Re: [PATCH 2/2] brcmfmac: pcie: Provide a buffer of random bytes to the device

From: Julian Calaby
Date: Tue Feb 14 2023 - 04:14:02 EST


Hi Hector,

On Tue, Feb 14, 2023 at 8:08 PM Hector Martin <marcan@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>
> On 14/02/2023 18.00, Julian Calaby wrote:
> > Hi Arend,
> >
> > On Tue, Feb 14, 2023 at 7:04 PM Hector Martin <marcan@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> >>
> >> Newer Apple firmwares on chipsets without a hardware RNG require the
> >> host to provide a buffer of 256 random bytes to the device on
> >> initialization. This buffer is present immediately before NVRAM,
> >> suffixed by a footer containing a magic number and the buffer length.
> >>
> >> This won't affect chips/firmwares that do not use this feature, so do it
> >> unconditionally for all Apple platforms (those with an Apple OTP).
> >
> > Following on from the conversation a year ago, is there a way to
> > detect chipsets that need these random bytes? While I'm sure Apple is
> > doing their own special thing for special Apple reasons, it seems
> > relatively sensible to omit a RNG on lower-cost chipsets, so would
> > other chipsets need it?
>
> I think we could include a list of chips known not to have the RNG (I
> think it's only the ones shipped on T2 machines). The main issue is I
> don't have access to those machines so it's hard for me to test exactly
> which ones need it. IIRC Apple's driver unconditionally provides the
> randomness. I could at least test the newer chips on AS platforms and
> figure out if they need it to exclude them... but then again, all I can
> do is test whether they work without the blob, but they might still want
> it (and simply become less secure without it).
>
> So I guess the answer is "maybe, I don't know, and it's kind of hard to
> know for sure"... the joys of reverse engineering hardware without
> vendor documentation.
>
> If you mean whether other chips with non-apple firmware can use this, I
> have no idea. That's probably something for Arend to answer. My gut
> feeling is Apple added this as part of a hardening mechanism and
> non-Apple firmware does not use it (and Broadcom then probably started
> shipping chips with a hardware RNG and firmware that uses it directly
> across all vendors), in which case the answer is no.

Sorry, I should have been more clear, I wasn't expecting you to know,
I was asking Arend if he knew.

Thanks,

--
Julian Calaby

Email: julian.calaby@xxxxxxxxx
Profile: http://www.google.com/profiles/julian.calaby/