@@ -205,6 +205,14 @@ Before jumping into the kernel, the following conditions must be met:
ICC_SRE_EL2.SRE (bit 0) must be initialised to 0b0.
- The DT or ACPI tables must describe a GICv2 interrupt controller.
+ For CPUs with pointer authentication functionality:
+ - If EL3 is present:
+ SCR_EL3.APK (bit 16) must be initialised to 0b1
+ SCR_EL3.API (bit 17) must be initialised to 0b1
+ - If the kernel is entered at EL1:
+ HCR_EL2.APK (bit 40) must be initialised to 0b1
+ HCR_EL2.API (bit 41) must be initialised to 0b1
+
The requirements described above for CPU mode, caches, MMUs, architected
timers, coherency and system registers apply to all CPUs. All CPUs must
enter the kernel in the same exception level.
@@ -178,3 +178,9 @@ HWCAP_ILRCPC
HWCAP_FLAGM
Functionality implied by ID_AA64ISAR0_EL1.TS == 0b0001.
+
+HWCAP_APIA
+
+ EL0 AddPac and Auth functionality using APIAKey_EL1 is enabled, as
+ described by Documentation/arm64/pointer-authentication.txt.
+
new file mode 100644
@@ -0,0 +1,84 @@
+Pointer authentication in AArch64 Linux
+=======================================
+
+Author: Mark Rutland <mark.rutland@arm.com>
+Date: 2017-07-19
+
+This document briefly describes the provision of pointer authentication
+functionality in AArch64 Linux.
+
+
+Architecture overview
+---------------------
+
+The ARMv8.3 Pointer Authentication extension adds primitives that can be
+used to mitigate certain classes of attack where an attacker can corrupt
+the contents of some memory (e.g. the stack).
+
+The extension uses a Pointer Authentication Code (PAC) to determine
+whether pointers have been modified unexpectedly. A PAC is derived from
+a pointer, another value (such as the stack pointer), and a secret key
+held in system registers.
+
+The extension adds instructions to insert a valid PAC into a pointer,
+and to verify/remove the PAC from a pointer. The PAC occupies a number
+of high-order bits of the pointer, which varies dependent on the
+configured virtual address size and whether pointer tagging is in use.
+
+A subset of these instructions have been allocated from the HINT
+encoding space. In the absence of the extension (or when disabled),
+these instructions behave as NOPs. Applications and libraries using
+these instructions operate correctly regardless of the presence of the
+extension.
+
+
+Basic support
+-------------
+
+When CONFIG_ARM64_PTR_AUTH is selected, and relevant HW support is
+present, the kernel will assign a random APIAKey value to each process
+at exec*() time. This key is shared by all threads within the process,
+and the key is preserved across fork(). Presence of functionality using
+APIAKey is advertised via HWCAP_APIA.
+
+Recent versions of GCC can compile code with APIAKey-based return
+address protection when passed the -msign-return-address option. This
+uses instructions in the HINT space, and such code can run on systems
+without the pointer authentication extension.
+
+The remaining instruction and data keys (APIBKey, APDAKey, APDBKey) are
+reserved for future use, and instructions using these keys must not be
+used by software until a purpose and scope for their use has been
+decided. To enable future software using these keys to function on
+contemporary kernels, where possible, instructions using these keys are
+made to behave as NOPs.
+
+The generic key (APGAKey) is currently unsupported. Instructions using
+the generic key must not be used by software.
+
+
+Debugging
+---------
+
+When CONFIG_ARM64_PTR_AUTH is selected, and relevant HW support is
+present, the kernel will expose the position of TTBR0 PAC bits in the
+NT_ARM_PAC_MASK regset (struct user_pac_mask), which userspace can
+acqure via PTRACE_GETREGSET.
+
+Separate masks are exposed for data pointers and instruction pointers,
+as the set of PAC bits can vary between the two. Debuggers should not
+expect that HWCAP_APIA implies the presence (or non-presence) of this
+regset -- in future the kernel may support the use of APIBKey, APDAKey,
+and/or APBAKey, even in the absence of APIAKey.
+
+Note that the masks apply to TTBR0 addresses, and are not valid to apply
+to TTBR1 addresses (e.g. kernel pointers).
+
+
+Virtualization
+--------------
+
+Pointer authentication is not currently supported in KVM guests. KVM
+will mask the feature bits from ID_AA64ISAR1_EL1, and attempted use of
+the feature will result in an UNDEFINED exception being injected into
+the guest.
Now that we've added code to support pointer authentication, add some documentation so that people can figure out if/how to use it. Signed-off-by: Mark Rutland <mark.rutland@arm.com> Cc: Andrew Jones <drjones@redhat.com> Cc: Catalin Marinas <catalin.marinas@arm.com> Cc: Ramana Radhakrishnan <ramana.radhakrishnan@arm.com> Cc: Will Deacon <will.deacon@arm.com> --- Documentation/arm64/booting.txt | 8 +++ Documentation/arm64/elf_hwcaps.txt | 6 ++ Documentation/arm64/pointer-authentication.txt | 84 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 3 files changed, 98 insertions(+) create mode 100644 Documentation/arm64/pointer-authentication.txt -- 2.11.0