/* Copyright (c) 2013 The Chromium OS Authors. All rights reserved. * Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style license that can be * found in the LICENSE file. */ /* APIs provided by firmware to vboot_reference. * * General notes: * * All verified boot functions now start with "Vb" for namespace clarity. This * fixes the problem where uboot and vboot both defined assert(). * * Verified boot APIs to be implemented by the calling firmware and exported to * vboot_reference start with "VbEx". * * TODO: split this file into a vboot_entry_points.h file which contains the * entry points for the firmware to call vboot_reference, and a * vboot_firmware_exports.h which contains the APIs to be implemented by the * calling firmware and exported to vboot_reference. */ #ifndef VBOOT_REFERENCE_VBOOT_API_H_ #define VBOOT_REFERENCE_VBOOT_API_H_ #include #include #include "gpt.h" /*****************************************************************************/ /* Error codes */ /* * Functions which return an error all return this type. This is a 32-bit * value rather than an int so it's consistent across UEFI, which is 32-bit * during PEI and 64-bit during DXE/BDS. */ typedef uint32_t VbError_t; /* * Define test_mockable for mocking functions. */ #define test_mockable __attribute__((weak)) /* * Predefined error numbers. Success is 0. Errors are non-zero, but differ * between functions. For example, the TPM functions may pass through TPM * error codes, some of which may be recoverable. */ enum VbErrorPredefined_t { /* No error; function completed successfully. */ VBERROR_SUCCESS = 0, /* * The verified boot entry points VbInit(), VbSelectFirmware(), * VbSelectAndLoadKernel() may return the following errors. */ /* Unknown error */ VBERROR_UNKNOWN = 0x10000, /* Unable to initialize shared data */ VBERROR_INIT_SHARED_DATA = 0x10001, /* Error resuming TPM during a S3 resume */ VBERROR_TPM_S3_RESUME = 0x10002, /* VbSelectFirmware() failed to find a valid firmware */ VBERROR_LOAD_FIRMWARE = 0x10003, /* Unable to write firmware versions to TPM */ VBERROR_TPM_WRITE_FIRMWARE = 0x10004, /* Unable to lock firmware versions in TPM */ VBERROR_TPM_LOCK_FIRMWARE = 0x10005, /* Unable to set boot mode state in TPM */ VBERROR_TPM_SET_BOOT_MODE_STATE = 0x10006, /* Calling firmware needs to perform a reboot. */ VBERROR_REBOOT_REQUIRED = 0x10007, /* Unable to set up TPM */ VBERROR_TPM_FIRMWARE_SETUP = 0x10008, /* Unable to read kernel versions from TPM */ VBERROR_TPM_READ_KERNEL = 0x10009, /* Attempt to load developer-only firmware with developer switch off */ VBERROR_DEV_FIRMWARE_SWITCH_MISMATCH = 0x1000A, /* Unable to write kernel versions to TPM */ VBERROR_TPM_WRITE_KERNEL = 0x1000B, /* Unable to lock kernel versions in TPM */ VBERROR_TPM_LOCK_KERNEL = 0x1000C, /* Calling firmware requested shutdown via VbExIsShutdownRequested() */ VBERROR_SHUTDOWN_REQUESTED = 0x1000D, /* Unable to find a boot device on which to look for a kernel */ VBERROR_NO_DISK_FOUND = 0x1000E, /* No OS kernel found on any boot device */ VBERROR_NO_KERNEL_FOUND = 0x1000F, /* All OS kernels found were invalid (corrupt, improperly signed...) */ VBERROR_INVALID_KERNEL_FOUND = 0x10010, /* VbSelectAndLoadKernel() requested recovery mode */ VBERROR_LOAD_KERNEL_RECOVERY = 0x10011, /* Other error inside VbSelectAndLoadKernel() */ VBERROR_LOAD_KERNEL = 0x10012, /* Invalid Google binary block */ VBERROR_INVALID_GBB = 0x10013, /* Invalid bitmap volume */ VBERROR_INVALID_BMPFV = 0x10014, /* Invalid screen index */ VBERROR_INVALID_SCREEN_INDEX = 0x10015, /* Simulated (test) error */ VBERROR_SIMULATED = 0x10016, /* Invalid parameter */ VBERROR_INVALID_PARAMETER = 0x10017, /* VbExBeep() can't make sounds at all */ VBERROR_NO_SOUND = 0x10018, /* VbExBeep() can't make sound in the background */ VBERROR_NO_BACKGROUND_SOUND = 0x10019, /* Developer has requested a BIOS shell */ VBERROR_BIOS_SHELL_REQUESTED = 0x10020, /* Need VGA and don't have it, or vice-versa */ VBERROR_VGA_OPROM_MISMATCH = 0x10021, /* Need EC to reboot to read-only code */ VBERROR_EC_REBOOT_TO_RO_REQUIRED = 0x10022, /* Invalid region read parameters */ VBERROR_REGION_READ_INVALID = 0x10023, /* Cannot read from region */ VBERROR_REGION_READ_FAILED = 0x10024, /* Unsupported region type */ VBERROR_UNSUPPORTED_REGION = 0x10025, /* No image present (returned from VbGbbReadImage() for missing image) */ VBERROR_NO_IMAGE_PRESENT = 0x10026, /* failed to draw screen */ VBERROR_SCREEN_DRAW = 0x10027, /* failed to jump to RW image */ VBERROR_RW_JUMP_FAILED = 0x10028, /* Error reading FWMP from TPM (note: not present is not an error) */ VBERROR_TPM_READ_FWMP = 0x10029, /* VbExEcGetExpectedRWHash() may return the following codes */ /* Compute expected RW hash from the EC image; BIOS doesn't have it */ VBERROR_EC_GET_EXPECTED_HASH_FROM_IMAGE = 0x20000, }; /*****************************************************************************/ /* Main entry points from firmware into vboot_reference */ /* * Minimum and recommended size of shared_data_blob in bytes. Shared data blob * is used to communicate data between calls to VbInit(), VbSelectFirmware(), * the OS. Minimum size is enough to hold all required data for verified boot * but may not be able to hold debug output. */ #define VB_SHARED_DATA_MIN_SIZE 3072 #define VB_SHARED_DATA_REC_SIZE 16384 /* * Data passed by firmware to VbInit(), VbSelectFirmware() and * VbSelectAndLoadKernel(). * * Note that in UEFI, these are called by different phases in different * processor modes (VbInit() and VbSelectFirmware() = 32-bit PEI, * VbSelectAndLoadKernel() = 64-bit BDS), so the data may be at a different * location between calls. */ typedef struct VbCommonParams { /* Pointer to GBB data */ void *gbb_data; /* Size of GBB data in bytes */ uint32_t gbb_size; /* * Shared data blob for data shared between verified boot entry points. * This should be at least VB_SHARED_DATA_MIN_SIZE bytes long, and * ideally is VB_SHARED_DATA_REC_SIZE bytes long. */ /* Pointer to shared data blob buffer */ void *shared_data_blob; /* * On input, set to size of shared data blob buffer, in bytes. On * output, this will contain the actual data size placed into the * buffer. */ uint32_t shared_data_size; /* * Internal context/data for verified boot, to maintain state during * calls to other API functions such as VbExHashFirmwareBody(). * Allocated and freed inside the entry point; firmware should not look * at this. */ void *vboot_context; /* * Internal context/data for firmware / VbExHashFirmwareBody(). Needed * because the PEI phase of UEFI boot runs out of ROM and thus can't * modify global variables; everything needs to get passed around on * the stack. */ void *caller_context; /* For internal use of Vboot - do not examine or modify! */ struct GoogleBinaryBlockHeader *gbb; struct BmpBlockHeader *bmp; } VbCommonParams; /* Flags for VbInitParams.flags */ /* Developer switch was on at boot time. */ #define VB_INIT_FLAG_DEV_SWITCH_ON 0x00000001 /* Recovery button was pressed at boot time. */ #define VB_INIT_FLAG_REC_BUTTON_PRESSED 0x00000002 /* Hardware write protect was enabled at boot time. */ #define VB_INIT_FLAG_WP_ENABLED 0x00000004 /* This is a S3 resume, not a normal boot. */ #define VB_INIT_FLAG_S3_RESUME 0x00000008 /* * Previous boot attempt failed for reasons external to verified boot (RAM * init failure, SSD missing, etc.). * * TODO: add a field to VbInitParams which holds a reason code, and report * that via VbSharedData. */ #define VB_INIT_FLAG_PREVIOUS_BOOT_FAIL 0x00000010 /* * Calling firmware supports read only firmware for normal/developer boot path. */ #define VB_INIT_FLAG_RO_NORMAL_SUPPORT 0x00000020 /* * This platform does not have a physical dev-switch, so we must rely on a * virtual switch (kept in the TPM) instead. When this flag is set, * VB_INIT_FLAG_DEV_SWITCH_ON is ignored. */ #define VB_INIT_FLAG_VIRTUAL_DEV_SWITCH 0x00000040 /* Set when the VGA Option ROM has been loaded already. */ #define VB_INIT_FLAG_OPROM_LOADED 0x00000080 /* Set if we care about the VGA Option ROM - some platforms don't. */ #define VB_INIT_FLAG_OPROM_MATTERS 0x00000100 /* EC on this platform supports EC software sync. */ #define VB_INIT_FLAG_EC_SOFTWARE_SYNC 0x00000200 /* EC on this platform is slow to update. */ #define VB_INIT_FLAG_EC_SLOW_UPDATE 0x00000400 /* * Software write protect was enabled at boot time. This is separate from the * HW write protect. Both must be set for flash write protection to work. */ #define VB_INIT_FLAG_SW_WP_ENABLED 0x00000800 /* * This platform does not have a physical recovery switch which, when present, * can (and should) be used for additional physical presence checks. */ #define VB_INIT_FLAG_VIRTUAL_REC_SWITCH 0x00001000 /* Set when we are calling VbInit() before loading Option ROMs */ #define VB_INIT_FLAG_BEFORE_OPROM_LOAD 0x00002000 /* Allow USB boot on transition to dev */ #define VB_INIT_FLAG_ALLOW_USB_BOOT 0x00004000 /* Set when we can't reliably identify boot failures. This prevents * the boot-try counters from decrementing. */ #define VB_INIT_FLAG_NOFAIL_BOOT 0x00008000 /* * Output flags for VbInitParams.out_flags. Used to indicate potential boot * paths and configuration to the calling firmware early in the boot process, * so that it can properly configure itself for the capabilities subsequently * required by VbSelectFirmware() and VbSelectAndLoadKernel(). */ /* * Enable recovery path. Do not rely on any rewritable data (cached RAM * timings, etc.). Reliable operation is more important than boot speed. */ #define VB_INIT_OUT_ENABLE_RECOVERY 0x00000001 /* RAM must be cleared before calling VbSelectFirmware(). */ #define VB_INIT_OUT_CLEAR_RAM 0x00000002 /* * Load display drivers; VbExDisplay*() functions may be called. If this flag * is not present, VbExDisplay*() functions will not be called this boot. */ #define VB_INIT_OUT_ENABLE_DISPLAY 0x00000004 /* * Load USB storage drivers; VbExDisk*() functions may be called with the * VB_DISK_FLAG_REMOVABLE flag. If this flag is not present, VbExDisk*() * functions will only be called for fixed disks. */ #define VB_INIT_OUT_ENABLE_USB_STORAGE 0x00000008 /* If this is a S3 resume, do a debug reset boot instead */ #define VB_INIT_OUT_S3_DEBUG_BOOT 0x00000010 /* BIOS should load any PCI option ROMs it finds, not just internal video */ #define VB_INIT_OUT_ENABLE_OPROM 0x00000020 /* BIOS may be asked to boot something other than ChromeOS */ #define VB_INIT_OUT_ENABLE_ALTERNATE_OS 0x00000040 /* Enable developer path. */ #define VB_INIT_OUT_ENABLE_DEVELOPER 0x00000080 /* Data only used by VbInit() */ typedef struct VbInitParams { /* Inputs to VbInit() */ /* Flags (see VB_INIT_FLAG_*) */ uint32_t flags; /* Outputs from VbInit(); valid only if it returns success. */ /* Output flags for firmware; see VB_INIT_OUT_*) */ uint32_t out_flags; } VbInitParams; /* * Firmware types for VbHashFirmwareBody() and * VbSelectFirmwareParams.selected_firmware. Note that we store these in a * uint32_t because enum maps to int, which isn't fixed-size. */ enum VbSelectFirmware_t { /* Recovery mode */ VB_SELECT_FIRMWARE_RECOVERY = 0, /* Rewritable firmware A/B for normal or developer path */ VB_SELECT_FIRMWARE_A = 1, VB_SELECT_FIRMWARE_B = 2, /* Read only firmware for normal or developer path. */ VB_SELECT_FIRMWARE_READONLY = 3, VB_SELECT_FIRMWARE_COUNT, }; /* Data only used by VbSelectFirmware() */ typedef struct VbSelectFirmwareParams { /* Inputs to VbSelectFirmware() */ /* Key block + preamble for firmware A */ void *verification_block_A; /* Key block + preamble for firmware B */ void *verification_block_B; /* Verification block A size in bytes */ uint32_t verification_size_A; /* Verification block B size in bytes */ uint32_t verification_size_B; /* Outputs from VbSelectFirmware(); valid only if it returns success. */ /* Main firmware to run; see VB_SELECT_FIRMWARE_*. */ uint32_t selected_firmware; } VbSelectFirmwareParams; /* * We use disk handles rather than indices. Using indices causes problems if * a disk is removed/inserted in the middle of processing. */ typedef void *VbExDiskHandle_t; /* Data used only by VbSelectAndLoadKernel() */ typedef struct VbSelectAndLoadKernelParams { /* Inputs to VbSelectAndLoadKernel() */ /* Destination buffer for kernel (normally at 0x100000 on x86) */ void *kernel_buffer; /* Size of kernel buffer in bytes */ uint32_t kernel_buffer_size; /* input flags. Currently used for detachables */ uint32_t inflags; /* * Outputs from VbSelectAndLoadKernel(); valid only if it returns * success. */ /* Handle of disk containing loaded kernel */ VbExDiskHandle_t disk_handle; /* Partition number on disk to boot (1...M) */ uint32_t partition_number; /* Address of bootloader image in RAM */ uint64_t bootloader_address; /* Size of bootloader image in bytes */ uint32_t bootloader_size; /* UniquePartitionGuid for boot partition */ uint8_t partition_guid[16]; /* Flags set by signer */ uint32_t flags; /* * TODO: in H2C, all that pretty much just gets passed to the * bootloader as KernelBootloaderOptions, though the disk handle is * passed as an index instead of a handle. Is that used anymore now * that we're passing partition_guid? */ } VbSelectAndLoadKernelParams; /* Flag to indicate using detachable menu ui (arrow up/down+power) * instead of traditional FW screens with ctrl+D, ctrl+U, etc. */ #define VB_SALK_INFLAGS_ENABLE_DETACHABLE_UI (1 << 0) /** * Select and loads the kernel. * * Returns VBERROR_SUCCESS if success, non-zero if error; on error, caller * should reboot. */ VbError_t VbSelectAndLoadKernel(VbCommonParams *cparams, VbSelectAndLoadKernelParams *kparams); /** * Verify Kernel Image loaded in memory. * * This routine is used by fastboot boot command to verify the kernel image in * memory sent by the host device using fastboot protocol. It checks if the * image in memory is signed using official recovery keys. In case of GBB * override to allow full fastboot functionality, it checks image integrity, but * does not check the image signature. * * @param cparams Common parameters, e.g. use member caller_context * to point to useful context data * @param kparams kernel params * @param boot_image Image in memory that needs to be verified * @param image_size Size of the image in memory * @return VBERROR_... error, VBERROR_SUCCESS on success. */ VbError_t VbVerifyMemoryBootImage(VbCommonParams *cparams, VbSelectAndLoadKernelParams *kparams, void *boot_image, size_t image_size); /** * Fastboot API to enter dev mode. * * This routine is used by fastboot oem unlock command to switch the device into * dev mode. * * NOTE: The caller MUST be in read-only firmware, and MUST have just obtained * explicit physical confirmation from the user via a trusted input method * before calling this function! Also, on successful return from this function, * the caller needs to reboot the device immediately for changes to take effect. * * @return VBERROR_... error, VBERROR_SUCCESS on success. */ VbError_t VbUnlockDevice(void); /** * Fastboot API to enter normal mode. * * This routine is used by fastboot oem lock command to switch the device into * normal mode. * * NOTE: On successful return from this function, the caller needs to reboot the * device immediately for changes to take effect. This routine just stores a * request, which will be handled by RO firmware on next reboot. * * @return VBERROR_... error, VBERROR_SUCCESS on success. */ VbError_t VbLockDevice(void); /*****************************************************************************/ /* Debug output (from utility.h) */ /** * Output an error message and quit. Does not return. Supports * printf()-style formatting. */ void VbExError(const char *format, ...); /** * Output a debug message. Supports printf()-style formatting. */ void VbExDebug(const char *format, ...) __attribute__ ((format (__printf__, 1, 2))); /*****************************************************************************/ /* Timer and delay (first two from utility.h) */ /** * Read a high-resolution timer. Returns the current timer value in arbitrary * units. * * This is intended for benchmarking, so this call MUST be fast. The timer * frequency must be >1 KHz (preferably >1 MHz), and the timer must not wrap * around for at least 10 minutes. It is preferable (but not required) that * the timer be initialized to 0 at boot. * * It is assumed that the firmware has some other way of communicating the * timer frequency to the OS. For example, on x86 we use TSC, and the OS * kernel reports the initial TSC value at kernel-start and calculates the * frequency. */ uint64_t VbExGetTimer(void); /** * Delay for at least the specified number of milliseconds. Should be accurate * to within 10% (a requested delay of 1000 ms should result in an actual delay * of between 1000 - 1100 ms). */ void VbExSleepMs(uint32_t msec); /** * Play a beep tone of the specified frequency in Hz and duration in msec. * This is effectively a VbSleep() variant that makes noise. * * If the audio codec can run in the background, then: * zero frequency means OFF, non-zero frequency means ON * zero msec means return immediately, non-zero msec means delay (and * then OFF if needed) * otherwise, * non-zero msec and non-zero frequency means ON, delay, OFF, return * zero msec or zero frequency means do nothing and return immediately * * The return value is used by the caller to determine the capabilities. The * implementation should always do the best it can if it cannot fully support * all features - for example, beeping at a fixed frequency if frequency * support is not available. At a minimum, it must delay for the specified * non-zero duration. */ VbError_t VbExBeep(uint32_t msec, uint32_t frequency); /*****************************************************************************/ /* TPM (from tlcl_stub.h) */ /** * Initialize the stub library. */ VbError_t VbExTpmInit(void); /** * Close and open the device. This is needed for running more complex commands * at user level, such as TPM_TakeOwnership, since the TPM device can be opened * only by one process at a time. */ VbError_t VbExTpmClose(void); VbError_t VbExTpmOpen(void); /** * Send a request_length-byte request to the TPM and receive a response. On * input, response_length is the size of the response buffer in bytes. On * exit, response_length is set to the actual received response length in * bytes. */ VbError_t VbExTpmSendReceive(const uint8_t *request, uint32_t request_length, uint8_t *response, uint32_t *response_length); /*****************************************************************************/ /* Non-volatile storage */ #define VBNV_BLOCK_SIZE 16 /* Size of NV storage block in bytes */ /** * Read the VBNV_BLOCK_SIZE-byte non-volatile storage into buf. */ VbError_t VbExNvStorageRead(uint8_t *buf); /** * Write the VBNV_BLOCK_SIZE-byte non-volatile storage from buf. */ VbError_t VbExNvStorageWrite(const uint8_t *buf); /*****************************************************************************/ /* Firmware / EEPROM access (previously in load_firmware_fw.h) */ /** * Calculate the hash of the firmware body data for [firmware_index], which is * either VB_SELECT_FIRMWARE_A or VB_SELECT_FIRMWARE B. * * This function must call VbUpdateFirmwareBodyHash() before returning, to * update the secure hash for the firmware image. For best performance, the * implementation should call VbUpdateFirmwareBodyHash() periodically during * the read, so that updating the hash can be pipelined with the read. If the * reader cannot update the hash during the read process, it should call * VbUpdateFirmwareBodyHash() on the entire firmware data after the read, * before returning. * * It is recommended that the firmware use this call to copy the requested * firmware body from EEPROM into RAM, so that it doesn't need to do a second * slow copy from EEPROM to RAM if this firmware body is selected. * * Note this function doesn't actually pass the firmware body data to verified * boot, because verified boot doesn't actually need the firmware body, just * its hash. This is important on x86, where the firmware is stored * compressed. We hash the compressed data, but the BIOS decompresses it * during read. Simply updating a hash is compatible with the x86 * read-and-decompress pipeline. */ VbError_t VbExHashFirmwareBody(VbCommonParams *cparams, uint32_t firmware_index); /*****************************************************************************/ /* Disk access (previously in boot_device.h) */ /* Flags for VbDisk APIs */ /* Disk is removable. Example removable disks: SD cards, USB keys. */ #define VB_DISK_FLAG_REMOVABLE 0x00000001 /* * Disk is fixed. If this flag is present, disk is internal to the system and * not removable. Example fixed disks: internal SATA SSD, eMMC. */ #define VB_DISK_FLAG_FIXED 0x00000002 /* * Note that VB_DISK_FLAG_REMOVABLE and VB_DISK_FLAG_FIXED are * mutually-exclusive for a single disk. VbExDiskGetInfo() may specify both * flags to request disks of both types in a single call. * * At some point we could specify additional flags, but we don't currently * have a way to make use of these: * * USB Device is known to be attached to USB. Note that the SD * card reader inside x86 systems is attached to USB so this * isn't super useful. * SD Device is known to be a SD card. Note that external card * readers might not return this information, so also of * questionable use. * READ_ONLY Device is known to be read-only. Could be used by recovery * when processing read-only recovery image. */ /* * Disks are used in two ways: * - As a random-access device to read and write the GPT * - As a streaming device to read the kernel * These are implemented differently on raw NAND vs eMMC/SATA/USB * - On eMMC/SATA/USB, both of these refer to the same underlying * storage, so they have the same size and LBA size. In this case, * the GPT should not point to the same address as itself. * - On raw NAND, the GPT is held on a portion of the SPI flash. * Random access GPT operations refer to the SPI and streaming * operations refer to NAND. The GPT may therefore point into * the same offsets as itself. * These types are distinguished by the following flag and VbDiskInfo * has separate fields to describe the random-access ("GPT") and * streaming aspects of the disk. If a disk is random-access (i.e. * not raw NAND) then these fields are equal. */ #define VB_DISK_FLAG_EXTERNAL_GPT 0x00000004 /* Information on a single disk */ typedef struct VbDiskInfo { /* Disk handle */ VbExDiskHandle_t handle; /* Size of a random-access LBA sector in bytes */ uint64_t bytes_per_lba; /* Number of random-access LBA sectors on the device. * If streaming_lba_count is 0, this stands in for the size of the * randomly accessed portion as well as the streaming portion. * Otherwise, this is only the randomly-accessed portion. */ uint64_t lba_count; /* Number of streaming sectors on the device */ uint64_t streaming_lba_count; /* Flags (see VB_DISK_FLAG_* constants) */ uint32_t flags; /* * Optional name string, for use in debugging. May be empty or null if * not available. */ const char *name; } VbDiskInfo; /** * Store information into [info] for all disks (storage devices) attached to * the system which match all of the disk_flags. * * On output, count indicates how many disks are present, and [infos_ptr] * points to a [count]-sized array of VbDiskInfo structs with the information * on those disks; this pointer must be freed by calling VbExDiskFreeInfo(). * If count=0, infos_ptr may point to NULL. If [infos_ptr] points to NULL * because count=0 or error, it is not necessary to call VbExDiskFreeInfo(). * * A multi-function device (such as a 4-in-1 card reader) should provide * multiple disk handles. * * The firmware must not alter or free the list pointed to by [infos_ptr] until * VbExDiskFreeInfo() is called. */ VbError_t VbExDiskGetInfo(VbDiskInfo **infos_ptr, uint32_t *count, uint32_t disk_flags); /** * Free a disk information list [infos] previously returned by * VbExDiskGetInfo(). If [preserve_handle] != NULL, the firmware must ensure * that handle remains valid after this call; all other handles from the info * list need not remain valid after this call. */ VbError_t VbExDiskFreeInfo(VbDiskInfo *infos, VbExDiskHandle_t preserve_handle); /** * Read lba_count LBA sectors, starting at sector lba_start, from the disk, * into the buffer. * * This is used for random access to the GPT. It is not for the partition * contents. The upper limit is lba_count. * * If the disk handle is invalid (for example, the handle refers to a disk * which as been removed), the function must return error but must not * crash. */ VbError_t VbExDiskRead(VbExDiskHandle_t handle, uint64_t lba_start, uint64_t lba_count, void *buffer); /** * Write lba_count LBA sectors, starting at sector lba_start, to the disk, from * the buffer. * * This is used for random access to the GPT. It does not (necessarily) access * the streaming portion of the device. * * If the disk handle is invalid (for example, the handle refers to a disk * which as been removed), the function must return error but must not * crash. */ VbError_t VbExDiskWrite(VbExDiskHandle_t handle, uint64_t lba_start, uint64_t lba_count, const void *buffer); /* Streaming read interface */ typedef void *VbExStream_t; /** * Open a stream on a disk * * @param handle Disk to open the stream against * @param lba_start Starting sector offset within the disk to stream from * @param lba_count Maximum extent of the stream in sectors * @param stream out-paramter for the generated stream * * @return Error code, or VBERROR_SUCCESS. * * This is used for access to the contents of the actual partitions on the * device. It is not used to access the GPT. The size of the content addressed * is within streaming_lba_count. */ VbError_t VbExStreamOpen(VbExDiskHandle_t handle, uint64_t lba_start, uint64_t lba_count, VbExStream_t *stream_ptr); /** * Read from a stream on a disk * * @param stream Stream to read from * @param bytes Number of bytes to read * @param buffer Destination to read into * * @return Error code, or VBERROR_SUCCESS. Failure to read as much data as * requested is an error. * * This is used for access to the contents of the actual partitions on the * device. It is not used to access the GPT. */ VbError_t VbExStreamRead(VbExStream_t stream, uint32_t bytes, void *buffer); /** * Close a stream * * @param stream Stream to close */ void VbExStreamClose(VbExStream_t stream); /*****************************************************************************/ /* Display */ /* Predefined (default) screens for VbExDisplayScreen(). */ enum VbScreenType_t { /* Blank (clear) screen */ VB_SCREEN_BLANK = 0, /* Developer - warning */ VB_SCREEN_DEVELOPER_WARNING = 0x101, /* Developer - easter egg */ VB_SCREEN_DEVELOPER_EGG = 0x102, /* Recovery - remove inserted devices */ VB_SCREEN_RECOVERY_REMOVE = 0x201, /* Recovery - insert recovery image */ VB_SCREEN_RECOVERY_INSERT = 0x202, /* Recovery - inserted image invalid */ VB_SCREEN_RECOVERY_NO_GOOD = 0x203, /* Recovery - confirm dev mode */ VB_SCREEN_RECOVERY_TO_DEV = 0x204, /* Developer - confirm normal mode */ VB_SCREEN_DEVELOPER_TO_NORM = 0x205, /* Please wait - programming EC */ VB_SCREEN_WAIT = 0x206, /* Confirm after DEVELOPER_TO_NORM */ VB_SCREEN_TO_NORM_CONFIRMED = 0x207, /* Broken screen shown after verification failure */ VB_SCREEN_OS_BROKEN = 0x208, /* Display base screen (no icons, no text) */ VB_SCREEN_BASE = 0x209, /* Detachable Menu - Developer Warning */ VB_SCREEN_DEVELOPER_WARNING_MENU = 0x20a, /* Detachable Menu - Developer Boot */ VB_SCREEN_DEVELOPER_MENU = 0x20b, /* Detachable Menu - Recovery */ VB_SCREEN_RECOVERY_MENU = 0x20c, /* Detachable Menu - Confirm Dev Mode */ VB_SCREEN_RECOVERY_TO_DEV_MENU = 0x20d, /* Detachable Menu - Confirm Normal Mode */ VB_SCREEN_DEVELOPER_TO_NORM_MENU = 0x20e, /* Detachable Menu - Languages */ VB_SCREEN_LANGUAGES_MENU = 0x20f, }; /** * Initialize and clear the display. Set width and height to the screen * dimensions in pixels. */ VbError_t VbExDisplayInit(uint32_t *width, uint32_t *height); /** * Enable (enable!=0) or disable (enable=0) the display backlight. */ VbError_t VbExDisplayBacklight(uint8_t enable); /** * Sets the logical dimension to display. * * If the physical display is larger or smaller than given dimension, display * provider may decide to scale or shift images (from VbExDisplayImage)to proper * location. */ VbError_t VbExDisplaySetDimension(uint32_t width, uint32_t height); /** * Returns the logical dimension to display. */ VbError_t VbExDisplayGetDimension(uint32_t *width, uint32_t *height); /** * Display a predefined screen; see VB_SCREEN_* for valid screens. * * This is a backup method of screen display, intended for use if the GBB does * not contain a full set of bitmaps. It is acceptable for the backup screen * to be simple ASCII text such as "NO GOOD" or "INSERT"; these screens should * only be seen during development. */ VbError_t VbExDisplayScreen(uint32_t screen_type, uint32_t locale); /** * Display a predefined menu screen; see VB_SCREEN_* for valid screens. * * This is a backup method of screen display, intended for use if the GBB does * not contain a full set of bitmaps. It is acceptable for the backup screen * to be simple ASCII text such as "NO GOOD" or "INSERT"; these screens should * only be seen during development. */ VbError_t VbExDisplayMenu(uint32_t screen_type, uint32_t locale, uint32_t selected_index, uint32_t redraw_base); /** * Write an image to the display, with the upper left corner at the specified * pixel coordinates. The bitmap buffer is a pointer to the platform-dependent * uncompressed binary blob with dimensions and format specified internally * (for example, a raw BMP, GIF, PNG, whatever). We pass the size just for * convenience. */ VbError_t VbExDisplayImage(uint32_t x, uint32_t y, void *buffer, uint32_t buffersize); /** * Display a string beginning at coordinate x,y. * * The highlight option will display the string in a contrasting color to * the normal colors. For example, the normal display colors are white * background, black foreground. If highlight==1, will display with black * background, white foreground. */ VbError_t VbExDisplayText(uint32_t x, uint32_t y, const char *info_str, int highlight); /** * Display a string containing debug information on the screen, rendered in a * platform-dependent font. Should be able to handle newlines '\n' in the * string. Firmware must support displaying at least 20 lines of text, where * each line may be at least 80 characters long. If the firmware has its own * debug state, it may display it to the screen below this information. * * NOTE: This is what we currently display when TAB is pressed. Some * information (HWID, recovery reason) is ours; some (CMOS breadcrumbs) is * platform-specific. If we decide to soft-render the HWID string * (chrome-os-partner:3693), we'll need to maintain our own fonts, so we'll * likely display it via VbExDisplayImage() above. */ VbError_t VbExDisplayDebugInfo(const char *info_str); /*****************************************************************************/ /* Keyboard and switches */ /* Key codes for required non-printable-ASCII characters. */ enum VbKeyCode_t { VB_KEY_UP = 0x100, VB_KEY_DOWN = 0x101, VB_KEY_LEFT = 0x102, VB_KEY_RIGHT = 0x103, VB_KEY_CTRL_ENTER = 0x104 }; /* Button codes match that of 8042 ascii values */ enum VbButtonCode_t { VB_BUTTON_VOL_UP = 0x62, VB_BUTTON_VOL_DOWN = 0x63, VB_BUTTON_POWER = 0x90 }; /* Flags for additional information. * TODO(semenzato): consider adding flags for modifiers instead of * making up some of the key codes above. */ enum VbKeyFlags_t { VB_KEY_FLAG_TRUSTED_KEYBOARD = 1 << 0, }; /** * Read the next keypress from the keyboard buffer. * * Returns the keypress, or zero if no keypress is pending or error. * * The following keys must be returned as ASCII character codes: * 0x08 Backspace * 0x09 Tab * 0x0D Enter (carriage return) * 0x01 - 0x1A Ctrl+A - Ctrl+Z (yes, those alias with backspace/tab/enter) * 0x1B Esc * 0x20 Space * 0x30 - 0x39 '0' - '9' * 0x60 - 0x7A 'a' - 'z' * * Some extended keys must also be supported; see the VB_KEY_* defines above. * * Keys ('/') or key-chords (Fn+Q) not defined above may be handled in any of * the following ways: * 1. Filter (don't report anything if one of these keys is pressed). * 2. Report as ASCII (if a well-defined ASCII value exists for the key). * 3. Report as any other value in the range 0x200 - 0x2FF. * It is not permitted to report a key as a multi-byte code (for example, * sending an arrow key as the sequence of keys '\x1b', '[', '1', 'A'). */ uint32_t VbExKeyboardRead(void); /** * Same as VbExKeyboardRead(), but return extra information. */ uint32_t VbExKeyboardReadWithFlags(uint32_t *flags_ptr); /** * Return the current state of the switches specified in request_mask */ uint32_t VbExGetSwitches(uint32_t request_mask); /*****************************************************************************/ /* Embedded controller (EC) */ /* * All these functions take a devidx parameter, which indicates which embedded * processor the call applies to. At present, only devidx=0 is valid, but * upcoming CLs will add support for multiple devices. */ /** * This is called only if the system implements a keyboard-based (virtual) * developer switch. It must return true only if the system has an embedded * controller which is provably running in its RO firmware at the time the * function is called. */ int VbExTrustEC(int devidx); /** * Check if the EC is currently running rewritable code. * * If the EC is in RO code, sets *in_rw=0. * If the EC is in RW code, sets *in_rw non-zero. * If the current EC image is unknown, returns error. */ VbError_t VbExEcRunningRW(int devidx, int *in_rw); /** * Request the EC jump to its rewritable code. If successful, returns when the * EC has booting its RW code far enough to respond to subsequent commands. * Does nothing if the EC is already in its rewritable code. */ VbError_t VbExEcJumpToRW(int devidx); /** * Tell the EC to refuse another jump until it reboots. Subsequent calls to * VbExEcJumpToRW() in this boot will fail. */ VbError_t VbExEcDisableJump(int devidx); /** * Read the SHA-256 hash of the selected EC image. */ VbError_t VbExEcHashImage(int devidx, enum VbSelectFirmware_t select, const uint8_t **hash, int *hash_size); /** * Get the expected contents of the EC image associated with the main firmware * specified by the "select" argument. */ VbError_t VbExEcGetExpectedImage(int devidx, enum VbSelectFirmware_t select, const uint8_t **image, int *image_size); /** * Read the SHA-256 hash of the expected contents of the EC image associated * with the main firmware specified by the "select" argument. */ VbError_t VbExEcGetExpectedImageHash(int devidx, enum VbSelectFirmware_t select, const uint8_t **hash, int *hash_size); /** * Update the selected EC image. */ VbError_t VbExEcUpdateImage(int devidx, enum VbSelectFirmware_t select, const uint8_t *image, int image_size); /** * Lock the selected EC code to prevent updates until the EC is rebooted. * Subsequent calls to VbExEcUpdateImage() with the same region this boot will * fail. */ VbError_t VbExEcProtect(int devidx, enum VbSelectFirmware_t select); /** * Info the EC of the boot mode selected by the AP. * mode: Normal, Developer, or Recovery */ enum VbEcBootMode_t {VB_EC_NORMAL, VB_EC_DEVELOPER, VB_EC_RECOVERY }; VbError_t VbExEcEnteringMode(int devidx, enum VbEcBootMode_t mode); /** * Perform EC post-verification / updating / jumping actions. * * This routine is called to perform certain actions that must wait until * after the EC resides in its `final` image (the image the EC will * run for the duration of boot). These actions include verifying that * enough power is available to continue with boot. * * @param in_recovery 1 if recovery mode is selected by the AP, 0 otherwise. * @return VBERROR_... error, VBERROR_SUCCESS on success. */ VbError_t VbExEcVbootDone(int in_recovery); /** * Request EC to stop discharging and cut-off battery. */ VbError_t VbExEcBatteryCutOff(void); /* * severity levels for an auxiliary firmware update request */ typedef enum { /* no update needed */ VB_AUX_FW_NO_UPDATE = 0, /* update needed, can be done quickly */ VB_AUX_FW_FAST_UPDATE = 1, /* update needed, "this would take a while..." */ VB_AUX_FW_SLOW_UPDATE = 2, } VbAuxFwUpdateSeverity_t; /** * Perform auxiliary firmware checks. * * This is called after the EC has been updated and is intended to * version-check additional firmware blobs such as TCPCs. * * @param severity return parameter for health of auxiliary firmware * 0: no update needed * 1: fast update needed * 2: slow update needed * @return VBERROR_... error, VBERROR_SUCCESS on success. */ VbError_t VbExCheckAuxFw(VbAuxFwUpdateSeverity_t *severity); /** * Perform auxiliary firmware update(s). * * This is called after the EC has been updated and is intended to * update additional firmware blobs such as TCPCs. * * @return VBERROR_... error, VBERROR_SUCCESS on success. */ VbError_t VbExUpdateAuxFw(void); /*****************************************************************************/ /* Misc */ /* Args to VbExProtectFlash() */ enum VbProtectFlash_t { VBPROTECT_RW_A, VBPROTECT_RW_B, VBPROTECT_RW_DEVKEY }; /** * Lock a section of the BIOS flash address space to prevent updates until the * host is rebooted. Subsequent attempts to erase or modify the specified BIOS * image will fail. If this function is called more than once each call should * be cumulative. */ VbError_t VbExProtectFlash(enum VbProtectFlash_t region); /** * Check if the firmware needs to shut down the system. * * Returns a non-zero VB_SHUTDOWN_REQUEST mask indicating the reason(s) for * shutdown if a shutdown is being requested (see VB_SHUTDOWN_REQUEST_*), or 0 * if a shutdown is not being requested. * * NOTE: When we're displaying a screen, pressing the power button should shut * down the computer. We need a way to break out of our control loop so this * can occur cleanly. */ uint32_t VbExIsShutdownRequested(void); /* * Shutdown requested for a reason which is not defined among other * VB_SHUTDOWN_REQUEST_* values. This must be defined as 1 for backward * compatibility with old versions of the API. */ #define VB_SHUTDOWN_REQUEST_OTHER 0x00000001 /* Shutdown requested due to a lid switch being closed. */ #define VB_SHUTDOWN_REQUEST_LID_CLOSED 0x00000002 /* Shutdown requested due to a power button being pressed. */ #define VB_SHUTDOWN_REQUEST_POWER_BUTTON 0x00000004 /** * Expose the BIOS' built-in decompression routine to the vboot wrapper. The * caller must know how large the uncompressed data will be and must manage * that memory. The decompression routine just puts the uncompressed data into * the specified buffer. We pass in the size of the outbuf, and get back the * actual size used. */ VbError_t VbExDecompress(void *inbuf, uint32_t in_size, uint32_t compression_type, void *outbuf, uint32_t *out_size); /* Constants for compression_type */ enum { COMPRESS_NONE = 0, COMPRESS_EFIv1, /* The x86 BIOS only supports this */ COMPRESS_LZMA1, /* The ARM BIOS supports LZMA1 */ MAX_COMPRESS, }; /** * Execute legacy boot option. */ int VbExLegacy(void); /* Regions for VbExRegionRead() */ enum vb_firmware_region { VB_REGION_GBB, /* Google Binary Block - see gbbheader.h */ VB_REGION_COUNT, }; /** * Read data from a region of the firmware image * * Vboot wants access to a region, to read data from it. This function * reads it (typically from the firmware image such as SPI flash) and * returns the data. * * cparams is passed so that the boot loader has some context for the * operation. * * @param cparams Common parameters, e.g. use member caller_context * to point to useful context data * @param region Firmware region to read * @param offset Start offset within region * @param size Number of bytes to read * @param buf Place to put data * @return VBERROR_... error, VBERROR_SUCCESS on success, */ VbError_t VbExRegionRead(VbCommonParams *cparams, enum vb_firmware_region region, uint32_t offset, uint32_t size, void *buf); /** * Check if the firmware wants to override GPT entry priority. * * In case of kernel entry, check if there is an override of priority * available. This is used to select a particular partition to boot in the * current boot cycle. Rollback protection, image verification and all other * checks in LoadKernel still remain the same. * * @param e Gpt Entry to check for priority override. * @return 0 if no override, 1-15 for override priority. */ uint8_t VbExOverrideGptEntryPriority(const GptEntry *e); /** * Return number of locales supported * * @param count Pointer to the number of locales. * @return VBERROR_... error, VBERROR_SUCCESS on success. */ VbError_t VbExGetLocalizationCount(uint32_t *count); #endif /* VBOOT_REFERENCE_VBOOT_API_H_ */