1
0
mirror of https://github.com/trezor/trezor-firmware.git synced 2024-11-27 01:48:17 +00:00
trezor-firmware/docs/misc/update-wipes.md

53 lines
2.0 KiB
Markdown
Raw Normal View History

# Firmware update and device wipe
This document describes under which circumstances the device gets wiped during a firmware
update.
## Trezor 1
The device gets **wiped**:
- If the firmware to be installed is unsigned.
- If the present firmware is unsigned.
- If the firmware to be installed has lower version than the current firmware's
_fix_version_ [1].
The device gets **wiped on every reboot**:
- If the firmware's debug mode is turned on.
## Trezor T
In Trezor T this works a bit differently, we have introduced so-called vendors headers.
Each firmware has its vendor header and this vendor header is signed by SatoshiLabs. The
actual firmware is signed by the vendor header's key. That means that all firmwares are
signed by _someone_ to be able to run on Trezor T.
We currently have two vendors:
1. SatoshiLabs
2. UNSAFE DO NOT USE
As the names suggest, the first one is the official SatoshiLabs vendor header and all
public firmwares are signed with that. The second one is meant for generic audience; if
you build firmware this vendor header is automatically applied and the firmware is signed
with it (see `core/tools/headertool.py`).
The device gets **wiped**:
- If the firmware to be installed is from different vendor than the present firmware [2].
- If the firmware to be installed has lower version than the current firmware's
_fix_version_ [1].
The device gets **wiped on every reboot**:
- If the firmware's debug mode is turned on.
----
[1] Firmware contains a _fix_version_, which is the lowest version to which that
particular firmware can be downgraded without wiping storage. This is typically used in
case the internal storage format is changed. For example, in version 2.2.0, we have
introduced Wipe Code, which introduced some changes to storage that the older firmwares
(e.g. 2.1.8) would not understand. It can also be used to enforce security fixes.
[2] The most common example is if you have a device with the official firmware
(SatoshiLabs) and you install the unofficial (UNSIGNED) firmware -> the device gets
wiped. Same thing vice versa.