Last edited 4 months ago

PKA internal peripheral


1. Article purpose

The purpose of this article is to:

  • briefly introduce the PKA peripheral and its main features,
  • indicate the peripheral instances assignment at boot time and their assignment at runtime (including whether instances can be allocated to secure contexts),
  • list the software frameworks and drivers managing the peripheral,
  • explain how to configure the peripheral.

2. Peripheral overview

The PKA (public key accelerator) peripheral is used to ease computation of cryptographic public key primitives, specifically those related to RSA, Diffie-Hellmann or ECC (elliptic curve cryptography) over GF(p) (Galois fields).

Refer to the STM32 MPU reference manuals for the complete list of features, and to the software frameworks and drivers, introduced below, to see which features are implemented.

3. Peripheral usage

This chapter is applicable in the scope of the OpenSTLinux BSP running on the Arm® Cortex®-A processor(s), and the STM32CubeMPU Package running on the Arm® Cortex®-M processor.

3.1. Boot time assignment

The PKA peripheral is a boot device, it is used for signature verification for binary authentication when device is in secured locked state.

3.1.1. On STM32MP13x lines More info.png

Click on How to.png to expand or collapse the legend...

Domain Peripheral Boot time allocation Comment How to.png
Instance Cortex-A7
secure
(ROM code)
Cortex-A7
secure
(TF-A BL2)
Cortex-A7
non-secure
(U-Boot)
Security PKA PKA Assignment is mandatory only for secure boot

3.1.2. On STM32MP2 series

Click on How to.png to expand or collapse the legend...

Domain Peripheral Boot time allocation Comment How to.png
Instance Cortex-A35
secure
(ROM code)
Cortex-A35
secure
(TF-A BL2)
Cortex-A35
nonsecure
(U-Boot)
Security PKA PKA Assignment is mandatory only for secure boot

3.2. Runtime assignment

3.2.1. On STM32MP13x lines More info.png

Click on How to.png to expand or collapse the legend...

Domain Peripheral Runtime allocation Comment How to.png
Instance Cortex-A7
secure
(OP-TEE)
Cortex-A7
non-secure
(Linux)
Security PKA PKA Assignment (single choice)

3.2.2. On STM32MP21x lines More info.png

Click on How to.png to expand or collapse the legend...

Domain Peripheral Runtime allocation Comment How to.png
Instance Cortex-A35
secure
(OP-TEE /
TF-A BL31)
Cortex-A35
nonsecure
(Linux)
Cortex-M33
secure
(TF-M)
Cortex-M33
nonsecure
(STM32Cube)
Security PKA PKA OP-TEE

3.2.3. On STM32MP23x lines More info.png

Click on How to.png to expand or collapse the legend...

Domain Peripheral Runtime allocation Comment How to.png
Instance Cortex-A35
secure
(OP-TEE /
TF-A BL31)
Cortex-A35
nonsecure
(Linux)
Cortex-M33
secure
(TF-M)
Cortex-M33
nonsecure
(STM32Cube)
Security PKA PKA OP-TEE

3.2.4. On STM32MP25x lines More info.png

Click on How to.png to expand or collapse the legend...

Domain Peripheral Runtime allocation Comment How to.png
Instance Cortex-A35
secure
(OP-TEE /
TF-A BL31)
Cortex-A35
nonsecure
(Linux)
Cortex-M33
secure
(TF-M)
Cortex-M33
nonsecure
(STM32Cube)
Cortex-M0+
(STM32Cube)
Security PKA PKA OP-TEE

4. Software frameworks and drivers

Below are listed the software frameworks and drivers managing the PKA peripheral for the embedded software components listed in the above tables.

5. How to assign and configure the peripheral

The peripheral assignment can be done via the STM32CubeMX graphical tool (and manually completed if needed).
This tool also helps to configure the peripheral:

  • partial device trees (pin control and clock tree) generation for the OpenSTLinux software components,
  • HAL initialization code generation for the STM32CubeMPU Package.

The configuration is applied by the firmware running in the context in which the peripheral is assigned.