Re: Intel GCM: __driver-gcm-aes-aesni setkey missing

From: Stephan Mueller
Date: Sun Jan 18 2015 - 13:16:10 EST


Am Samstag, 17. Januar 2015, 17:37:06 schrieb Tadeusz Struk:

Hi Tadeusz,

> Hi Stephan,
>
> On 01/17/2015 10:23 AM, Stephan Mueller wrote:
> > during testing of my algif_aead patch with the different GCM
> > implementations I am able to trigger a kernel crash from user space using
> > __driver-gcm-aes- aesni.
> >
> > As I hope that algif_aead is going to be included, unprivileged userspace
> > would then reliably crash the kernel -- with the current kernel code,
> > userspace has no interface to trigger the issue.
>
> Yes, that's a problem.
>
> > As I am not sure what the purpose of __driver-gcm-aes-aesni is (only a
> > backend for RFC4106 GCM or a regular cipher), I did not yet create a
> > patch. IMHO there are two solutions:
> >
> > - either create a valid setkey callback so that a key is set
> >
> > - or create a noop setkey that returns -EOPNOTSUPP which effectively
> > disables that cipher for regular consumption.
>
> __driver-gcm-aes-aesni is only a helper for rfc4106-gcm-aesni and it
> never supposed to be used on it's own. I think implementing a setkey
> function that only returns an error would be a good solution for this.

Ok, I will send a patch shortly.

> Another question is what if someone will ignore the error or skip the
> setsockopt(ALG_SET_KEY) altogether and still call the sendmsg() and
> read() to trigger encrypt()?

Using my libkcapi [1] test bench, I disabled key and IV submission for
symmetric ciphers (tested cbc(aes) which invokes your AESNI code path on my
box -- and gcm(aes) and ccm(aes) which again both use the AESNI core and the C
implementation of GCM and CCM).

All tests with missing keys and IVs:

- showed a successful encryption / decryption with the CBC mode

- returned the error code of either ENOKEY or EINVAL for GCM / CCM
encryption/decryption

There is no crash/BUG/WARN observed.

>
> > Note, if it is only a backend for the RFC4106 implementation, may I ask
> > why
> > __driver-gcm-aes-aesni is implemented as a separate cipher that is
> > registered with the kernel crypto API?
>
> This is because we need to have one instance of the helper tfm with its
> context per each of the rfc4106-gcm-aesni tfm instance and that was one
> convenient way to do this.

Then I concur with you that having a setkey function returning an error is the
right way.
>
> Tadeusz
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--
Ciao
Stephan
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