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trezor-firmware/docs/common/communication/sessions.md
2020-08-28 15:37:06 +02:00

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Sessions

Trezor has limited support for logical sessions. The main purpose is to enable seamless operation with multiple passphrases.

Warning: Session isolation does not exist. Host software is responsible for maintaining isolation. Running multiple host-side applications at the same time is not recommended.

See "Caveats" section below for details.

Support for isolated sessions is in the works, see #79.

Session lifecycle

After Trezor starts up, no session exists. Any attempt to use session data (i.e., the seed) will be rejected with InvalidSession error code.

New session is started by calling Initialize with no arguments. The response is a Features message, which contains a 32-byte session_id. All subsequent commands happen within the given session.

To resume a previous session (after creating a new one), call Initialize with a stored session_id as an argument.

Attempt to resume an unknown session ID will transparently allocate a new session ID.

Since firmwares 1.9.4 / 2.3.4, it is possible to destroy the current session via the EndSession call. The session and all its associated data is wiped from Trezor memory, and it is impossible to resume the session. Trezor returns to the initial state and all requests will return InvalidSession.

There is no explicit way to leave a session and keep its data for later resumption. Instead, you can switch to a new session via Initialize with no arguments.

At the moment, both T1 and TT allow for 10 sessions to exist at the same time. When a new session needs to be allocated and there is no space in the cache, the least recently used session is evicted.

Sessions only exist in RAM and are lost when Trezor is disconnected.

All commands are performed in the context of the current session, until one of the following happens:

  • Host calls EndSession. The current session is destroyed and Trezor returns to the initial state.
  • Host calls Initialize with no arguments, or with an unknown session_id. A new session is allocated and its id returned in the Features message.
  • Host calls Initialize with a known session_id. The specified session is resumed and its session_id is returned in the Features message.
  • Trezor is disconnected.

Caveats

  • Sessions only exist on the protobuf message level. There is no proper isolation. Multiple host applications can insert commands into each other's sessions.

    It is recommended to send Initialize to resume a session immediately before each flow. However, even this does not guarantee that another application doesn't insert its own Initialize in the time it takes you to send the next command.

    The reverse is also true: session management does not prevent other applications from inserting commands under the currently active session (and therefore passphrase), without knowledge of the session ID or the passphrase.

  • It is impossible to run complex flows concurrently. If an application is in the middle of Bitcoin signing, sending Initialize will cancel the signing flow. Resuming the appropriate session later will not continue where it left off.

Examples

Allocate a new session, perform a command, and end the session:

Initialize()
--------->          Features(..., session_id=AAAA)
                       <---------
    ---<now in session AAAA>---
Request
--------->          Response
                       <---------
EndSession()
--------->          Success()
                       <---------
    ---<now in no session>---

Allocate two new sessions, resume the first one later:

Initialize()
--------->          Features(..., session_id=AAAA)
                       <---------
    ---<now in session AAAA>---
Request
--------->          Response
                       <---------

Initialize()
--------->          Features(..., session_id=BBBB)
                       <---------
    ---<now in session BBBB>---
Request
--------->          Response
                       <---------

Initialize(session_id=AAAA)
--------->          Features(..., session_id=AAAA)
                       <---------
    ---<now in session AAAA>---
Request
--------->          Response
                       <---------

Attempt to resume session that is not in the cache:

Initialize()
--------->          Features(..., session_id=AAAA)
                       <---------
    ---<now in session AAAA>---
EndSession()
--------->          Success()
                       <---------
    ---<now in no session>---
Initialize(session_id=AAAA)
--------->          Features(..., session_id=BBBB)
                       <---------
    ---<now in session BBBB>---