module-signing.rst 11 KB

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  1. Kernel module signing facility
  2. ------------------------------
  3. .. CONTENTS
  4. ..
  5. .. - Overview.
  6. .. - Configuring module signing.
  7. .. - Generating signing keys.
  8. .. - Public keys in the kernel.
  9. .. - Manually signing modules.
  10. .. - Signed modules and stripping.
  11. .. - Loading signed modules.
  12. .. - Non-valid signatures and unsigned modules.
  13. .. - Administering/protecting the private key.
  14. ========
  15. Overview
  16. ========
  17. The kernel module signing facility cryptographically signs modules during
  18. installation and then checks the signature upon loading the module. This
  19. allows increased kernel security by disallowing the loading of unsigned modules
  20. or modules signed with an invalid key. Module signing increases security by
  21. making it harder to load a malicious module into the kernel. The module
  22. signature checking is done by the kernel so that it is not necessary to have
  23. trusted userspace bits.
  24. This facility uses X.509 ITU-T standard certificates to encode the public keys
  25. involved. The signatures are not themselves encoded in any industrial standard
  26. type. The built-in facility currently only supports the RSA & NIST P-384 ECDSA
  27. public key signing standard (though it is pluggable and permits others to be
  28. used). The possible hash algorithms that can be used are SHA-2 and SHA-3 of
  29. sizes 256, 384, and 512 (the algorithm is selected by data in the signature).
  30. ==========================
  31. Configuring module signing
  32. ==========================
  33. The module signing facility is enabled by going to the
  34. :menuselection:`Enable Loadable Module Support` section of
  35. the kernel configuration and turning on::
  36. CONFIG_MODULE_SIG "Module signature verification"
  37. This has a number of options available:
  38. (1) :menuselection:`Require modules to be validly signed`
  39. (``CONFIG_MODULE_SIG_FORCE``)
  40. This specifies how the kernel should deal with a module that has a
  41. signature for which the key is not known or a module that is unsigned.
  42. If this is off (ie. "permissive"), then modules for which the key is not
  43. available and modules that are unsigned are permitted, but the kernel will
  44. be marked as being tainted, and the concerned modules will be marked as
  45. tainted, shown with the character 'E'.
  46. If this is on (ie. "restrictive"), only modules that have a valid
  47. signature that can be verified by a public key in the kernel's possession
  48. will be loaded. All other modules will generate an error.
  49. Irrespective of the setting here, if the module has a signature block that
  50. cannot be parsed, it will be rejected out of hand.
  51. (2) :menuselection:`Automatically sign all modules`
  52. (``CONFIG_MODULE_SIG_ALL``)
  53. If this is on then modules will be automatically signed during the
  54. modules_install phase of a build. If this is off, then the modules must
  55. be signed manually using::
  56. scripts/sign-file
  57. (3) :menuselection:`Which hash algorithm should modules be signed with?`
  58. This presents a choice of which hash algorithm the installation phase will
  59. sign the modules with:
  60. =============================== ==========================================
  61. ``CONFIG_MODULE_SIG_SHA256`` :menuselection:`Sign modules with SHA-256`
  62. ``CONFIG_MODULE_SIG_SHA384`` :menuselection:`Sign modules with SHA-384`
  63. ``CONFIG_MODULE_SIG_SHA512`` :menuselection:`Sign modules with SHA-512`
  64. ``CONFIG_MODULE_SIG_SHA3_256`` :menuselection:`Sign modules with SHA3-256`
  65. ``CONFIG_MODULE_SIG_SHA3_384`` :menuselection:`Sign modules with SHA3-384`
  66. ``CONFIG_MODULE_SIG_SHA3_512`` :menuselection:`Sign modules with SHA3-512`
  67. =============================== ==========================================
  68. The algorithm selected here will also be built into the kernel (rather
  69. than being a module) so that modules signed with that algorithm can have
  70. their signatures checked without causing a dependency loop.
  71. (4) :menuselection:`File name or PKCS#11 URI of module signing key`
  72. (``CONFIG_MODULE_SIG_KEY``)
  73. Setting this option to something other than its default of
  74. ``certs/signing_key.pem`` will disable the autogeneration of signing keys
  75. and allow the kernel modules to be signed with a key of your choosing.
  76. The string provided should identify a file containing both a private key
  77. and its corresponding X.509 certificate in PEM form, or — on systems where
  78. the OpenSSL ENGINE_pkcs11 is functional — a PKCS#11 URI as defined by
  79. RFC7512. In the latter case, the PKCS#11 URI should reference both a
  80. certificate and a private key.
  81. If the PEM file containing the private key is encrypted, or if the
  82. PKCS#11 token requires a PIN, this can be provided at build time by
  83. means of the ``KBUILD_SIGN_PIN`` variable.
  84. (5) :menuselection:`Additional X.509 keys for default system keyring`
  85. (``CONFIG_SYSTEM_TRUSTED_KEYS``)
  86. This option can be set to the filename of a PEM-encoded file containing
  87. additional certificates which will be included in the system keyring by
  88. default.
  89. Note that enabling module signing adds a dependency on the OpenSSL devel
  90. packages to the kernel build processes for the tool that does the signing.
  91. =======================
  92. Generating signing keys
  93. =======================
  94. Cryptographic keypairs are required to generate and check signatures. A
  95. private key is used to generate a signature and the corresponding public key is
  96. used to check it. The private key is only needed during the build, after which
  97. it can be deleted or stored securely. The public key gets built into the
  98. kernel so that it can be used to check the signatures as the modules are
  99. loaded.
  100. Under normal conditions, when ``CONFIG_MODULE_SIG_KEY`` is unchanged from its
  101. default, the kernel build will automatically generate a new keypair using
  102. openssl if one does not exist in the file::
  103. certs/signing_key.pem
  104. during the building of vmlinux (the public part of the key needs to be built
  105. into vmlinux) using parameters in the::
  106. certs/x509.genkey
  107. file (which is also generated if it does not already exist).
  108. One can select between RSA (``MODULE_SIG_KEY_TYPE_RSA``) and ECDSA
  109. (``MODULE_SIG_KEY_TYPE_ECDSA``) to generate either RSA 4k or NIST
  110. P-384 keypair.
  111. It is strongly recommended that you provide your own x509.genkey file.
  112. Most notably, in the x509.genkey file, the req_distinguished_name section
  113. should be altered from the default::
  114. [ req_distinguished_name ]
  115. #O = Unspecified company
  116. CN = Build time autogenerated kernel key
  117. #emailAddress = unspecified.user@unspecified.company
  118. The generated RSA key size can also be set with::
  119. [ req ]
  120. default_bits = 4096
  121. It is also possible to manually generate the key private/public files using the
  122. x509.genkey key generation configuration file in the root node of the Linux
  123. kernel sources tree and the openssl command. The following is an example to
  124. generate the public/private key files::
  125. openssl req -new -nodes -utf8 -sha256 -days 36500 -batch -x509 \
  126. -config x509.genkey -outform PEM -out kernel_key.pem \
  127. -keyout kernel_key.pem
  128. The full pathname for the resulting kernel_key.pem file can then be specified
  129. in the ``CONFIG_MODULE_SIG_KEY`` option, and the certificate and key therein will
  130. be used instead of an autogenerated keypair.
  131. =========================
  132. Public keys in the kernel
  133. =========================
  134. The kernel contains a ring of public keys that can be viewed by root. They're
  135. in a keyring called ".builtin_trusted_keys" that can be seen by::
  136. [root@deneb ~]# cat /proc/keys
  137. ...
  138. 223c7853 I------ 1 perm 1f030000 0 0 keyring .builtin_trusted_keys: 1
  139. 302d2d52 I------ 1 perm 1f010000 0 0 asymmetri Fedora kernel signing key: d69a84e6bce3d216b979e9505b3e3ef9a7118079: X509.RSA a7118079 []
  140. ...
  141. Beyond the public key generated specifically for module signing, additional
  142. trusted certificates can be provided in a PEM-encoded file referenced by the
  143. ``CONFIG_SYSTEM_TRUSTED_KEYS`` configuration option.
  144. Further, the architecture code may take public keys from a hardware store and
  145. add those in also (e.g. from the UEFI key database).
  146. Finally, it is possible to add additional public keys by doing::
  147. keyctl padd asymmetric "" [.builtin_trusted_keys-ID] <[key-file]
  148. e.g.::
  149. keyctl padd asymmetric "" 0x223c7853 <my_public_key.x509
  150. Note, however, that the kernel will only permit keys to be added to
  151. ``.builtin_trusted_keys`` **if** the new key's X.509 wrapper is validly signed by a key
  152. that is already resident in the ``.builtin_trusted_keys`` at the time the key was added.
  153. ========================
  154. Manually signing modules
  155. ========================
  156. To manually sign a module, use the scripts/sign-file tool available in
  157. the Linux kernel source tree. The script requires 4 arguments:
  158. 1. The hash algorithm (e.g., sha256)
  159. 2. The private key filename or PKCS#11 URI
  160. 3. The public key filename
  161. 4. The kernel module to be signed
  162. The following is an example to sign a kernel module::
  163. scripts/sign-file sha512 kernel-signkey.priv \
  164. kernel-signkey.x509 module.ko
  165. The hash algorithm used does not have to match the one configured, but if it
  166. doesn't, you should make sure that hash algorithm is either built into the
  167. kernel or can be loaded without requiring itself.
  168. If the private key requires a passphrase or PIN, it can be provided in the
  169. $KBUILD_SIGN_PIN environment variable.
  170. ============================
  171. Signed modules and stripping
  172. ============================
  173. A signed module has a digital signature simply appended at the end. The string
  174. ``~Module signature appended~.`` at the end of the module's file confirms that a
  175. signature is present but it does not confirm that the signature is valid!
  176. Signed modules are BRITTLE as the signature is outside of the defined ELF
  177. container. Thus they MAY NOT be stripped once the signature is computed and
  178. attached. Note the entire module is the signed payload, including any and all
  179. debug information present at the time of signing.
  180. ======================
  181. Loading signed modules
  182. ======================
  183. Modules are loaded with insmod, modprobe, ``init_module()`` or
  184. ``finit_module()``, exactly as for unsigned modules as no processing is
  185. done in userspace. The signature checking is all done within the kernel.
  186. =========================================
  187. Non-valid signatures and unsigned modules
  188. =========================================
  189. If ``CONFIG_MODULE_SIG_FORCE`` is enabled or module.sig_enforce=1 is supplied on
  190. the kernel command line, the kernel will only load validly signed modules
  191. for which it has a public key. Otherwise, it will also load modules that are
  192. unsigned. Any module for which the kernel has a key, but which proves to have
  193. a signature mismatch will not be permitted to load.
  194. Any module that has an unparsable signature will be rejected.
  195. =========================================
  196. Administering/protecting the private key
  197. =========================================
  198. Since the private key is used to sign modules, viruses and malware could use
  199. the private key to sign modules and compromise the operating system. The
  200. private key must be either destroyed or moved to a secure location and not kept
  201. in the root node of the kernel source tree.
  202. If you use the same private key to sign modules for multiple kernel
  203. configurations, you must ensure that the module version information is
  204. sufficient to prevent loading a module into a different kernel. Either
  205. set ``CONFIG_MODVERSIONS=y`` or ensure that each configuration has a different
  206. kernel release string by changing ``EXTRAVERSION`` or ``CONFIG_LOCALVERSION``.