# These three are the actual options to check in code,
# selected by the displayed options
config SECURE_SIGNED_ON_BOOT
bool
default y
depends on SECURE_BOOT_ENABLED || SECURE_SIGNED_ON_BOOT_NO_SECURE_BOOT
config SECURE_SIGNED_ON_UPDATE
bool
default y
depends on SECURE_BOOT_ENABLED || SECURE_SIGNED_ON_UPDATE_NO_SECURE_BOOT
config SECURE_SIGNED_APPS
bool
default y
depends on SECURE_SIGNED_ON_BOOT || SECURE_SIGNED_ON_UPDATE
config SECURE_SIGNED_APPS_NO_SECURE_BOOT
bool "Require signed app images"
default n
depends on !SECURE_BOOT_ENABLED
help
Require apps to be signed to verify their integrity.
This option uses the same app signature scheme as hardware secure boot, but unlike hardware secure boot it does not prevent the bootloader from being physically updated. This means that the device can be secured against remote network access, but not physical access. Compared to using hardware Secure Boot this option is much simpler to implement.
config SECURE_SIGNED_ON_BOOT_NO_SECURE_BOOT
bool "Bootloader verifies app signatures"
default n
depends on SECURE_SIGNED_APPS_NO_SECURE_BOOT
help
If this option is set, the bootloader will be compiled with code to verify that an app is signed before booting it.
If hardware secure boot is enabled, this option is always enabled and cannot be disabled.
If hardware secure boot is not enabled, this option doesn't add significant security by itself so most users will want to leave it disabled.
config SECURE_SIGNED_ON_UPDATE_NO_SECURE_BOOT
bool "Verify app signature on update"
default y
depends on SECURE_SIGNED_APPS_NO_SECURE_BOOT
help
If this option is set, any OTA updated apps will have the signature verified before being considered valid.
When enabled, the signature is automatically checked whenever the esp_ota_ops.h APIs are used for OTA updates,
or esp_image_format.h APIs are used to verify apps.
If hardware secure boot is enabled, this option is always enabled and cannot be disabled.
If hardware secure boot is not enabled, this option still adds significant security against network-based attackers by preventing spoofing of OTA updates.
Once enabled, secure boot will not boot a modified bootloader. The bootloader will only load a partition table or boot an app if the data has a verified digital signature. There are implications for reflashing updated apps once secure boot is enabled.
On first boot, the bootloader will generate a key which is not readable externally or by software. A digest is generated from the bootloader image itself. This digest will be verified on each subsequent boot.
Enabling this option means that the bootloader cannot be changed after the first time it is booted.
If enabled (default), these binary files are signed as part of the build process. The file named in "Secure boot private signing key" will be used to sign the image.
If not set (default), the bootloader will permanently disable JTAG (across entire chip) on first boot when either secure boot or flash encryption is enabled.
Setting this option leaves JTAG on for debugging, which negates all protections of flash encryption and some of the protections of secure boot.
bool "Allow app partition length not 64KB aligned"
depends on SECURE_BOOT_INSECURE
help
If not set (default), app partition size must be a multiple of 64KB. App images are padded to 64KB length, and the bootloader checks any trailing bytes after the signature (before the next 64KB boundary) have not been written. This is because flash cache maps entire 64KB pages into the address space. This prevents an attacker from appending unverified data after the app image in the flash, causing it to be mapped into the address space.
Setting this option allows the app partition length to be unaligned, and disables padding of the app image to this length. It is generally not recommended to set this option, unless you have a legacy partitioning scheme which doesn't support 64KB aligned partition lengths.
If not set (default), the bootloader will permanently disable UART bootloader encryption access on first boot. If set, the UART bootloader will still be able to access hardware encryption.
It is recommended to only set this option in testing environments.
If not set (default), the bootloader will permanently disable UART bootloader decryption access on first boot. If set, the UART bootloader will still be able to access hardware decryption.
If not set (default), the bootloader will permanently disable UART bootloader flash cache access on first boot. If set, the UART bootloader will still be able to access the flash cache.