Remove dependency of rsa_mod_exp from CONFIG_FIT_SIGNATURE.
As rsa modular exponentiation is an independent module
and can be invoked independently.
Signed-off-by: Gaurav Rana <gaurav.rana@freescale.com>
Acked-by: Simon Glass <sjg@chromium.org>
Reviewed-by: York Sun <yorksun@freescale.com>
Public exponentiation which is required in rsa verify functionality is
tightly integrated with verification code in rsa_verify.c. The patch
splits the file into twp separating the modular exponentiation.
1. rsa-verify.c
- The file parses device tree keys node to fill a keyprop structure.
The keyprop structure can then be converted to implementation specific
format.
(struct rsa_pub_key for sw implementation)
- The parsed device tree node is then passed to a generic rsa_mod_exp
function.
2. rsa-mod-exp.c
Move the software specific functions related to modular exponentiation
from rsa-verify.c to this file.
Signed-off-by: Ruchika Gupta <ruchika.gupta@freescale.com>
CC: Simon Glass <sjg@chromium.org>
Acked-by: Simon Glass <sjg@chromium.org>
based on patch from andreas@oetken.name:
http://patchwork.ozlabs.org/patch/294318/
commit message:
I currently need support for rsa-sha256 signatures in u-boot and found out that
the code for signatures is not very generic. Thus adding of different
hash-algorithms for rsa-signatures is not easy to do without copy-pasting the
rsa-code. I attached a patch for how I think it could be better and included
support for rsa-sha256. This is a fast first shot.
aditionally work:
- removed checkpatch warnings
- removed compiler warnings
- rebased against current head
Signed-off-by: Heiko Schocher <hs@denx.de>
Cc: andreas@oetken.name
Cc: Simon Glass <sjg@chromium.org>
RSA provides a public key encryption facility which is ideal for image
signing and verification.
Images are signed using a private key by mkimage. Then at run-time, the
images are verified using a private key.
This implementation uses openssl for the host part (mkimage). To avoid
bringing large libraries into the U-Boot binary, the RSA public key
is encoded using a simple numeric representation in the device tree.
Signed-off-by: Simon Glass <sjg@chromium.org>