linux-next/Documentation/security/tpm/tpm_vtpm_proxy.rst
Jarkko Sakkinen 799a545bb9 tpm: move documentation under Documentation/security
In order too make Documentation root directory cleaner move the tpm
directory under Documentation/security.

Signed-off-by: Jarkko Sakkinen <jarkko.sakkinen@linux.intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Corbet <corbet@lwn.net>
2016-11-07 18:56:42 -07:00

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2.1 KiB
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=============================================
Virtual TPM Proxy Driver for Linux Containers
=============================================
| Authors:
| Stefan Berger <stefanb@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
This document describes the virtual Trusted Platform Module (vTPM)
proxy device driver for Linux containers.
Introduction
============
The goal of this work is to provide TPM functionality to each Linux
container. This allows programs to interact with a TPM in a container
the same way they interact with a TPM on the physical system. Each
container gets its own unique, emulated, software TPM.
Design
======
To make an emulated software TPM available to each container, the container
management stack needs to create a device pair consisting of a client TPM
character device ``/dev/tpmX`` (with X=0,1,2...) and a 'server side' file
descriptor. The former is moved into the container by creating a character
device with the appropriate major and minor numbers while the file descriptor
is passed to the TPM emulator. Software inside the container can then send
TPM commands using the character device and the emulator will receive the
commands via the file descriptor and use it for sending back responses.
To support this, the virtual TPM proxy driver provides a device ``/dev/vtpmx``
that is used to create device pairs using an ioctl. The ioctl takes as
an input flags for configuring the device. The flags for example indicate
whether TPM 1.2 or TPM 2 functionality is supported by the TPM emulator.
The result of the ioctl are the file descriptor for the 'server side'
as well as the major and minor numbers of the character device that was created.
Besides that the number of the TPM character device is returned. If for
example ``/dev/tpm10`` was created, the number (``dev_num``) 10 is returned.
Once the device has been created, the driver will immediately try to talk
to the TPM. All commands from the driver can be read from the file descriptor
returned by the ioctl. The commands should be responded to immediately.
UAPI
====
.. kernel-doc:: include/uapi/linux/vtpm_proxy.h
.. kernel-doc:: drivers/char/tpm/tpm_vtpm_proxy.c
:functions: vtpmx_ioc_new_dev