On 16-11-20, 18:13, Sudeep Holla wrote:
> The CLKSCREW attack [0] exposed security vulnerabilities in energy management
> implementations where untrusted software had direct access to clock and
> voltage hardware controls. In this attack, the malicious software was able to
> place the platform into unsafe overclocked or undervolted configurations. Such
> configurations then enabled the injection of predictable faults to reveal
> secrets.
> 
> Many Arm-based systems used to or still use voltage regulator and clock
> frameworks in the kernel. These frameworks allow callers to independently
> manipulate frequency and voltage settings. Such implementations can render
> systems susceptible to this form of attack.
> 
> Attacks such as CLKSCREW are now being mitigated by not having direct and
> independent control of clock and voltage in the kernel and moving that
> control to a trusted entity, such as the SCP firmware or secure world
> firmware/software which are to perform sanity checking on the requested
> performance levels, thereby preventing any attempted malicious programming.
> 
> With the advent of such an abstraction, there is a need to replace the
> generic clock and regulator bindings used by such devices with a generic
> performance domains bindings.
> 
> [0] 
> https://www.usenix.org/conference/usenixsecurity17/technical-sessions/presentation/tang
> 
> Cc: Rob Herring <robh...@kernel.org>
> Signed-off-by: Sudeep Holla <sudeep.ho...@arm.com>
> ---
>  .../bindings/dvfs/performance-domain.yaml     | 76 +++++++++++++++++++
>  1 file changed, 76 insertions(+)
>  create mode 100644 
> Documentation/devicetree/bindings/dvfs/performance-domain.yaml

Acked-by: Viresh Kumar <viresh.ku...@linaro.org>

-- 
viresh

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