * respectively. The rest is operandB which
+ * must be zero padded in a hash digest
+ */
+ u16 opb_len = pols->len[i] - 4;
+
+ if (opb_len > pols->hash_size)
+ return -EINVAL;
+
+ tpm_buf_append_u16(&buf, opb_len);
+ tpm_buf_append(&buf, pols->policies[i], opb_len);
+ /* offset and operand*/
+ tpm_buf_append(&buf, pols->policies[i] + opb_len, 4);
+ failure = "Counter Timer";
+ break;
+ }
default:
failure = "unknown policy";
break;
This is actually a generic policy allowing a range of comparisons against any value set in the TPM Clock, which includes things like the reset count, a monotonic millisecond count and the restart count. The most useful comparison is against the millisecond count for expiring keys. However, you have to remember that currently Linux doesn't try to sync the epoch timer with the TPM, so the expiration is actually measured in how long the TPM itself has been powered on ... the TPM timer doesn't count while the system is powered down. The millisecond counter is a u64 quantity found at offset 8 in the timer structure, and the <= comparision operand is 9, so a policy set to expire after the TPM has been up for 100 seconds would look like 0000016d00000000000f424000080009 Where 0x16d is the counter timer policy code and 0xf4240 is 100 000 in hex. Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <James.Bottomley@HansenPartnership.com> --- Documentation/security/keys/trusted-encrypted.rst | 29 +++++++++++++++++++++++ security/keys/trusted-keys/tpm2-policy.c | 19 +++++++++++++++ 2 files changed, 48 insertions(+)