Mikulas Patocka | a4ffc15 | 2012-03-28 18:43:38 +0100 | [diff] [blame] | 1 | dm-verity |
| 2 | ========== |
| 3 | |
| 4 | Device-Mapper's "verity" target provides transparent integrity checking of |
| 5 | block devices using a cryptographic digest provided by the kernel crypto API. |
| 6 | This target is read-only. |
| 7 | |
| 8 | Construction Parameters |
| 9 | ======================= |
| 10 | <version> <dev> <hash_dev> <hash_start> |
| 11 | <data_block_size> <hash_block_size> |
| 12 | <num_data_blocks> <hash_start_block> |
| 13 | <algorithm> <digest> <salt> |
| 14 | |
| 15 | <version> |
| 16 | This is the version number of the on-disk format. |
| 17 | |
| 18 | 0 is the original format used in the Chromium OS. |
| 19 | The salt is appended when hashing, digests are stored continuously and |
| 20 | the rest of the block is padded with zeros. |
| 21 | |
| 22 | 1 is the current format that should be used for new devices. |
| 23 | The salt is prepended when hashing and each digest is |
| 24 | padded with zeros to the power of two. |
| 25 | |
| 26 | <dev> |
| 27 | This is the device containing the data the integrity of which needs to be |
| 28 | checked. It may be specified as a path, like /dev/sdaX, or a device number, |
| 29 | <major>:<minor>. |
| 30 | |
| 31 | <hash_dev> |
| 32 | This is the device that that supplies the hash tree data. It may be |
| 33 | specified similarly to the device path and may be the same device. If the |
| 34 | same device is used, the hash_start should be outside of the dm-verity |
| 35 | configured device size. |
| 36 | |
| 37 | <data_block_size> |
| 38 | The block size on a data device. Each block corresponds to one digest on |
| 39 | the hash device. |
| 40 | |
| 41 | <hash_block_size> |
| 42 | The size of a hash block. |
| 43 | |
| 44 | <num_data_blocks> |
| 45 | The number of data blocks on the data device. Additional blocks are |
| 46 | inaccessible. You can place hashes to the same partition as data, in this |
| 47 | case hashes are placed after <num_data_blocks>. |
| 48 | |
| 49 | <hash_start_block> |
| 50 | This is the offset, in <hash_block_size>-blocks, from the start of hash_dev |
| 51 | to the root block of the hash tree. |
| 52 | |
| 53 | <algorithm> |
| 54 | The cryptographic hash algorithm used for this device. This should |
| 55 | be the name of the algorithm, like "sha1". |
| 56 | |
| 57 | <digest> |
| 58 | The hexadecimal encoding of the cryptographic hash of the root hash block |
| 59 | and the salt. This hash should be trusted as there is no other authenticity |
| 60 | beyond this point. |
| 61 | |
| 62 | <salt> |
| 63 | The hexadecimal encoding of the salt value. |
| 64 | |
| 65 | Theory of operation |
| 66 | =================== |
| 67 | |
| 68 | dm-verity is meant to be setup as part of a verified boot path. This |
| 69 | may be anything ranging from a boot using tboot or trustedgrub to just |
| 70 | booting from a known-good device (like a USB drive or CD). |
| 71 | |
| 72 | When a dm-verity device is configured, it is expected that the caller |
| 73 | has been authenticated in some way (cryptographic signatures, etc). |
| 74 | After instantiation, all hashes will be verified on-demand during |
| 75 | disk access. If they cannot be verified up to the root node of the |
| 76 | tree, the root hash, then the I/O will fail. This should identify |
| 77 | tampering with any data on the device and the hash data. |
| 78 | |
| 79 | Cryptographic hashes are used to assert the integrity of the device on a |
| 80 | per-block basis. This allows for a lightweight hash computation on first read |
| 81 | into the page cache. Block hashes are stored linearly-aligned to the nearest |
| 82 | block the size of a page. |
| 83 | |
| 84 | Hash Tree |
| 85 | --------- |
| 86 | |
| 87 | Each node in the tree is a cryptographic hash. If it is a leaf node, the hash |
| 88 | is of some block data on disk. If it is an intermediary node, then the hash is |
| 89 | of a number of child nodes. |
| 90 | |
| 91 | Each entry in the tree is a collection of neighboring nodes that fit in one |
| 92 | block. The number is determined based on block_size and the size of the |
| 93 | selected cryptographic digest algorithm. The hashes are linearly-ordered in |
| 94 | this entry and any unaligned trailing space is ignored but included when |
| 95 | calculating the parent node. |
| 96 | |
| 97 | The tree looks something like: |
| 98 | |
| 99 | alg = sha256, num_blocks = 32768, block_size = 4096 |
| 100 | |
| 101 | [ root ] |
| 102 | / . . . \ |
| 103 | [entry_0] [entry_1] |
| 104 | / . . . \ . . . \ |
| 105 | [entry_0_0] . . . [entry_0_127] . . . . [entry_1_127] |
| 106 | / ... \ / . . . \ / \ |
| 107 | blk_0 ... blk_127 blk_16256 blk_16383 blk_32640 . . . blk_32767 |
| 108 | |
| 109 | |
| 110 | On-disk format |
| 111 | ============== |
| 112 | |
| 113 | Below is the recommended on-disk format. The verity kernel code does not |
| 114 | read the on-disk header. It only reads the hash blocks which directly |
| 115 | follow the header. It is expected that a user-space tool will verify the |
| 116 | integrity of the verity_header and then call dmsetup with the correct |
| 117 | parameters. Alternatively, the header can be omitted and the dmsetup |
| 118 | parameters can be passed via the kernel command-line in a rooted chain |
| 119 | of trust where the command-line is verified. |
| 120 | |
| 121 | The on-disk format is especially useful in cases where the hash blocks |
| 122 | are on a separate partition. The magic number allows easy identification |
| 123 | of the partition contents. Alternatively, the hash blocks can be stored |
| 124 | in the same partition as the data to be verified. In such a configuration |
| 125 | the filesystem on the partition would be sized a little smaller than |
| 126 | the full-partition, leaving room for the hash blocks. |
| 127 | |
| 128 | struct superblock { |
| 129 | uint8_t signature[8] |
| 130 | "verity\0\0"; |
| 131 | |
| 132 | uint8_t version; |
| 133 | 1 - current format |
| 134 | |
| 135 | uint8_t data_block_bits; |
| 136 | log2(data block size) |
| 137 | |
| 138 | uint8_t hash_block_bits; |
| 139 | log2(hash block size) |
| 140 | |
| 141 | uint8_t pad1[1]; |
| 142 | zero padding |
| 143 | |
| 144 | uint16_t salt_size; |
| 145 | big-endian salt size |
| 146 | |
| 147 | uint8_t pad2[2]; |
| 148 | zero padding |
| 149 | |
| 150 | uint32_t data_blocks_hi; |
| 151 | big-endian high 32 bits of the 64-bit number of data blocks |
| 152 | |
| 153 | uint32_t data_blocks_lo; |
| 154 | big-endian low 32 bits of the 64-bit number of data blocks |
| 155 | |
| 156 | uint8_t algorithm[16]; |
| 157 | cryptographic algorithm |
| 158 | |
| 159 | uint8_t salt[384]; |
| 160 | salt (the salt size is specified above) |
| 161 | |
| 162 | uint8_t pad3[88]; |
| 163 | zero padding to 512-byte boundary |
| 164 | } |
| 165 | |
| 166 | Directly following the header (and with sector number padded to the next hash |
| 167 | block boundary) are the hash blocks which are stored a depth at a time |
| 168 | (starting from the root), sorted in order of increasing index. |
| 169 | |
| 170 | Status |
| 171 | ====== |
| 172 | V (for Valid) is returned if every check performed so far was valid. |
| 173 | If any check failed, C (for Corruption) is returned. |
| 174 | |
| 175 | Example |
| 176 | ======= |
| 177 | |
| 178 | Setup a device: |
| 179 | dmsetup create vroot --table \ |
| 180 | "0 2097152 "\ |
| 181 | "verity 1 /dev/sda1 /dev/sda2 4096 4096 2097152 1 "\ |
| 182 | "4392712ba01368efdf14b05c76f9e4df0d53664630b5d48632ed17a137f39076 "\ |
| 183 | "1234000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000" |
| 184 | |
| 185 | A command line tool veritysetup is available to compute or verify |
| 186 | the hash tree or activate the kernel driver. This is available from |
| 187 | the LVM2 upstream repository and may be supplied as a package called |
| 188 | device-mapper-verity-tools: |
| 189 | git://sources.redhat.com/git/lvm2 |
| 190 | http://sourceware.org/git/?p=lvm2.git |
| 191 | http://sourceware.org/cgi-bin/cvsweb.cgi/LVM2/verity?cvsroot=lvm2 |
| 192 | |
| 193 | veritysetup -a vroot /dev/sda1 /dev/sda2 \ |
| 194 | 4392712ba01368efdf14b05c76f9e4df0d53664630b5d48632ed17a137f39076 |