Re: [PATCH] KEYS: encrypted: fix key instantiation with user-provided data
From: Nikolaus Voss <hidden>
Date: 2022-09-21 07:24:29
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keyrings, linux-integrity, lkml
On Tue, 20 Sep 2022, Mimi Zohar wrote:
On Tue, 2022-09-20 at 18:23 +0200, Nikolaus Voss wrote:quoted
On Tue, 20 Sep 2022, Mimi Zohar wrote:quoted
On Fri, 2022-09-16 at 07:45 +0200, Nikolaus Voss wrote:quoted
Commit cd3bc044af48 ("KEYS: encrypted: Instantiate key with user-provided decrypted data") added key instantiation with user provided decrypted data. The user data is hex-ascii-encoded but was just memcpy'ed to the binary buffer. Fix this to use hex2bin instead.Thanks, Nikolaus. We iterated a number of times over what would be the safest userspace input. One of the last changes was that the key data should be hex-ascii-encoded. Unfortunately, the LTP testcases/kernel/syscalls/keyctl09.c example isn't hex-ascii-encoded and the example in Documentation/security/keys/trusted-encrypted.rst just cat's a file. Both expect the length to be the length of the userspace provided data. With this patch, when hex2bin() fails, there is no explanation.That's true. But it's true for all occurrences of hex2bin() in this file. I could pr_err() an explanation, improve the trusted-encrypted.rst example and respin the patch. Should I, or do you have another suggestion?quoted
I wasn't aware of keyctl09.c, but quickly looking into it, the user data _is_ hex-ascii-encoded, only the length is "wrong": Imho, the specified length should be the binary length as this is consistent with key-length specs in other cases (e.g. when loading the key from a blob). keyctl09.c could be easy to fix, if only the length is modified. Should I propose a patch? What is the correct/appropriate workflow there?I'm concerned that this change breaks existing encrypted keys created with user-provided data. Otherwise I'm fine with your suggestion.
Ok, but this change does not touch the hex-ascii format of encrypted key blobs?
The LTP example decrypted data length is 32, but the minimum decrypted data size is 20. So it's a bit more than just changing the LTP decrypted data size. The modified LTP test should work on kernels with and without this patch.
So this would mean OR-ing old and new variant for the test? The current implementation of the test will fail anyway as the key size is below the minimum of 20 and thus should have failed before. Niko