tillitis-key/doc/system_description/system_description.md
2022-12-20 12:06:07 +01:00

136 lines
5.3 KiB
Markdown

# System Description
## Purpose and Revision
The purpose of this document is to provide a description of the
Tillitis TKey. What it is, what is supposed to be used for, by whom,
where and possible use cases. The document also provides a functional
level description of features and components of the TKey.
Finally, the document acts as a requirement description. For the
requirements, the document follows
[RFC2119](https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/rfc2119) to indicate
requirement levels.
The described functionality and requirements applies to version 1 of
the TKey (TK1)
The intended users of this document are:
- Implementors of the TKkey hardware, firmware and SDKs
- Developers of secure applications for the TKey
- Technically skilled third parties that wants to understand the
TKey
## Introduction
The TKey is a USB-connected, RISC-V based application platform. The
purpose of the TKey is to provide a secure environment
for applications that provides some security functionality needed by the
device user. Some examples of such security functionality are:
- TOTP token generators
- Signing oracles
- SSH login dongles
### Measured Based Security
The key, unique feature of the TKey is that it measures the secure
application when the application is being loaded onto the device. The
measurement (a hash digest), combined with a Unique Device Secret
(UDS) is used to derive a base secret for the application.
The consequence of this is that if the application is altered,
the base secret derived will also change. Conversely, if the keys
derived from the base secret are the same as the last time the
application was loaded onto the same device, the application can
be trusted not to have been altered.
Note that since the UDS is per-device unique, the same application
loaded onto another TKey device will derive a different set of keys.
This ties keys to a specific device.
The derivation can also be combined with a User Supplied Secret
(USS). This means that keys derived are both based on something the user
has - the specific device, and something the user knows (the USS). And
the derived can be trusted because of the measurement being used
by the derivation, thereby verifying the intergrity od the application.
### Assets
The TKey store and use the following assets internally:
- UDS - Unique Device Secret. 256 bits. Provisioned and stored during
device manufacturing. Never to be replaced during the life time of
a given device. Used to derive application secrets. Must never leave
the device. Tillitis will NOT store a copy of the UDS. Can be read
by firmware once between power cycling
- UDI - Unique Device ID. 64 bits. Provisioned and stored during
device manufacturing. Only accessible by FW. Never to be replaced or
altered during the life time of a given device. May be copied,
extracted, read from the device.
- CDI - Compound Device Identity. Dervied by the FW when an application
is loaded using the UDS and the application binary. Used by the
application to derive secrets, keys as needed. The CDI should never
be exposed outside of the application_fpga
Additionally the following asset could be provided from the host:
- USS - User Supplied Secret. May possibly be replaced many times.
Supplied from the host to the device. Should not be revealed to a
third party.
### Subsystems and Components
The TKey as a project, system and secure application platform
consists of a number of subsystems and components, modules, support
libraries etc. Roughly these can be divided into:
- TKey boards. PCB designs including schematics, Bill of Material (BOM)
and layout, as needed for development, production and and general usage
of the TKey devices
- TKey programmer. SW, PCB designs including schematics, Bill of
Material (BOM) and layout, as needed for development, production
and and provisioning, programming general usage
- USB to UART controller. FW for the MCU implementing the USB host
interface on the TKey
- application_fpga. FPGA design with cores including CPU and memory that
implements the secure application platform
- application_fpga FW. The base software running on the CPU as needed to
boot, load applications, measure applications, dderive base secret etc
- One or more applications loaded onto the application_fpga to provide
some functionality to the user of the host
- host side application loader. Software that talks to the FW in the
application_fpga to load a secure application
- host side boot, management. Support software to boot, authenticate
the TKey device connected to a host
- host side secure application. Software that communicates with the
secure application running in the application_fpga as needed to solve
a security objective
- application_fpga FW SDK. Tools, libraries, documentation and examples
to support development of the application_fpga firmware
- secure application SDK. Tools, libraries, documentation and examples
to support development of the secure applications to be loaded onto
the application_fpga
- host side secure application SDK. Tools, libraries, documentation and
examples to support development of the host applications
## References
More detailed information about the software running on the device
(referred to firmware, SDK, and secure application), can be found in
the [software document](software.md).