Now that lifetimes have structures and secure element drivers handle
all the lifetimes with a certain location, update driver registration
to take a location as argument rather than a lifetime.
This commit updates the tests.
Signed-off-by: Gilles Peskine <Gilles.Peskine@arm.com>
Define constants for ECC curve families and DH group families. These
constants have 0x0000 in the lower 16 bits of the key type.
Support these constants in the implementation and in the PSA metadata
tests.
Switch the slot management and secure element driver HAL tests to the
new curve encodings. This requires SE driver code to become slightly
more clever when figuring out the bit-size of an imported EC key since
it now needs to take the data size into account.
Switch some documentation to the new encodings.
Remove the macro PSA_ECC_CURVE_BITS which can no longer be implemented.
When registering a key in a secure element, go through the transaction
mechanism. This makes the code simpler, at the expense of a few extra
storage operations. Given that registering a key is typically very
rare over the lifetime of a device, this is an acceptable loss.
Drivers must now have a p_validate_slot_number method, otherwise
registering a key is not possible. This reduces the risk that due to a
mistake during the integration of a device, an application might claim
a slot in a way that is not supported by the driver.
Add a flow where the key is imported or fake-generated in the secure
element, then call psa_export_public_key and do the software
verification with the public key.
Register an existing key in a secure element.
Minimal implementation that doesn't call any driver method and just
lets the application declare whatever it wants.
Allow the application to choose the slot number in a secure element,
rather than always letting the driver choose.
With this commit, any application may request any slot. In an
implementation with isolation, it's up to the service to filter key
creation requests and apply policies to limit which applications can
request which slot.
Run all functions that take a key handle as input with a key that is
in a secure element. All calls are expected to error out one way or
another (not permitted by policy, invalid key type, method not
implemented in the secure element, ...). The goal of this test is to
ensure that nothing bad happens (e.g. invalid pointer dereference).
Run with various key types and algorithms to get good coverage.