rustBoot is a standalone bootloader, written entirely in Rust
, designed to run on anything from a microcontroller to a system on chip. It can be used to boot into bare-metal firmware or Linux.
rustBoot aims to offer an OS and micro-architecture agnostic (i.e. highly portable) secure bootloader which is standards-compatible and easy to integrate into existing embedded software projects.
- support for
ARM Cortex-M, Cortex-A
micro-architectures - support for multi-slot partitioning of microcontroller flash memory. This allows us to implement the
boot/update
approach for bare-metalfirmware updates
. - support for
Aarch64 linux
booting - elliptic curve cryptography for integrity and authenticity verification using
RustCrypto
crates - a tiny hardware abstraction layer for non-volatile memory (i.e. flash) access.
- anti-rollback protection via version numbering.
- a fully memory safe core-bootloader implementation with safe parsers and firmware-update logic.
- power-interruptible firmware updates along with the assurance of fall-back availability.
- a
signing utility
to sign bare-metal firmware and fit-image(s), written in pure rust.
- support for external flash devices (ex: SPI flash) and serial/console logging interfaces.
- support for
ARM TrustZone-M and A
and certifiedsecure hardware elements
- microchip ATECC608a, NXP SE050, STSAFE-100 - support for secure, distributed and efficient
firmware transport
over ipfs.
You can read the book for free online
..
Note:
rustBoot
and thebook
are still in development (i.e. a work in progress).
rustBoot exists as we could not find a suitable (open-source) option that meets our security goals. It is the result of an exhaustive evaluation of 'pretty much' the entire embedded-bootloader landscape.
Having said that, it does take inspiration from similar projects (such as u-boot, zephyr, mcuboot, coreboot, wolfBoot etc). However, the key differentiator is security-above-all-else. To that extent, its built entirely in rust, takes full advantage of rust's memory safety guarantees while leveraging safer parsing libraries, compile-time state-transition checks coupled with (safe) community sourced rust-crates (such as boards, HALs drivers etc.)
For questions, issues, feature requests, and other changes, please file an issue in the github project.
rustBoot is licensed under
- MIT license (LICENSE-MIT or http://opensource.org/licenses/MIT)
Unless you explicitly state otherwise, any contribution intentionally submitted for inclusion in the work by you, as defined in the MIT license, shall be licensed as above, without any additional terms or conditions.