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firmware_image.md

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Firmware image

Firmware entry point

WolfBoot can only chain-load and execute firmware images from a specific entry point in memory, which must be specified as the origin of the FLASH memory in the linker script of the embedded application. This corresponds to the first partition in the flash memory.

Multiple firmware images can be created this way, and stored in two different partitions. The bootloader will take care of moving the selected firmware to the first (BOOT) partition before chain-loading the image.

Due to the presence of an image header, the entry point of the application has a fixed additional offset of 256B from the beginning of the flash partition.

Firmware image header

Each (signed) firmware image is prepended with a fixed-size image header, containing useful information about the firmware. The exact size of the image header depends on the size of the image digest and signature, which depend on the algorithms/key sizes used. Larger key sizes will result in a larger image header. The size of the image header is determined by the build system and provided to the application code in the IMAGE_HEADER_SIZE macro. The size of the generated image header is also output by the keytools during the signing operation. The image header data is padded out to the next multiple of 256B, in order to guarantee that the entry point of the actual firmware is stored on the flash starting from a 256-Bytes aligned address. This ensures that the bootloader can relocate the vector table before chain-loading the firmware so interrupts continue to work properly after the boot is complete. When porting wolfBoot to a platform that doesn't use wolfBoot's Makefile-based build system, extra care should be taken to ensure IMAGE_HEADER_SIZE is set to a value that matches the output of the wolfBoot sign key tool.

Image header

The image header is stored at the beginning of the slot and the actual firmware image starts IMAGE_HEADER_SIZE Bytes after it

Image header: Tags

The image header is prepended with a single 4-byte magic number, followed by a 4-byte field indicating the firmware image size (excluding the header). All numbers in the header are stored in Little-endian format.

The two fixed fields are followed by one or more tags. Each TAG is structured as follows:

  • 2 bytes indicating the Type
  • 2 bytes indicating the size of the tag, excluding the type and size bytes
  • N bytes of tag content

With the following exception:

  • A '0xFF' in the Type field indicate a simple padding byte. The 'padding' byte has no size field, and the next byte should be processed as Type again.

Each Type has a different meaning, and integrate information about the firmware. The following Tags are mandatory for validating the firmware image:

  • A 'version' Tag (type: 0x0001, size: 4 Bytes) indicating the version number for the firmware stored in the image
  • A 'timestamp' Tag (type: 0x0002, size 8 Bytes) indicating the timestamp in unix seconds for the creation of the firmware
  • A 'sha digest' Tag (type: 0x0003, size: digest size (32 Bytes for SHA256)) used for integrity check of the firmware
  • A 'firmware signature' Tag (type: 0x0020, size: 64 Bytes) used to validate the signature stored with the firmware against a known public key
  • A 'firmware type' Tag (type: 0x0030, size: 2 Bytes) used to identify the type of firmware, and the authentication mechanism in use.

A 'public key hint digest' tag is transmitted in the header (type: 0x10, size:32 Bytes). This tag contains the SHA digest of the public key used by the signing tool. The bootloader may use this field to locate the correct public key in case of multiple keys available.

wolfBoot will, in all cases, refuse to boot an image that cannot be verified and authenticated using the built-in digital signature authentication mechanism.

Adding custom fields to the manifest header

It is possible to add custom fields to the manifest header, by using the --custom-tlv option in the signing tool.

In order for the fields to be secured (checked by wolfBoot for integrity and authenticity), their value is placed in the manifest header before the signature is calculated. The signing tool takes care of the alignment and padding of the fields.

The custom fields are identified by a 16-bit tag, and their size is indicated by a 16-bit length field. The tag and length fields are stored in little-endian format.

At runtime, the values stored in the manifest header can be accessed using the wolfBoot_find_header function.

The syntax for --custom-tlv option is also documented in docs/Signing.md.

Image header: Example

This example adds a custom field when the signing tool is used to sign the firmware image:

./tools/keytools/sign --ed25519 --custom-tlv 0x34 4 0xAABBCCDD test-app/image.bin wolfboot_signing_private_key.der 4

The output image test-app/image_v4_signed.bin will contain the custom field with tag 0x34 with length 4 and value 0xAABBCCDD.

From the bootloader code, we can then retrieve the value of the custom field using the wolfBoot_find_header function:

uint32_t value;
uint8_t* ptr = NULL;
uint16_t tlv = 0x34;
uint8_t* imageHdr = (uint8_t*)WOLFBOOT_PARTITION_BOOT_ADDRESS + IMAGE_HEADER_OFFSET;
uint16_t size = wolfBoot_find_header(imageHdr, tlv, &ptr);
if (size > 0 && ptr != NULL) {
  /* Found field and ptr points to value 0xAABBCCDD */
  memcpy(&value, ptr, size);
  printf("TLV 0x%x=0x%x\n", tlv, value);
}
else {
    /* Error: the field is not found */
}

Image signing tool

The image signing tool generates the header with all the required Tags for the compiled image, and add them to the output file that can be then stored on the primary slot on the device, or transmitted later to the device through a secure channel to initiate an update.

Storing firmware image

Firmware images are stored with their full header at the beginning of any of the partitions on the system. wolfBoot can only boot images from the BOOT partition, while keeping a second firmware image in the UPDATE partition.

In order to boot a different image, wolfBoot will have to swap the content of the two images.

For more information on how firmware images are stored and managed within the two partitions, see Flash partitions