linux/Documentation/x86/sgx.rst
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   1.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0
   2
   3===============================
   4Software Guard eXtensions (SGX)
   5===============================
   6
   7Overview
   8========
   9
  10Software Guard eXtensions (SGX) hardware enables for user space applications
  11to set aside private memory regions of code and data:
  12
  13* Privileged (ring-0) ENCLS functions orchestrate the construction of the.
  14  regions.
  15* Unprivileged (ring-3) ENCLU functions allow an application to enter and
  16  execute inside the regions.
  17
  18These memory regions are called enclaves. An enclave can be only entered at a
  19fixed set of entry points. Each entry point can hold a single hardware thread
  20at a time.  While the enclave is loaded from a regular binary file by using
  21ENCLS functions, only the threads inside the enclave can access its memory. The
  22region is denied from outside access by the CPU, and encrypted before it leaves
  23from LLC.
  24
  25The support can be determined by
  26
  27        ``grep sgx /proc/cpuinfo``
  28
  29SGX must both be supported in the processor and enabled by the BIOS.  If SGX
  30appears to be unsupported on a system which has hardware support, ensure
  31support is enabled in the BIOS.  If a BIOS presents a choice between "Enabled"
  32and "Software Enabled" modes for SGX, choose "Enabled".
  33
  34Enclave Page Cache
  35==================
  36
  37SGX utilizes an *Enclave Page Cache (EPC)* to store pages that are associated
  38with an enclave. It is contained in a BIOS-reserved region of physical memory.
  39Unlike pages used for regular memory, pages can only be accessed from outside of
  40the enclave during enclave construction with special, limited SGX instructions.
  41
  42Only a CPU executing inside an enclave can directly access enclave memory.
  43However, a CPU executing inside an enclave may access normal memory outside the
  44enclave.
  45
  46The kernel manages enclave memory similar to how it treats device memory.
  47
  48Enclave Page Types
  49------------------
  50
  51**SGX Enclave Control Structure (SECS)**
  52   Enclave's address range, attributes and other global data are defined
  53   by this structure.
  54
  55**Regular (REG)**
  56   Regular EPC pages contain the code and data of an enclave.
  57
  58**Thread Control Structure (TCS)**
  59   Thread Control Structure pages define the entry points to an enclave and
  60   track the execution state of an enclave thread.
  61
  62**Version Array (VA)**
  63   Version Array pages contain 512 slots, each of which can contain a version
  64   number for a page evicted from the EPC.
  65
  66Enclave Page Cache Map
  67----------------------
  68
  69The processor tracks EPC pages in a hardware metadata structure called the
  70*Enclave Page Cache Map (EPCM)*.  The EPCM contains an entry for each EPC page
  71which describes the owning enclave, access rights and page type among the other
  72things.
  73
  74EPCM permissions are separate from the normal page tables.  This prevents the
  75kernel from, for instance, allowing writes to data which an enclave wishes to
  76remain read-only.  EPCM permissions may only impose additional restrictions on
  77top of normal x86 page permissions.
  78
  79For all intents and purposes, the SGX architecture allows the processor to
  80invalidate all EPCM entries at will.  This requires that software be prepared to
  81handle an EPCM fault at any time.  In practice, this can happen on events like
  82power transitions when the ephemeral key that encrypts enclave memory is lost.
  83
  84Application interface
  85=====================
  86
  87Enclave build functions
  88-----------------------
  89
  90In addition to the traditional compiler and linker build process, SGX has a
  91separate enclave “build” process.  Enclaves must be built before they can be
  92executed (entered). The first step in building an enclave is opening the
  93**/dev/sgx_enclave** device.  Since enclave memory is protected from direct
  94access, special privileged instructions are Then used to copy data into enclave
  95pages and establish enclave page permissions.
  96
  97.. kernel-doc:: arch/x86/kernel/cpu/sgx/ioctl.c
  98   :functions: sgx_ioc_enclave_create
  99               sgx_ioc_enclave_add_pages
 100               sgx_ioc_enclave_init
 101               sgx_ioc_enclave_provision
 102
 103Enclave vDSO
 104------------
 105
 106Entering an enclave can only be done through SGX-specific EENTER and ERESUME
 107functions, and is a non-trivial process.  Because of the complexity of
 108transitioning to and from an enclave, enclaves typically utilize a library to
 109handle the actual transitions.  This is roughly analogous to how glibc
 110implementations are used by most applications to wrap system calls.
 111
 112Another crucial characteristic of enclaves is that they can generate exceptions
 113as part of their normal operation that need to be handled in the enclave or are
 114unique to SGX.
 115
 116Instead of the traditional signal mechanism to handle these exceptions, SGX
 117can leverage special exception fixup provided by the vDSO.  The kernel-provided
 118vDSO function wraps low-level transitions to/from the enclave like EENTER and
 119ERESUME.  The vDSO function intercepts exceptions that would otherwise generate
 120a signal and return the fault information directly to its caller.  This avoids
 121the need to juggle signal handlers.
 122
 123.. kernel-doc:: arch/x86/include/uapi/asm/sgx.h
 124   :functions: vdso_sgx_enter_enclave_t
 125
 126ksgxd
 127=====
 128
 129SGX support includes a kernel thread called *ksgxwapd*.
 130
 131EPC sanitization
 132----------------
 133
 134ksgxd is started when SGX initializes.  Enclave memory is typically ready
 135For use when the processor powers on or resets.  However, if SGX has been in
 136use since the reset, enclave pages may be in an inconsistent state.  This might
 137occur after a crash and kexec() cycle, for instance.  At boot, ksgxd
 138reinitializes all enclave pages so that they can be allocated and re-used.
 139
 140The sanitization is done by going through EPC address space and applying the
 141EREMOVE function to each physical page. Some enclave pages like SECS pages have
 142hardware dependencies on other pages which prevents EREMOVE from functioning.
 143Executing two EREMOVE passes removes the dependencies.
 144
 145Page reclaimer
 146--------------
 147
 148Similar to the core kswapd, ksgxd, is responsible for managing the
 149overcommitment of enclave memory.  If the system runs out of enclave memory,
 150*ksgxwapd* “swaps” enclave memory to normal memory.
 151
 152Launch Control
 153==============
 154
 155SGX provides a launch control mechanism. After all enclave pages have been
 156copied, kernel executes EINIT function, which initializes the enclave. Only after
 157this the CPU can execute inside the enclave.
 158
 159ENIT function takes an RSA-3072 signature of the enclave measurement.  The function
 160checks that the measurement is correct and signature is signed with the key
 161hashed to the four **IA32_SGXLEPUBKEYHASH{0, 1, 2, 3}** MSRs representing the
 162SHA256 of a public key.
 163
 164Those MSRs can be configured by the BIOS to be either readable or writable.
 165Linux supports only writable configuration in order to give full control to the
 166kernel on launch control policy. Before calling EINIT function, the driver sets
 167the MSRs to match the enclave's signing key.
 168
 169Encryption engines
 170==================
 171
 172In order to conceal the enclave data while it is out of the CPU package, the
 173memory controller has an encryption engine to transparently encrypt and decrypt
 174enclave memory.
 175
 176In CPUs prior to Ice Lake, the Memory Encryption Engine (MEE) is used to
 177encrypt pages leaving the CPU caches. MEE uses a n-ary Merkle tree with root in
 178SRAM to maintain integrity of the encrypted data. This provides integrity and
 179anti-replay protection but does not scale to large memory sizes because the time
 180required to update the Merkle tree grows logarithmically in relation to the
 181memory size.
 182
 183CPUs starting from Icelake use Total Memory Encryption (TME) in the place of
 184MEE. TME-based SGX implementations do not have an integrity Merkle tree, which
 185means integrity and replay-attacks are not mitigated.  B, it includes
 186additional changes to prevent cipher text from being returned and SW memory
 187aliases from being Created.
 188
 189DMA to enclave memory is blocked by range registers on both MEE and TME systems
 190(SDM section 41.10).
 191
 192Usage Models
 193============
 194
 195Shared Library
 196--------------
 197
 198Sensitive data and the code that acts on it is partitioned from the application
 199into a separate library. The library is then linked as a DSO which can be loaded
 200into an enclave. The application can then make individual function calls into
 201the enclave through special SGX instructions. A run-time within the enclave is
 202configured to marshal function parameters into and out of the enclave and to
 203call the correct library function.
 204
 205Application Container
 206---------------------
 207
 208An application may be loaded into a container enclave which is specially
 209configured with a library OS and run-time which permits the application to run.
 210The enclave run-time and library OS work together to execute the application
 211when a thread enters the enclave.
 212
 213Impact of Potential Kernel SGX Bugs
 214===================================
 215
 216EPC leaks
 217---------
 218
 219When EPC page leaks happen, a WARNING like this is shown in dmesg:
 220
 221"EREMOVE returned ... and an EPC page was leaked.  SGX may become unusable..."
 222
 223This is effectively a kernel use-after-free of an EPC page, and due
 224to the way SGX works, the bug is detected at freeing. Rather than
 225adding the page back to the pool of available EPC pages, the kernel
 226intentionally leaks the page to avoid additional errors in the future.
 227
 228When this happens, the kernel will likely soon leak more EPC pages, and
 229SGX will likely become unusable because the memory available to SGX is
 230limited. However, while this may be fatal to SGX, the rest of the kernel
 231is unlikely to be impacted and should continue to work.
 232
 233As a result, when this happpens, user should stop running any new
 234SGX workloads, (or just any new workloads), and migrate all valuable
 235workloads. Although a machine reboot can recover all EPC memory, the bug
 236should be reported to Linux developers.
 237
 238
 239Virtual EPC
 240===========
 241
 242The implementation has also a virtual EPC driver to support SGX enclaves
 243in guests. Unlike the SGX driver, an EPC page allocated by the virtual
 244EPC driver doesn't have a specific enclave associated with it. This is
 245because KVM doesn't track how a guest uses EPC pages.
 246
 247As a result, the SGX core page reclaimer doesn't support reclaiming EPC
 248pages allocated to KVM guests through the virtual EPC driver. If the
 249user wants to deploy SGX applications both on the host and in guests
 250on the same machine, the user should reserve enough EPC (by taking out
 251total virtual EPC size of all SGX VMs from the physical EPC size) for
 252host SGX applications so they can run with acceptable performance.
 253
 254Architectural behavior is to restore all EPC pages to an uninitialized
 255state also after a guest reboot.  Because this state can be reached only
 256through the privileged ``ENCLS[EREMOVE]`` instruction, ``/dev/sgx_vepc``
 257provides the ``SGX_IOC_VEPC_REMOVE_ALL`` ioctl to execute the instruction
 258on all pages in the virtual EPC.
 259
 260``EREMOVE`` can fail for three reasons.  Userspace must pay attention
 261to expected failures and handle them as follows:
 262
 2631. Page removal will always fail when any thread is running in the
 264   enclave to which the page belongs.  In this case the ioctl will
 265   return ``EBUSY`` independent of whether it has successfully removed
 266   some pages; userspace can avoid these failures by preventing execution
 267   of any vcpu which maps the virtual EPC.
 268
 2692. Page removal will cause a general protection fault if two calls to
 270   ``EREMOVE`` happen concurrently for pages that refer to the same
 271   "SECS" metadata pages.  This can happen if there are concurrent
 272   invocations to ``SGX_IOC_VEPC_REMOVE_ALL``, or if a ``/dev/sgx_vepc``
 273   file descriptor in the guest is closed at the same time as
 274   ``SGX_IOC_VEPC_REMOVE_ALL``; it will also be reported as ``EBUSY``.
 275   This can be avoided in userspace by serializing calls to the ioctl()
 276   and to close(), but in general it should not be a problem.
 277
 2783. Finally, page removal will fail for SECS metadata pages which still
 279   have child pages.  Child pages can be removed by executing
 280   ``SGX_IOC_VEPC_REMOVE_ALL`` on all ``/dev/sgx_vepc`` file descriptors
 281   mapped into the guest.  This means that the ioctl() must be called
 282   twice: an initial set of calls to remove child pages and a subsequent
 283   set of calls to remove SECS pages.  The second set of calls is only
 284   required for those mappings that returned a nonzero value from the
 285   first call.  It indicates a bug in the kernel or the userspace client
 286   if any of the second round of ``SGX_IOC_VEPC_REMOVE_ALL`` calls has
 287   a return code other than 0.
 288