Message ID | 20230720221623.9530-1-jo.vanbulck@cs.kuleuven.be (mailing list archive) |
---|---|
Headers | show |
Series | selftests/sgx: Harden test enclave | expand |
On 7/20/23 15:16, Jo Van Bulck wrote: > While I understand that the bare-metal Intel SGX selftest enclave is > certainly not intended as a full-featured independent production runtime, > it has been noted on this mailing list before that "people are likely to > copy this code for their own enclaves" and that it provides a "great > starting point if you want to do things from scratch" [1]. I wholeheartedly agree with the desire to spin up enclaves without the overhead or complexity of the SDK. I think I'm the one that asked for this test enclave in the first place. There *IS* a gap here. Those who care about SGX would be wise to close this gap in _some_ way. But I don't think the kernel should be the place this is done. The kernel should not be hosting a real-world (userspace) SGX reference implementation. I'd fully support if you'd like to take the selftest code, fork it, and maintain it. The SGX ecosystem would be better off if such a project existed. If I can help here in some way like (trying to) release the SGX selftest under a different license, please let me know. The only patches I want for the kernel are to make the test enclave more *obviously* insecure. So, it's a NAK from me for this series. I won't support merging this into the kernel. But at the same time, I'm very sympathetic to your cause, and I do appreciate your effort here.
On 21.07.23 02:24, Dave Hansen wrote: > I wholeheartedly agree with the desire to spin up enclaves without the > overhead or complexity of the SDK. I think I'm the one that asked for > this test enclave in the first place. There *IS* a gap here. Those who > care about SGX would be wise to close this gap in _some_ way. > > But I don't think the kernel should be the place this is done. The > kernel should not be hosting a real-world (userspace) SGX reference > implementation. Okay, makes sense. > I'd fully support if you'd like to take the selftest code, fork it, and > maintain it. The SGX ecosystem would be better off if such a project > existed. If I can help here in some way like (trying to) release the > SGX selftest under a different license, please let me know. Thank you! I agree this would benefit the SGX ecosystem and I'll go ahead with further developing such a standalone fork when I find time probably in the next month or so. For future reference, in case people end up reading this discussion thread, I created a placeholder (atm emtpy) repo here: https://github.com/jovanbulck/bare-sgx Re licensing: no need to re-license, I think GPL would be the best license for such a project anyway. > The only patches I want for the kernel are to make the test enclave more > *obviously* insecure. Makes sense. I'll see if I can create a new proposed minimal patch in this spirit (e.g., removing existing register cleansing and adding an explicit comment) to take away any misguided impression that the test enclave would be a representative example of secure code and make its real purpose clearer. > So, it's a NAK from me for this series. I won't support merging this > into the kernel. But at the same time, I'm very sympathetic to your > cause, and I do appreciate your effort here. Thank you, appreciated!