-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 279
How does it work?
Since me_cleaner modifies a very fundamental part of an Intel system, it is reasonable to be worried about such modification. Here I'm explaining what this script does, and how.
You can also watch my talk with Igor Skochinsky at the 34C3, Intel ME: Myths and reality (the me_cleaner part starts at min 30:00).
The basic informations about Intel ME were provided by:
- me.bios.info
- Igor Skochinsky - Rootkit in your laptop - Breakpoint 2012
- Igor Skochinsky - Intel ME Secrets - RECON 2014
- Positive Technologies - Intel ME: The Way of the Static Analysis - TROOPERS17
- Positive Technologies - Disabling Intel ME 11 via undocumented mode
- Ruan, Xiaoyu - Platform Embedded Security Technology Revealed - Apress
- me-tools
- MEAnalyzer
Our work started when we found, on the coreboot Mailing List, a message from Trammel Hudson in which he shared his recent discovers about Intel ME firmware. Then we tried by ourself and replicated the results: to make things simpler I created a Python script to modify the firmware automatically and we published it on the coreboot Mailing List and later on GitHub.
As you can see in me.bios.info, the firmware is divided in partitions and every partition can contain one or more modules. At the beginning of the image there is the FPT (Firmware Partition Table), a region where all the partitions are indexed. The FPT region is NOT signed and can be freely modified (but it has a checksum, offset 0x1b).
Each partition is individually signed, therefore all the non-fundamental partitions can be removed without breaking anything (as we are removing the partitions, but also the signatures).
It seems that the only fundamental partition is the FTPR (Factory Partition), as every other partition (with the respective entry in the FPT) can be removed. The firmware still contains some code, but:
- The network stack (partition NFTP) has been removed
- The PAVP (partition MDMV, module JCOM) has been removed
- And more...
Based on the results on Trammel Hudson (again, on the coreboot ML) I improved me_cleaner by removing also the LZMA-compressed modules in the FTPR partition (more or less half of the modules in the partition). This also removes the Intel Antitheft module (module TDT), and leaves only 4-5 Huffman-compressed modules. According to Igor's 2014 presentation, slide 17, these modules do the basic ME initialization:
- ROMP (not always present)
- BUP - Bringup (hardware initialization/configuration)
- KERNEL - Scheduler, low-level APIs for other modules
- POLICY - Secondary init tasks, some high-level APIs
- FTCS
After a while I updated me_cleaner to remove also most of the Huffman-compressed modules, leaving only:
- ROMP (not always present)
- BUP - Bringup (hardware initialization/configuration)
Since the TXE firmware is very similar to the ME one, I adapted me_cleaner to work on it.
A month later I finally realized how to move the partitions; in this way the empty space before the FTPR partition can be recovered, and the final size of the Intel ME image is ~80 kB.
In June 2017 I updated me_cleaner to adapt it to the changes introduced by ME 11 (Skylake and following), removing most of the modules from the newer Intel ME firmware images.
Thanks to the work of Positive Technologies, in August 2017 a new way of disabling Intel ME has been found: it appears that Intel put a "kill-switch" for Intel ME in the PCHSTRP (the configuration section of the Flash Descriptor) for the U.S. government's High Assurance Platform (HAP) program. This bit (for ME >= 11) and the MeAltDisable bit (for ME < 11, discovered by Igor Skochinsky) gave us a new way to disable Intel ME.
We can never be sure about this, but, thanks to the Igor's 2014 presentation (slide 18), we can suppose that the code inside the internal ROM is just the code responsible for the very basic initialization of Intel ME, plus some low-level libraries).
First, it detects if the image is a "pure" ME image (magic $FPT at offset 0x10) or a full BIOS dump (magic 5a a5 f0 0f at offset 0x10). If it is a "pure" ME image it uses the whole file as ME image, otherwise it finds the ME region by reading the values inside the Intel Flash Descriptor.
Then it searches for the basic ME informations: presence of the FPT region, version of the firmware, number of partitions and offset and size of the FTPR partition. Now it has all the informations it needs, and it can start the "cleaning" process by:
- dumping the original FTPR entry in the FPT
- filling the whole image with 0xff, except for the first 0x30 bytes (the start of the FPT) and the FTPR partition
- restoring the FTPR entry in the FPT
- removing the EFFS presence flag
- correcting the FPT checksum
Now the ME image contains only the FTPR partition, as every other partition has been overwritten by 0xff; it's time to dig deeper into the FTPR partition and remove as many modules as possible.
The LZMA modules are placed after the Huffman data (after the LLUT) and their positions are clearly saved inside the manifests, so they can easily be removed.
The Huffman modules are more tricky to remove, as the module manifests does not contain directly an offset. The Huffman modules are indexed by "chunks": each "chunk" represent a fixed-size block (usually 1024 bytes of uncompressed data) and it contains an offset to the Huffman stream and a flag. Each module manifest contains the base loading address of that module (that sets the starting chunk, first_chunk = (module_base - overall_base) / chunk_size
) and the uncompressed module size (that sets the number of chunks, last_chunk = first_chunk + module_size / chunk_size
). Once we have the chunk indexes we can construct a whitelist of unremovable blocks and remove the others.
Moving a partition is not straightforward, as additional steps are needed:
- correct the partition's FPT offset (bytes 0x8:0xc)
- fix the LLUT absolute offset (bytes 0xc:0x10 of the LLUT, minus bytes 0x9:0xb)
- adjust the absolute Huffman offset in the LLUT (bytes 0x14:0x18)
- correct the offset of each Huffman chunk
Starting from ME version 11 the internal structure of the partitions has changed substantially. The modules are now indexed in the CPD, the Code Partition Directory, where the partition manifest (the same partition manifest of the previous ME versions), the modules metadata and data are listed. To remove a module (uncompressed, Huffman or LZMA) it's sufficient to look for its offset in the CPD and remove the data from that offset to the following one.
Since there isn't a Huffman LLUT anymore (the Huffman-compressed data is now in a single stream, one for each module), the relocation of a partition is trivial, as it is sufficient to move the data and correct the offset in the FPT.
With the -S
/-s
options, me_cleaner sets the HAP (for ME >= 11) or MeAltDisable (for ME < 11) bit, which ask Intel ME to disable itself after the hardware initialization.
This is the simplified structure of a partition header:
As you can see the partition is not signed directly, instead all the modules are hashed and the modules manifests (that contain the hashes) are signed. This means that modify a module doesn't invalidate the signature, but only its hash.
Luckily for us, Intel ME doesn't check all the hashes at once, but only when it needs to execute them. Moreover the 30-min watchdog that forcefully shuts off the system is disabled in the BUP module.
Therefore Intel ME:
- checks the partition signature: valid
- finds the BUP module and checks its hash: valid
- executes BUP
- at this point the system can boot correctly, without the 30-min window
- finds the following module (probably KERNEL) and checks its hash: INVALID
- stops the execution
With ME 11 things have changed, but the signing scheme is more or less the same; here's the integrity scheme (from Positive Technologies - Intel ME: The Way of the Static Analysis - TROOPERS17):
As you can see, things are a bit more complex but the overall concept is the same: one RSA signature over the hash chains of the modules. As before, the hashes are not checked all at once but only when needed, allowing us to remove some modules without problem. Unfortunately it seems that the hashes of the modules rbe
, bup
, kernel
and syslib
are checked together, increasing the number of the fundamental modules to four.
You're right, you should never trust a random guy on the Internet, but you don't have to trust me, you can check the code by yourself.
And, by the way
- most of the
me_cleaner
code is "find x and overwrite it with 0xff". - Intel ME doesn't accept unsigned code and, unfortunately, I don't own the Intel ME key
Before flashing the modified image you should understand the implications of such modification. First you should understand that this tool does not reimplement anything, it only wipes parts of a basic component of your system, so keep in mind:
- It is not clear if me_cleaner can work on platforms with Intel Boot Guard in
verified boot
mode, see here - Even if this tool has been tested with your system, it does not mean that this modification is safe, so be prepared for a brick!
- Intel ME doesn't only provide some services (that you may or may not use), but it also does low-level stuff (like silicon workaround, thermal management, fan control...). Luckily, no user has reported any side effect so far (as many of these features aren't used anymore, they are implemented by something else or they are executed in the modules not removed by me_cleaner).
- Often the ME region is not writeable by software: in these cases you need an external programmer to write the modified firmware.
Even if it sounds dangerous, once you have a valid backup of your ROM and a way to reprogram it (external flasher, dual BIOS...), you should be safe.
Great! You can follow this guide if you want to try it.
Please report the success on #3 (even if it's already listed in the status page).
See this.