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Re: [Qemu-devel] [PATCH v5 1/4] Provide support for the CUSE TPM


From: Xu, Quan
Subject: Re: [Qemu-devel] [PATCH v5 1/4] Provide support for the CUSE TPM
Date: Wed, 1 Jun 2016 01:58:00 +0000

On Wednesday, June 01, 2016 2:59 AM, BICKFORD, JEFFREY E <address@hidden> wrote:
> > * Daniel P. Berrange (address@hidden) wrote:
> > > On Wed, Jan 20, 2016 at 10:54:47AM -0500, Stefan Berger wrote:
> > > > On 01/20/2016 10:46 AM, Daniel P. Berrange wrote:
> > > > >On Wed, Jan 20, 2016 at 10:31:56AM -0500, Stefan Berger wrote:
> > > > >>"Daniel P. Berrange" <address@hidden> wrote on 01/20/2016
> > > > >>10:00:41
> > > > >>AM:
> > > > >>
> > > > >>
> > > > >>>process at all - it would make sense if there was a single
> > > > >>>swtpm_cuse shared across all QEMU's, but if there's one per
> > > > >>>QEMU device, it feels like it'd be much simpler to just have
> > > > >>>the functionality linked in QEMU.  That avoids the problem
> > > > >>I tried having it linked in QEMU before. It was basically rejected.
> > > > >I remember an impl you did many years(?) ago now, but don't
> > > > >recall the results of the discussion. Can you elaborate on why it
> > > > >was rejected as an approach ? It just doesn't make much sense to
> > > > >me to have to create an external daemon, a CUSE device and comms
> > > > >protocol, simply to be able to read/write a plain file containing
> > > > >the TPM state. Its massive over engineering IMHO and adding way
> > > > >more complexity and thus scope for failure
> > > >
> > > > The TPM 1.2 implementation adds 10s of thousands of lines of code.
> > > > The TPM 2 implementation is in the same range. The concern was
> > > > having this code right in the QEMU address space. It's big, it can
> > > > have bugs, so we don't want it to harm QEMU. So we now put this
> > > > into an external process implemented by the swtpm project that
> > > > builds on libtpms which provides TPM 1.2 functionality (to be
> > > > extended with TPM 2). We cannot call APIs of libtpms directly
> > > > anymore, so we need a control channel, which is implemented through
> ioctls on the CUSE device.
> > >
> > > Ok, the security separation concern does make some sense. The use of
> > > CUSE still seems fairly questionable to me. CUSE makes sense if you
> > > want to provide a drop-in replacement for the kernel TPM device
> > > driver, which would avoid ned for a new QEMU backend. If you're not
> > > emulating an existing kernel driver ABI though, CUSE + ioctl is
> > > feels like a really awful RPC transport between 2 userspace processes.
> 
> > While I don't really like CUSE; I can see some of the reasoning here.
> > By providing the existing TPM ioctl interface I think it means you can
> > use existing host-side TPM tools to initialise/query the soft-tpm, and
> > those should be independent of the soft-tpm implementation.
> > As for the extra interfaces you need because it's a soft-tpm to set it
> > up, once you've already got that ioctl interface as above, then it
> > seems to make sense to extend that to add the extra interfaces needed.
> > The only thing you have to watch for there are that the extra
> > interfaces don't clash with any future kernel ioctl extensions, and
> > that the interface defined is generic enough for different soft-tpm
> implementations.
> 
> > Dave
> > Dr. David Alan Gilbert / address@hidden / Manchester, UK
> 
> 
> Over the past several months, AT&T Security Research has been testing the
> Virtual TPM software from IBM on the Power (ppc64) platform.

What about x86 platform?

> Based on our
> testing results, the vTPM software works well and as expected. Support for
> libvirt and the CUSE TPM allows us to create VMs with the vTPM functionality
> and was tested in a full-fledged OpenStack environment.
>

Cool..

> We believe the vTPM functionality will improve various aspects of VM security
> in our enterprise-grade cloud environment. AT&T would like to see these
> patches accepted into the QEMU community as the default-standard build so
> this technology can be easily adopted in various open source cloud
> deployments.

Stefan: could you update status about this patch set? I'd really appreciate 
your patch..

-Quan



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