| % UBIFS Authentication | 
 | % sigma star gmbh | 
 | % 2018 | 
 |  | 
 | # Introduction | 
 |  | 
 | UBIFS utilizes the fscrypt framework to provide confidentiality for file | 
 | contents and file names. This prevents attacks where an attacker is able to | 
 | read contents of the filesystem on a single point in time. A classic example | 
 | is a lost smartphone where the attacker is unable to read personal data stored | 
 | on the device without the filesystem decryption key. | 
 |  | 
 | At the current state, UBIFS encryption however does not prevent attacks where | 
 | the attacker is able to modify the filesystem contents and the user uses the | 
 | device afterwards. In such a scenario an attacker can modify filesystem | 
 | contents arbitrarily without the user noticing. One example is to modify a | 
 | binary to perform a malicious action when executed [DMC-CBC-ATTACK]. Since | 
 | most of the filesystem metadata of UBIFS is stored in plain, this makes it | 
 | fairly easy to swap files and replace their contents. | 
 |  | 
 | Other full disk encryption systems like dm-crypt cover all filesystem metadata, | 
 | which makes such kinds of attacks more complicated, but not impossible. | 
 | Especially, if the attacker is given access to the device multiple points in | 
 | time. For dm-crypt and other filesystems that build upon the Linux block IO | 
 | layer, the dm-integrity or dm-verity subsystems [DM-INTEGRITY, DM-VERITY] | 
 | can be used to get full data authentication at the block layer. | 
 | These can also be combined with dm-crypt [CRYPTSETUP2]. | 
 |  | 
 | This document describes an approach to get file contents _and_ full metadata | 
 | authentication for UBIFS. Since UBIFS uses fscrypt for file contents and file | 
 | name encryption, the authentication system could be tied into fscrypt such that | 
 | existing features like key derivation can be utilized. It should however also | 
 | be possible to use UBIFS authentication without using encryption. | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | ## MTD, UBI & UBIFS | 
 |  | 
 | On Linux, the MTD (Memory Technology Devices) subsystem provides a uniform | 
 | interface to access raw flash devices. One of the more prominent subsystems that | 
 | work on top of MTD is UBI (Unsorted Block Images). It provides volume management | 
 | for flash devices and is thus somewhat similar to LVM for block devices. In | 
 | addition, it deals with flash-specific wear-leveling and transparent I/O error | 
 | handling. UBI offers logical erase blocks (LEBs) to the layers on top of it | 
 | and maps them transparently to physical erase blocks (PEBs) on the flash. | 
 |  | 
 | UBIFS is a filesystem for raw flash which operates on top of UBI. Thus, wear | 
 | leveling and some flash specifics are left to UBI, while UBIFS focuses on | 
 | scalability, performance and recoverability. | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | 	+------------+ +*******+ +-----------+ +-----+ | 
 | 	|            | * UBIFS * | UBI-BLOCK | | ... | | 
 | 	| JFFS/JFFS2 | +*******+ +-----------+ +-----+ | 
 | 	|            | +-----------------------------+ +-----------+ +-----+ | 
 | 	|            | |              UBI            | | MTD-BLOCK | | ... | | 
 | 	+------------+ +-----------------------------+ +-----------+ +-----+ | 
 | 	+------------------------------------------------------------------+ | 
 | 	|                  MEMORY TECHNOLOGY DEVICES (MTD)                 | | 
 | 	+------------------------------------------------------------------+ | 
 | 	+-----------------------------+ +--------------------------+ +-----+ | 
 | 	|         NAND DRIVERS        | |        NOR DRIVERS       | | ... | | 
 | 	+-----------------------------+ +--------------------------+ +-----+ | 
 |  | 
 |             Figure 1: Linux kernel subsystems for dealing with raw flash | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | Internally, UBIFS maintains multiple data structures which are persisted on | 
 | the flash: | 
 |  | 
 | - *Index*: an on-flash B+ tree where the leaf nodes contain filesystem data | 
 | - *Journal*: an additional data structure to collect FS changes before updating | 
 |   the on-flash index and reduce flash wear. | 
 | - *Tree Node Cache (TNC)*: an in-memory B+ tree that reflects the current FS | 
 |   state to avoid frequent flash reads. It is basically the in-memory | 
 |   representation of the index, but contains additional attributes. | 
 | - *LEB property tree (LPT)*: an on-flash B+ tree for free space accounting per | 
 |   UBI LEB. | 
 |  | 
 | In the remainder of this section we will cover the on-flash UBIFS data | 
 | structures in more detail. The TNC is of less importance here since it is never | 
 | persisted onto the flash directly. More details on UBIFS can also be found in | 
 | [UBIFS-WP]. | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | ### UBIFS Index & Tree Node Cache | 
 |  | 
 | Basic on-flash UBIFS entities are called *nodes*. UBIFS knows different types | 
 | of nodes. Eg. data nodes (`struct ubifs_data_node`) which store chunks of file | 
 | contents or inode nodes (`struct ubifs_ino_node`) which represent VFS inodes. | 
 | Almost all types of nodes share a common header (`ubifs_ch`) containing basic | 
 | information like node type, node length, a sequence number, etc. (see | 
 | `fs/ubifs/ubifs-media.h`in kernel source). Exceptions are entries of the LPT | 
 | and some less important node types like padding nodes which are used to pad | 
 | unusable content at the end of LEBs. | 
 |  | 
 | To avoid re-writing the whole B+ tree on every single change, it is implemented | 
 | as *wandering tree*, where only the changed nodes are re-written and previous | 
 | versions of them are obsoleted without erasing them right away. As a result, | 
 | the index is not stored in a single place on the flash, but *wanders* around | 
 | and there are obsolete parts on the flash as long as the LEB containing them is | 
 | not reused by UBIFS. To find the most recent version of the index, UBIFS stores | 
 | a special node called *master node* into UBI LEB 1 which always points to the | 
 | most recent root node of the UBIFS index. For recoverability, the master node | 
 | is additionally duplicated to LEB 2. Mounting UBIFS is thus a simple read of | 
 | LEB 1 and 2 to get the current master node and from there get the location of | 
 | the most recent on-flash index. | 
 |  | 
 | The TNC is the in-memory representation of the on-flash index. It contains some | 
 | additional runtime attributes per node which are not persisted. One of these is | 
 | a dirty-flag which marks nodes that have to be persisted the next time the | 
 | index is written onto the flash. The TNC acts as a write-back cache and all | 
 | modifications of the on-flash index are done through the TNC. Like other caches, | 
 | the TNC does not have to mirror the full index into memory, but reads parts of | 
 | it from flash whenever needed. A *commit* is the UBIFS operation of updating the | 
 | on-flash filesystem structures like the index. On every commit, the TNC nodes | 
 | marked as dirty are written to the flash to update the persisted index. | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | ### Journal | 
 |  | 
 | To avoid wearing out the flash, the index is only persisted (*commited*) when | 
 | certain conditions are met (eg. `fsync(2)`). The journal is used to record | 
 | any changes (in form of inode nodes, data nodes etc.) between commits | 
 | of the index. During mount, the journal is read from the flash and replayed | 
 | onto the TNC (which will be created on-demand from the on-flash index). | 
 |  | 
 | UBIFS reserves a bunch of LEBs just for the journal called *log area*. The | 
 | amount of log area LEBs is configured on filesystem creation (using | 
 | `mkfs.ubifs`) and stored in the superblock node. The log area contains only | 
 | two types of nodes: *reference nodes* and *commit start nodes*. A commit start | 
 | node is written whenever an index commit is performed. Reference nodes are | 
 | written on every journal update. Each reference node points to the position of | 
 | other nodes (inode nodes, data nodes etc.) on the flash that are part of this | 
 | journal entry. These nodes are called *buds* and describe the actual filesystem | 
 | changes including their data. | 
 |  | 
 | The log area is maintained as a ring. Whenever the journal is almost full, | 
 | a commit is initiated. This also writes a commit start node so that during | 
 | mount, UBIFS will seek for the most recent commit start node and just replay | 
 | every reference node after that. Every reference node before the commit start | 
 | node will be ignored as they are already part of the on-flash index. | 
 |  | 
 | When writing a journal entry, UBIFS first ensures that enough space is | 
 | available to write the reference node and buds part of this entry. Then, the | 
 | reference node is written and afterwards the buds describing the file changes. | 
 | On replay, UBIFS will record every reference node and inspect the location of | 
 | the referenced LEBs to discover the buds. If these are corrupt or missing, | 
 | UBIFS will attempt to recover them by re-reading the LEB. This is however only | 
 | done for the last referenced LEB of the journal. Only this can become corrupt | 
 | because of a power cut. If the recovery fails, UBIFS will not mount. An error | 
 | for every other LEB will directly cause UBIFS to fail the mount operation. | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 |        | ----    LOG AREA     ---- | ----------    MAIN AREA    ------------ | | 
 |  | 
 |         -----+------+-----+--------+----   ------+-----+-----+--------------- | 
 |         \    |      |     |        |   /  /      |     |     |               \ | 
 |         / CS |  REF | REF |        |   \  \ DENT | INO | INO |               / | 
 |         \    |      |     |        |   /  /      |     |     |               \ | 
 |          ----+------+-----+--------+---   -------+-----+-----+---------------- | 
 |                  |     |                  ^            ^ | 
 |                  |     |                  |            | | 
 |                  +------------------------+            | | 
 |                        |                               | | 
 |                        +-------------------------------+ | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 |                 Figure 2: UBIFS flash layout of log area with commit start nodes | 
 |                           (CS) and reference nodes (REF) pointing to main area | 
 |                           containing their buds | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | ### LEB Property Tree/Table | 
 |  | 
 | The LEB property tree is used to store per-LEB information. This includes the | 
 | LEB type and amount of free and *dirty* (old, obsolete content) space [1] on | 
 | the LEB. The type is important, because UBIFS never mixes index nodes with data | 
 | nodes on a single LEB and thus each LEB has a specific purpose. This again is | 
 | useful for free space calculations. See [UBIFS-WP] for more details. | 
 |  | 
 | The LEB property tree again is a B+ tree, but it is much smaller than the | 
 | index. Due to its smaller size it is always written as one chunk on every | 
 | commit. Thus, saving the LPT is an atomic operation. | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | [1] Since LEBs can only be appended and never overwritten, there is a | 
 | difference between free space ie. the remaining space left on the LEB to be | 
 | written to without erasing it and previously written content that is obsolete | 
 | but can't be overwritten without erasing the full LEB. | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | # UBIFS Authentication | 
 |  | 
 | This chapter introduces UBIFS authentication which enables UBIFS to verify | 
 | the authenticity and integrity of metadata and file contents stored on flash. | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | ## Threat Model | 
 |  | 
 | UBIFS authentication enables detection of offline data modification. While it | 
 | does not prevent it, it enables (trusted) code to check the integrity and | 
 | authenticity of on-flash file contents and filesystem metadata. This covers | 
 | attacks where file contents are swapped. | 
 |  | 
 | UBIFS authentication will not protect against rollback of full flash contents. | 
 | Ie. an attacker can still dump the flash and restore it at a later time without | 
 | detection. It will also not protect against partial rollback of individual | 
 | index commits. That means that an attacker is able to partially undo changes. | 
 | This is possible because UBIFS does not immediately overwrites obsolete | 
 | versions of the index tree or the journal, but instead marks them as obsolete | 
 | and garbage collection erases them at a later time. An attacker can use this by | 
 | erasing parts of the current tree and restoring old versions that are still on | 
 | the flash and have not yet been erased. This is possible, because every commit | 
 | will always write a new version of the index root node and the master node | 
 | without overwriting the previous version. This is further helped by the | 
 | wear-leveling operations of UBI which copies contents from one physical | 
 | eraseblock to another and does not atomically erase the first eraseblock. | 
 |  | 
 | UBIFS authentication does not cover attacks where an attacker is able to | 
 | execute code on the device after the authentication key was provided. | 
 | Additional measures like secure boot and trusted boot have to be taken to | 
 | ensure that only trusted code is executed on a device. | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | ## Authentication | 
 |  | 
 | To be able to fully trust data read from flash, all UBIFS data structures | 
 | stored on flash are authenticated. That is: | 
 |  | 
 | - The index which includes file contents, file metadata like extended | 
 |   attributes, file length etc. | 
 | - The journal which also contains file contents and metadata by recording changes | 
 |   to the filesystem | 
 | - The LPT which stores UBI LEB metadata which UBIFS uses for free space accounting | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | ### Index Authentication | 
 |  | 
 | Through UBIFS' concept of a wandering tree, it already takes care of only | 
 | updating and persisting changed parts from leaf node up to the root node | 
 | of the full B+ tree. This enables us to augment the index nodes of the tree | 
 | with a hash over each node's child nodes. As a result, the index basically also | 
 | a Merkle tree. Since the leaf nodes of the index contain the actual filesystem | 
 | data, the hashes of their parent index nodes thus cover all the file contents | 
 | and file metadata. When a file changes, the UBIFS index is updated accordingly | 
 | from the leaf nodes up to the root node including the master node. This process | 
 | can be hooked to recompute the hash only for each changed node at the same time. | 
 | Whenever a file is read, UBIFS can verify the hashes from each leaf node up to | 
 | the root node to ensure the node's integrity. | 
 |  | 
 | To ensure the authenticity of the whole index, the UBIFS master node stores a | 
 | keyed hash (HMAC) over its own contents and a hash of the root node of the index | 
 | tree. As mentioned above, the master node is always written to the flash whenever | 
 | the index is persisted (ie. on index commit). | 
 |  | 
 | Using this approach only UBIFS index nodes and the master node are changed to | 
 | include a hash. All other types of nodes will remain unchanged. This reduces | 
 | the storage overhead which is precious for users of UBIFS (ie. embedded | 
 | devices). | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 |                              +---------------+ | 
 |                              |  Master Node  | | 
 |                              |    (hash)     | | 
 |                              +---------------+ | 
 |                                      | | 
 |                                      v | 
 |                             +-------------------+ | 
 |                             |  Index Node #1    | | 
 |                             |                   | | 
 |                             | branch0   branchn | | 
 |                             | (hash)    (hash)  | | 
 |                             +-------------------+ | 
 |                                |    ...   |  (fanout: 8) | 
 |                                |          | | 
 |                        +-------+          +------+ | 
 |                        |                         | | 
 |                        v                         v | 
 |             +-------------------+       +-------------------+ | 
 |             |  Index Node #2    |       |  Index Node #3    | | 
 |             |                   |       |                   | | 
 |             | branch0   branchn |       | branch0   branchn | | 
 |             | (hash)    (hash)  |       | (hash)    (hash)  | | 
 |             +-------------------+       +-------------------+ | 
 |                  |   ...                     |   ...   | | 
 |                  v                           v         v | 
 |                +-----------+         +----------+  +-----------+ | 
 |                | Data Node |         | INO Node |  | DENT Node | | 
 |                +-----------+         +----------+  +-----------+ | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 |            Figure 3: Coverage areas of index node hash and master node HMAC | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | The most important part for robustness and power-cut safety is to atomically | 
 | persist the hash and file contents. Here the existing UBIFS logic for how | 
 | changed nodes are persisted is already designed for this purpose such that | 
 | UBIFS can safely recover if a power-cut occurs while persisting. Adding | 
 | hashes to index nodes does not change this since each hash will be persisted | 
 | atomically together with its respective node. | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | ### Journal Authentication | 
 |  | 
 | The journal is authenticated too. Since the journal is continuously written | 
 | it is necessary to also add authentication information frequently to the | 
 | journal so that in case of a powercut not too much data can't be authenticated. | 
 | This is done by creating a continuous hash beginning from the commit start node | 
 | over the previous reference nodes, the current reference node, and the bud | 
 | nodes. From time to time whenever it is suitable authentication nodes are added | 
 | between the bud nodes. This new node type contains a HMAC over the current state | 
 | of the hash chain. That way a journal can be authenticated up to the last | 
 | authentication node. The tail of the journal which may not have a authentication | 
 | node cannot be authenticated and is skipped during journal replay. | 
 |  | 
 | We get this picture for journal authentication: | 
 |  | 
 |     ,,,,,,,, | 
 |     ,......,........................................... | 
 |     ,. CS  ,               hash1.----.           hash2.----. | 
 |     ,.  |  ,                    .    |hmac            .    |hmac | 
 |     ,.  v  ,                    .    v                .    v | 
 |     ,.REF#0,-> bud -> bud -> bud.-> auth -> bud -> bud.-> auth ... | 
 |     ,..|...,........................................... | 
 |     ,  |   , | 
 |     ,  |   ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, | 
 |     .  |            hash3,----. | 
 |     ,  |                 ,    |hmac | 
 |     ,  v                 ,    v | 
 |     , REF#1 -> bud -> bud,-> auth ... | 
 |     ,,,|,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, | 
 |        v | 
 |       REF#2 -> ... | 
 |        | | 
 |        V | 
 |       ... | 
 |  | 
 | Since the hash also includes the reference nodes an attacker cannot reorder or | 
 | skip any journal heads for replay. An attacker can only remove bud nodes or | 
 | reference nodes from the end of the journal, effectively rewinding the | 
 | filesystem at maximum back to the last commit. | 
 |  | 
 | The location of the log area is stored in the master node. Since the master | 
 | node is authenticated with a HMAC as described above, it is not possible to | 
 | tamper with that without detection. The size of the log area is specified when | 
 | the filesystem is created using `mkfs.ubifs` and stored in the superblock node. | 
 | To avoid tampering with this and other values stored there, a HMAC is added to | 
 | the superblock struct. The superblock node is stored in LEB 0 and is only | 
 | modified on feature flag or similar changes, but never on file changes. | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | ### LPT Authentication | 
 |  | 
 | The location of the LPT root node on the flash is stored in the UBIFS master | 
 | node. Since the LPT is written and read atomically on every commit, there is | 
 | no need to authenticate individual nodes of the tree. It suffices to | 
 | protect the integrity of the full LPT by a simple hash stored in the master | 
 | node. Since the master node itself is authenticated, the LPTs authenticity can | 
 | be verified by verifying the authenticity of the master node and comparing the | 
 | LTP hash stored there with the hash computed from the read on-flash LPT. | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | ## Key Management | 
 |  | 
 | For simplicity, UBIFS authentication uses a single key to compute the HMACs | 
 | of superblock, master, commit start and reference nodes. This key has to be | 
 | available on creation of the filesystem (`mkfs.ubifs`) to authenticate the | 
 | superblock node. Further, it has to be available on mount of the filesystem | 
 | to verify authenticated nodes and generate new HMACs for changes. | 
 |  | 
 | UBIFS authentication is intended to operate side-by-side with UBIFS encryption | 
 | (fscrypt) to provide confidentiality and authenticity. Since UBIFS encryption | 
 | has a different approach of encryption policies per directory, there can be | 
 | multiple fscrypt master keys and there might be folders without encryption. | 
 | UBIFS authentication on the other hand has an all-or-nothing approach in the | 
 | sense that it either authenticates everything of the filesystem or nothing. | 
 | Because of this and because UBIFS authentication should also be usable without | 
 | encryption, it does not share the same master key with fscrypt, but manages | 
 | a dedicated authentication key. | 
 |  | 
 | The API for providing the authentication key has yet to be defined, but the | 
 | key can eg. be provided by userspace through a keyring similar to the way it | 
 | is currently done in fscrypt. It should however be noted that the current | 
 | fscrypt approach has shown its flaws and the userspace API will eventually | 
 | change [FSCRYPT-POLICY2]. | 
 |  | 
 | Nevertheless, it will be possible for a user to provide a single passphrase | 
 | or key in userspace that covers UBIFS authentication and encryption. This can | 
 | be solved by the corresponding userspace tools which derive a second key for | 
 | authentication in addition to the derived fscrypt master key used for | 
 | encryption. | 
 |  | 
 | To be able to check if the proper key is available on mount, the UBIFS | 
 | superblock node will additionally store a hash of the authentication key. This | 
 | approach is similar to the approach proposed for fscrypt encryption policy v2 | 
 | [FSCRYPT-POLICY2]. | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | # Future Extensions | 
 |  | 
 | In certain cases where a vendor wants to provide an authenticated filesystem | 
 | image to customers, it should be possible to do so without sharing the secret | 
 | UBIFS authentication key. Instead, in addition the each HMAC a digital | 
 | signature could be stored where the vendor shares the public key alongside the | 
 | filesystem image. In case this filesystem has to be modified afterwards, | 
 | UBIFS can exchange all digital signatures with HMACs on first mount similar | 
 | to the way the IMA/EVM subsystem deals with such situations. The HMAC key | 
 | will then have to be provided beforehand in the normal way. | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | # References | 
 |  | 
 | [CRYPTSETUP2]        http://www.saout.de/pipermail/dm-crypt/2017-November/005745.html | 
 |  | 
 | [DMC-CBC-ATTACK]     http://www.jakoblell.com/blog/2013/12/22/practical-malleability-attack-against-cbc-encrypted-luks-partitions/ | 
 |  | 
 | [DM-INTEGRITY]       https://www.kernel.org/doc/Documentation/device-mapper/dm-integrity.txt | 
 |  | 
 | [DM-VERITY]          https://www.kernel.org/doc/Documentation/device-mapper/verity.txt | 
 |  | 
 | [FSCRYPT-POLICY2]    https://www.spinics.net/lists/linux-ext4/msg58710.html | 
 |  | 
 | [UBIFS-WP]           http://www.linux-mtd.infradead.org/doc/ubifs_whitepaper.pdf |