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Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +02001PSA Cryptoprocessor Driver Interface
2====================================
3
Gilles Peskine3d1bcc62020-08-05 22:20:09 +02004This document describes an interface for cryptoprocessor drivers in the PSA cryptography API. This interface complements the [PSA Cryptography API specification](https://armmbed.github.io/mbed-crypto/psa/#application-programming-interface), which describes the interface between a PSA Cryptography implementation and an application.
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +02005
6This specification is work in progress and should be considered to be in a beta stage. There is ongoing work to implement this interface in Mbed TLS, which is the reference implementation of the PSA Cryptography API. At this stage, Arm does not expect major changes, but minor changes are expected based on experience from the first implementation and on external feedback.
7
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +02008## Introduction
9
10### Purpose of the driver interface
11
Gilles Peskinec2592132020-08-07 13:52:43 +020012The PSA Cryptography API defines an interface that allows applications to perform cryptographic operations in a uniform way regardless of how the operations are performed. Under the hood, different keys may be stored and used in different hardware or in different logical partitions, and different algorithms may involve different hardware or software components.
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +020013
Gilles Peskinec2592132020-08-07 13:52:43 +020014The driver interface allows implementations of the PSA Cryptography API to be built compositionally. An implementation of the PSA Cryptography API is composed of a **core** and zero or more **drivers**. The core handles key management, enforces key usage policies, and dispatches cryptographic operations either to the applicable driver or to built-in code.
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +020015
16Functions in the PSA Cryptography API invoke functions in the core. Code from the core calls drivers as described in the present document.
17
18### Types of drivers
19
20The PSA Cryptography driver interface supports two types of cryptoprocessors, and accordingly two types of drivers.
21
Gilles Peskinec2592132020-08-07 13:52:43 +020022* **Transparent** drivers implement cryptographic operations on keys that are provided in cleartext at the beginning of each operation. They are typically used for hardware **accelerators**. When a transparent driver is available for a particular combination of parameters (cryptographic algorithm, key type and size, etc.), it is used instead of the default software implementation. Transparent drivers can also be pure software implementations that are distributed as plug-ins to a PSA Cryptography implementation (for example, an alternative implementation with different performance characteristics, or a certified implementation).
Gilles Peskine929ab8a2020-08-05 22:18:38 +020023* **Opaque** drivers implement cryptographic operations on keys that can only be used inside a protected environment such as a **secure element**, a hardware security module, a smartcard, a secure enclave, etc. An opaque driver is invoked for the specific [key location](#lifetimes-and-locations) that the driver is registered for: the dispatch is based on the key's lifetime.
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +020024
25### Requirements
26
Gilles Peskine7a1e4f92020-08-06 20:54:56 +020027The present specification was designed to fulfill the following high-level requirements.
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +020028
29[Req.plugins] It is possible to combine multiple drivers from different providers into the same implementation, without any prior arrangement other than choosing certain names and values from disjoint namespaces.
30
31[Req.compile] It is possible to compile the code of each driver and of the core separately, and link them together. A small amount of glue code may need to be compiled once the list of drivers is available.
32
33[Req.types] Support drivers for the following types of hardware: accelerators that operate on keys in cleartext; cryptoprocessors that can wrap keys with a built-in keys but not store user keys; and cryptoprocessors that store key material.
34
Gilles Peskine0dfd10d2020-08-19 21:41:27 +020035[Req.portable] The interface between drivers and the core does not involve any platform-specific consideration. Driver calls are simple C function calls. Interactions with platform-specific hardware happen only inside the driver (and in fact a driver need not involve any hardware at all).
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +020036
37[Req.location] Applications can tell which location values correspond to which secure element drivers.
38
Gilles Peskineb320d082020-08-05 22:24:21 +020039[Req.fallback] Accelerator drivers can specify that they do not fully support a cryptographic mechanism and that a fallback to core code may be necessary. Conversely, if an accelerator fully supports cryptographic mechanism, the core must be able to omit code for this mechanism.
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +020040
41[Req.mechanisms] Drivers can specify which mechanisms they support. A driver's code will not be invoked for cryptographic mechanisms that it does not support.
42
43## Overview of drivers
44
45### Deliverables for a driver
46
Gilles Peskinee72e4de2020-08-06 20:56:45 +020047To write a driver, you need to implement some functions with C linkage, and to declare these functions in a **driver description file**. The driver description file declares which functions the driver implements and what cryptographic mechanisms they support. If the driver description references custom types, macros or constants, you also need to provide C header files defining those elements.
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +020048
49The concrete syntax for a driver description file is JSON. The structure of this JSON file is specified in the section [“Driver description syntax”](#driver-description-syntax).
50
51A driver therefore consists of:
52
53* A driver description file (in JSON format).
Gilles Peskine7a1e4f92020-08-06 20:54:56 +020054* C header files defining the types required by the driver description. The names of these header files are declared in the driver description file.
55* An object file compiled for the target platform defining the entry point functions specified by the driver description. Implementations may allow drivers to be provided as source files and compiled with the core instead of being pre-compiled.
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +020056
57How to provide the driver description file, the C header files and the object code is implementation-dependent.
58
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +020059### Driver description syntax
60
61The concrete syntax for a driver description file is JSON.
62
Gilles Peskine5298f682020-08-19 21:53:59 +020063#### Driver description list
Gilles Peskined89cd742020-08-07 23:37:55 +020064
Gilles Peskine5298f682020-08-19 21:53:59 +020065PSA Cryptography core implementations should support multiple drivers. The driver description files are passed to the implementation as an ordered list in an unspecified manner. This may be, for example, a list of file names passed on a command line, or a JSON list whose elements are individual driver descriptions.
Gilles Peskined89cd742020-08-07 23:37:55 +020066
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +020067#### Driver description top-level element
68
69A driver description is a JSON object containing the following properties:
70
71* `"prefix"` (mandatory, string). This must be a valid prefix for a C identifier. All the types and functions provided by the driver have a name that starts with this prefix unless overridden with a `"name"` element in the applicable capability as described below.
72* `"type"` (mandatory, string). One of `"transparent"` or `"opaque"`.
Gilles Peskine53ba94c2020-08-06 20:58:54 +020073* `"headers"` (optional, array of strings). A list of header files. These header files must define the types, macros and constants referenced by the driver description. They may declare the entry point functions, but this is not required. They may include other PSA headers and standard headers of the platform. Whether they may include other headers is implementation-specific. If omitted, the list of headers is empty. The header files must be present at the specified location relative to a directory on the compiler's include path when compiling glue code between the core and the drivers.
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +020074* `"capabilities"` (mandatory, array of [capabilities](#driver-description-capability)).
75A list of **capabilities**. Each capability describes a family of functions that the driver implements for a certain class of cryptographic mechanisms.
76* `"key_context"` (not permitted for transparent drivers, mandatory for opaque drivers): information about the [representation of keys](#key-format-for-opaque-drivers).
77* `"persistent_state_size"` (not permitted for transparent drivers, optional for opaque drivers, integer or string). The size in bytes of the [persistent state of the driver](#opaque-driver-persistent-state). This may be either a non-negative integer or a C constant expression of type `size_t`.
Gilles Peskine929ab8a2020-08-05 22:18:38 +020078* `"location"` (not permitted for transparent drivers, optional for opaque drivers, integer or string). The [location value](#lifetimes-and-locations) for which this driver is invoked. In other words, this determines the lifetimes for which the driver is invoked. This may be either a non-negative integer or a C constant expression of type `psa_key_location_t`.
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +020079
Gilles Peskinec7cf1332020-08-07 23:24:00 +020080### Driver description capability
81
82#### Capability syntax
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +020083
84A capability declares a family of functions that the driver implements for a certain class of cryptographic mechanisms. The capability specifies which key types and algorithms are covered and the names of the types and functions that implement it.
85
86A capability is a JSON object containing the following properties:
87
Gilles Peskine5298f682020-08-19 21:53:59 +020088* `"entry_points"` (mandatory, list of strings). Each element is the name of a [driver entry point](#driver-entry-points) or driver entry point family. An entry point is a function defined by the driver. If specified, the core will invoke this capability of the driver only when performing one of the specified operations. The driver must implement all the specified entry points, as well as the types if applicable.
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +020089* `"algorithms"` (optional, list of strings). Each element is an [algorithm specification](#algorithm-specifications). If specified, the core will invoke this capability of the driver only when performing one of the specified algorithms. If omitted, the core will invoke this capability for all applicable algorithms.
90* `"key_types"` (optional, list of strings). Each element is a [key type specification](#key-type-specifications). If specified, the core will invoke this capability of the driver only for operations involving a key with one of the specified key types. If omitted, the core will invoke this capability of the driver for all applicable key types.
91* `"key_sizes"` (optional, list of integers). If specified, the core will invoke this capability of the driver only for operations involving a key with one of the specified key sizes. If omitted, the core will invoke this capability of the driver for all applicable key sizes. Key sizes are expressed in bits.
Gilles Peskine924e2732020-08-07 13:53:16 +020092* `"names"` (optional, object). A mapping from entry point names described by the `"entry_points"` property, to the name of the C function in the driver that implements the corresponding function. If a function is not listed here, name of the driver function that implements it is the driver's prefix followed by an underscore (`_`) followed by the function name. If this property is omitted, it is equivalent to an empty object (so each entry point *suffix* is implemented by a function called *prefix*`_`*suffix*).
Gilles Peskine0dfd10d2020-08-19 21:41:27 +020093* `"fallback"` (optional for transparent drivers, not permitted for opaque drivers, boolean). If present and true, the driver may return `PSA_ERROR_NOT_SUPPORTED`, in which case the core should call another driver or use built-in code to perform this operation. If absent or false, the driver is expected to fully support the mechanisms described by this capability. See the section “[Fallback](#fallback)” for more information.
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +020094
Gilles Peskinec7cf1332020-08-07 23:24:00 +020095#### Capability semantics
96
Gilles Peskine5298f682020-08-19 21:53:59 +020097When the PSA Cryptography implementation performs a cryptographic mechanism, it invokes available driver entry points as described in the section [“Driver entry points”](#driver-entry-points).
Gilles Peskinec7cf1332020-08-07 23:24:00 +020098
99A driver is considered available for a cryptographic mechanism that invokes a given entry point if all of the following conditions are met:
100
101* The driver specification includes a capability whose `"entry_points"` list either includes the entry point or includes an entry point family that includes the entry point.
102* If the mechanism involves an algorithm:
103 * either the capability does not have an `"algorithms"` property;
104 * or the value of the capability's `"algorithms"` property includes an [algorithm specification](#algorithm-specifications) that matches this algorithm.
105* If the mechanism involves a key:
Gilles Peskine0dfd10d2020-08-19 21:41:27 +0200106 * either the key is transparent (its location is `PSA_KEY_LOCATION_LOCAL_STORAGE`) and the driver is transparent;
Gilles Peskinec7cf1332020-08-07 23:24:00 +0200107 * or the key is opaque (its location is not `PSA_KEY_LOCATION_LOCAL_STORAGE`) and the driver is an opaque driver whose location is the key's location.
108* If the mechanism involves a key:
109 * either the capability does not have a `"key_types"` property;
110 * or the value of the capability's `"key_types"` property includes a [key type specification](#key-type-specifications) that matches this algorithm.
111* If the mechanism involves a key:
112 * either the capability does not have a `"key_sizes"` property;
113 * or the value of the capability's `"key_sizes"` property includes the key's size.
114
Gilles Peskine91cbf562020-08-07 23:25:33 +0200115If a driver includes multiple applicable capabilities for a given combination of entry point, algorithm, key type and key size, and all the capabilities map the entry point to the same function name, the driver is considered available for this cryptographic mechanism. If a driver includes multiple applicable capabilities for a given combination of entry point, algorithm, key type and key size, and at least two of these capabilities map the entry point to the different function names, the driver specification is invalid.
116
Gilles Peskine5298f682020-08-19 21:53:59 +0200117If multiple transparent drivers have applicable capabilities for a given combination of entry point, algorithm, key type and key size, the first matching driver in the [specification list](#driver-description-list) is invoked. If the capability has [fallback](#fallback) enabled and the first driver returns `PSA_ERROR_NOT_SUPPORTED`, the next matching driver is invoked, and so on.
Gilles Peskined89cd742020-08-07 23:37:55 +0200118
Gilles Peskine0dfd10d2020-08-19 21:41:27 +0200119If multiple opaque drivers have the same location, the list of driver specifications is invalid.
Gilles Peskine91cbf562020-08-07 23:25:33 +0200120
Gilles Peskinec7cf1332020-08-07 23:24:00 +0200121#### Capability examples
122
Gilles Peskinedaf017c2020-08-07 23:40:53 +0200123Example 1: the following capability declares that the driver can perform deterministic ECDSA signatures (but not signature verification) using any hash algorithm and any curve that the core supports. If the prefix of this driver is `"acme"`, the function that performs the signature is called `acme_sign_hash`.
124```
125{
126 "entry_points": ["sign_hash"],
127 "algorithms": ["PSA_ALG_DETERMINISTIC_ECDSA(PSA_ALG_ANY_HASH)"],
128}
129```
130
131Example 2: the following capability declares that the driver can perform deterministic ECDSA signatures using SHA-256 or SHA-384 with a SECP256R1 or SECP384R1 private key (with either hash being possible in combination with either curve). If the prefix of this driver is `"acme"`, the function that performs the signature is called `acme_sign_hash`.
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +0200132```
133{
Gilles Peskine924e2732020-08-07 13:53:16 +0200134 "entry_points": ["sign_hash"],
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +0200135 "algorithms": ["PSA_ALG_DETERMINISTIC_ECDSA(PSA_ALG_SHA_256)",
136 "PSA_ALG_DETERMINISTIC_ECDSA(PSA_ALG_SHA_384)"],
TRodziewicz2a1a6732021-04-13 23:12:42 +0200137 "key_types": ["PSA_KEY_TYPE_ECC_KEY_PAIR(PSA_ECC_FAMILY_SECP_R1)"],
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +0200138 "key_sizes": [256, 384]
139}
140```
141
142### Algorithm and key specifications
143
144#### Algorithm specifications
145
Gilles Peskinedaf017c2020-08-07 23:40:53 +0200146An algorithm specification is a string consisting of a `PSA_ALG_xxx` macro that specifies a cryptographic algorithm or an algorithm wildcard policy defined by the PSA Cryptography API. If the macro takes arguments, the string must have the syntax of a C macro call and each argument must be an algorithm specification or a decimal or hexadecimal literal with no suffix, depending on the expected type of argument.
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +0200147
148Spaces are optional after commas. Whether other whitespace is permitted is implementation-specific.
149
150Valid examples:
151```
152PSA_ALG_SHA_256
153PSA_ALG_HMAC(PSA_ALG_SHA_256)
154PSA_ALG_KEY_AGREEMENT(PSA_ALG_ECDH, PSA_ALG_HKDF(PSA_ALG_SHA_256))
Gilles Peskinedaf017c2020-08-07 23:40:53 +0200155PSA_ALG_RSA_PSS(PSA_ALG_ANY_HASH)
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +0200156```
157
158#### Key type specifications
159
160An algorithm specification is a string consisting of a `PSA_KEY_TYPE_xxx` macro that specifies a key type defined by the PSA Cryptography API. If the macro takes an argument, the string must have the syntax of a C macro call and each argument must be the name of a constant of suitable type (curve or group).
161
162The name `_` may be used instead of a curve or group to indicate that the capability concerns all curves or groups.
163
164Valid examples:
165```
166PSA_KEY_TYPE_AES
TRodziewicz2a1a6732021-04-13 23:12:42 +0200167PSA_KEY_TYPE_ECC_KEY_PAIR(PSA_ECC_FAMILY_SECP_R1)
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +0200168PSA_KEY_TYPE_ECC_KEY_PAIR(_)
169```
170
Gilles Peskineb6c43f62020-08-03 10:55:16 +0200171### Driver entry points
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +0200172
Gilles Peskineb6c43f62020-08-03 10:55:16 +0200173#### Overview of driver entry points
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +0200174
Gilles Peskineb6c43f62020-08-03 10:55:16 +0200175Drivers define functions, each of which implements an aspect of a capability of a driver, such as a cryptographic operation, a part of a cryptographic operation, or a key management action. These functions are called the **entry points** of the driver. Most driver entry points correspond to a particular function in the PSA Cryptography API. For example, if a call to `psa_sign_hash()` is dispatched to a driver, it invokes the driver's `sign_hash` function.
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +0200176
Gilles Peskinec2592132020-08-07 13:52:43 +0200177All driver entry points return a status of type `psa_status_t` which should use the status codes documented for PSA services in general and for PSA Cryptography in particular: `PSA_SUCCESS` indicates that the function succeeded, and `PSA_ERROR_xxx` values indicate that an error occurred.
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +0200178
Gilles Peskinec2592132020-08-07 13:52:43 +0200179The signature of a driver entry point generally looks like the signature of the PSA Cryptography API that it implements, with some modifications. This section gives an overview of modifications that apply to whole classes of entry points. Refer to the reference section for each entry point or entry point family for details.
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +0200180
Gilles Peskineb6c43f62020-08-03 10:55:16 +0200181* For entry points that operate on an existing key, the `psa_key_id_t` parameter is replaced by a sequence of three parameters that describe the key:
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +0200182 1. `const psa_key_attributes_t *attributes`: the key attributes.
183 2. `const uint8_t *key_buffer`: a key material or key context buffer.
184 3. `size_t key_buffer_size`: the size of the key buffer in bytes.
185
186 For transparent drivers, the key buffer contains the key material, in the same format as defined for `psa_export_key()` and `psa_export_public_key()` in the PSA Cryptography API. For opaque drivers, the content of the key buffer is entirely up to the driver.
187
Gilles Peskineb6c43f62020-08-03 10:55:16 +0200188* For entry points that involve a multi-part operation, the operation state type (`psa_XXX_operation_t`) is replaced by a driver-specific operation state type (*prefix*`_XXX_operation_t`).
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +0200189
Gilles Peskinece3ec6f2020-10-27 18:31:50 +0100190* For entry points that are involved in key creation, the `psa_key_id_t *` output parameter is replaced by a sequence of parameters that convey the key context:
Gilles Peskine28b3a942020-11-24 13:08:11 +0100191 1. `uint8_t *key_buffer`: a buffer for the key material or key context.
Gilles Peskinece3ec6f2020-10-27 18:31:50 +0100192 2. `size_t key_buffer_size`: the size of the key buffer in bytes.
193 2. `size_t *key_buffer_length`: the length of the data written to the key buffer in bytes.
194
Gilles Peskine7a1e4f92020-08-06 20:54:56 +0200195Some entry points are grouped in families that must be implemented as a whole. If a driver supports an entry point family, it must provide all the entry points in the family.
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +0200196
Gilles Peskine5263e1e2020-11-13 14:14:28 +0100197Drivers can also have entry points related to random generation. A transparent driver can provide a [random generation interface](#random-generation-entry-points). Separately, transparent and opaque drivers can have [entropy collection entry points](#entropy-collection-entry-point).
Gilles Peskinee80978a2020-11-13 13:07:14 +0100198
Gilles Peskineb6c43f62020-08-03 10:55:16 +0200199#### General considerations on driver entry point parameters
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +0200200
Gilles Peskineb6c43f62020-08-03 10:55:16 +0200201Buffer parameters for driver entry points obey the following conventions:
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +0200202
203* An input buffer has the type `const uint8_t *` and is immediately followed by a parameter of type `size_t` that indicates the buffer size.
Gilles Peskine7a1e4f92020-08-06 20:54:56 +0200204* An output buffer has the type `uint8_t *` and is immediately followed by a parameter of type `size_t` that indicates the buffer size. A third parameter of type `size_t *` is provided to report the actual length of the data written in the buffer if the function succeeds.
205* An in-out buffer has the type `uint8_t *` and is immediately followed by a parameter of type `size_t` that indicates the buffer size. In-out buffers are only used when the input and the output have the same length.
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +0200206
207Buffers of size 0 may be represented with either a null pointer or a non-null pointer.
208
209Input buffers and other input-only parameters (`const` pointers) may be in read-only memory. Overlap is possible between input buffers, and between an input buffer and an output buffer, but not between two output buffers or between a non-buffer parameter and another parameter.
210
Gilles Peskineb6c43f62020-08-03 10:55:16 +0200211#### Driver entry points for single-part cryptographic operations
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +0200212
Gilles Peskineb6c43f62020-08-03 10:55:16 +0200213The following driver entry points perform a cryptographic operation in one shot (single-part operation):
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +0200214
Gilles Peskineb6c43f62020-08-03 10:55:16 +0200215* `"hash_compute"` (transparent drivers only): calculation of a hash. Called by `psa_hash_compute()` and `psa_hash_compare()`. To verify a hash with `psa_hash_compare()`, the core calls the driver's `"hash_compute"` entry point and compares the result with the reference hash value.
216* `"mac_compute"`: calculation of a MAC. Called by `psa_mac_compute()` and possibly `psa_mac_verify()`. To verify a mac with `psa_mac_verify()`, the core calls an applicable driver's `"mac_verify"` entry point if there is one, otherwise the core calls an applicable driver's `"mac_compute"` entry point and compares the result with the reference MAC value.
217* `"mac_verify"`: verification of a MAC. Called by `psa_mac_verify()`. This entry point is mainly useful for drivers of secure elements that verify a MAC without revealing the correct MAC. Although transparent drivers may implement this entry point in addition to `"mac_compute"`, it is generally not useful because the core can call the `"mac_compute"` entry point and compare with the expected MAC value.
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +0200218* `"cipher_encrypt"`: unauthenticated symmetric cipher encryption. Called by `psa_cipher_encrypt()`.
219* `"cipher_decrypt"`: unauthenticated symmetric cipher decryption. Called by `psa_cipher_decrypt()`.
220* `"aead_encrypt"`: authenticated encryption with associated data. Called by `psa_aead_encrypt()`.
221* `"aead_decrypt"`: authenticated decryption with associated data. Called by `psa_aead_decrypt()`.
222* `"asymmetric_encrypt"`: asymmetric encryption. Called by `psa_asymmetric_encrypt()`.
223* `"asymmetric_decrypt"`: asymmetric decryption. Called by `psa_asymmetric_decrypt()`.
Gilles Peskineb6c43f62020-08-03 10:55:16 +0200224* `"sign_hash"`: signature of an already calculated hash. Called by `psa_sign_hash()` and possibly `psa_sign_message()`. To sign a message with `psa_sign_message()`, the core calls an applicable driver's `"sign_message"` entry point if there is one, otherwise the core calls an applicable driver's `"hash_compute"` entry point followed by an applicable driver's `"sign_hash"` entry point.
225* `"verify_hash"`: verification of an already calculated hash. Called by `psa_verify_hash()` and possibly `psa_verify_message()`. To verify a message with `psa_verify_message()`, the core calls an applicable driver's `"verify_message"` entry point if there is one, otherwise the core calls an applicable driver's `"hash_compute"` entry point followed by an applicable driver's `"verify_hash"` entry point.
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +0200226* `"sign_message"`: signature of a message. Called by `psa_sign_message()`.
227* `"verify_message"`: verification of a message. Called by `psa_verify_message()`.
228* `"key_agreement"`: key agreement without a subsequent key derivation. Called by `psa_raw_key_agreement()` and possibly `psa_key_derivation_key_agreement()`.
229
Gilles Peskineb6c43f62020-08-03 10:55:16 +0200230### Driver entry points for multi-part operations
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +0200231
232#### General considerations on multi-part operations
233
Gilles Peskineb6c43f62020-08-03 10:55:16 +0200234The entry points that implement each step of a multi-part operation are grouped into a family. A driver that implements a multi-part operation must define all of the entry points in this family as well as a type that represents the operation context. The lifecycle of a driver operation context is similar to the lifecycle of an API operation context:
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +0200235
2361. The core initializes operation context objects to either all-bits-zero or to logical zero (`{0}`), at its discretion.
Gilles Peskineb6c43f62020-08-03 10:55:16 +02002371. The core calls the `xxx_setup` entry point for this operation family. If this fails, the core destroys the operation context object without calling any other driver entry point on it.
2381. The core calls other entry points that manipulate the operation context object, respecting the constraints.
2391. If any entry point fails, the core calls the driver's `xxx_abort` entry point for this operation family, then destroys the operation context object without calling any other driver entry point on it.
2401. If a finish entry point fails, the core destroys the operation context object without calling any other driver entry point on it. The finish entry points are: *prefix*`_mac_sign_finish`, *prefix*`_mac_verify_finish`, *prefix*`_cipher_fnish`, *prefix*`_aead_finish`, *prefix*`_aead_verify`.
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +0200241
Gilles Peskineb6c43f62020-08-03 10:55:16 +0200242If a driver implements a multi-part operation but not the corresponding single-part operation, the core calls the driver's multipart operation entry points to perform the single-part operation.
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +0200243
Gilles Peskineb6c43f62020-08-03 10:55:16 +0200244#### Multi-part operation entry point family `"hash_multipart"`
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +0200245
Gilles Peskine92149262020-08-03 11:35:49 +0200246This family corresponds to the calculation of a hash in multiple steps.
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +0200247
248This family applies to transparent drivers only.
249
Gilles Peskined4e69272020-08-06 21:10:20 +0200250This family requires the following type and entry points:
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +0200251
252* Type `"hash_operation_t"`: the type of a hash operation context. It must be possible to copy a hash operation context byte by byte, therefore hash operation contexts must not contain any embedded pointers (except pointers to global data that do not change after the setup step).
253* `"hash_setup"`: called by `psa_hash_setup()`.
254* `"hash_update"`: called by `psa_hash_update()`.
255* `"hash_finish"`: called by `psa_hash_finish()` and `psa_hash_verify()`.
Gilles Peskined4e69272020-08-06 21:10:20 +0200256* `"hash_abort"`: called by all multi-part hash functions of the PSA Cryptography API.
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +0200257
Gilles Peskine7a1e4f92020-08-06 20:54:56 +0200258To verify a hash with `psa_hash_verify()`, the core calls the driver's *prefix*`_hash_finish` entry point and compares the result with the reference hash value.
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +0200259
Gilles Peskineb6c43f62020-08-03 10:55:16 +0200260For example, a driver with the prefix `"acme"` that implements the `"hash_multipart"` entry point family must define the following type and entry points (assuming that the capability does not use the `"names"` property to declare different type and entry point names):
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +0200261
262```
263typedef ... acme_hash_operation_t;
264psa_status_t acme_hash_setup(acme_hash_operation_t *operation,
265 psa_algorithm_t alg);
266psa_status_t acme_hash_update(acme_hash_operation_t *operation,
267 const uint8_t *input,
268 size_t input_length);
269psa_status_t acme_hash_finish(acme_hash_operation_t *operation,
270 uint8_t *hash,
271 size_t hash_size,
272 size_t *hash_length);
273psa_status_t acme_hash_abort(acme_hash_operation_t *operation);
274```
275
276#### Operation family `"mac_multipart"`
277
278TODO
279
280#### Operation family `"mac_verify_multipart"`
281
282TODO
283
284#### Operation family `"cipher_encrypt_multipart"`
285
286TODO
287
288#### Operation family `"cipher_decrypt_multipart"`
289
290TODO
291
292#### Operation family `"aead_encrypt_multipart"`
293
294TODO
295
296#### Operation family `"aead_decrypt_multipart"`
297
298TODO
299
Gilles Peskinea2b41592022-01-24 14:52:59 +0100300### Driver entry points for key derivation
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +0200301
Gilles Peskineeda71ce2023-01-12 14:32:56 +0100302Key derivation is more complex than other multipart operations for several reasons:
303
Gilles Peskine66b96e22023-05-31 00:39:58 +0200304* There are multiple inputs and outputs.
Gilles Peskineeda71ce2023-01-12 14:32:56 +0100305* Multiple drivers can be involved. This happens when an operation combines a key agreement and a subsequent symmetric key derivation, each of which can have independent drivers. This also happens when deriving an asymmetric key, where processing the secret input and generating the key output might involve different drivers.
306* When multiple drivers are involved, they are not always independent: if the secret input is managed by an opaque driver, it might not allow the core to retrieve the intermediate output and pass it to another driver.
307* The involvement of an opaque driver cannot be determined as soon as the operation is set up (since `psa_key_derivation_setup()` does not determine the key input).
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +0200308
Gilles Peskinea2b41592022-01-24 14:52:59 +0100309#### Key derivation driver dispatch logic
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +0200310
Gilles Peskine66b96e22023-05-31 00:39:58 +0200311The core decides whether to dispatch a key derivation operation to a driver based on the location associated with of the input step `PSA_KEY_DERIVATION_INPUT_SECRET`.
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +0200312
Gilles Peskinea2b41592022-01-24 14:52:59 +01003131. If this step is passed via `psa_key_derivation_input_key()` for a key in a secure element:
Gilles Peskine4e94fea2023-05-31 00:40:56 +0200314 * If the driver for this secure element implements the `"key_derivation"` family for the specified algorithm, the core calls that driver's `"key_derivation_setup"` and subsequent entry points.
315 Note that for all currently specified algorithms, the key type for the secret input does not matter.
Gilles Peskinea2b41592022-01-24 14:52:59 +0100316 * Otherwise the core calls the secure element driver's [`"export_key"`](#key-management-with-opaque-drivers) entry point.
Gilles Peskine4e94fea2023-05-31 00:40:56 +02003172. Otherwise ([or on fallback?](#fallback-for-key-derivation-in-opaque-drivers)), if there is a transparent driver for the specified algorithm, the core calls that driver's `"key_derivation_setup"` and subsequent entry points.
Gilles Peskinea2b41592022-01-24 14:52:59 +01003183. Otherwise, or on fallback, the core uses its built-in implementation.
319
320#### Summary of entry points for the operation family `"key_derivation"`
321
322A key derivation driver has the following entry points:
323
324* `"key_derivation_setup"` (mandatory): always the first entry point to be called. This entry point provides the [initial inputs](#key-derivation-driver-initial-inputs). See [“Key derivation driver setup”](#key-derivation-driver-setup).
Gilles Peskinec2e29102022-06-03 17:07:19 +0200325* `"key_derivation_input_step"` (optional): provide an extra input for the key derivation. This entry point is only mandatory in drivers that support algorithms that have extra inputs. See [“Key derivation driver long inputs”](#key-derivation-driver-long-inputs).
Gilles Peskinea2b41592022-01-24 14:52:59 +0100326* `"key_derivation_output_bytes"` (mandatory): derive cryptographic material and output it. See [“Key derivation driver outputs”](#key-derivation-driver-outputs).
Gilles Peskined9645c82022-06-30 18:19:51 +0200327* `"key_derivation_output_key"`, `"key_derivation_verify_bytes"`, `"key_derivation_verify_key"` (optional, opaque drivers only): derive key material which remains inside the same secure element. See [“Key derivation driver outputs”](#key-derivation-driver-outputs).
Gilles Peskine4e346bd2023-01-12 14:33:22 +0100328* `"key_derivation_set_capacity"` (mandatory for opaque drivers that implement `"key_derivation_output_key"` for “cooked”, i.e. non-raw-data key types): update the capacity policy on the operation. See [“Key derivation driver operation capacity”](#key-derivation-driver-operation-capacity).
Gilles Peskinea2b41592022-01-24 14:52:59 +0100329* `"key_derivation_abort"` (mandatory): always the last entry point to be called.
330
331For naming purposes, here and in the following subsection, this specification takes the example of a driver with the prefix `"acme"` that implements the `"key_derivation"` entry point family with a capability that does not use the `"names"` property to declare different type and entry point names. Such a driver must implement the following type and functions, as well as the entry points listed above and described in the following subsections:
332```
333typedef ... acme_key_derivation_operation_t;
Gilles Peskine1a5b8302022-06-03 17:47:40 +0200334psa_status_t acme_key_derivation_abort(acme_key_derivation_operation_t *operation);
Gilles Peskinea2b41592022-01-24 14:52:59 +0100335```
336
337#### Key derivation driver initial inputs
338
339The core conveys the initial inputs for a key derivation via an opaque data structure of type `psa_crypto_driver_key_derivation_inputs_t`.
340
341```
342typedef ... psa_crypto_driver_key_derivation_inputs_t; // implementation-specific type
343```
344
Gilles Peskine66b96e22023-05-31 00:39:58 +0200345A driver receiving an argument that points to a `psa_crypto_driver_key_derivation_inputs_t` can retrieve its contents by calling one of the type-specific the functions below. To determine the correct function, the driver can call `psa_crypto_driver_key_derivation_get_input_type()`.
Gilles Peskine54eb0682022-06-30 18:09:27 +0200346
347```
348enum psa_crypto_driver_key_derivation_input_type_t {
349 PSA_KEY_DERIVATION_INPUT_TYPE_INVALID = 0,
350 PSA_KEY_DERIVATION_INPUT_TYPE_OMITTED,
351 PSA_KEY_DERIVATION_INPUT_TYPE_BYTES,
352 PSA_KEY_DERIVATION_INPUT_TYPE_KEY,
353 PSA_KEY_DERIVATION_INPUT_TYPE_INTEGER,
354 // Implementations may add other values, and may freely choose the
355 // numerical values for each identifer except as explicitly specified
356 // above.
357};
358psa_crypto_driver_key_derivation_input_type_t psa_crypto_driver_key_derivation_get_input_type(
359 const psa_crypto_driver_key_derivation_inputs_t *inputs,
360 psa_key_derivation_step_t step);
361```
362
363The function `psa_crypto_driver_key_derivation_get_input_type()` determines whether a given step is present and how to access its value:
364
365* `PSA_KEY_DERIVATION_INPUT_TYPE_INVALID`: the step is invalid for the algorithm of the operation that the inputs are for.
366* `PSA_KEY_DERIVATION_INPUT_TYPE_OMITTED`: the step is optional for the algorithm of the operation that the inputs are for, and has been omitted.
Gilles Peskined2fe1d52023-05-31 00:41:57 +0200367* `PSA_KEY_DERIVATION_INPUT_TYPE_BYTES`: the step is valid and present and is a transparent byte string. Call `psa_crypto_driver_key_derivation_get_input_size()` to obtain the size of the input data. Call `psa_crypto_driver_key_derivation_get_input_bytes()` to make a copy of the input data (design note: [why a copy?](#key-derivation-inputs-and-buffer-ownership)).
Gilles Peskine66b96e22023-05-31 00:39:58 +0200368* `PSA_KEY_DERIVATION_INPUT_TYPE_KEY`: the step is valid and present and is a byte string passed via a key object. Call `psa_crypto_driver_key_derivation_get_input_key()` to obtain a pointer to the key context.
Gilles Peskine54eb0682022-06-30 18:09:27 +0200369* `PSA_KEY_DERIVATION_INPUT_TYPE_INTEGER`: the step is valid and present and is an integer. Call `psa_crypto_driver_key_derivation_get_input_integer()` to retrieve the integer value.
Gilles Peskinea2b41592022-01-24 14:52:59 +0100370
371```
372psa_status_t psa_crypto_driver_key_derivation_get_input_size(
373 const psa_crypto_driver_key_derivation_inputs_t *inputs,
374 psa_key_derivation_step_t step,
375 size_t *size);
376psa_status_t psa_crypto_driver_key_derivation_get_input_bytes(
377 const psa_crypto_driver_key_derivation_inputs_t *inputs,
378 psa_key_derivation_step_t step,
Gilles Peskine220bda72022-01-25 12:03:34 +0100379 uint8_t *buffer, size_t buffer_size, size_t *buffer_length);
Gilles Peskinea2b41592022-01-24 14:52:59 +0100380psa_status_t psa_crypto_driver_key_derivation_get_input_key(
381 const psa_crypto_driver_key_derivation_inputs_t *inputs,
382 psa_key_derivation_step_t step,
Gilles Peskinefd094082023-01-20 20:24:17 +0100383 const psa_key_attributes_t *attributes,
Gilles Peskinea2b41592022-01-24 14:52:59 +0100384 uint8_t** p_key_buffer, size_t *key_buffer_size);
385psa_status_t psa_crypto_driver_key_derivation_get_input_integer(
386 const psa_crypto_driver_key_derivation_inputs_t *inputs,
387 psa_key_derivation_step_t step,
388 uint64_t *value);
389```
390
Gilles Peskine54eb0682022-06-30 18:09:27 +0200391The get-data functions take the following parameters:
Gilles Peskinea2b41592022-01-24 14:52:59 +0100392
Gilles Peskine1a5b8302022-06-03 17:47:40 +0200393* The first parameter `inputs` must be a pointer passed by the core to a key derivation driver setup entry point which has not returned yet.
Gilles Peskine54eb0682022-06-30 18:09:27 +0200394* The `step` parameter indicates the input step whose content the driver wants to retrieve.
Gilles Peskine66b96e22023-05-31 00:39:58 +0200395* On a successful invocation of `psa_crypto_driver_key_derivation_get_input_size`, the core sets `*size` to the size of the specified input in bytes.
396* On a successful invocation of `psa_crypto_driver_key_derivation_get_input_bytes`, the core fills the first *N* bytes of `buffer` with the specified input and sets `*buffer_length` to *N*, where *N* is the length of the input in bytes. The value of `buffer_size` must be at least *N*, otherwise this function fails with the status `PSA_ERROR_BUFFER_TOO_SMALL`.
Gilles Peskinea2b41592022-01-24 14:52:59 +0100397* On a successful invocation of `psa_crypto_driver_key_derivation_get_input_key`, the core sets `*key_buffer` to a pointer to a buffer containing the key context and `*key_buffer_size` to the size of the key context in bytes. The key context buffer remains valid for the duration of the driver entry point. If the driver needs to access the key context after the current entry point returns, it must make a copy of the key context.
Gilles Peskine66b96e22023-05-31 00:39:58 +0200398* On a successful invocation of `psa_crypto_driver_key_derivation_get_input_integer`, the core sets `*value` to the value of the specified input.
Gilles Peskinea2b41592022-01-24 14:52:59 +0100399
400These functions can return the following statuses:
401
Gilles Peskine66b96e22023-05-31 00:39:58 +0200402* `PSA_SUCCESS`: the call succeeded and the requested value has been copied to the output parameter (`size`, `buffer`, `value` or `p_key_buffer`) and if applicable the size of the value has been written to the applicable parameter (`buffer_length`, `key_buffer_size`).
Gilles Peskine1a5b8302022-06-03 17:47:40 +0200403* `PSA_ERROR_DOES_NOT_EXIST`: the input step is valid for this particular algorithm, but it is not part of the initial inputs. This is not a fatal error. The driver will receive the input later as a [long input](#key-derivation-driver-long-inputs).
Gilles Peskine54eb0682022-06-30 18:09:27 +0200404* `PSA_ERROR_INVALID_ARGUMENT`: the input type is not compatible with this function or was omitted. Call `psa_crypto_driver_key_derivation_get_input_type()` to find out the actual type of this input step. This is not a fatal error and the driver can, for example, subsequently call the appropriate function on the same step.
Gilles Peskinea2b41592022-01-24 14:52:59 +0100405* `PSA_ERROR_BUFFER_TOO_SMALL` (`psa_crypto_driver_key_derivation_get_input_bytes` only): the output buffer is too small. This is not a fatal error and the driver can, for example, subsequently call the same function again with a larger buffer. Call `psa_crypto_driver_key_derivation_get_input_size` to obtain the required size.
406* The core may return other errors such as `PSA_ERROR_CORRUPTION_DETECTED` or `PSA_ERROR_COMMUNICATION_FAILURE` to convey implementation-specific error conditions. Portable drivers should treat such conditions as fatal errors.
407
408#### Key derivation driver setup
409
410A key derivation driver must implement the following entry point:
411```
412psa_status_t acme_key_derivation_setup(
413 acme_key_derivation_operation_t *operation,
414 psa_algorithm_t alg,
415 const psa_crypto_driver_key_derivation_inputs_t *inputs);
416```
417
418* `operation` is a zero-initialized operation object.
419* `alg` is the algorithm for the key derivation operation. It does not include a key agreement component.
420* `inputs` is an opaque pointer to the [initial inputs](#key-derivation-driver-initial-inputs) for the key derivation.
421
Gilles Peskinea2b41592022-01-24 14:52:59 +0100422#### Key derivation driver long inputs
423
Gilles Peskinef7878792023-05-31 00:42:29 +0200424Some key derivation algorithms take long inputs which it would not be practical to pass in the [initial inputs](#key-derivation-driver-initial-inputs). A driver that implements a key derivation algorithm that takes such inputs must provide a `"key_derivation_input_step"` entry point. The core calls this entry point for all the long inputs after calling `"acme_key_derivation_setup"`. A long input step may be fragmented into multiple calls of `psa_key_derivation_input_bytes()`, and the core may reassemble or refragment those fragments before passing them to the driver. Calls to this entry point for different step values occur in an unspecified order and may be interspersed.
Gilles Peskinea2b41592022-01-24 14:52:59 +0100425
426```
427psa_status_t acme_key_derivation_input_step(
428 acme_key_derivation_operation_t *operation,
429 psa_key_derivation_step_t step,
430 const uint8_t *input, size_t input_length);
431```
432
433At the time of writing, no standard key derivation algorithm has long inputs. It is likely that such algorithms will be added in the future.
434
435#### Key derivation driver operation capacity
436
Gilles Peskined9645c82022-06-30 18:19:51 +0200437The core keeps track of an operation's capacity and enforces it. The core guarantees that it will not request output beyond the capacity of the operation, with one exception: opaque drivers that support [`"key_derivation_output_key"`](#key-derivation-driver-outputs), i.e. for key types where the derived key material is not a direct copy of the key derivation's output stream.
Gilles Peskinea2b41592022-01-24 14:52:59 +0100438
439Such drivers must enforce the capacity limitation and must return `PSA_ERROR_INSUFFICIENT_CAPACITY` from any output request that exceeds the operation's capacity. Such drivers must provide the following entry point:
440```
441psa_status_t acme_key_derivation_set_capacity(
442 acme_key_derivation_operation_t *operation,
443 size_t capacity);
444```
Gilles Peskine66b96e22023-05-31 00:39:58 +0200445`capacity` is guaranteed to be less or equal to any value previously set through this entry point, and is guaranteed not to be `PSA_KEY_DERIVATION_UNLIMITED_CAPACITY`.
Gilles Peskinea2b41592022-01-24 14:52:59 +0100446
447If this entry point has not been called, the operation has an unlimited capacity.
448
449#### Key derivation driver outputs
450
451A key derivation driver must provide the following entry point:
452```
453psa_status_t acme_key_derivation_output_bytes(
454 acme_key_derivation_operation_t *operation,
455 uint8_t *output, size_t length);
456```
457
458An opaque key derivation driver may provide the following entry points:
459```
460psa_status_t acme_key_derivation_output_key(
461 const psa_key_attributes_t *attributes,
462 acme_key_derivation_operation_t *operation,
463 uint8_t *key_buffer, size_t key_buffer_size, size_t *key_buffer_length);
464psa_status_t acme_key_derivation_verify_bytes(
465 acme_key_derivation_operation_t *operation,
466 const uint8_t *expected output, size_t length);
467psa_status_t acme_key_derivation_verify_key(
468 acme_key_derivation_operation_t *operation,
469 uint8_t *key_buffer, size_t key_buffer_size);
470```
471
472The core calls a key derivation driver's output entry point when the application calls `psa_key_derivation_output_bytes()`, `psa_key_derivation_output_key()`, `psa_key_derivation_verify_bytes()` or `psa_key_derivation_verify_key()`.
473
474If the key derivation's `PSA_KEY_DERIVATION_INPUT_SECRET` input is in a secure element and the derivation operation is handled by that secure element, the core performs the following steps:
475
4761. For a call to `psa_key_derivation_output_key()` where the derived key is in the same secure element, if the driver has an `"key_derivation_output_key"` entry point, call that entry point. If the driver has no such entry point, or if that entry point returns `PSA_ERROR_NOT_SUPPORTED`, continue with the following steps, otherwise stop.
4771. For a call to `psa_key_derivation_output_key()`, if the driver's capabilities indicate that its `"import_key"` entry point does not support the derived key, stop and return `PSA_ERROR_NOT_SUPPORTED`.
4781. For a call to `psa_key_derivation_verify_key()`, if the driver has a `"key_derivation_verify_key"` entry point, call it and stop.
4791. For a call to `psa_key_derivation_verify_key()` or `psa_key_derivation_verify_bytes()`, if the driver has a `"key_derivation_verify_bytes"` entry point, call the driver's `"export_key"` entry point on the key object that contains the expected value, call the `"key_derivation_verify_bytes"` entry point on the exported material, and stop.
Gilles Peskine3fc9e042022-06-03 17:48:46 +02004801. Call the `"key_derivation_output_bytes"` entry point. The core may call this entry point multiple times to implement a single call from the application when deriving a cooked (non-raw) key as described below, or if the output size exceeds some implementation limit.
Gilles Peskinea2b41592022-01-24 14:52:59 +0100481
Gilles Peskine66b96e22023-05-31 00:39:58 +0200482If the key derivation operation is not handled by an opaque driver as described above, the core calls the `"key_derivation_output_bytes"` from the applicable transparent driver (or multiple drivers in succession if fallback applies). In some cases, the core then calls additional entry points in the same or another driver:
Gilles Peskinea2b41592022-01-24 14:52:59 +0100483
484* For a call to `psa_key_derivation_output_key()` for some key types, the core calls a transparent driver's `"derive_key"` entry point. See [“Transparent cooked key derivation”](#transparent-cooked-key-derivation).
485* For a call to `psa_key_derivation_output_key()` where the derived key is in a secure element, call that secure element driver's `"import_key"` entry point.
486
487#### Transparent cooked key derivation
488
489Key derivation is said to be *raw* for some key types, where the key material of a derived (8×*n*)-bit key consists of the next *n* bytes of output from the key derivation, and *cooked* otherwise. When deriving a raw key, the core only calls the driver's `"output_bytes"` entry point, except when deriving a key entirely inside a secure element as described in [“Key derivation driver outputs”](#key-derivation-driver-outputs). When deriving a cooked key, the core calls a transparent driver's `"derive_key"` entry point if available.
490
491A capability for cooked key derivation contains the following properties (this is not a subset of [the usual entry point properties](#capability-syntax)):
492
493* `"entry_points"` (mandatory, list of strings). Must be `["derive_key"]`.
494* `"derived_types"` (mandatory, list of strings). Each element is a [key type specification](#key-type-specifications). This capability only applies when deriving a key of the specified type.
Gilles Peskine66b96e22023-05-31 00:39:58 +0200495* `"derived_sizes"` (optional, list of integers). Each element is a size for the derived key, in bits. This capability only applies when deriving a key of the specified sizes. If absent, this capability applies to all sizes for the specified types.
Gilles Peskinea2b41592022-01-24 14:52:59 +0100496* `"memory"` (optional, boolean). If present and true, the driver must define a type `"derive_key_memory_t"` and the core will allocate an object of that type as specified below.
497* `"names"` (optional, object). A mapping from entry point names to C function and type names, as usual.
498* `"fallback"` (optional, boolean). If present and true, the driver may return `PSA_ERROR_NOT_SUPPORTED` if it only partially supports the specified mechanism, as usual.
499
500A transparent driver with the prefix `"acme"` that implements cooked key derivation must provide the following type and function:
501
502```
503typedef ... acme_derive_key_memory_t; // only if the "memory" property is true
504psa_status_t acme_derive_key(
505 const psa_key_attributes_t *attributes,
506 const uint8_t *input, size_t input_length,
507 acme_derive_key_memory_t *memory, // if the "memory" property is false: void*
508 uint8_t *key_buffer, size_t key_buffer_size, size_t *key_buffer_length);
509```
510
Gilles Peskine66b96e22023-05-31 00:39:58 +0200511* `attributes` contains the attributes of the specified key. Note that only the key type and the bit-size are guaranteed to be set.
Gilles Peskinea2b41592022-01-24 14:52:59 +0100512* `input` is a buffer of `input_length` bytes which contains the raw key stream, i.e. the data that `psa_key_derivation_output_bytes()` would return.
Gilles Peskinee52bff92023-05-31 00:43:29 +0200513 TODO: how does the core choose `input_length`? Doesn't the driver know better? Should there be a driver entry point to determine the length, or should there be a callback that allows the driver to retrieve the input? (Note that for some algorithms, it's impossible to predict the amount of input in advance, because it depends on some complex calculation or even on random data, e.g. if doing a randomized pseudo-primality test.)
Gilles Peskinea2b41592022-01-24 14:52:59 +0100514* If `"memory"` property in the driver capability is true, `memory` is a data structure that the driver may use to store data between successive calls of the `"derive_key"` entry point to derive the same key. If the `"memory"` property is false or absent, the `memory` parameter is a null pointer.
Gilles Peskineb319ed62023-05-31 00:42:45 +0200515* `key_buffer` is a buffer for the output material, in the appropriate [export format](#key-format-for-transparent-drivers) for the key type. Its size is `key_buffer_size` bytes.
Gilles Peskinea2b41592022-01-24 14:52:59 +0100516* On success, `*key_buffer_length` must contain the number of bytes written to `key_buffer`.
517
518This entry point may return the following statuses:
519
Gilles Peskine66b96e22023-05-31 00:39:58 +0200520* `PSA_SUCCESS`: a key was derived successfully. The driver has placed the representation of the key in `key_buffer`.
Gilles Peskinea2b41592022-01-24 14:52:59 +0100521* `PSA_ERROR_NOT_SUPPORTED` (for the first call only) (only if fallback is enabled): the driver cannot fulfill this request, but a fallback driver might.
522* `PSA_ERROR_INSUFFICIENT_DATA`: the core must call the `"derive_key"` entry point again with the same `memory` object and with subsequent data from the key stream.
523* Any other error is a fatal error.
524
525The core calls the `"derive_key"` entry point in a loop until it returns a status other than `PSA_ERROR_INSUFFICIENT_DATA`. Each call has a successive fragment of the key stream. The `memory` object is guaranteed to be the same for successive calls, but note that its address may change between calls. Before the first call, `*memory` is initialized to all-bits-zero.
526
527For standard key types, the `"derive_key"` entry point is called with a certain input length as follows:
528
529* `PSA_KEY_TYPE_DES`: the length of the key.
Gilles Peskine66b96e22023-05-31 00:39:58 +0200530* `PSA_KEY_TYPE_ECC_KEY_PAIR(…)`, `PSA_KEY_TYPE_DH_KEY_PAIR(…)`: $m$ bytes, where the bit-size of the key $n$ satisfies $8 (m-1) < n \le 8 m$.
Gilles Peskinea2b41592022-01-24 14:52:59 +0100531* `PSA_KEY_TYPE_RSA_KEY_PAIR`: an implementation-defined length. A future version of this specification may specify a length.
532* Other key types: not applicable.
533
534#### Key agreement
535
536The core always decouples key agreement from symmetric key derivation.
537
538To implement a call to `psa_key_derivation_key_agreement()` where the private key is in a secure element that has a `"key_agreement_to_key"` entry point which is applicable for the given key type and algorithm, the core calls the secure element driver as follows:
539
5401. Call the `"key_agreement_to_key"` entry point to create a key object containing the shared secret. The key object is volatile and has the type `PSA_KEY_TYPE_DERIVE`.
5412. Call the `"key_derivation_setup"` entry point, passing the resulting key object .
5423. Perform the rest of the key derivation, up to and including the call to the `"key_derivation_abort"` entry point.
5434. Call the `"destroy_key"` entry point to destroy the key containing the key object.
544
545In other cases, the core treats `psa_key_derivation_key_agreement()` as if it was a call to `psa_raw_key_agreement()` followed by a call to `psa_key_derivation_input_bytes()` on the shared secret.
546
547The entry points related to key agreement have the following prototypes for a driver with the prefix `"acme"`:
548```
549psa_status_t acme_key_agreement(psa_algorithm_t alg,
Gilles Peskine24f52292023-05-31 00:44:04 +0200550 const psa_key_attributes_t *our_attributes,
Gilles Peskinea2b41592022-01-24 14:52:59 +0100551 const uint8_t *our_key_buffer,
552 size_t our_key_buffer_length,
553 const uint8_t *peer_key,
554 size_t peer_key_length,
555 uint8_t *output,
556 size_t output_size,
557 size_t *output_length);
558psa_status_t acme_key_agreement_to_key(psa_algorithm_t alg,
Gilles Peskine24f52292023-05-31 00:44:04 +0200559 const psa_key_attributes_t *our_attributes,
Gilles Peskinea2b41592022-01-24 14:52:59 +0100560 const uint8_t *our_key_buffer,
561 size_t our_key_buffer_length,
562 const uint8_t *peer_key,
563 size_t peer_key_length,
Gilles Peskine24f52292023-05-31 00:44:04 +0200564 const psa_key_attributes_t *shared_secret_attributes,
Gilles Peskinea2b41592022-01-24 14:52:59 +0100565 uint8_t *shared_secret_key_buffer,
566 size_t shared_secret_key_buffer_size,
567 size_t *shared_secret_key_buffer_length);
568```
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +0200569
Gilles Peskine24f52292023-05-31 00:44:04 +0200570Note that unlike most other key creation entry points, in `"acme_key_agreement_to_key"`, the parameters for the shared secret are not placed near the beginning, but rather grouped with the other parameters at the end, to avoid confusion with the keys passed as inputs.
571
Gilles Peskineb6c43f62020-08-03 10:55:16 +0200572### Driver entry points for key management
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +0200573
Gilles Peskine28b3a942020-11-24 13:08:11 +0100574The driver entry points for key management differ significantly between [transparent drivers](#key-management-with-transparent-drivers) and [opaque drivers](#key-management-with-opaque-drivers). This section describes common elements. Refer to the applicable section for each driver type for more information.
Gilles Peskinece3ec6f2020-10-27 18:31:50 +0100575
576The entry points that create or format key data have the following prototypes for a driver with the prefix `"acme"`:
577
578```
579psa_status_t acme_import_key(const psa_key_attributes_t *attributes,
580 const uint8_t *data,
581 size_t data_length,
582 uint8_t *key_buffer,
583 size_t key_buffer_size,
584 size_t *key_buffer_length,
Gilles Peskine99e52f62020-11-24 13:09:50 +0100585 size_t *bits); // additional parameter, see below
Gilles Peskinece3ec6f2020-10-27 18:31:50 +0100586psa_status_t acme_generate_key(const psa_key_attributes_t *attributes,
587 uint8_t *key_buffer,
588 size_t key_buffer_size,
589 size_t *key_buffer_length);
590```
Gilles Peskinea2b41592022-01-24 14:52:59 +0100591Additionally, opaque drivers can create keys through their [`"key_derivation_output_key"`](#key-derivation-driver-outputs) and [`"key_agreement_key"`](#key-agreement) entry points. Transparent drivers can create key material through their [`"derive_key"`](#transparent-cooked-key-derivation) entry point.
Gilles Peskinece3ec6f2020-10-27 18:31:50 +0100592
Gilles Peskinea2b41592022-01-24 14:52:59 +0100593TODO: copy
Gilles Peskinece3ec6f2020-10-27 18:31:50 +0100594
595* The key attributes (`attributes`) have the same semantics as in the PSA Cryptography application interface.
596* For the `"import_key"` entry point, the input in the `data` buffer is either the export format or an implementation-specific format that the core documents as an acceptable input format for `psa_import_key()`.
Gilles Peskine99e52f62020-11-24 13:09:50 +0100597* The size of the key data buffer `key_buffer` is sufficient for the internal representation of the key. For a transparent driver, this is the key's [export format](#key-format-for-transparent-drivers). For an opaque driver, this is the size determined from the driver description and the key attributes, as specified in the section [“Key format for opaque drivers”](#key-format-for-opaque-drivers).
Gilles Peskinece3ec6f2020-10-27 18:31:50 +0100598* For an opaque driver with an `"allocate_key"` entry point, the content of the key data buffer on entry is the output of that entry point.
599* The `"import_key"` entry point must determine or validate the key size and set `*bits` as described in the section [“Key size determination on import”](#key-size-determination-on-import) below.
600
601All key creation entry points must ensure that the resulting key is valid as specified in the section [“Key validation”](#key-validation) below. This is primarily important for import entry points since the key data comes from the application.
602
603#### Key size determination on import
604
Gilles Peskine99e52f62020-11-24 13:09:50 +0100605The `"import_key"` entry point must determine or validate the key size.
Gilles Peskinece3ec6f2020-10-27 18:31:50 +0100606The PSA Cryptography API exposes the key size as part of the key attributes.
Gilles Peskine99e52f62020-11-24 13:09:50 +0100607When importing a key, the key size recorded in the key attributes can be either a size specified by the caller of the API (who may not be trusted), or `0` which indicates that the size must be calculated from the data.
608
609When the core calls the `"import_key"` entry point to process a call to `psa_import_key`, it passes an `attributes` structure such that `psa_get_key_bits(attributes)` is the size passed by the caller of `psa_import_key`. If this size is `0`, the `"import_key"` entry point must set the `bits` input-output parameter to the correct key size. The semantics of `bits` is as follows:
Gilles Peskinece3ec6f2020-10-27 18:31:50 +0100610
611* The core sets `*bits` to `psa_get_key_bits(attributes)` before calling the `"import_key"` entry point.
612* If `*bits == 0`, the driver must determine the key size from the data and set `*bits` to this size. If the key size cannot be determined from the data, the driver must return `PSA_ERROR_INVALID_ARGUMENT` (as of version 1.0 of the PSA Cryptography API specification, it is possible to determine the key size for all standard key types).
Gilles Peskine99e52f62020-11-24 13:09:50 +0100613* If `*bits != 0`, the driver must check the value of `*bits` against the data and return `PSA_ERROR_INVALID_ARGUMENT` if it does not match. If the driver entry point changes `*bits` to a different value but returns `PSA_SUCCESS`, the core will consider the key as invalid and the import will fail.
Gilles Peskinece3ec6f2020-10-27 18:31:50 +0100614
615#### Key validation
616
617Key creation entry points must produce valid key data. Key data is _valid_ if operations involving the key are guaranteed to work functionally and not to cause indirect security loss. Operation functions are supposed to receive valid keys, and should not have to check and report invalid keys. For example:
618
619* If a cryptographic mechanism is defined as having keying material of a certain size, or if the keying material involves integers that have to be in a certain range, key creation must ensure that the keying material has an appropriate size and falls within an appropriate range.
620* If a cryptographic operation involves a division by an integer which is provided as part of a key, key creation must ensure that this integer is nonzero.
Gilles Peskine42286712020-11-24 13:10:58 +0100621* If a cryptographic operation involves two keys A and B (or more), then the creation of A must ensure that using it does not risk compromising B. This applies even if A's policy does not explicitly allow a problematic operation, but A is exportable. In particular, public keys that can potentially be used for key agreement are considered invalid and must not be created if they risk compromising the private key.
Gilles Peskinece3ec6f2020-10-27 18:31:50 +0100622* On the other hand, it is acceptable for import to accept a key that cannot be verified as valid if using this key would at most compromise the key itself and material that is secured with this key. For example, RSA key import does not need to verify that the primes are actually prime. Key import may accept an insecure key if the consequences of the insecurity are no worse than a leak of the key prior to its import.
623
624With opaque drivers, the key context can only be used by code from the same driver, so key validity is primarily intended to report key creation errors at creation time rather than during an operation. With transparent drivers, the key context can potentially be used by code from a different provider, so key validity is critical for interoperability.
625
626This section describes some minimal validity requirements for standard key types.
627
628* For symmetric key types, check that the key size is suitable for the type.
629* For DES (`PSA_KEY_TYPE_DES`), additionally verify the parity bits.
630* For RSA (`PSA_KEY_TYPE_RSA_PUBLIC_KEY`, `PSA_KEY_TYPE_RSA_KEY_PAIR`), check the syntax of the key and make sanity checks on its components. TODO: what sanity checks? Value ranges (e.g. p < n), sanity checks such as parity, minimum and maximum size, what else?
631* For elliptic curve private keys (`PSA_KEY_TYPE_ECC_KEY_PAIR`), check the size and range. TODO: what else?
632* For elliptic curve public keys (`PSA_KEY_TYPE_ECC_PUBLIC_KEY`), check the size and range, and that the point is on the curve. TODO: what else?
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +0200633
Gilles Peskine5263e1e2020-11-13 14:14:28 +0100634### Entropy collection entry point
635
Gilles Peskine32e584c2020-11-30 15:52:02 +0100636A driver can declare an entropy source by providing a `"get_entropy"` entry point. This entry point has the following prototype for a driver with the prefix `"acme"`:
Gilles Peskine5263e1e2020-11-13 14:14:28 +0100637
638```
639psa_status_t acme_get_entropy(uint32_t flags,
640 size_t *estimate_bits,
641 uint8_t *output,
642 size_t output_size);
643```
644
645The semantics of the parameters is as follows:
646
647* `flags`: a bit-mask of [entropy collection flags](#entropy-collection-flags).
Gilles Peskine32e584c2020-11-30 15:52:02 +0100648* `estimate_bits`: on success, an estimate of the amount of entropy that is present in the `output` buffer, in bits. This must be at least `1` on success. The value is ignored on failure. Drivers should return a conservative estimate, even in circumstances where the quality of the entropy source is degraded due to environmental conditions (e.g. undervolting, low temperature, etc.).
Gilles Peskineb89b4b92020-11-16 21:52:21 +0100649* `output`: on success, this buffer contains non-deterministic data with an estimated entropy of at least `*estimate_bits` bits. When the entropy is coming from a hardware peripheral, this should preferably be raw or lightly conditioned measurements from a physical process, such that statistical tests run over a sufficiently large amount of output can confirm the entropy estimates. But this specification also permits entropy sources that are fully conditioned, for example when the PSA Cryptography system is running as an application in an operating system and `"get_entropy"` returns data from the random generator in the operating system's kernel.
Gilles Peskine05ab2642020-11-16 21:46:40 +0100650* `output_size`: the size of the `output` buffer in bytes. This size should be large enough to allow a driver to pass unconditioned data with a low density of entropy; for example a peripheral that returns eight bytes of data with an estimated one bit of entropy cannot provide meaningful output in less than 8 bytes.
651
652Note that there is no output parameter indicating how many bytes the driver wrote to the buffer. Such an output length indication is not necessary because the entropy may be located anywhere in the buffer, so the driver may write less than `output_size` bytes but the core does not need to know this. The output parameter `estimate_bits` contains the amount of entropy, expressed in bits, which may be significantly less than `output_size * 8`.
Gilles Peskine5263e1e2020-11-13 14:14:28 +0100653
654The entry point may return the following statuses:
655
656* `PSA_SUCCESS`: success. The output buffer contains some entropy.
Gilles Peskineb89b4b92020-11-16 21:52:21 +0100657* `PSA_ERROR_INSUFFICIENT_ENTROPY`: no entropy is available without blocking. This is only permitted if the `PSA_DRIVER_GET_ENTROPY_BLOCK` flag is clear. The core may call `get_entropy` again later, giving time for entropy to be gathered or for adverse environmental conditions to be rectified.
Gilles Peskine5263e1e2020-11-13 14:14:28 +0100658* Other error codes indicate a transient or permanent failure of the entropy source.
659
660Unlike most other entry points, if multiple transparent drivers include a `"get_entropy"` point, the core will call all of them (as well as the entry points from opaque drivers). Fallback is not applicable to `"get_entropy"`.
661
662#### Entropy collection flags
663
664* `PSA_DRIVER_GET_ENTROPY_BLOCK`: If this flag is set, the driver should block until it has at least one bit of entropy. If this flag is clear, the driver should avoid blocking if no entropy is readily available.
Gilles Peskine348eeeb2020-12-11 10:52:36 +0100665* `PSA_DRIVER_GET_ENTROPY_KEEPALIVE`: This flag is intended to help with energy management for entropy-generating peripherals. If this flag is set, the driver should expect another call to `acme_get_entropy` after a short time. If this flag is clear, the core is not expecting to call the `"get_entropy"` entry point again within a short amount of time (but it may do so nonetheless).
Gilles Peskine5263e1e2020-11-13 14:14:28 +0100666
667#### Entropy collection and blocking
668
669The intent of the `BLOCK` and `KEEPALIVE` [flags](#entropy-collection-flags) is to support drivers for TRNG (True Random Number Generator, i.e. an entropy source peripheral) that have a long ramp-up time, especially on platforms with multiple entropy sources.
670
671Here is a suggested call sequence for entropy collection that leverages these flags:
672
6731. The core makes a first round of calls to `"get_entropy"` on every source with the `BLOCK` flag clear and the `KEEPALIVE` flag set, so that drivers can prepare the TRNG peripheral.
6742. The core makes a second round of calls with the `BLOCK` flag set and the `KEEPALIVE` flag clear to gather needed entropy.
6753. If the second round does not collect enough entropy, the core makes more similar rounds, until the total amount of collected entropy is sufficient.
676
Gilles Peskineb6c43f62020-08-03 10:55:16 +0200677### Miscellaneous driver entry points
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +0200678
679#### Driver initialization
680
Gilles Peskinec2592132020-08-07 13:52:43 +0200681A driver may declare an `"init"` entry point in a capability with no algorithm, key type or key size. If so, the core calls this entry point once during the initialization of the PSA Cryptography subsystem. If the init entry point of any driver fails, the initialization of the PSA Cryptography subsystem fails.
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +0200682
Gilles Peskined4e69272020-08-06 21:10:20 +0200683When multiple drivers have an init entry point, the order in which they are called is unspecified. It is also unspecified whether other drivers' `"init"` entry points are called if one or more init entry point fails.
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +0200684
Gilles Peskine0dfd10d2020-08-19 21:41:27 +0200685On platforms where the PSA Cryptography implementation is a subsystem of a single application, the initialization of the PSA Cryptography subsystem takes place during the call to `psa_crypto_init()`. On platforms where the PSA Cryptography implementation is separate from the application or applications, the initialization of the PSA Cryptography subsystem takes place before or during the first time an application calls `psa_crypto_init()`.
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +0200686
Gilles Peskined4e69272020-08-06 21:10:20 +0200687The init entry point does not take any parameter.
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +0200688
689### Combining multiple drivers
690
Gilles Peskine7a1e4f92020-08-06 20:54:56 +0200691To declare a cryptoprocessor can handle both cleartext and wrapped keys, you need to provide two driver descriptions, one for a transparent driver and one for an opaque driver. You can use the mapping in capabilities' `"names"` property to arrange for multiple driver entry points to map to the same C function.
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +0200692
693## Transparent drivers
694
695### Key format for transparent drivers
696
Gilles Peskinea58d2252020-08-06 21:24:03 +0200697The format of a key for transparent drivers is the same as in applications. Refer to the documentation of [`psa_export_key()`](https://armmbed.github.io/mbed-crypto/html/api/keys/management.html#c.psa_export_key) and [`psa_export_public_key()`](https://armmbed.github.io/mbed-crypto/html/api/keys/management.html#c.psa_export_public_key) in the PSA Cryptography API specification. For custom key types defined by an implementation, refer to the documentation of that implementation.
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +0200698
699### Key management with transparent drivers
700
Gilles Peskineb6c43f62020-08-03 10:55:16 +0200701Transparent drivers may provide the following key management entry points:
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +0200702
Gilles Peskine12760592020-10-26 18:07:01 +0100703* [`"import_key"`](#key-import-with-transparent-drivers): called by `psa_import_key()`, only when importing a key pair or a public key (key such that `PSA_KEY_TYPE_IS_ASYMMETRIC` is true).
Gilles Peskinea8fc1712020-09-21 13:54:00 +0200704* `"generate_key"`: called by `psa_generate_key()`, only when generating a key pair (key such that `PSA_KEY_TYPE_IS_KEY_PAIR` is true).
705* `"key_derivation_output_key"`: called by `psa_key_derivation_output_key()`, only when deriving a key pair (key such that `PSA_KEY_TYPE_IS_KEY_PAIR` is true).
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +0200706* `"export_public_key"`: called by the core to obtain the public key of a key pair. The core may call this function at any time to obtain the public key, which can be for `psa_export_public_key()` but also at other times, including during a cryptographic operation that requires the public key such as a call to `psa_verify_message()` on a key pair object.
707
Gilles Peskinea8fc1712020-09-21 13:54:00 +0200708Transparent drivers are not involved when exporting, copying or destroying keys, or when importing, generating or deriving symmetric keys.
709
Gilles Peskine12760592020-10-26 18:07:01 +0100710#### Key import with transparent drivers
711
Gilles Peskine99e52f62020-11-24 13:09:50 +0100712As discussed in [the general section about key management entry points](#driver-entry-points-for-key-management), the key import entry points has the following prototype for a driver with the prefix `"acme"`:
Gilles Peskine12760592020-10-26 18:07:01 +0100713```
714psa_status_t acme_import_key(const psa_key_attributes_t *attributes,
715 const uint8_t *data,
716 size_t data_length,
717 uint8_t *key_buffer,
718 size_t key_buffer_size,
719 size_t *key_buffer_length,
720 size_t *bits);
721```
722
723This entry point has several roles:
724
7251. Parse the key data in the input buffer `data`. The driver must support the export format for the key types that the entry point is declared for. It may support additional formats as specified in the description of [`psa_import_key()`](https://armmbed.github.io/mbed-crypto/html/api/keys/management.html#c.psa_export_key) in the PSA Cryptography API specification.
Gilles Peskinec2e29102022-06-03 17:07:19 +02007262. Validate the key data. The necessary validation is described in the section [“Key validation”](#key-validation) above.
Gilles Peskine12760592020-10-26 18:07:01 +01007273. [Determine the key size](#key-size-determination-on-import) and output it through `*bits`.
7284. Copy the validated key data from `data` to `key_buffer`. The output must be in the canonical format documented for [`psa_export_key()`](https://armmbed.github.io/mbed-crypto/html/api/keys/management.html#c.psa_export_key) or [`psa_export_public_key()`](https://armmbed.github.io/mbed-crypto/html/api/keys/management.html#c.psa_export_public_key), so if the input is not in this format, the entry point must convert it.
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +0200729
Gilles Peskinee80978a2020-11-13 13:07:14 +0100730### Random generation entry points
731
Gilles Peskine32e584c2020-11-30 15:52:02 +0100732A transparent driver may provide an operation family that can be used as a cryptographic random number generator. The random generation mechanism must obey the following requirements:
Gilles Peskinee80978a2020-11-13 13:07:14 +0100733
734* The random output must be of cryptographic quality, with a uniform distribution. Therefore, if the random generator includes an entropy source, this entropy source must be fed through a CSPRNG (cryptographically secure pseudo-random number generator).
735* Random generation is expected to be fast. (If a device can provide entropy but is slow at generating random data, declare it as an [entropy driver](#entropy-collection-entry-point) instead.)
Gilles Peskine32e584c2020-11-30 15:52:02 +0100736* The random generator should be able to incorporate entropy provided by an outside source. If it isn't, the random generator can only be used if it's the only entropy source on the platform. (A random generator peripheral can be declared as an [entropy source](#entropy-collection-entry-point) instead of a random generator; this way the core will combine it with other entropy sources.)
Gilles Peskinee80978a2020-11-13 13:07:14 +0100737* The random generator may either be deterministic (in the sense that it always returns the same data when given the same entropy inputs) or non-deterministic (including its own entropy source). In other words, this interface is suitable both for PRNG (pseudo-random number generator, also known as DRBG (deterministic random bit generator)) and for NRBG (non-deterministic random bit generator).
738
739If no driver implements the random generation entry point family, the core provides an unspecified random generation mechanism.
740
741This operation family requires the following type, entry points and parameters (TODO: where exactly are the parameters in the JSON structure?):
742
743* Type `"random_context_t"`: the type of a random generation context.
Gilles Peskine390c5a22020-11-13 14:27:43 +0100744* `"init_random"` (entry point, optional): if this function is present, [the core calls it once](#random-generator-initialization) after allocating a `"random_context_t"` object.
Gilles Peskine6a530e82020-11-23 12:30:15 +0100745* `"add_entropy"` (entry point, optional): the core calls this function to [inject entropy](#entropy-injection). This entry point is optional if the driver is for a peripheral that includes an entropy source of its own, however [random generator drivers without entropy injection](#random-generator-drivers-without-entropy-injection) have limited portability since they can only be used on platforms with no other entropy source. This entry point is mandatory if `"initial_entropy_size"` is nonzero.
Gilles Peskine390c5a22020-11-13 14:27:43 +0100746* `"get_random"` (entry point, mandatory): the core calls this function whenever it needs to [obtain random data](#the-get_random-entry-point).
Gilles Peskine6a530e82020-11-23 12:30:15 +0100747* `"initial_entropy_size"` (integer, mandatory): the minimum number of bytes of entropy that the core must supply before the driver can output random data. This can be `0` if the driver is for a peripheral that includes an entropy source of its own.
Gilles Peskineae7772d2020-11-30 15:52:50 +0100748* `"reseed_entropy_size"` (integer, optional): the minimum number of bytes of entropy that the core should supply via [`"add_entropy"`](#entropy-injection) when the driver runs out of entropy. This value is also a hint for the size to supply if the core makes additional calls to `"add_entropy"`, for example to enforce prediction resistance. If omitted, the core should pass an amount of entropy corresponding to the expected security strength of the device (for example, pass 32 bytes of entropy when reseeding to achieve a security strength of 256 bits). If specified, the core should pass the larger of `"reseed_entropy_size"` and the amount corresponding to the security strength.
Gilles Peskinee80978a2020-11-13 13:07:14 +0100749
750Random generation is not parametrized by an algorithm. The choice of algorithm is up to the driver.
751
752#### Random generator initialization
753
754The `"init_random"` entry point has the following prototype for a driver with the prefix `"acme"`:
755
756```
757psa_status_t acme_init_random(acme_random_context_t *context);
758```
759
760The core calls this entry point once after allocating a random generation context. Initially, the context object is all-bits-zero.
761
Gilles Peskine0e3b7ce2020-11-13 14:20:03 +0100762If a driver does not have an `"init_random"` entry point, the context object passed to the first call to `"add_entropy"` or `"get_random"` will be all-bits-zero.
Gilles Peskinee80978a2020-11-13 13:07:14 +0100763
764#### Entropy injection
765
766The `"add_entropy"` entry point has the following prototype for a driver with the prefix `"acme"`:
767
768```
769psa_status_t acme_add_entropy(acme_random_context_t *context,
770 const uint8_t *entropy,
771 size_t entropy_size);
772```
773
774The semantics of the parameters is as follows:
775
776* `context`: a random generation context. On the first call to `"add_entropy"`, this object has been initialized by a call to the driver's `"init_random"` entry point if one is present, and to all-bits-zero otherwise.
Gilles Peskineee914f32020-11-19 12:10:51 +0100777* `entropy`: a buffer containing full-entropy data to seed the random generator. Full-entropy means that the data is uniformly distributed and independent of any other observable quantity.
Gilles Peskinee80978a2020-11-13 13:07:14 +0100778* `entropy_size`: the size of the `entropy` buffer in bytes. It is guaranteed to be at least `1`, but it may be smaller than the amount of entropy that the driver needs to deliver random data, in which case the core will call the `"add_entropy"` entry point again to supply more entropy.
779
780The core calls this function to supply entropy to the driver. The driver must mix this entropy into its internal state. The driver must mix the whole supplied entropy, even if there is more than what the driver requires, to ensure that all entropy sources are mixed into the random generator state. The driver may mix additional entropy of its own.
781
782The core may call this function at any time. For example, to enforce prediction resistance, the core can call `"add_entropy"` immediately after each call to `"get_random"`. The core must call this function in two circumstances:
783
Gilles Peskineee914f32020-11-19 12:10:51 +0100784* Before the first call to the `"get_random"` entry point, to supply `"initial_entropy_size"` bytes of entropy.
Gilles Peskineae7772d2020-11-30 15:52:50 +0100785* After a call to the `"get_random"` entry point returns less than the required amount of random data, to supply at least `"reseed_entropy_size"` bytes of entropy.
Gilles Peskinee80978a2020-11-13 13:07:14 +0100786
Gilles Peskine0e3b7ce2020-11-13 14:20:03 +0100787When the driver requires entropy, the core can supply it with one or more successive calls to the `"add_entropy"` entry point. If the required entropy size is zero, the core does not need to call `"add_entropy"`.
Gilles Peskinee80978a2020-11-13 13:07:14 +0100788
Gilles Peskine43100e32020-11-30 15:52:20 +0100789#### Combining entropy sources with a random generation driver
790
791This section provides guidance on combining one or more [entropy sources](#entropy-collection-entry-point) (each having a `"get_entropy"` entry point) with a random generation driver (with an `"add_entropy"` entry point).
792
793Note that `"get_entropy"` returns data with an estimated amount of entropy that is in general less than the buffer size. The core must apply a mixing algorithm to the output of `"get_entropy"` to obtain full-entropy data.
794
795For example, the core may use a simple mixing scheme based on a pseudorandom function family $(F_k)$ with an $E$-bit output where $E = 8 \cdot \mathtt{entropy_size}$ and $\mathtt{entropy_size}$ is the desired amount of entropy in bytes (typically the random driver's `"initial_entropy_size"` property for the initial seeding and the `"reseed_entropy_size"` property for subsequent reseeding). The core calls the `"get_entropy"` points of the available entropy drivers, outputting a string $s_i$ and an entropy estimate $e_i$ on the $i$th call. It does so until the total entropy estimate $e_1 + e_2 + \ldots + e_n$ is at least $E$. The core then calculates $F_k(0)$ where $k = s_1 || s_2 || \ldots || s_n$. This value is a string of $\mathtt{entropy_size}$, and since $(F_k)$ is a pseudorandom function family, $F_k(0)$ is uniformly distributed over strings of $\mathtt{entropy_size}$ bytes. Therefore $F_k(0)$ is a suitable value to pass to `"add_entropy"`.
796
797Note that the mechanism above is only given as an example. Implementations may choose a different mechanism, for example involving multiple pools or intermediate compression functions.
798
Gilles Peskinea14326f2020-11-13 14:40:57 +0100799#### Random generator drivers without entropy injection
800
801Random generator drivers should have the capability to inject additional entropy through the `"add_entropy"` entry point. This ensures that the random generator depends on all the entropy sources that are available on the platform. A driver where a call to `"add_entropy"` does not affect the state of the random generator is not compliant with this specification.
802
803However, a driver may omit the `"add_entropy"` entry point. This limits the driver's portability: implementations of the PSA Cryptography specification may reject drivers without an `"add_entropy"` entry point, or only accept such drivers in certain configurations. In particular, the `"add_entropy"` entry point is required if:
804
805* the integration of PSA Cryptography includes an entropy source that is outside the driver; or
806* the core saves random data in persistent storage to be preserved across platform resets.
807
Gilles Peskinee80978a2020-11-13 13:07:14 +0100808#### The `"get_random"` entry point
809
810The `"get_random"` entry point has the following prototype for a driver with the prefix `"acme"`:
811
812```
813psa_status_t acme_get_random(acme_random_context_t *context,
814 uint8_t *output,
815 size_t output_size,
816 size_t *output_length);
817```
818
819The semantics of the parameters is as follows:
820
Gilles Peskinea14326f2020-11-13 14:40:57 +0100821* `context`: a random generation context. If the driver's `"initial_entropy_size"` property is nonzero, the core must have called `"add_entropy"` at least once with a total of at least `"initial_entropy_size"` bytes of entropy before it calls `"get_random"`. Alternatively, if the driver's `"initial_entropy_size"` property is zero and the core did not call `"add_entropy"`, or if the driver has no `"add_entropy"` entry point, the core must have called `"init_random"` if present, and otherwise the context is all-bits zero.
Gilles Peskine8d5092c2020-11-16 22:00:24 +0100822* `output`: on success (including partial success), the first `*output_length` bytes of this buffer contain cryptographic-quality random data. The output is not used on error.
Gilles Peskinee80978a2020-11-13 13:07:14 +0100823* `output_size`: the size of the `output` buffer in bytes.
Gilles Peskine8d5092c2020-11-16 22:00:24 +0100824* `*output_length`: on success (including partial success), the number of bytes of random data that the driver has written to the `output` buffer. This is preferably `output_size`, but the driver is allowed to return less data if it runs out of entropy as described below. The core sets this value to 0 on entry. The value is not used on error.
Gilles Peskinee80978a2020-11-13 13:07:14 +0100825
826The driver may return the following status codes:
827
Gilles Peskineae7772d2020-11-30 15:52:50 +0100828* `PSA_SUCCESS`: the `output` buffer contains `*output_length` bytes of cryptographic-quality random data. Note that this may be less than `output_size`; in this case the core should call the driver's `"add_entropy"` method to supply at least `"reseed_entropy_size"` bytes of entropy before calling `"get_random"` again.
Gilles Peskine8d5092c2020-11-16 22:00:24 +0100829* `PSA_ERROR_INSUFFICIENT_ENTROPY`: the core must supply additional entropy by calling the `"add_entropy"` entry point with at least `"reseed_entropy_size"` bytes.
830* `PSA_ERROR_NOT_SUPPORTED`: the random generator is not available. This is only permitted if the driver specification for random generation has the [fallback property](#fallback) enabled.
831* Other error codes such as `PSA_ERROR_COMMUNICATION_FAILURE` or `PSA_ERROR_HARDWARE_FAILURE` indicate a transient or permanent error.
Gilles Peskinee80978a2020-11-13 13:07:14 +0100832
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +0200833### Fallback
834
Gilles Peskine15319452020-08-06 22:47:39 +0200835Sometimes cryptographic accelerators only support certain cryptographic mechanisms partially. The capability description language allows specifying some restrictions, including restrictions on key sizes, but it cannot cover all the possibilities that may arise in practice. Furthermore, it may be desirable to deploy the same binary image on different devices, only some of which have a cryptographic accelerators.
836For these purposes, a transparent driver can declare that it only supports a [capability](#driver-description-capability) partially, by setting the capability's `"fallback"` property to true.
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +0200837
Gilles Peskined89cd742020-08-07 23:37:55 +0200838If a transparent driver entry point is part of a capability which has a true `"fallback"` property and returns `PSA_ERROR_NOT_SUPPORTED`, the core will call the next transparent driver that supports the mechanism, if there is one. The core considers drivers in the order given by the [driver description list](#driver-description-list).
Gilles Peskine15319452020-08-06 22:47:39 +0200839
Gilles Peskine0dfd10d2020-08-19 21:41:27 +0200840If all the available drivers have fallback enabled and return `PSA_ERROR_NOT_SUPPORTED`, the core will perform the operation using built-in code.
Gilles Peskine15319452020-08-06 22:47:39 +0200841As soon as a driver returns any value other than `PSA_ERROR_NOT_SUPPORTED` (`PSA_SUCCESS` or a different error code), this value is returned to the application, without attempting to call any other driver or built-in code.
842
Gilles Peskineb6c43f62020-08-03 10:55:16 +0200843If a transparent driver entry point is part of a capability where the `"fallback"` property is false or omitted, the core should not include any other code for this capability, whether built in or in another transparent driver.
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +0200844
845## Opaque drivers
846
847Opaque drivers allow a PSA Cryptography implementation to delegate cryptographic operations to a separate environment that might not allow exporting key material in cleartext. The opaque driver interface is designed so that the core never inspects the representation of a key. The opaque driver interface is designed to support two subtypes of cryptoprocessors:
848
849* Some cryptoprocessors do not have persistent storage for individual keys. The representation of a key is the key material wrapped with a master key which is located in the cryptoprocessor and never exported from it. The core stores this wrapped key material on behalf of the cryptoprocessor.
850* Some cryptoprocessors have persistent storage for individual keys. The representation of a key is an identifier such as label or slot number. The core stores this identifier.
851
852### Key format for opaque drivers
853
854The format of a key for opaque drivers is an opaque blob. The content of this blob is fully up to the driver. The core merely stores this blob.
855
856Note that since the core stores the key context blob as it is in memory, it must only contain data that is meaningful after a reboot. In particular, it must not contain any pointers or transient handles.
857
858The `"key_context"` property in the [driver description](#driver-description-top-level-element) specifies how to calculate the size of the key context as a function of the key type and size. This is an object with the following properties:
859
860* `"base_size"` (integer or string, optional): this many bytes are included in every key context. If omitted, this value defaults to 0.
861* `"key_pair_size"` (integer or string, optional): this many bytes are included in every key context for a key pair. If omitted, this value defaults to 0.
862* `"public_key_size"` (integer or string, optional): this many bytes are included in every key context for a public key. If omitted, this value defaults to 0.
863* `"symmetric_factor"` (integer or string, optional): every key context for a symmetric key includes this many times the key size. If omitted, this value defaults to 0.
864* `"store_public_key"` (boolean, optional): If specified and true, for a key pair, the key context includes space for the public key. If omitted or false, no additional space is added for the public key.
Gilles Peskine84ae1ee2021-01-20 20:20:10 +0100865* `"size_function"` (string, optional): the name of a function that returns the number of bytes that the driver needs in a key context for a key. This may be a pointer to function. This must be a C identifier; more complex expressions are not permitted. If the core uses this function, it supersedes all the other properties except for `"builtin_key_size"` (where applicable, if present).
Gilles Peskine055be832021-01-25 11:36:24 +0100866* `"builtin_key_size"` (integer or string, optional): If specified, this overrides all other methods (including the `"size_function"` entry point) to determine the size of the key context for [built-in keys](#built-in-keys). This allows drivers to efficiently represent application keys as wrapped key material, but built-in keys by an internal identifier that takes up less space.
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +0200867
868The integer properties must be C language constants. A typical value for `"base_size"` is `sizeof(acme_key_context_t)` where `acme_key_context_t` is a type defined in a driver header file.
869
870#### Size of a dynamically allocated key context
871
872If the core supports dynamic allocation for the key context and chooses to use it, and the driver specification includes the `"size_function"` property, the size of the key context is at least
873```
874size_function(key_type, key_bits)
875```
876where `size_function` is the function named in the `"size_function"` property, `key_type` is the key type and `key_bits` is the key size in bits. The prototype of the size function is
877```
878size_t size_function(psa_key_type_t key_type, size_t key_bits);
879```
880
881#### Size of a statically allocated key context
882
883If the core does not support dynamic allocation for the key context or chooses not to use it, or if the driver specification does not include the `"size_function"` property, the size of the key context for a key of type `key_type` and of size `key_bits` bits is:
884
885* For a key pair (`PSA_KEY_TYPE_IS_KEY_PAIR(key_type)` is true):
886 ```
887 base_size + key_pair_size + public_key_overhead
888 ```
889 where `public_key_overhead = PSA_EXPORT_PUBLIC_KEY_MAX_SIZE(key_type, key_bits)` if the `"store_public_key"` property is true and `public_key_overhead = 0` otherwise.
890
891* For a public key (`PSA_KEY_TYPE_IS_PUBLIC_KEY(key_type)` is true):
892 ```
893 base_size + public_key_size
894 ```
895
896* For a symmetric key (not a key pair or public key):
897 ```
898 base_size + symmetric_factor * key_bytes
899 ```
900 where `key_bytes = ((key_bits + 7) / 8)` is the key size in bytes.
901
902#### Key context size for a secure element with storage
903
904If the key is stored in the secure element and the driver only needs to store a label for the key, use `"base_size"` as the size of the label plus any other metadata that the driver needs to store, and omit the other properties.
905
Gilles Peskineb6c43f62020-08-03 10:55:16 +0200906If the key is stored in the secure element, but the secure element does not store the public part of a key pair and cannot recompute it on demand, additionally use the `"store_public_key"` property with the value `true`. Note that this only influences the size of the key context: the driver code must copy the public key to the key context and retrieve it on demand in its `export_public_key` entry point.
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +0200907
908#### Key context size for a secure element without storage
909
910If the key is stored in wrapped form outside the secure element, and the wrapped form of the key plus any metadata has up to *N* bytes of overhead, use *N* as the value of the `"base_size"` property and set the `"symmetric_factor"` property to 1. Set the `"key_pair_size"` and `"public_key_size"` properties appropriately for the largest supported key pair and the largest supported public key respectively.
911
912### Key management with opaque drivers
913
Gilles Peskine7a1e4f92020-08-06 20:54:56 +0200914Opaque drivers may provide the following key management entry points:
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +0200915
Gilles Peskinea2b41592022-01-24 14:52:59 +0100916* `"export_key"`: called by `psa_export_key()`, or by `psa_copy_key()` when copying a key from or to a different [location](#lifetimes-and-locations), or [as a fallback for key derivation](#key-derivation-driver-dispatch-logic).
Gilles Peskineb6c43f62020-08-03 10:55:16 +0200917* `"export_public_key"`: called by the core to obtain the public key of a key pair. The core may call this entry point at any time to obtain the public key, which can be for `psa_export_public_key()` but also at other times, including during a cryptographic operation that requires the public key such as a call to `psa_verify_message()` on a key pair object.
Gilles Peskine8d06ad02020-08-03 11:37:02 +0200918* `"import_key"`: called by `psa_import_key()`, or by `psa_copy_key()` when copying a key from another location.
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +0200919* `"generate_key"`: called by `psa_generate_key()`.
Gilles Peskinedaf9d822020-08-06 22:11:30 +0200920* `"key_derivation_output_key"`: called by `psa_key_derivation_output_key()`.
Gilles Peskine929ab8a2020-08-05 22:18:38 +0200921* `"copy_key"`: called by `psa_copy_key()` when copying a key within the same [location](#lifetimes-and-locations).
Gilles Peskine48d71f22020-10-26 10:34:17 +0100922* `"get_builtin_key"`: called by functions that access a key to retrieve information about a [built-in key](#built-in-keys).
Gilles Peskine8d06ad02020-08-03 11:37:02 +0200923
924In addition, secure elements that store the key material internally must provide the following two entry points:
925
926* `"allocate_key"`: called by `psa_import_key()`, `psa_generate_key()`, `psa_key_derivation_output_key()` or `psa_copy_key()` before creating a key in the location of this driver.
927* `"destroy_key"`: called by `psa_destroy_key()`.
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +0200928
929#### Key creation in a secure element without storage
930
Gilles Peskine8d06ad02020-08-03 11:37:02 +0200931This section describes the key creation process for secure elements that do not store the key material. The driver must obtain a wrapped form of the key material which the core will store. A driver for such a secure element has no `"allocate_key"` or `"destroy_key"` entry point.
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +0200932
Gilles Peskine8d06ad02020-08-03 11:37:02 +0200933When creating a key with an opaque driver which does not have an `"allocate_key"` or `"destroy_key"` entry point:
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +0200934
9351. The core allocates memory for the key context.
Gilles Peskined4e69272020-08-06 21:10:20 +02009362. The core calls the driver's import, generate, derive or copy entry point.
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +02009373. The core saves the resulting wrapped key material and any other data that the key context may contain.
938
Gilles Peskine8d06ad02020-08-03 11:37:02 +0200939To destroy a key, the core simply destroys the wrapped key material, without invoking driver code.
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +0200940
Gilles Peskine8d06ad02020-08-03 11:37:02 +0200941#### Key management in a secure element with storage
942
943This section describes the key creation and key destruction processes for secure elements that have persistent storage for the key material. A driver for such a secure element has two mandatory entry points:
944
945* `"allocate_key"`: this function obtains an internal identifier for the key. This may be, for example, a unique label or a slot number.
946* `"destroy_key"`: this function invalidates the internal identifier and destroys the associated key material.
947
Gilles Peskine85b3e132020-08-06 22:20:07 +0200948These functions have the following prototypes for a driver with the prefix `"acme"`:
Gilles Peskine8d06ad02020-08-03 11:37:02 +0200949```
950psa_status_t acme_allocate_key(const psa_key_attributes_t *attributes,
951 uint8_t *key_buffer,
952 size_t key_buffer_size);
953psa_status_t acme_destroy_key(const psa_key_attributes_t *attributes,
954 const uint8_t *key_buffer,
955 size_t key_buffer_size);
956```
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +0200957
Gilles Peskine92149262020-08-03 11:35:49 +0200958When creating a persistent key with an opaque driver which has an `"allocate_key"` entry point:
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +0200959
Gilles Peskine8d06ad02020-08-03 11:37:02 +02009601. The core calls the driver's `"allocate_key"` entry point. This function typically allocates an internal identifier for the key without modifying the state of the secure element and stores the identifier in the key context. This function should not modify the state of the secure element. It may modify the copy of the persistent state of the driver in memory.
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +0200961
9621. The core saves the key context to persistent storage.
963
Gilles Peskine8d06ad02020-08-03 11:37:02 +02009641. The core calls the driver's key creation entry point.
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +0200965
Gilles Peskine8d06ad02020-08-03 11:37:02 +02009661. The core saves the updated key context to persistent storage.
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +0200967
Gilles Peskine8d06ad02020-08-03 11:37:02 +0200968If a failure occurs after the `"allocate_key"` step but before the call to the second driver entry point, the core will do one of the following:
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +0200969
Gilles Peskine8d06ad02020-08-03 11:37:02 +0200970* Fail the creation of the key without indicating this to the driver. This can happen, in particular, if the device loses power immediately after the key allocation entry point returns.
971* Call the driver's `"destroy_key"` entry point.
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +0200972
Gilles Peskine8d06ad02020-08-03 11:37:02 +0200973To destroy a key, the core calls the driver's `"destroy_key"` entry point.
974
Gilles Peskinec2592132020-08-07 13:52:43 +0200975Note that the key allocation and destruction entry points must not rely solely on the key identifier in the key attributes to identify a key. Some implementations of the PSA Cryptography API store keys on behalf of multiple clients, and different clients may use the same key identifier to designate different keys. The manner in which the core distinguishes keys that have the same identifier but are part of the key namespace for different clients is implementation-dependent and is not accessible to drivers. Some typical strategies to allocate an internal key identifier are:
Gilles Peskine8d06ad02020-08-03 11:37:02 +0200976
977* Maintain a set of free slot numbers which is stored either in the secure element or in the driver's persistent storage. To allocate a key slot, find a free slot number, mark it as occupied and store the number in the key context. When the key is destroyed, mark the slot number as free.
978* Maintain a monotonic counter with a practically unbounded range in the secure element or in the driver's persistent storage. To allocate a key slot, increment the counter and store the current value in the key context. Destroying a key does not change the counter.
979
980TODO: explain constraints on how the driver updates its persistent state for resilience
981
982TODO: some of the above doesn't apply to volatile keys
983
984#### Key creation entry points in opaque drivers
985
Gilles Peskine85b3e132020-08-06 22:20:07 +0200986The key creation entry points have the following prototypes for a driver with the prefix `"acme"`:
Gilles Peskine8d06ad02020-08-03 11:37:02 +0200987
988```
989psa_status_t acme_import_key(const psa_key_attributes_t *attributes,
990 const uint8_t *data,
991 size_t data_length,
992 uint8_t *key_buffer,
Gilles Peskine27e69b52020-09-19 00:35:01 +0200993 size_t key_buffer_size,
Gilles Peskine233f91d2020-10-02 17:48:04 +0200994 size_t *key_buffer_length,
995 size_t *bits);
Gilles Peskine8d06ad02020-08-03 11:37:02 +0200996psa_status_t acme_generate_key(const psa_key_attributes_t *attributes,
997 uint8_t *key_buffer,
Gilles Peskine27e69b52020-09-19 00:35:01 +0200998 size_t key_buffer_size,
999 size_t *key_buffer_length);
Gilles Peskine8d06ad02020-08-03 11:37:02 +02001000```
1001
Gilles Peskined4e69272020-08-06 21:10:20 +02001002If the driver has an [`"allocate_key"` entry point](#key-management-in-a-secure-element-with-storage), the core calls the `"allocate_key"` entry point with the same attributes on the same key buffer before calling the key creation entry point.
Gilles Peskine8d06ad02020-08-03 11:37:02 +02001003
1004TODO: derivation, copy
1005
1006#### Key export entry points in opaque drivers
1007
Gilles Peskine85b3e132020-08-06 22:20:07 +02001008The key export entry points have the following prototypes for a driver with the prefix `"acme"`:
Gilles Peskine8d06ad02020-08-03 11:37:02 +02001009
1010```
1011psa_status_t acme_export_key(const psa_key_attributes_t *attributes,
1012 const uint8_t *key_buffer,
Gilles Peskine22270b52020-09-18 22:54:51 +02001013 size_t key_buffer_size,
Gilles Peskine8d06ad02020-08-03 11:37:02 +02001014 uint8_t *data,
1015 size_t data_size,
1016 size_t *data_length);
1017psa_status_t acme_export_public_key(const psa_key_attributes_t *attributes,
1018 const uint8_t *key_buffer,
Gilles Peskine22270b52020-09-18 22:54:51 +02001019 size_t key_buffer_size,
Gilles Peskine8d06ad02020-08-03 11:37:02 +02001020 uint8_t *data,
1021 size_t data_size,
1022 size_t *data_length);
1023```
1024
1025The core will only call `acme_export_public_key` on a private key. Drivers implementers may choose to store the public key in the key context buffer or to recalculate it on demand. If the key context includes the public key, it needs to have an adequate size; see [“Key format for opaque drivers”](#key-format-for-opaque-drivers).
1026
1027The core guarantees that the size of the output buffer (`data_size`) is sufficient to export any key with the given attributes. The driver must set `*data_length` to the exact size of the exported key.
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +02001028
1029### Opaque driver persistent state
1030
1031The core maintains persistent state on behalf of an opaque driver. This persistent state consists of a single byte array whose size is given by the `"persistent_state_size"` property in the [driver description](#driver-description-top-level-element).
1032
Gilles Peskinec1d388a2020-08-03 12:02:30 +02001033The core loads the persistent state in memory before it calls the driver's [init entry point](#driver-initialization). It is adjusted to match the size declared by the driver, in case a driver upgrade changes the size:
1034
1035* The first time the driver is loaded on a system, the persistent state is all-bits-zero.
1036* If the stored persistent state is smaller than the declared size, the core pads the persistent state with all-bits-zero at the end.
1037* If the stored persistent state is larger than the declared size, the core truncates the persistent state to the declared size.
1038
1039The core provides the following callback functions, which an opaque driver may call while it is processing a call from the driver:
1040```
1041psa_status_t psa_crypto_driver_get_persistent_state(uint_8_t **persistent_state_ptr);
Gilles Peskine404e1db2020-08-05 22:37:29 +02001042psa_status_t psa_crypto_driver_commit_persistent_state(size_t from, size_t length);
Gilles Peskinec1d388a2020-08-03 12:02:30 +02001043```
1044
1045`psa_crypto_driver_get_persistent_state` sets `*persistent_state_ptr` to a pointer to the first byte of the persistent state. This pointer remains valid during a call to a driver entry point. Once the entry point returns, the pointer is no longer valid. The core guarantees that calls to `psa_crypto_driver_get_persistent_state` within the same entry point return the same address for the persistent state, but this address may change between calls to an entry point.
1046
Gilles Peskine404e1db2020-08-05 22:37:29 +02001047`psa_crypto_driver_commit_persistent_state` updates the persistent state in persistent storage. Only the portion at byte offsets `from` inclusive to `from + length` exclusive is guaranteed to be updated; it is unspecified whether changes made to other parts of the state are taken into account. The driver must call this function after updating the persistent state in memory and before returning from the entry point, otherwise it is unspecified whether the persistent state is updated.
1048
1049The core will not update the persistent state in storage while an entry point is running except when the entry point calls `psa_crypto_driver_commit_persistent_state`. It may update the persistent state in storage after an entry point returns.
Gilles Peskinec1d388a2020-08-03 12:02:30 +02001050
1051In a multithreaded environment, the driver may only call these two functions from the thread that is executing the entry point.
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +02001052
Gilles Peskine48d71f22020-10-26 10:34:17 +01001053#### Built-in keys
1054
1055Opaque drivers may declare built-in keys. Built-in keys can be accessed, but not created, through the PSA Cryptography API.
1056
Gilles Peskinea6454d22020-11-19 15:38:06 +01001057A built-in key is identified by its location and its **slot number**. Drivers that support built-in keys must provide a `"get_builtin_key"` entry point to retrieve the key data and metadata. The core calls this entry point when it needs to access the key, typically because the application requested an operation on the key. The core may keep information about the key in cache, and successive calls to access the same slot number should return the same data. This entry point has the following prototype:
Gilles Peskine48d71f22020-10-26 10:34:17 +01001058
1059```
1060psa_status_t acme_get_builtin_key(psa_drv_slot_number_t slot_number,
1061 psa_key_attributes_t *attributes,
1062 uint8_t *key_buffer,
Gilles Peskine3d673652021-01-20 20:19:14 +01001063 size_t key_buffer_size,
1064 size_t *key_buffer_length);
Gilles Peskine48d71f22020-10-26 10:34:17 +01001065```
1066
Gilles Peskine1fc4c8d2020-12-07 18:41:50 +01001067If this function returns `PSA_SUCCESS` or `PSA_ERROR_BUFFER_TOO_SMALL`, it must fill `attributes` with the attributes of the key (except for the key identifier). On success, this function must also fill `key_buffer` with the key context.
Gilles Peskine48d71f22020-10-26 10:34:17 +01001068
Steven Cooreman31e27af2021-04-14 10:32:05 +02001069On entry, `psa_get_key_lifetime(attributes)` is the location at which the driver was declared and a persistence level with which the platform is attempting to register the key. The driver entry point may choose to change the lifetime (`psa_set_key_lifetime(attributes, lifetime)`) of the reported key attributes to one with the same location but a different persistence level, in case the driver has more specific knowledge about the actual persistence level of the key which is being retrieved. For example, if a driver knows it cannot delete a key, it may override the persistence level in the lifetime to `PSA_KEY_PERSISTENCE_READ_ONLY`. The standard attributes other than the key identifier and lifetime have the value conveyed by `PSA_KEY_ATTRIBUTES_INIT`.
Gilles Peskine48d71f22020-10-26 10:34:17 +01001070
1071The output parameter `key_buffer` points to a writable buffer of `key_buffer_size` bytes. If the driver has a [`"builtin_key_size"` property](#key-format-for-opaque-drivers) property, `key_buffer_size` has this value, otherwise `key_buffer_size` has the value determined from the key type and size.
1072
Gilles Peskinea6454d22020-11-19 15:38:06 +01001073Typically, for a built-in key, the key context is a reference to key material that is kept inside the secure element, similar to the format returned by [`"allocate_key"`](#key-management-in-a-secure-element-with-storage). A driver may have built-in keys even if it doesn't have an `"allocate_key"` entry point.
1074
1075This entry point may return the following status values:
1076
Gilles Peskine3d673652021-01-20 20:19:14 +01001077* `PSA_SUCCESS`: the requested key exists, and the output parameters `attributes` and `key_buffer` contain the key metadata and key context respectively, and `*key_buffer_length` contains the length of the data written to `key_buffer`.
Gilles Peskine1fc4c8d2020-12-07 18:41:50 +01001078* `PSA_ERROR_BUFFER_TOO_SMALL`: `key_buffer_size` is insufficient. In this case, the driver must pass the key's attributes in `*attributes`. In particular, `get_builtin_key(slot_number, &attributes, NULL, 0)` is a way for the core to obtain the key's attributes.
Gilles Peskinea6454d22020-11-19 15:38:06 +01001079* `PSA_ERROR_DOES_NOT_EXIST`: the requested key does not exist.
Gilles Peskinea6454d22020-11-19 15:38:06 +01001080* Other error codes such as `PSA_ERROR_COMMUNICATION_FAILURE` or `PSA_ERROR_HARDWARE_FAILURE` indicate a transient or permanent error.
Gilles Peskine48d71f22020-10-26 10:34:17 +01001081
1082The core will pass authorized requests to destroy a built-in key to the [`"destroy_key"`](#key-management-in-a-secure-element-with-storage) entry point if there is one. If built-in keys must not be destroyed, it is up to the driver to reject such requests.
1083
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +02001084## How to use drivers from an application
1085
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +02001086### Using transparent drivers
1087
1088Transparent drivers linked into the library are automatically used for the mechanisms that they implement.
1089
1090### Using opaque drivers
1091
Gilles Peskine929ab8a2020-08-05 22:18:38 +02001092Each opaque driver is assigned a [location](#lifetimes-and-locations). The driver is invoked for all actions that use a key in that location. A key's location is indicated by its lifetime. The application chooses the key's lifetime when it creates the key.
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +02001093
Gilles Peskine85b3e132020-08-06 22:20:07 +02001094For example, the following snippet creates an AES-GCM key which is only accessible inside the secure element designated by the location `PSA_KEY_LOCATION_acme`.
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +02001095```
1096psa_key_attributes_t attributes = PSA_KEY_ATTRIBUTES_INIT;
1097psa_set_key_lifetime(&attributes, PSA_KEY_LIFETIME_FROM_PERSISTENCE_AND_LOCATION(
Gilles Peskine71db60b2020-07-13 13:18:28 +02001098 PSA_KEY_PERSISTENCE_DEFAULT, PSA_KEY_LOCATION_acme));
Gilles Peskine055be832021-01-25 11:36:24 +01001099psa_set_key_identifier(&attributes, 42);
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +02001100psa_set_key_type(&attributes, PSA_KEY_TYPE_AES);
1101psa_set_key_size(&attributes, 128);
1102psa_set_key_algorithm(&attributes, PSA_ALG_GCM);
1103psa_set_key_usage_flags(&attributes, PSA_KEY_USAGE_ENCRYPT | PSA_KEY_USAGE_DECRYPT);
Ronald Croncf56a0a2020-08-04 09:51:30 +02001104psa_key_id_t key;
1105psa_generate_key(&attributes, &key);
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +02001106```
1107
Gilles Peskine71db60b2020-07-13 13:18:28 +02001108## Using opaque drivers from an application
1109
Gilles Peskine929ab8a2020-08-05 22:18:38 +02001110### Lifetimes and locations
1111
1112The PSA Cryptography API, version 1.0.0, defines [lifetimes](https://armmbed.github.io/mbed-crypto/html/api/keys/attributes.html?highlight=psa_key_lifetime_t#c.psa_key_lifetime_t) as an attribute of a key that indicates where the key is stored and which application and system actions will create and destroy it. The lifetime is expressed as a 32-bit value (`typedef uint32_t psa_key_lifetime_t`). An upcoming version of the PSA Cryptography API defines more structure for lifetime values to separate these two aspects of the lifetime:
1113
1114* Bits 07 are a _persistence level_. This value indicates what device management actions can cause it to be destroyed. In particular, it indicates whether the key is volatile or persistent.
1115* Bits 831 are a _location indicator_. This value indicates where the key material is stored and where operations on the key are performed. Location values can be stored in a variable of type `psa_key_location_t`.
1116
1117An opaque driver is attached to a specific location. Keys in the default location (`PSA_KEY_LOCATION_LOCAL_STORAGE = 0`) are transparent: the core has direct access to the key material. For keys in a location that is managed by an opaque driver, only the secure element has access to the key material and can perform operations on the key, while the core only manipulates a wrapped form of the key or an identifier of the key.
1118
1119### Creating a key in a secure element
1120
Gilles Peskinee265b9d2020-08-05 22:20:24 +02001121The core defines a compile-time constant for each opaque driver indicating its location called `PSA_KEY_LOCATION_`*prefix* where *prefix* is the value of the `"prefix"` property in the driver description. For convenience, Mbed TLS also declares a compile-time constant for the corresponding lifetime with the default persistence called `PSA_KEY_LIFETIME_`*prefix*. Therefore, to declare an opaque key in the location with the prefix `foo` with the default persistence, call `psa_set_key_lifetime` during the key creation as follows:
Gilles Peskine71db60b2020-07-13 13:18:28 +02001122```
1123psa_set_key_lifetime(&attributes, PSA_KEY_LIFETIME_foo);
1124```
1125
1126To declare a volatile key:
1127```
1128psa_set_key_lifetime(&attributes, PSA_KEY_LIFETIME_FROM_PERSISTENCE_AND_LOCATION(
1129 PSA_KEY_LOCATION_foo,
1130 PSA_KEY_PERSISTENCE_VOLATILE));
1131```
1132
1133Generally speaking, to declare a key with a specified persistence:
1134```
1135psa_set_key_lifetime(&attributes, PSA_KEY_LIFETIME_FROM_PERSISTENCE_AND_LOCATION(
1136 PSA_KEY_LOCATION_foo,
1137 persistence));
1138```
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +02001139
1140## Open questions
1141
Gilles Peskine3ff79062020-11-23 12:31:38 +01001142### Value representation
1143
1144#### Integers
1145
1146It would be better if there was a uniform requirement on integer values. Do they have to be JSON integers? C preprocessor integers (which could be e.g. a macro defined in some header file)? C compile-time constants (allowing `sizeof`)?
1147
1148This choice is partly driven by the use of the values, so they might not be uniform. Note that if the value can be zero and it's plausible that the core would want to statically allocate an array of the given size, the core needs to know whether the value is 0 so that it could use code like
1149```
1150#if ACME_FOO_SIZE != 0
1151 uint8_t foo[ACME_FOO_SIZE];
1152#endif
1153```
1154
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +02001155### Driver declarations
1156
Gilles Peskine2e843ae2020-08-19 21:43:59 +02001157#### Declaring driver entry points
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +02001158
Gilles Peskine2e843ae2020-08-19 21:43:59 +02001159The core may want to provide declarations for the driver entry points so that it can compile code using them. At the time of writing this paragraph, the driver headers must define types but there is no obligation for them to declare functions. The core knows what the function names and argument types are, so it can generate prototypes.
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +02001160
1161It should be ok for driver functions to be function-like macros or function pointers.
1162
1163#### Driver location values
1164
1165How does a driver author decide which location values to use? It should be possible to combine drivers from different sources. Use the same vendor assignment as for PSA services?
1166
1167Can the driver assembly process generate distinct location values as needed? This can be convenient, but it's also risky: if you upgrade a device, you need the location values to be the same between builds.
1168
Gilles Peskine2e843ae2020-08-19 21:43:59 +02001169The current plan is for Arm to maintain a registry of vendors and assign a location namespace to each vendor. Parts of the namespace would be reserved for implementations and integrators.
1170
Gilles Peskine15319452020-08-06 22:47:39 +02001171#### Multiple transparent drivers
1172
1173When multiple transparent drivers implement the same mechanism, which one is called? The first one? The last one? Unspecified? Or is this an error (excluding capabilities with fallback enabled)?
1174
Gilles Peskine2e843ae2020-08-19 21:43:59 +02001175The current choice is that the first one is used, which allows having a preference order on drivers, but may mask integration errors.
1176
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +02001177### Driver function interfaces
1178
1179#### Driver function parameter conventions
1180
1181Should 0-size buffers be guaranteed to have a non-null pointers?
1182
1183Should drivers really have to cope with overlap?
1184
1185Should the core guarantee that the output buffer size has the size indicated by the applicable buffer size macro (which may be an overestimation)?
1186
Gilles Peskined2fe1d52023-05-31 00:41:57 +02001187#### Key derivation inputs and buffer ownership
1188
1189Why is `psa_crypto_driver_key_derivation_get_input_bytes` a copy, rather than giving a pointer?
1190
1191The main reason is to avoid complex buffer ownership. A driver entry point does not own memory after the entry point return. This is generally necessary because an API function does not own memory after the entry point returns. In the case of key derivation inputs, this could be relaxed because the driver entry point is making callbacks to the core: these functions could return a pointer that is valid until the driver entry point, which would allow the driver to process the data immediately (e.g. hash it rather than copy it).
1192
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +02001193### Partial computations in drivers
1194
1195#### Substitution points
1196
1197Earlier drafts of the driver interface had a concept of _substitution points_: places in the calculation where a driver may be called. Some hardware doesn't do the whole calculation, but only the “main” part. This goes both for transparent and opaque drivers. Some common examples:
1198
1199* A processor that performs the RSA exponentiation, but not the padding. The driver should be able to leverage the padding code in the core.
1200* A processor that performs a block cipher operation only for a single block, or only in ECB mode, or only in CTR mode. The core would perform the block mode (CBC, CTR, CCM, ...).
1201
1202This concept, or some other way to reuse portable code such as specifying inner functions like `psa_rsa_pad` in the core, should be added to the specification.
1203
1204### Key management
1205
1206#### Mixing drivers in key derivation
1207
1208How does `psa_key_derivation_output_key` work when the extraction part and the expansion part use different drivers?
1209
Gilles Peskineab808e72020-08-03 13:43:02 +02001210#### Public key calculation
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +02001211
Gilles Peskineab808e72020-08-03 13:43:02 +02001212ECC key pairs are represented as the private key value only. The public key needs to be calculated from that. Both transparent drivers and opaque drivers provide a function to calculate the public key (`"export_public_key"`).
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +02001213
Gilles Peskineab808e72020-08-03 13:43:02 +02001214The specification doesn't mention when the public key might be calculated. The core may calculate it on creation, on demand, or anything in between. Opaque drivers have a choice of storing the public key in the key context or calculating it on demand and can convey whether the core should store the public key with the `"store_public_key"` property. Is this good enough or should the specification include non-functional requirements?
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +02001215
Gilles Peskinea8fc1712020-09-21 13:54:00 +02001216#### Symmetric key validation with transparent drivers
1217
1218Should the entry point be called for symmetric keys as well?
1219
Gilles Peskine99e52f62020-11-24 13:09:50 +01001220#### Support for custom import formats
1221
1222[“Driver entry points for key management”](#driver-entry-points-for-key-management) states that the input to `"import_key"` can be an implementation-defined format. Is this a good idea? It reduces driver portability, since a core that accepts a custom format would not work with a driver that doesn't accept this format. On the other hand, if a driver accepts a custom format, the core should let it through because the driver presumably handles it more efficiently (in terms of speed and code size) than the core could.
1223
1224Allowing custom formats also causes a problem with import: the core can't know the size of the key representation until it knows the bit-size of the key, but determining the bit-size of the key is part of the job of the `"import_key"` entry point. For standard key types, this could plausibly be an issue for RSA private keys, where an implementation might accept a custom format that omits the CRT parameters (or that omits *d*).
1225
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +02001226### Opaque drivers
1227
1228#### Opaque driver persistent state
1229
Gilles Peskinec1d388a2020-08-03 12:02:30 +02001230The driver is allowed to update the state at any time. Is this ok?
1231
1232An example use case for updating the persistent state at arbitrary times is to renew a key that is used to encrypt communications between the application processor and the secure element.
1233
1234`psa_crypto_driver_get_persistent_state` does not identify the calling driver, so the driver needs to remember which driver it's calling. This may require a thread-local variable in a multithreaded core. Is this ok?
Gilles Peskine2e66aca2020-07-13 11:27:13 +02001235
Gilles Peskinea2b41592022-01-24 14:52:59 +01001236#### Fallback for key derivation in opaque drivers
1237
1238Should [dispatch to an opaque driver](#key-derivation-driver-dispatch-logic) allow fallback, so that if `"key_derivation_setup"` returns `PSA_ERROR_NOT_SUPPORTED` then the core exports the key from the secure element instead?
1239
1240Should the ["`key_derivation_output_key`"](#key-derivation-driver-outputs) capability indicate which key types the driver can derive? How should fallback work? For example, consider a secure element that implements HMAC, HKDF and ECDSA, and that can derive an HMAC key from HKDF without exporting intermediate material but can only import or randomly generate ECC keys. How does this driver convey that it can't derive an ECC key with HKDF, but it can let the core do this and import the resulting key?
1241
Gilles Peskine3eb65fb2020-11-16 21:53:16 +01001242### Randomness
1243
1244#### Input to `"add_entropy"`
1245
1246Should the input to the [`"add_entropy"` entry point](#entropy-injection) be a full-entropy buffer (with data from all entropy sources already mixed), raw entropy direct from the entropy sources, or give the core a choice?
1247
1248* Raw data: drivers must implement entropy mixing. `"add_entropy"` needs an extra parameter to indicate the amount of entropy in the data. The core must not do any conditioning.
1249* Choice: drivers must implement entropy mixing. `"add_entropy"` needs an extra parameter to indicate the amount of entropy in the data. The core may do conditioning if it wants, but doesn't have to.
1250* Full entropy: drivers don't need to do entropy mixing.
1251
Gilles Peskine1ef6ad42020-11-16 21:59:58 +01001252#### Flags for `"get_entropy"`
1253
1254Are the [entropy collection flags](#entropy-collection-flags) well-chosen?
1255
Gilles Peskine609394c2020-11-18 15:44:12 +01001256#### Random generator instantiations
1257
1258May the core instantiate a random generation context more than once? In other words, can there be multiple objects of type `acme_random_context_t`?
1259
1260Functionally, one RNG is as good as any. If the core wants some parts of the system to use a deterministic generator for reproducibility, it can't use this interface anyway, since the RNG is not necessarily deterministic. However, for performance on multiprocessor systems, a multithreaded core could prefer to use one RNG instance per thread.
1261
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