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Trusted Computing Software Stack open source implementation
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trousers README Trousers is an open-source TCG Software Stack (TSS), released under the Common Public License. Trousers aims to be compliant with the 1.1b and 1.2 TSS specifications available from the Trusted Computing Group website: http://www.trustedcomputinggroup.org CONTACT For information on the TrouSerS project, please send mail to the following lists: Use of the TSS API and TrouSerS: [email protected] Discussion of the internals of the TrouSerS implementation: [email protected] Possibly sensitive security related bugs: Debora Velarde <[email protected]> Run-of-the-mill bug reports should use the TrouSerS bug tracker: http://sourceforge.net/tracker/?group_id=126012&atid=704358 BUILD REQUIREMENTS Packages needed to build: automake > 1.4 autoconf > 1.4 pkgconfig libtool gtk2-devel openssl-devel >= 0.9.7 pthreads library (glibc-devel) BUILDING the TSS 32-bit Build and install the latest TPM device driver from sf.net/projects/tpmdd either compiled in or loaded as a module. UPDATE: This driver is now included in the vanilla 2.6.12 kernel! If you are doing this, trousers should just work after a vanilla build. Follow the build instructions below and read RUNNING the TSS, below. To build trousers after you have the device driver installed: $ sh bootstrap.sh $ ./configure [--enable-debug] [--enable-gprof] [--enable-gcov] $ make # make install Here are the default locations of files that trousers installs: /usr/local/sbin/tcsd /usr/local/etc/tcsd.conf /usr/local/lib/libtspi.so.0.0.X /usr/local/lib/libtspi.so.0 -> libtspi.so.0.0.X /usr/local/lib/libtspi.so -> libtspi.so.0.0.X /usr/local/lib/libtspi.la /usr/local/lib/libtddl.a /usr/local/var/lib/tpm By default the build will place everything in /usr/local. To install in a slightly more predictable place, use `./configure --prefix=/usr`. 'make install' will run ldconfig, but if /usr/local/lib is not in your /etc/ld.so.conf, this won't make a difference. You may need to manually add it and run ldconfig as root to allow your apps to link at run time to libtspi.so. BUILDING the TSS 64-bit TrouSerS has been built and tested on ppc64 and x86_64, so please don't hesitate to report bugs on these platforms. Building everything 64-bit will require a few more flags than are necessary for a 32-bit platform. Here are some example instructions for ppc64: $ sh bootstrap.sh $ export PKG_CONFIG_PATH=/usr/lib64/pkgconfig $ CFLAGS="-L/usr/lib64 -L/opt/gnome/lib64" LDFLAGS="-L/usr/lib64 \ -L/opt/gnome/lib64" ./configure --libdir="/usr/local/lib64" $ make # make install Hopefully the above example will get you going on building in your 64-bit environment. If you need to do anything special, please send your build steps to [email protected] and I'll include it here. USING TROUSERS ON AN ALREADY OWNED TPM If you've already taken ownership of your TPM using a TSS under another operating system, there are a few issues you should be aware of. Auth vs No-Auth SRK: In order to trick trousers into thinking it has taken ownership of the TPM it's running on, you will need to create a persistent storage file for trousers to use. Normally trousers would create this file itself at the time ownership is taken. If your SRK has been given an authorization password by the non-Linux OS, you will need to move the file dist/system.data.auth to /usr/local/var/lib/tpm/system.data. If you've taken ownership of your TPM without issuing a password, move dist/system.data.noauth to /usr/local/var/lib/tpm/system.data. Passwords: When entering passwords for keys you'd like to use in both Linux and other OS's, you'll need to take note of how you entered those passwords. The TSS spec states that when a password is entered through a GUI popup dialog box provided by the TSS library, the password should be converted to the UTF-16 encoding and then hashed using SHA-1, including the UTF-16 null terminator in the hash calculation. In order to work around this problem, specify the -u option to the tpm-tools command line to convert the password to UTF-16 before hashing. This, however, unfolds yet another problem... Some TSS stacks aren't compliant with the TSS spec, in that they hash their passwords without including the terminating null character. This means that there are effectively two versions of any password set through a popup dialog box. Trousers will include the terminating null character in its hashes of UTF-16 data. We'll do our best to track other TSS software and how it behaves. Please see the trousers FAQ at http://trousers.sf.net for more information. ARCHITECTURE This TSS implementation has several components. A) The TCS Daemon - A user space daemon that should be (according to the TSS spec) the only portal to the TPM device driver. At boot time, the TCS Daemon should be started, it should open the TPM device driver and from that point on, all requests to the TPM should go through the TSS stack. The TCSD manages TPM resources and handles requests from TSP's both local and remote. B) The TSP shared library - The TSP (TCG Service Provider) is a shared library that enables applications to talk to TCSD's both locally and remotely. The TSP also manages resources used in commicating with the application and the TCSD and transparently contacts the TCSD whenever necessary. C) Persistent Storage (PS) files - TSS's have 2 different kinds of PS for keys. PS can be thought of as a database for keys, with each key in the database indexed by a UUID. 'User' persistent storage is maintained by the application's TSP library. Upon writing the first key to User PS, the TSP library creates a new file at ~/.trousers/user.data, using the effective user id of the process executing the call to find ~. An environment variable, TSS_USER_PS_FILE, can also be set to point the TSP library to a different location for the User PS. This environment variable has the lifetime of the TSP context, so to store 2 keys in 2 different files, you will need to call Tspi_Context_Close, set the new location, and open the context again. 'System' persistent storage is controlled by the TCS and stays valid across all application lifetimes, TCSD restarts and system resets. Data registered in system PS stays valid until an application requests that it be removed. The System PS file by default is /usr/local/var/lib/tpm/system.data. The system PS file is initially created when ownership of the TPM is first taken. D) A config file. By default located in /usr/local/etc/tcsd.conf. RUNNING the TSS By default, the TCS daemon is not reachable over the internet, so if you just plan to access it locally, running it as root with a root owned device node is probably ok. Just make sure your device driver is loaded and start the tcsd as root. If you would like to run the TCS daemon as an unprivleged user, please follow these instructions: If you're using the device driver from a linux 2.6.12+ kernel and have udev enabled, you need to add the following line to your udev.permissions file (usually in /etc/udev somewhere): tpm[0-9]:tss:tss:0600 and then just load the device driver with: # modprobe tpm_atmel or, # modprobe tpm_natl start the TCS Core Services daemon, by default /usr/local/sbin/tcsd. # /usr/local/sbin/tcsd If you're attempting to make the TCS Core Services daemon communicate with a softwware TPM through TCP, you must call it using the -e option. # /usr/local/sbin/tcsd -e The default values for hostname, port and UN socket device path are "localhost", "6545" and "/var/run/tpm/tpmd_socket:0". It will search for the IN socket device, then for an UN socket one, and then for the real TPM in this order. The default values match with the current open source project required values, if for instance case you need to set values of your choice, the environment variables for them are TCSD_TCP_DEVICE_HOSTNAME, TCSD_TCP_DEVICE_PORT if using an IN socket and TCSD_UN_SOCKET_DEVICE_PATH if running an UN socket. DEBUGGING If you've compiled trousers with './configure --enable-debug' and would like to turn debugging output off at run-time, set the environment variable TSS_DEBUG_OFF to any value. BUILDING a TSS RPM # sh bootstrap.sh # ./configure # cd .. # mv trousers trousers-${version} # tar zcvf /usr/src/packages/SOURCES/trousers-${version}.tar.gz \ trousers-${version} # rpmbuild -bb trousers-${version}/dist/trousers.spec EOF
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