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450 lines
18 KiB
Markdown
450 lines
18 KiB
Markdown
# What Attestation is
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A computer can use a TPM to demonstrate:
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- possession of a valid TPM
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- it being in a trusted state by dint of having executed trusted code
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to get to that state
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- possession of objects such as asymmetric keypairs being resident on
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the TPM (objects that might be used in the attestation protocol)
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Possible outputs of succesful attestation:
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- encrypted filesystems getting unlocked with the help of an
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attestation server
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- other secrets (e.g., credentials for various authentication systems)
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- issuance of X.509 certificate(s) for TPM-resident public keys
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For servers these certificates would have `dNSName` subject
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alternative names (SANs).
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For a user device such a certificate might have a subject name and/or
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SANs identifying the user.
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Possible outputs of unsuccessful attestation:
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- alerting
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- diagnostics (e.g., which PCR extensions in the PCR quote and eventlog
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are not recognized)
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# Attestation Protocols
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Attestation is done by a computer with a TPM interacting with an
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attestation service over a network. This requires a network protocol
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for attestation.
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## Notation
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- `Encrypt_<name>` == encryption with the named private or secret key
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(if symmetric, then this primitive is expected to provide
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authenticated encryption).
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- `Sign_<name>` == digital signature with the named private key.
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- `MAC_<name>` == message authentication code keyed with the named
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secret key.
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- `CSn` == client-to-server message number `n`
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- `SCn` == server-to-client message number `n`
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- `{stuff, more_stuff}` == a sequence of data, a "struct"
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- `{"key":<value>,...}` == JSON text
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- `TPM2_MakeCredential(<args>)` == outputs of calling `TPM2_MakeCredential()` with `args` arguments
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- `TPM2_Certify(<args>)` == outputs of calling `TPM2_Certify()` with `args` arguments
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## Proof of Possession of TPM
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Proof of possession of a valid TPM is performed by the attestation
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client sending its TPM's Endorsement Key (EK) certificate (if one is
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available, else the attestation service must recognize the EK public
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key) and then exchanging additional messages by which the client can
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prove its possession of the EK.
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Proof of possession of an EK is complicated by the fact that EKs are
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[generally decrypt-only](Decrypt-only-EK.md) (some TPMs also support
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signing EKs, but the TCG specifications only require decrypt-only EKs).
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The protocol has to have the attestation service send a challenge (or
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key) encrypted to the EKpub and then the attestation client demonstrate
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that it was able to decrypt that with the EK. However, this is not
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_quite_ how attestation protocols work! Instead of plain asymmetric
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encryption the server will use
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[`TPM2_MakeCredential()`](TPM2_MakeCredential.md), while the attestation
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client will use
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[`TPM2_ActivateCredential()`](TPM2_ActivateCredential.md) instead of
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plain asymmetric decryption.
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## Trusted State Attestation
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Trusted state is attested by sending a quote of Platform Configuration
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Registers (PCRs) and the `eventlog` describing the evolution of the
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system's state from power-up to the current state. The attestation
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service validates the digests used to extend the various PCRs,
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and perhaps the sequence in which they appear in the eventlog, typically
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by checking a list of known-trusted digests (these are, for example,
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checksums of firmware images).
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Typically the attestation protocol will have the client generate a
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signing-only asymmetric public key pair known as the attestation key
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(AK) with which to sign the PCR quote and eventlog. Binding of the
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EKpub and AKpub will happen via
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[`TPM2_MakeCredential()`](TPM2_MakeCredential.md) /
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[`TPM2_ActivateCredential()`](TPM2_ActivateCredential.md).
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## Binding of Other Keys to EKpub
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The semantics of [`TPM2_MakeCredential()`](TPM2_MakeCredential.md) /
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[`TPM2_ActivateCredential()`](TPM2_ActivateCredential.md) make it
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possible to bind a TPM-resident object to the TPM's EKpub.
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[`TPM2_MakeCredential()`](TPM2_MakeCredential.md) encrypts to the EKpub
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a small secret datum and the name (digest of public part) of the
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TPM-resident object being bound. The counter-part to this,
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[`TPM2_ActivateCredential()`](TPM2_ActivateCredential.md), will decrypt
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that and return the secret to the application IFF (if and only if) the
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caller has access to the named object.
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Typically attestation protocols have the client send its EKpub, EKcert
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(if it has one), AKpub (the public key of an "attestation key"), and
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other things (e.g., PCR quote and eventlog signed with the AK), and the
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server will then send the output of `TPM2_MakeCredential()` that the
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client can recover a secret from using `TPM2_ActivateCredential()`.
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The implication is that if the client can extract the cleartext payload
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of `TPM2_MakeCredential()`, then it must possess a) the EK private key
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corresponding to the EKpub, b) the AK private key corresponding to the
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object named by the server.
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Proof of possession can be completed immediately by demonstrating
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knowledge of the secret sent by the server. Proof of possession can
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also be delayed to an eventual use of that secret, allowing for single
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round trip attestation.
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## Binding hosts to TPMs
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(TBD. Talk about IDevID or similar certificates binding hosts to their
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factory-installed TPMs, and how to obtain those from vendors.)
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## Attestation Protocol Patterns and Actual Protocols (decrypt-only EKs)
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Note: all the protocols described below are based on decrypt-only TPM
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endorsement keys.
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Let's start with few observations and security considerations:
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- Clients need to know which PCRs to quote. E.g., the [Safe Boot](https://safeboot.dev/)
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project and the [IBM sample attestation client and server](https://sourceforge.net/projects/ibmtpm20acs/)
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have the client ask for a list of PCRs and then the client quotes
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just those.
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But clients could just quote all PCRs. It's more data to send, but
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probably not a big deal, and it saves a round trip if there's no need
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to ask what PCRs to send.
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- Some replay protection or freshness indication for client requests is
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needed. A stateful method of doing this is to use a server-generated
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nonce. A stateless method is to use a timestamp.
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- Replay protection of server to client responses is mostly either not
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needed or implicitly provided by [`TPM2_MakeCredential()`](TMP2_MakeCredential.md)
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because `TPM2_MakeCredential()` generates a secret seed that
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randomizes its outputs even when all the inputs are the same across
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multiple calls to it.
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- Ultimately the protocol *must* make use of
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[`TPM2_MakeCredential()`](TMP2_MakeCredential.md) and
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[`TPM2_ActivateCredential()`](TPM2_ActivateCredential.md) in order to
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authenticate a TPM-running host via its TPM's EKpub.
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- Privacy protection of client identifiers may be needed, in which case
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TLS may be desired.
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- Even if a single round trip attestation protocol is adequate, a
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return routability check may be needed to avoid denial of service
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attacks. I.e., do not run a single round trip attestation protocol
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over UDP without first requiring the client to echo a nonce/cookie.
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- Statelessness on the server side is highly desirable, as that should
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permit having multiple servers and each of a client's messages can go
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to different servers. Conversely, keeping state on the server across
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multiple round trips can cause resource exhaustion / denial of
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service attack considerations.
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- Statelessness maps well onto HTTP / REST. Indeed, attestation
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protocol messages could all be idempotent and therefore map well onto
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HTTP `GET` requests but for the fact that all the things that may be
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have to be sent may not fit on a URI local part or URI query
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parameters, therefore HTTP `POST` is the better option.
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### Single Round Trip Attestation Protocol Patterns
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An attestation protocol need not complete proof-of-possession
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immediately if the successful outcome of the protocol has the client
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subsequently demonstrate possession to other services/peers. This is a
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matter of taste and policy. However, one may want to have
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cryptographically secure "client attested successfully" state on the
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server without delay, in which case two round trips are the minimum for
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an attestation protocol.
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In the following example the client obtains a certificate (`AKcert`) for
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its AKpub, filesystem decryption keys, and possibly other things, and
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eventually it will use those items in ways that -by virtue of having
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thus been used- demonstrate that it possesses the EK used in the
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protocol:
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```
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<client knows a priori what PCRs to quote, possibly all, saving a round trip>
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CS0: Signed_AK({timestamp, [ID], EKpub, [EKcert],
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AKpub, PCR_quote, eventlog})
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SC0: {TPM2_MakeCredential(EKpub, AKpub, session_key),
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Encrypt_session_key({AKcert, filesystem_keys, etc.})}
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<subsequent client use of AK w/ AKcert, or of credentials made
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available by dint of being able to access filesystems unlocked by
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SC0, demonstrate that the client has attested successfully>
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```
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(`ID` might be, e.g., a hostname.)
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The server will validate that the `timestamp` is near the current time,
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the EKcert (if provided, else the EKpub), the signature using the
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asserted (but not yet bound to the EKpub) AKpub, then it will validate
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the PCR quote and eventlog, and, if everything checks out, will issue a
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certificate for the AKpub and return various secrets that the client may
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need.
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The client obtains those items IFF (if and only if) the AK is resident
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in the same TPM as the EK, courtesy of `TPM2_ActivateCredential()`'s
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semantics.
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NOTE well that in this example it is *essential* that the AKcert not be
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logged in any public place since otherwise an attacker can make and send
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`CS0` using a non-TPM-resident AK and any TPM's EKpub/EKcert known to
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the attacker, and then it may recover the AK certificate from the log in
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spite of being unable to recover the AK certificate from `SC1`!
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Alternatively, a single round trip attestation protocol can be
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implemented as an optimization to a two round trip protocol when the AK
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is persisted both, in the client TPM and in the attestation service's
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database:
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```
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<having previously successfully enrolled AKpub and bound it to EKpub...>
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CS0: Signed_AK({timestamp, AKpub, PCR_quote, eventlog})
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SC0: {TPM2_MakeCredential(EKpub, AKpub, session_key),
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Encrypt_session_key({AKcert, filesystem_keys, etc.})}
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```
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### Two Round Trip Stateless Attestation Protocol Patterns
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We can add a round trip to the protocol in the previous section to make
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the client prove possession of the EK and binding of the AK to the EK
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before it can get the items it needs. This avoids the security
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consideration of having to not log the AKcert.
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Below is a sketch of a stateless, two round trip attestation protocol.
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Actual protocols tend to use a secret challenge that the client echoes
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back to the server rather than a secret key possesion of which is proven
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with symmetriclly-keyed cryptographic algorithms.
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```
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CS0: Signed_AK({timestamp, [ID], EKpub, [EKcert],
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AKpub, PCR_quote, eventlog})
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SC0: {TPM2_MakeCredential(EKpub, AKpub, session_key), ticket}
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CS1: {ticket, MAC_session_key(CS0), CS0}
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SC1: Encrypt_session_key({AKcert, filesystem_keys, etc.})
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```
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where `session_key` is an ephemeral secret symmetric authenticated
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encryption key, and `ticket` is an authenticated encrypted state cookie:
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```
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ticket = {vno, Encrypt_server_secret_key({session_key, timestamp,
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MAC_session_key(CS0)})}
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```
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where `server_secret_key` is a key known only to the attestation service
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and `vno` identifies that key (in order to support key rotation without
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having to try authenticated decryption twice near key rotation events).
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[Note: `ticket` here is not in the sense used by TPM specifications, but
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in the sense of "TLS session resumption ticket" or "Kerberos ticket",
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and, really, it's just an encrypted state cookie so that the server can
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be stateless.]
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The attestation server could validate that the `timestamp` is recent
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upon receipt of `CS0`. But the attestation server can delay validation
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of EKcert, signatures, and PCR quote and eventlog until receipt of
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`CS1`. In order to produce `SC0` the server need only digest the AKpub
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to produce the name input of `TPM2_MakeCredential()`. Upon receipt of
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`CS1` (which repeats `CS0`), the server can decrypt the ticket, validate
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the MAC of `CS0`, validate `CS0`, and produce `SC1` if everything checks
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out.
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In this protocol the client must successfully call
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`TPM2_ActivateCredential()` to obtain the `session_key` that it then
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proves possession of in `CS1`, and only then does the server send the
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`AKcert` and/or various secret values to the client, this time saving
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the cost of asymmetric encryption by using the `session_key` to key a
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symmetric authenticated cipher.
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(The `server_secret_key`, `ticket`, `session_key`, and proof of
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possession used in `CS1` could even conform to Kerberos or encrypted JWT
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and be used for authentication, possibly with an off-the-shelf HTTP
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stack.)
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An HTTP API binding for this protocol could look like:
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```
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POST /get-attestation-ticket
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Body: CS0
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Response: SC0
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POST /attest
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Body: CS1
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Response: SC1
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```
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### Actual Protocols: ibmacs
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The [`IBM TPM Attestation Client Server`](https://sourceforge.net/projects/ibmtpm20acs/)
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(`ibmacs`) open source project has sample code for a "TCG attestation
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application".
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It implements a stateful (state is kept in a database) attestation and
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enrollment protocol over TCP sockets that consists of JSON texts of the
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following form, sent prefixed with a 32-bit message length in host byte
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order:
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```
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CS0: {"command":"nonce","hostname":"somehostname",
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"userid":"someusername","boottime":"2021-04-29 16:37:06"}
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SC0: {"response":"nonce","nonce":"<hex>", "pcrselect":"<hex>", ...}
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<nonce is used in production of signed PCR quote>
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CS1: {"command":"quote","hostname":"somehostname",
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"quoted":"<hex>","signature":"<hex>",
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"event1":"<hex>","imaevent0":"<hex>"}
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SC1: {"response":"quote"}
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CS2: {"command":"enrollrequest","hostname":"somehost",
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"tpmvendor":"...","ekcert":"<PEM>","akpub":"<hex(DER)>"}
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SC2: {"response":"enrollrequest",
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"credentialblob":"<hex of credentialBlob output of TPM2_MakeCredential()>",
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"secret":"<hex of secret output of TPM2_MakeCredential()>"}
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CS3: {"command":"enrollcert","hostname":"somecert","challenge":"<hex>"}
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SC3: {"response":"enrollcert","akcert":"<hex>"}
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```
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The server keeps state across round trips.
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Note that this protocol has *up to* four (4) round trips. Because the
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`ibmacs` server keeps state in a database, it should be possible to
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elide some of these round trips in attestations subsequent to
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enrollment.
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The messages of the second and third round trips could be combined since
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there should be no need to wait for PCR quote validation before sending
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the EKcert and AKpub. The messages of the first round trip too could be
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combined with the messages of the second and third round trip by using a
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timestamp as a nonce -- with those changes this protocol would get down
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to two round trips.
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### Actual Protocols: safeboot.dev
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(TBD)
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### Actual Protocols: ...
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(TBD)
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## Attestation Protocol Patterns and Actual Protocols (signing-only EKs)
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Some TPMs come provisioned with signing-only endorsement keys in
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addition to decrypt-only EKs. For example, vTPMs in Google cloud
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provides both, decrypt-only and signing-only EKs.
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Signing-only EKs can be used for attestation as well.
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[Ideally signing-only EKs can be restricted to force the use of
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`TPM2_Certify()`? Restricted signing keys can only sign payloads that
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start with a magic value, whereas unrestricted signing keys can sign any
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payload.]
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Signing-only EKs make single round trip attestation protocols possible
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that also provide immediate attestation status because signing provides
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proof of possession non-interactively, whereas asymmetric encryption
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requires interaction to prove possession:
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```
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CS0: Signed_AK({timestamp, [ID], EKpub, [EKcert],
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AKpub, TPM2_Certify(EKpub, AKpub),
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PCR_quote, eventlog})
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SC0: AKcert
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```
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If secrets need to be sent back, then a decrypt-only EK also neds to be
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used:
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```
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CS0: Signed_AK({timestamp, [ID],
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EKpub_signing, EKpub_encrypt,
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[EKcert_signing], [EKcert_encrypt],
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AKpub, TPM2_Certify(EKpub, AKpub),
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PCR_quote, eventlog})
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SC0: {TPM2_MakeCredential(EKpub_encrypt, AKpub, session_key),
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Encrypt_session_key({AKcert, filesystem_keys, etc.})}
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```
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# Long-Term State Kept by Attestation Services
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Attestation servers need to keep some long-term state:
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- binding of `EKpub` and `ID`
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- PCR validation profile(s) for each identified client
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Log-like attestation state:
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- client attestation status (last time successfully attested, last time
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unsuccessfully attested)
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The PCR validation profile for a client consists of a set of required
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and/or acceptable digests that must appear in each PCR's extension log.
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These required and/or acceptable digests may be digests of firmware
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images, boot loaders, boot loader configurations (e.g., `menu.lst`, for
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Grub), operating system kernels, `initrd` images, filesystem root hashes
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(think ZFS), etc.
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Some of these are obtained by administrators on a trust-on-first-use
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(TOFU) basis.
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Things to log:
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- client attestation attempts and outcomes
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- AK certificates issued (WARNING: see note about single round trip
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attestation protocols above -- do not log AKcerts in public places
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when using single round trip attestation protocols!)
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## Long-Term State Created by Attestation Services
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An attestation service might support creation of host<->EKpub
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bindings on a first-come-first-served basis.
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An attestation service might support deletion of host PCR validation
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profiles that represent past states upon validation of PCR quotes using
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newer profiles. This could be used to permit firmware and/or operating
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system upgrades and then disallow downgrades after evidence of
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successful upgrade.
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# References
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- [TCG TPM Library part 1: Architecture, sections 23 and 24](https://trustedcomputinggroup.org/wp-content/uploads/TCG_TPM2_r1p59_Part1_Architecture_pub.pdf)
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- https://sourceforge.net/projects/ibmtpm20acs/
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- https://safeboot.dev/
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- https://github.com/osresearch/safeboot/
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