SYNOPSIS
sign-efi-sig-list [,-r/] [,-m/] [,-a/] [,-g <guid>/] [,-o/] [,-t <timestamp>/] [,-i <infile>/] [,-c <crt file>/] [,-k <key file>/] ,<var> <efi sig list file> <output file>/DESCRIPTION
Produce an output file with an authentication header for direct update to a secure variable. This output may be signed by the usual keys directly or may be split for external signing using the -o and -i options.OPTIONS
- -r
- the certificate is rsa2048 rather than x509 [UNIMPLEMENTED]
- -m
- Use a monotonic count instead of a timestamp [UNIMPLEMENTED]
- -a
- Prepare the variable for APPEND_WRITE rather than replacement
- -o
- Do not sign, but output a file of the exact bundle to be signed
- -t <timestamp>
- Use <timestamp> as the timestamp of the timed variable update If not present, then the timestamp will be taken from system time. Note you must use this option when doing detached signing otherwise the signature will be incorrect because of timestamp mismatches.
- -i <infile>
- take a detached signature (in PEM format) of the bundle produced by -o and complete the creation of the update
- -g <guid>
- Use <guid> as the signature owner GUID
- -c <crt>
- <crt> is the file containing the signing certificate in PEM format
- -k <key>
- <key> is the file containing the key for <crt> in PEM format
EXAMPLES
To sign a simple append update to db which has been prepared as an EFI Signature List in DB.esl and output the result with the authentication header in DB.auth
sign-efi-sig-list -a -c KEK.crt -k KEK.key db DB.esl DB.auth
To do a detached signature in the same way
sign-efi-sig-list -a -t 'Jul 21 09:39:37 BST 2012' -o db DB.esl DB.forsig
Now sign the DB.forsig file in the standard openssl way. Note that the standards require sha256 as the signature algorithm
openssl smime -sign -binary -in DB.forsig -out DB.signed -signer KEK.crt -inkey KEK.key -outform DER -md sha256
Which produces a detached PKCS7 signature in DB.signed. Now feed this back into the program remembering to keep the same timestamp (and the -a flag):
sign-efi-sig-list -a -i DB.signed -t 'Jul 21 09:39:37 BST 2012' db DB.auth
To delete a key, simply sign an empty EFI signature list file, so to produce an variable update that will delete the PK:
> null.esl
And then sign it in the standard way (must not be an append write update):
sign-efi-sig-list -c PK.crt -k PK.key PK null.esl PK.auth
Once you have the .auth file conveyed to the UEFI platform, you can use the UpdateVars.efi program to apply it
UpdateVars [-a] db DB.auth
Where the -a flag must be present if the DB.auth file was created as an append write update and absent if its replacing the variable.