freebsd-nq/sys/dev/random/nehemiah.c
Konstantin Belousov 8c6f8f3d5b Add support for the extended FPU states on amd64, both for native
64bit and 32bit ABIs.  As a side-effect, it enables AVX on capable
CPUs.

In particular:

- Query the CPU support for XSAVE, list of the supported extensions
  and the required size of FPU save area. The hw.use_xsave tunable is
  provided for disabling XSAVE, and hw.xsave_mask may be used to
  select the enabled extensions.

- Remove the FPU save area from PCB and dynamically allocate the
  (run-time sized) user save area on the top of the kernel stack,
  right above the PCB. Reorganize the thread0 PCB initialization to
  postpone it after BSP is queried for save area size.

- The dumppcb, stoppcbs and susppcbs now do not carry the FPU state as
  well. FPU state is only useful for suspend, where it is saved in
  dynamically allocated suspfpusave area.

- Use XSAVE and XRSTOR to save/restore FPU state, if supported and
  enabled.

- Define new mcontext_t flag _MC_HASFPXSTATE, indicating that
  mcontext_t has a valid pointer to out-of-struct extended FPU
  state. Signal handlers are supplied with stack-allocated fpu
  state. The sigreturn(2) and setcontext(2) syscall honour the flag,
  allowing the signal handlers to inspect and manipilate extended
  state in the interrupted context.

- The getcontext(2) never returns extended state, since there is no
  place in the fixed-sized mcontext_t to place variable-sized save
  area. And, since mcontext_t is embedded into ucontext_t, makes it
  impossible to fix in a reasonable way.  Instead of extending
  getcontext(2) syscall, provide a sysarch(2) facility to query
  extended FPU state.

- Add ptrace(2) support for getting and setting extended state; while
  there, implement missed PT_I386_{GET,SET}XMMREGS for 32bit binaries.

- Change fpu_kern KPI to not expose struct fpu_kern_ctx layout to
  consumers, making it opaque. Internally, struct fpu_kern_ctx now
  contains a space for the extended state. Convert in-kernel consumers
  of fpu_kern KPI both on i386 and amd64.

First version of the support for AVX was submitted by Tim Bird
<tim.bird am sony com> on behalf of Sony. This version was written
from scratch.

Tested by:	pho (previous version), Yamagi Burmeister <lists yamagi org>
MFC after:	1 month
2012-01-21 17:45:27 +00:00

206 lines
5.2 KiB
C

/*-
* Copyright (c) 2004 Mark R V Murray
* All rights reserved.
*
* Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
* modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
* are met:
* 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
* notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer
* in this position and unchanged.
* 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
* notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
* documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
*
* THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHOR ``AS IS'' AND ANY EXPRESS OR
* IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES
* OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED.
* IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT,
* INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT
* NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE,
* DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY
* THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT
* (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF
* THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
*
*/
#include <sys/cdefs.h>
__FBSDID("$FreeBSD$");
#include <sys/param.h>
#include <sys/time.h>
#include <sys/lock.h>
#include <sys/mutex.h>
#include <sys/selinfo.h>
#include <sys/systm.h>
#include <machine/pcb.h>
#include <dev/random/randomdev.h>
#define RANDOM_BLOCK_SIZE 256
#define CIPHER_BLOCK_SIZE 16
static void random_nehemiah_init(void);
static void random_nehemiah_deinit(void);
static int random_nehemiah_read(void *, int);
struct random_systat random_nehemiah = {
.ident = "Hardware, VIA Nehemiah",
.init = random_nehemiah_init,
.deinit = random_nehemiah_deinit,
.read = random_nehemiah_read,
.write = (random_write_func_t *)random_null_func,
.reseed = (random_reseed_func_t *)random_null_func,
.seeded = 1,
};
union VIA_ACE_CW {
uint64_t raw;
struct {
u_int round_count : 4;
u_int algorithm_type : 3;
u_int key_generation_type : 1;
u_int intermediate : 1;
u_int decrypt : 1;
u_int key_size : 2;
u_int filler0 : 20;
u_int filler1 : 32;
u_int filler2 : 32;
u_int filler3 : 32;
} field;
};
/* The extra 7 is to allow an 8-byte write on the last byte of the
* arrays. The ACE wants the AES data 16-byte/128-bit aligned, and
* it _always_ writes n*64 bits. The RNG does not care about alignment,
* and it always writes n*32 bits or n*64 bits.
*/
static uint8_t key[CIPHER_BLOCK_SIZE+7] __aligned(16);
static uint8_t iv[CIPHER_BLOCK_SIZE+7] __aligned(16);
static uint8_t in[RANDOM_BLOCK_SIZE+7] __aligned(16);
static uint8_t out[RANDOM_BLOCK_SIZE+7] __aligned(16);
static union VIA_ACE_CW acw __aligned(16);
static struct fpu_kern_ctx *fpu_ctx_save;
static struct mtx random_nehemiah_mtx;
/* ARGSUSED */
static __inline size_t
VIA_RNG_store(void *buf)
{
#ifdef __GNUCLIKE_ASM
uint32_t retval = 0;
uint32_t rate = 0;
/* The .byte line is really VIA C3 "xstore" instruction */
__asm __volatile(
"movl $0,%%edx \n\t"
".byte 0x0f, 0xa7, 0xc0"
: "=a" (retval), "+d" (rate), "+D" (buf)
:
: "memory"
);
if (rate == 0)
return (retval&0x1f);
#endif
return (0);
}
/* ARGSUSED */
static __inline void
VIA_ACE_cbc(void *in, void *out, size_t count, void *key, union VIA_ACE_CW *cw, void *iv)
{
#ifdef __GNUCLIKE_ASM
/* The .byte line is really VIA C3 "xcrypt-cbc" instruction */
__asm __volatile(
"pushf \n\t"
"popf \n\t"
"rep \n\t"
".byte 0x0f, 0xa7, 0xc8"
: "+a" (iv), "+c" (count), "+D" (out), "+S" (in)
: "b" (key), "d" (cw)
: "cc", "memory"
);
#endif
}
static void
random_nehemiah_init(void)
{
acw.raw = 0ULL;
acw.field.round_count = 12;
mtx_init(&random_nehemiah_mtx, "random nehemiah", NULL, MTX_DEF);
fpu_ctx_save = fpu_kern_alloc_ctx(FPU_KERN_NORMAL);
}
void
random_nehemiah_deinit(void)
{
fpu_kern_free_ctx(fpu_ctx_save);
mtx_destroy(&random_nehemiah_mtx);
}
static int
random_nehemiah_read(void *buf, int c)
{
int i, error;
size_t count, ret;
uint8_t *p;
mtx_lock(&random_nehemiah_mtx);
error = fpu_kern_enter(curthread, fpu_ctx_save, FPU_KERN_NORMAL);
if (error != 0) {
mtx_unlock(&random_nehemiah_mtx);
return (0);
}
/* Get a random AES key */
count = 0;
p = key;
do {
ret = VIA_RNG_store(p);
p += ret;
count += ret;
} while (count < CIPHER_BLOCK_SIZE);
/* Get a random AES IV */
count = 0;
p = iv;
do {
ret = VIA_RNG_store(p);
p += ret;
count += ret;
} while (count < CIPHER_BLOCK_SIZE);
/* Get a block of random bytes */
count = 0;
p = in;
do {
ret = VIA_RNG_store(p);
p += ret;
count += ret;
} while (count < RANDOM_BLOCK_SIZE);
/* This is a Davies-Meyer hash of the most paranoid variety; the
* key, IV and the data are all read directly from the hardware RNG.
* All of these are used precisely once.
*/
VIA_ACE_cbc(in, out, RANDOM_BLOCK_SIZE/CIPHER_BLOCK_SIZE,
key, &acw, iv);
for (i = 0; i < RANDOM_BLOCK_SIZE; i++)
out[i] ^= in[i];
c = MIN(RANDOM_BLOCK_SIZE, c);
memcpy(buf, out, (size_t)c);
fpu_kern_leave(curthread, fpu_ctx_save);
mtx_unlock(&random_nehemiah_mtx);
return (c);
}