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395 lines
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Markdown
395 lines
15 KiB
Markdown
# Passing a secret to a TPM using only the public key of Endorsement Key (EK)
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This is example code to pass a secret to a system by just knowing its endorsenment key's public key.
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We will be using the current (commit 07a92e9fa75548ea102ce90b3b6182093b3f7a73 or later) master branch of https://github.com/tpm2-software/tpm2-pytss
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The terms for the systems are `client`, the system we want to pass the secret to and `server`, the system which has the secret but doesn't need a TPM.
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One assumtion that will be made is that you already have the EKpub for the remote system on the local system, and trust it.
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While we will use the EK in this guide any key accepted by ActivateCredential should work.
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## Background
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What we want is something akin to asymmetric encryption, with the local
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system encrypting to the public key of the remote system. The local
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system would send the ciphertext to the remote system, and the remote
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system would decrypt it using its private key.
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The TPM does support plain asymmetric decryption using
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`TPM2_RSA_Decrypt()`. However, the `EK` is a [restricted
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key](/Intro/README.md#Restricted-Cryptographic-Keys), specifically a
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[restricted decryption key](/Intro/README.md#Restricted-Decryption-Keys)
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which means that `TPM2_RSA_Decrypt()` will not work.
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The TPM supports two constrained asymmetric decryption operations with
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[restricted decryption
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keys](/Intro/README.md#Restricted-Decryption-Keys):
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- [`TPM2_Import()`](/TPM-Commands/TPM2_Import.md)
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- [`TPM2_ActivateCredential()`](/TPM-Commands/TPM2_ActivateCredential.md)
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The sender sides of those two functions are, respectively:
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- [`TPM2_Duplicate()`](/TPM-Commands/TPM2_Duplicate.md)
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- [`TPM2_MakeCredential()`](/TPM-Commands/TPM2_MakeCredential.md)
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`TPM2_Duplicate()`/`TPM2_Import()` are specifically about sharing
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private key objects from one TPM to another. We won't use those here.
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[`TPM2_MakeCredential()`](/TPM-Commands/TPM2_MakeCredential.md) allows
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us to encrypt a small secret (e.g., an AES key) to a remote system's
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`EKpub`, and then the remote system can decrypt that with its `EK` using
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[`TPM2_ActivateCredential()`](/TPM-Commands/TPM2_ActivateCredential.md).
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The key background concepts here are:
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- [restricted decryption keys](/Intro/README.md#Restricted-Decryption-Keys),
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- and access controlled decryption with restricted decryption keys.
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Most importantly,
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[`TPM2_MakeCredential()`](/TPM-Commands/TPM2_MakeCredential.md) allows
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the sender to specify an authorization policy that the caller of
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[`TPM2_ActivateCredential()`](/TPM-Commands/TPM2_ActivateCredential.md)
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must meet in order for it to be willing to decrypt the ciphertext.
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> Note that `TPM2_MakeCredential()` can be implemented entirely in
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> software.
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> Note that duplicating a key that is fixed to TPMs requires using
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> `TPM2_Duplicate()` on that TPM, otherwise if the key is not fixed to
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> the TPM then `TPM2_Duplicate()` can be implemented in software.
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## Concept
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`TPM2_MakeCredential()` requires three inputs. Besides the target's
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`EKpub` and the small secret to send to it, `TPM2_MakeCredential()` also
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requires the [cryptographic name](/Intro/README.md#Cryptographic-Object-Naming)
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of a key object that must reside on the target system's TPM -- this is
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known as the _activation object_.
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The key insight is that the actual public key of the object named by the
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activation object name input of `TPM2_MakeCredential()` is not used at
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all. Neither does `TPM2_ActivateCredential()` use the private key of
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that object. The only things that matter about the activation object
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are that:
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a) it must exist on the target system,
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b) its cryptographic name must be the same as was used on the sender side,
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c) and that the caller of `TPM2_ActivateCredential()` must satisfy the activation object's [_authorization policy_](/Intro/README.md#Policies) (_if_ `adminWithPolicy` is set as an attribute of the activation object).
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> NOTE: The cryptographic name of an object binds the authorization
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> policy set on that object. Therefore the caller of
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> `TPM2_MakeCredential()` specifies an authorization policy that the
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> caller of `TPM2_ActivateCredential()` must meet if the
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> `adminWithPolicy` attribute is set on the activation object.
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> NOTE: Learn more about [restricted keys](/Intro/README.md#Restricted-Cryptographic-Keys),
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> [authorization policies](/Intro/README.md#Policies), and
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> user roles in our [introductory tutorial](/Intro/README.md).
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Since the private and public key parts of the activation object are not
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used and are irrelevant, they can even be fixed and published for all to
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see, even the private key.
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By using a well-known activation key we can avoid having to know the
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cryptographic name of some unique object on the remote system's TPM!
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Or we can generate a unique key but send its private part in the clear
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to the remote system.
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Thus we need only know the target system's TPM's `EKpub`.
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## server script
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```python
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#!/usr/bin/python3
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import sys
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from tpm2_pytss import *
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from tpm2_pytss.makecred import MakeCredential
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from cryptography.hazmat.primitives.asymmetric import ec
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from cryptography.hazmat.backends import default_backend
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from cryptography.hazmat.primitives.serialization import Encoding, PublicFormat, PrivateFormat, NoEncryption
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def main(ekpath, publicpath, sensitivepath, credpath, secretpath, oursecret):
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# first read the EK and unmarshal it
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with open(ekpath, 'rb') as ef:
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ekb = ef.read()
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ekpub, _ = TPM2B_PUBLIC.Unmarshal(ekb)
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# Now we generate the temporary key pair
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# We are using ECC keys here as they are generally fast to generate, but RSA should work as well
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# We will use the curve SECP256R1 as it should work on all TPMs
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# One could use a well known/the same pre-generated key for multiple systems
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privatekey = ec.generate_private_key(ec.SECP256R1, backend=default_backend())
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publickey = privatekey.public_key()
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# Now it's time to TPM structures from the keys
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# First we need to encode it due to how the tpm2_pytss API currently works
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privateenc = privatekey.private_bytes(Encoding.DER, PrivateFormat.PKCS8, NoEncryption())
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publicenc = publickey.public_bytes(Encoding.DER, PublicFormat.SubjectPublicKeyInfo)
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sensitive = TPM2B_SENSITIVE.fromPEM(privateenc)
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# by objectAttributes to 0 we reduce the change that keys will be used for anything
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public = TPM2B_PUBLIC.fromPEM(publicenc, objectAttributes=0)
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# the same applices to authPolicy
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public.publicArea.authPolicy = b"\x00" * 32
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# now it's time to run the MakeCredential part, using the software implementation in tpm2_pytss
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# the API is slight different to the standard, but behaves the same
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credblob, secret = MakeCredential(ekpub, oursecret, bytes(public.getName()))
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# time to marshal the structures and save them to disk so we can send them the remote system
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pubb = public.Marshal()
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with open(publicpath, 'xb') as pubf:
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pubf.write(pubb)
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sensb = sensitive.Marshal()
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with open(sensitivepath, 'xb') as sensf:
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sensf.write(sensb)
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credb = credblob.Marshal()
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with open(credpath, 'xb') as credf:
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credf.write(credb)
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secretb = secret.Marshal()
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with open(secretpath, 'xb') as secretf:
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secretf.write(secretb)
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if __name__ == '__main__':
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if len(sys.argv) < 6:
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sys.stderr.write(f"usage: {sys.argv[0]} ek-public temp-public temp-sensitive credblob secret\n")
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exit(1)
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main(sys.argv[1], sys.argv[2], sys.argv[3], sys.argv[4], sys.argv[5], b"example secret")
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```
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Arguments to the script is the following:
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ek-public: the path to the public part of the EK
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temp-public: where to save the public part of the temporary key
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temp-sensitive: where to save the sensitive part of the temporary key
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credlob: where to save the encrypted credential generated by MakeCredential
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secret: where to save the encrypted secret generated by MakeCredential
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## client script
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```python
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#!/usr/bin/python3
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import sys
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from tpm2_pytss import *
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def unmarshal_tools_context(ekb):
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ekctx = TPMS_CONTEXT()
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magic = int.from_bytes(ekb[0:4], byteorder='big')
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version = int.from_bytes(ekb[4:8], byteorder='big')
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ekctx.hierarchy = int.from_bytes(ekb[8:12], byteorder='big')
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ekctx.savedHandle = int.from_bytes(ekb[12:16], byteorder='big')
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ekctx.sequence = int.from_bytes(ekb[16:24], byteorder='big')
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ekctx.contextBlob, _ = TPM2B_CONTEXT_DATA.Unmarshal(ekb[24:])
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return ekctx
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def eksession(ectx):
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session = ectx.StartAuthSession(
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ESYS_TR.NONE,
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ESYS_TR.NONE,
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None,
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TPM2_SE.POLICY,
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TPMT_SYM_DEF(algorithm=TPM2_ALG.NULL),
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TPM2_ALG.SHA256,
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)
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ectx.PolicySecret(
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ESYS_TR.RH_ENDORSEMENT,
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session,
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TPM2B_NONCE()._cdata,
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TPM2B_DIGEST()._cdata,
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TPM2B_NONCE()._cdata,
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0,
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session1=ESYS_TR.PASSWORD,
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)
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return session
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def main(ekpath, publicpath, sensitivepath, credpath, secretpath):
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# time to setup a ESAPI context, we will use the default TCTI for the system
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ectx = ESAPI()
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# Time to load the EK context, by using tpm2_createek there is no reason the implement the whole setup in this example code
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with open(ekpath, 'rb') as ekf:
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ekb = ekf.read()
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ekctx = unmarshal_tools_context(ekb)
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ekhandle = ectx.ContextLoad(ekctx)
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# now lets setup the standard EK policy session
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session = eksession(ectx)
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# Now we should read, unmarshal and load the temporary key pair
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with open(publicpath, 'rb') as pubf:
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pubb = pubf.read()
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public, _ = TPM2B_PUBLIC.Unmarshal(pubb)
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with open(sensitivepath, 'rb') as sensf:
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sensb = sensf.read()
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sensitive, _ = TPM2B_SENSITIVE.Unmarshal(sensb)
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print(sensitive.sensitiveArea.authValue.size, public.publicArea.authPolicy.size)
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# We will load it under the NULL hierarchy as that is the only hierarchy allowing both the public and private part to be loaded for external keys
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handle = ectx.LoadExternal(sensitive, public, ESYS_TR.RH_NULL)
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# Time to read and unmarshal the credential and secret for ActivateCredential
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with open(credpath, 'rb') as credf:
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credb = credf.read()
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credblob, _ = TPM2B_ID_OBJECT.Unmarshal(credb)
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with open(secretpath, 'rb') as secretf:
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secretb = secretf.read()
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secret, _ = TPM2B_ENCRYPTED_SECRET.Unmarshal(secretb)
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# Well, now there is nothing left but calling ActivateCredential and getting our secret on the remove system!
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oursecret = ectx.ActivateCredential(handle, ekhandle, credblob, secret, session2=session)
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print(f"we got the secret: {bytes(oursecret)}")
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if __name__ == '__main__':
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if len(sys.argv) < 6:
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sys.stderr.write(f"usage: {sys.argv[0]} ek-ctx temp-public temp-sensitive credblob secret\n")
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exit(1)
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main(sys.argv[1], sys.argv[2], sys.argv[3], sys.argv[4], sys.argv[5])
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```
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Generate the EK context with `tpm2_createek -c ek.ctx`
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The arguments are:
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ek-ctx: the context generated by tpm2_createek
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temp-public: the temp-public output from the local system script
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temp-sensitive: the temp-sensitive output from the local system script
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credblob: the credblob output from the local system script
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secret: the secret output from the local system script
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## Example (bash)
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This example uses two bash scripts:
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- [`send-to-tpm.sh`](send-to-tpm.sh)
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- [`tpm-receive.sh`](tpm-receive.sh)
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Usage messages for those two scripts:
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```
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Usage: send-to-tpm.sh EK-PUB-FILE SECRET-FILE OUT-FILE [POLICY-CMD [ARGS [\; ...]]]
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send-to-tpm.sh -P well-known-key-name EK-PUB-FILE SECRET-FILE OUT-FILE
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Options:
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-h This help message.
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-P WKname Use the given cryptographic name binding a policy for
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recipient to meet.
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-f Overwrite OUT-FILE.
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-x Trace this script.
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```
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```
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Usage: receive.sh CIPHERTEXT-FILE OUT-FILE [POLICY-CMD [ARGS] [;] ...]
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"Activates" (decrypts) CIPHERTEXT-FILE made with TPM2_MakeCredential and
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writes the plaintext to OUT-FILE.
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The POLICY-CMD and arguments are one or more commands that must
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leave a policy digest in a file named 'policy' in the current
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directory (which will be a temporary directory).
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Options:
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-h This help message.
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-f Overwrite OUT-FILE.
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-x Trace this script.
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```
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Example (without policy, both scripts running on the same system):
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```
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: ; # NOTE: The shell prompt ($PS1) is set to ': ; ' to make it easy to
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: ; # cut-and-paste.
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: ;
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: ; # Get the EKpub:
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: ; tpm2 createek --ek-context ek.ctx --public ek.pub
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: ;
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: ; # Make a small secret:
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: ; echo hello world > secret.txt
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: ;
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: ; # Make ciphertext:
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: ; /tmp/send-to-tpm.sh -f ek.pub /tmp/secret /tmp/cipher
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: ;
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: ; # Decrypt ciphertext:
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: ; /tmp/receive.sh -f /tmp/cipher /tmp/plain
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name:
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000b9f40e7a7a85bcc39bba777b7eda5764d91a28512d91d395ca114b14621ae321e
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837197674484b3f81a90cc8d46a5d724fd52d76e06520b64f2a1da1b331469aa
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certinfodata:68656c6c6f20776f726c640a
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: ;
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: ; # Show plaintext:
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: ; cat /tmp/plain
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hello world
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```
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Example (with policy, both scripts running on the same system):
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```
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: ; # NOTE: The shell prompt ($PS1) is set to ': ; ' to make it easy to
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: ; # cut-and-paste.
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: ;
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: ; # Get the EKpub:
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: ; tpm2 createek --ek-context ek.ctx --public ek.pub
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: ;
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: ; # Make a small secret:
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: ; echo hello world > secret.txt
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: ;
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: ; /tmp/send-to-tpm.sh -f ek.pub /tmp/secret /tmp/cipher \
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> tpm2 policysecret --session session.ctx \
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> --object-context endorsement -L policy \; \
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> tpm2 policycommandcode -S session.ctx -L policy \
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> TPM2_CC_ActivateCredential
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837197674484b3f81a90cc8d46a5d724fd52d76e06520b64f2a1da1b331469aa
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cd9917cf18c3848c3a2e606986a066c68142f9bc2710a278287a650ca3bbf245
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: ;
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: ; /tmp/tpm-receive.sh -f /tmp/cipher /tmp/plain \
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> tpm2 policysecret --session session.ctx \
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--object-context endorsement \
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-L policy \; \
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tpm2 policycommandcode -S session.ctx -L policy \
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TPM2_CC_ActivateCredential
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837197674484b3f81a90cc8d46a5d724fd52d76e06520b64f2a1da1b331469aa
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cd9917cf18c3848c3a2e606986a066c68142f9bc2710a278287a650ca3bbf245
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name: 000bec987554f57b9918285794542c05549aa778832be169351494066907d6d95abf
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837197674484b3f81a90cc8d46a5d724fd52d76e06520b64f2a1da1b331469aa
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837197674484b3f81a90cc8d46a5d724fd52d76e06520b64f2a1da1b331469aa
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cd9917cf18c3848c3a2e606986a066c68142f9bc2710a278287a650ca3bbf245
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certinfodata:68656c6c6f20776f726c640a
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: ; cat /tmp/plain
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hello world
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: ;
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```
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You can pass policy commands to the `send-to-tpm.sh` and `tpm-receive.sh`
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commands as arguments, with multiple policy commands separated by a
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single semi-colon (quoted, to avoid evaluation by the shell):
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```bash
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send-to-tpm.sh ek.pub /tmp/secret /tmp/cipher \
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tpm2 policypcr -S session.ctx -l "sha256:0,1,2,3" -f $PWD/pcr.dat \
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-L policy \; \
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tpm2 policycommandcode -S session.ctx -L policy TPM2_CC_ActivateCredential
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```
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## Issues
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- The secret sent this way has to be small: no larger than the digest
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size for the digest algorithm being used.
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If the application needs to send larger secrets, then it should
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generate an AES key and send that as the small secret, then encrypt
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the larger secret in the AES key and send that ciphertext. (But
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don't forget to also include an HMAC or MAC of the ciphertext to make
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detection of errors / tampering possible.)
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- There is no protection against replay attacks in this example.
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Replay protection can be added by adding a timestamp to the secret
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data, and by using a replay cache on the remote system.
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- There is no authentication of the sender. To authenticate the sender
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simply add a digital signature of the ciphertext.
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