#
fdafd315 |
| 24-Nov-2023 |
Warner Losh <imp@FreeBSD.org> |
sys: Automated cleanup of cdefs and other formatting
Apply the following automated changes to try to eliminate no-longer-needed sys/cdefs.h includes as well as now-empty blank lines in a row.
Remov
sys: Automated cleanup of cdefs and other formatting
Apply the following automated changes to try to eliminate no-longer-needed sys/cdefs.h includes as well as now-empty blank lines in a row.
Remove /^#if.*\n#endif.*\n#include\s+<sys/cdefs.h>.*\n/ Remove /\n+#include\s+<sys/cdefs.h>.*\n+#if.*\n#endif.*\n+/ Remove /\n+#if.*\n#endif.*\n+/ Remove /^#if.*\n#endif.*\n/ Remove /\n+#include\s+<sys/cdefs.h>\n#include\s+<sys/types.h>/ Remove /\n+#include\s+<sys/cdefs.h>\n#include\s+<sys/param.h>/ Remove /\n+#include\s+<sys/cdefs.h>\n#include\s+<sys/capsicum.h>/
Sponsored by: Netflix
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Revision tags: release/14.0.0 |
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#
685dc743 |
| 16-Aug-2023 |
Warner Losh <imp@FreeBSD.org> |
sys: Remove $FreeBSD$: one-line .c pattern
Remove /^[\s*]*__FBSDID\("\$FreeBSD\$"\);?\s*\n/
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4d846d26 |
| 10-May-2023 |
Warner Losh <imp@FreeBSD.org> |
spdx: The BSD-2-Clause-FreeBSD identifier is obsolete, drop -FreeBSD
The SPDX folks have obsoleted the BSD-2-Clause-FreeBSD identifier. Catch up to that fact and revert to their recommended match of
spdx: The BSD-2-Clause-FreeBSD identifier is obsolete, drop -FreeBSD
The SPDX folks have obsoleted the BSD-2-Clause-FreeBSD identifier. Catch up to that fact and revert to their recommended match of BSD-2-Clause.
Discussed with: pfg MFC After: 3 days Sponsored by: Netflix
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Revision tags: release/13.2.0, release/12.4.0, release/13.1.0 |
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c9048120 |
| 09-Dec-2021 |
Mateusz Guzik <mjg@FreeBSD.org> |
geom_eli: mostly plug set-but-not-unused vars
The remaining case is an ignored error.
Sponsored by: Rubicon Communications, LLC ("Netgate")
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Revision tags: release/12.3.0 |
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#
2dbc9a38 |
| 28-Sep-2021 |
Gleb Smirnoff <glebius@FreeBSD.org> |
Fix memory deadlock when GELI partition is used for swap.
When we get low on memory, the VM system tries to free some by swapping pages. However, if we are so low on free pages that GELI allocations
Fix memory deadlock when GELI partition is used for swap.
When we get low on memory, the VM system tries to free some by swapping pages. However, if we are so low on free pages that GELI allocations block, then the swapout operation cannot complete. This keeps the VM system from being able to free enough memory so the allocation can complete.
To alleviate this, keep a UMA pool at the GELI layer which is used for data buffer allocation in the fast path, and reserve some of that memory for swap operations. If an IO operation is a swap, then use the reserved memory. If the allocation still fails, return ENOMEM instead of blocking.
For non-swap allocations, change the default to using M_NOWAIT. In general, this *should* be better, since it gives upper layers a signal of the memory pressure and a chance to manage their failure strategy appropriately. However, a user can set the kern.geom.eli.blocking_malloc sysctl/tunable to restore the previous M_WAITOK strategy.
Submitted by: jtl Reviewed by: imp Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24400
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0fcafe85 |
| 15-Jul-2021 |
Mark Johnston <markj@FreeBSD.org> |
eli: Zero pad bytes that arise when certain auth algorithms are used
When authentication is configured, GELI ensures that the amount of data per sector is a multiple of 16 bytes. This is done in el
eli: Zero pad bytes that arise when certain auth algorithms are used
When authentication is configured, GELI ensures that the amount of data per sector is a multiple of 16 bytes. This is done in eli_metadata_softc(). When the digest size is not a multiple of 16 bytes, this leaves some extra pad bytes at the end of every sector, and they were not being zeroed before being written to disk. In particular, this happens with the HMAC/SHA1, HMAC/RIPEMD160 and HMAC/SHA384 data authentication algorithms.
This change ensures that they are zeroed before being written to disk.
Reported by: KMSAN Reviewed by: delphij, asomers MFC after: 2 weeks Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D31170
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Revision tags: release/13.0.0 |
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#
68f6800c |
| 08-Feb-2021 |
Mark Johnston <markj@FreeBSD.org> |
opencrypto: Introduce crypto_dispatch_async()
Currently, OpenCrypto consumers can request asynchronous dispatch by setting a flag in the cryptop. (Currently only IPSec may do this.) I think this
opencrypto: Introduce crypto_dispatch_async()
Currently, OpenCrypto consumers can request asynchronous dispatch by setting a flag in the cryptop. (Currently only IPSec may do this.) I think this is a bit confusing: we (conditionally) set cryptop flags to request async dispatch, and then crypto_dispatch() immediately examines those flags to see if the consumer wants async dispatch. The flag names are also confusing since they don't specify what "async" applies to: dispatch or completion.
Add a new KPI, crypto_dispatch_async(), rather than encoding the requested dispatch type in each cryptop. crypto_dispatch_async() falls back to crypto_dispatch() if the session's driver provides asynchronous dispatch. Get rid of CRYPTOP_ASYNC() and CRYPTOP_ASYNC_KEEPORDER().
Similarly, add crypto_dispatch_batch() to request processing of a tailq of cryptops, rather than encoding the scheduling policy using cryptop flags. Convert GELI, the only user of this interface (disabled by default) to use the new interface.
Add CRYPTO_SESS_SYNC(), which can be used by consumers to determine whether crypto requests will be dispatched synchronously. This is just a helper macro. Use it instead of looking at cap flags directly.
Fix style in crypto_done(). Also get rid of CRYPTO_RETW_EMPTY() and just check the relevant queues directly. This could result in some unnecessary wakeups but I think it's very uncommon to be using more than one queue per worker in a given workload, so checking all three queues is a waste of cycles.
Reviewed by: jhb Sponsored by: Ampere Computing Submitted by: Klara, Inc. MFC after: 2 weeks Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D28194
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#
cd853791 |
| 28-Nov-2020 |
Konstantin Belousov <kib@FreeBSD.org> |
Make MAXPHYS tunable. Bump MAXPHYS to 1M.
Replace MAXPHYS by runtime variable maxphys. It is initialized from MAXPHYS by default, but can be also adjusted with the tunable kern.maxphys.
Make b_pag
Make MAXPHYS tunable. Bump MAXPHYS to 1M.
Replace MAXPHYS by runtime variable maxphys. It is initialized from MAXPHYS by default, but can be also adjusted with the tunable kern.maxphys.
Make b_pages[] array in struct buf flexible. Size b_pages[] for buffer cache buffers exactly to atop(maxbcachebuf) (currently it is sized to atop(MAXPHYS)), and b_pages[] for pbufs is sized to atop(maxphys) + 1. The +1 for pbufs allow several pbuf consumers, among them vmapbuf(), to use unaligned buffers still sized to maxphys, esp. when such buffers come from userspace (*). Overall, we save significant amount of otherwise wasted memory in b_pages[] for buffer cache buffers, while bumping MAXPHYS to desired high value.
Eliminate all direct uses of the MAXPHYS constant in kernel and driver sources, except a place which initialize maxphys. Some random (and arguably weird) uses of MAXPHYS, e.g. in linuxolator, are converted straight. Some drivers, which use MAXPHYS to size embeded structures, get private MAXPHYS-like constant; their convertion is out of scope for this work.
Changes to cam/, dev/ahci, dev/ata, dev/mpr, dev/mpt, dev/mvs, dev/siis, where either submitted by, or based on changes by mav.
Suggested by: mav (*) Reviewed by: imp, mav, imp, mckusick, scottl (intermediate versions) Tested by: pho Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27225
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Revision tags: release/12.2.0 |
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#
c7aa572c |
| 31-Jul-2020 |
Glen Barber <gjb@FreeBSD.org> |
MFH
Sponsored by: Rubicon Communications, LLC (netgate.com)
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17996960 |
| 31-Jul-2020 |
Dimitry Andric <dim@FreeBSD.org> |
Merge ^/head r363583 through r363738.
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#
e2bbd168 |
| 27-Jul-2020 |
John Baldwin <jhb@FreeBSD.org> |
Fix indentation.
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#
aafaa8b7 |
| 21-Jul-2020 |
Alan Somers <asomers@FreeBSD.org> |
Fix geli's null cipher, and add a test case
PR: 247954 Submitted by: jhb (sys), asomers (tests) Reviewed by: jhb (tests), asomers (sys) MFC after: 2 weeks Sponsored by: Axcient
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Revision tags: release/11.4.0 |
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#
9c0e3d3a |
| 26-May-2020 |
John Baldwin <jhb@FreeBSD.org> |
Add support for optional separate output buffers to in-kernel crypto.
Some crypto consumers such as GELI and KTLS for file-backed sendfile need to store their output in a separate buffer from the in
Add support for optional separate output buffers to in-kernel crypto.
Some crypto consumers such as GELI and KTLS for file-backed sendfile need to store their output in a separate buffer from the input. Currently these consumers copy the contents of the input buffer into the output buffer and queue an in-place crypto operation on the output buffer. Using a separate output buffer avoids this copy.
- Create a new 'struct crypto_buffer' describing a crypto buffer containing a type and type-specific fields. crp_ilen is gone, instead buffers that use a flat kernel buffer have a cb_buf_len field for their length. The length of other buffer types is inferred from the backing store (e.g. uio_resid for a uio). Requests now have two such structures: crp_buf for the input buffer, and crp_obuf for the output buffer.
- Consumers now use helper functions (crypto_use_*, e.g. crypto_use_mbuf()) to configure the input buffer. If an output buffer is not configured, the request still modifies the input buffer in-place. A consumer uses a second set of helper functions (crypto_use_output_*) to configure an output buffer.
- Consumers must request support for separate output buffers when creating a crypto session via the CSP_F_SEPARATE_OUTPUT flag and are only permitted to queue a request with a separate output buffer on sessions with this flag set. Existing drivers already reject sessions with unknown flags, so this permits drivers to be modified to support this extension without requiring all drivers to change.
- Several data-related functions now have matching versions that operate on an explicit buffer (e.g. crypto_apply_buf, crypto_contiguous_subsegment_buf, bus_dma_load_crp_buf).
- Most of the existing data-related functions operate on the input buffer. However crypto_copyback always writes to the output buffer if a request uses a separate output buffer.
- For the regions in input/output buffers, the following conventions are followed: - AAD and IV are always present in input only and their fields are offsets into the input buffer. - payload is always present in both buffers. If a request uses a separate output buffer, it must set a new crp_payload_start_output field to the offset of the payload in the output buffer. - digest is in the input buffer for verify operations, and in the output buffer for compute operations. crp_digest_start is relative to the appropriate buffer.
- Add a crypto buffer cursor abstraction. This is a more general form of some bits in the cryptosoft driver that tried to always use uio's. However, compared to the original code, this avoids rewalking the uio iovec array for requests with multiple vectors. It also avoids allocate an iovec array for mbufs and populating it by instead walking the mbuf chain directly.
- Update the cryptosoft(4) driver to support separate output buffers making use of the cursor abstraction.
Sponsored by: Netflix Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24545
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#
c0341432 |
| 27-Mar-2020 |
John Baldwin <jhb@FreeBSD.org> |
Refactor driver and consumer interfaces for OCF (in-kernel crypto).
- The linked list of cryptoini structures used in session initialization is replaced with a new flat structure: struct crypto_
Refactor driver and consumer interfaces for OCF (in-kernel crypto).
- The linked list of cryptoini structures used in session initialization is replaced with a new flat structure: struct crypto_session_params. This session includes a new mode to define how the other fields should be interpreted. Available modes include:
- COMPRESS (for compression/decompression) - CIPHER (for simply encryption/decryption) - DIGEST (computing and verifying digests) - AEAD (combined auth and encryption such as AES-GCM and AES-CCM) - ETA (combined auth and encryption using encrypt-then-authenticate)
Additional modes could be added in the future (e.g. if we wanted to support TLS MtE for AES-CBC in the kernel we could add a new mode for that. TLS modes might also affect how AAD is interpreted, etc.)
The flat structure also includes the key lengths and algorithms as before. However, code doesn't have to walk the linked list and switch on the algorithm to determine which key is the auth key vs encryption key. The 'csp_auth_*' fields are always used for auth keys and settings and 'csp_cipher_*' for cipher. (Compression algorithms are stored in csp_cipher_alg.)
- Drivers no longer register a list of supported algorithms. This doesn't quite work when you factor in modes (e.g. a driver might support both AES-CBC and SHA2-256-HMAC separately but not combined for ETA). Instead, a new 'crypto_probesession' method has been added to the kobj interface for symmteric crypto drivers. This method returns a negative value on success (similar to how device_probe works) and the crypto framework uses this value to pick the "best" driver. There are three constants for hardware (e.g. ccr), accelerated software (e.g. aesni), and plain software (cryptosoft) that give preference in that order. One effect of this is that if you request only hardware when creating a new session, you will no longer get a session using accelerated software. Another effect is that the default setting to disallow software crypto via /dev/crypto now disables accelerated software.
Once a driver is chosen, 'crypto_newsession' is invoked as before.
- Crypto operations are now solely described by the flat 'cryptop' structure. The linked list of descriptors has been removed.
A separate enum has been added to describe the type of data buffer in use instead of using CRYPTO_F_* flags to make it easier to add more types in the future if needed (e.g. wired userspace buffers for zero-copy). It will also make it easier to re-introduce separate input and output buffers (in-kernel TLS would benefit from this).
Try to make the flags related to IV handling less insane:
- CRYPTO_F_IV_SEPARATE means that the IV is stored in the 'crp_iv' member of the operation structure. If this flag is not set, the IV is stored in the data buffer at the 'crp_iv_start' offset.
- CRYPTO_F_IV_GENERATE means that a random IV should be generated and stored into the data buffer. This cannot be used with CRYPTO_F_IV_SEPARATE.
If a consumer wants to deal with explicit vs implicit IVs, etc. it can always generate the IV however it needs and store partial IVs in the buffer and the full IV/nonce in crp_iv and set CRYPTO_F_IV_SEPARATE.
The layout of the buffer is now described via fields in cryptop. crp_aad_start and crp_aad_length define the boundaries of any AAD. Previously with GCM and CCM you defined an auth crd with this range, but for ETA your auth crd had to span both the AAD and plaintext (and they had to be adjacent).
crp_payload_start and crp_payload_length define the boundaries of the plaintext/ciphertext. Modes that only do a single operation (COMPRESS, CIPHER, DIGEST) should only use this region and leave the AAD region empty.
If a digest is present (or should be generated), it's starting location is marked by crp_digest_start.
Instead of using the CRD_F_ENCRYPT flag to determine the direction of the operation, cryptop now includes an 'op' field defining the operation to perform. For digests I've added a new VERIFY digest mode which assumes a digest is present in the input and fails the request with EBADMSG if it doesn't match the internally-computed digest. GCM and CCM already assumed this, and the new AEAD mode requires this for decryption. The new ETA mode now also requires this for decryption, so IPsec and GELI no longer do their own authentication verification. Simple DIGEST operations can also do this, though there are no in-tree consumers.
To eventually support some refcounting to close races, the session cookie is now passed to crypto_getop() and clients should no longer set crp_sesssion directly.
- Assymteric crypto operation structures should be allocated via crypto_getkreq() and freed via crypto_freekreq(). This permits the crypto layer to track open asym requests and close races with a driver trying to unregister while asym requests are in flight.
- crypto_copyback, crypto_copydata, crypto_apply, and crypto_contiguous_subsegment now accept the 'crp' object as the first parameter instead of individual members. This makes it easier to deal with different buffer types in the future as well as separate input and output buffers. It's also simpler for driver writers to use.
- bus_dmamap_load_crp() loads a DMA mapping for a crypto buffer. This understands the various types of buffers so that drivers that use DMA do not have to be aware of different buffer types.
- Helper routines now exist to build an auth context for HMAC IPAD and OPAD. This reduces some duplicated work among drivers.
- Key buffers are now treated as const throughout the framework and in device drivers. However, session key buffers provided when a session is created are expected to remain alive for the duration of the session.
- GCM and CCM sessions now only specify a cipher algorithm and a cipher key. The redundant auth information is not needed or used.
- For cryptosoft, split up the code a bit such that the 'process' callback now invokes a function pointer in the session. This function pointer is set based on the mode (in effect) though it simplifies a few edge cases that would otherwise be in the switch in 'process'.
It does split up GCM vs CCM which I think is more readable even if there is some duplication.
- I changed /dev/crypto to support GMAC requests using CRYPTO_AES_NIST_GMAC as an auth algorithm and updated cryptocheck to work with it.
- Combined cipher and auth sessions via /dev/crypto now always use ETA mode. The COP_F_CIPHER_FIRST flag is now a no-op that is ignored. This was actually documented as being true in crypto(4) before, but the code had not implemented this before I added the CIPHER_FIRST flag.
- I have not yet updated /dev/crypto to be aware of explicit modes for sessions. I will probably do that at some point in the future as well as teach it about IV/nonce and tag lengths for AEAD so we can support all of the NIST KAT tests for GCM and CCM.
- I've split up the exising crypto.9 manpage into several pages of which many are written from scratch.
- I have converted all drivers and consumers in the tree and verified that they compile, but I have not tested all of them. I have tested the following drivers:
- cryptosoft - aesni (AES only) - blake2 - ccr
and the following consumers:
- cryptodev - IPsec - ktls_ocf - GELI (lightly)
I have not tested the following:
- ccp - aesni with sha - hifn - kgssapi_krb5 - ubsec - padlock - safe - armv8_crypto (aarch64) - glxsb (i386) - sec (ppc) - cesa (armv7) - cryptocteon (mips64) - nlmsec (mips64)
Discussed with: cem Relnotes: yes Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D23677
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#
47172feb |
| 23-Mar-2020 |
John Baldwin <jhb@FreeBSD.org> |
Use the newer EINTEGRITY error when authentication fails.
GELI used to fail with EINVAL when a read request spanned a disk sector whose contents did not match the sector's authentication tag. The re
Use the newer EINTEGRITY error when authentication fails.
GELI used to fail with EINVAL when a read request spanned a disk sector whose contents did not match the sector's authentication tag. The recently-added EINTEGRITY more closely matches to the error in this case.
Reviewed by: cem, mckusick MFC after: 2 weeks Sponsored by: Chelsio Communications Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24131
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Revision tags: release/12.1.0 |
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#
ac03832e |
| 07-Aug-2019 |
Conrad Meyer <cem@FreeBSD.org> |
GEOM: Reduce unnecessary log interleaving with sbufs
Similar to what was done for device_printfs in r347229.
Convert g_print_bio() to a thin shim around g_format_bio(), which acts on an sbuf; docum
GEOM: Reduce unnecessary log interleaving with sbufs
Similar to what was done for device_printfs in r347229.
Convert g_print_bio() to a thin shim around g_format_bio(), which acts on an sbuf; documented in g_bio.9.
Reviewed by: markj Discussed with: rlibby Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D21165
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Revision tags: release/11.3.0, release/12.0.0 |
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#
1b0909d5 |
| 18-Jul-2018 |
Conrad Meyer <cem@FreeBSD.org> |
OpenCrypto: Convert sessions to opaque handles instead of integers
Track session objects in the framework, and pass handles between the framework (OCF), consumers, and drivers. Avoid redundancy and
OpenCrypto: Convert sessions to opaque handles instead of integers
Track session objects in the framework, and pass handles between the framework (OCF), consumers, and drivers. Avoid redundancy and complexity in individual drivers by allocating session memory in the framework and providing it to drivers in ::newsession().
Session handles are no longer integers with information encoded in various high bits. Use of the CRYPTO_SESID2FOO() macros should be replaced with the appropriate crypto_ses2foo() function on the opaque session handle.
Convert OCF drivers (in particular, cryptosoft, as well as myriad others) to the opaque handle interface. Discard existing session tracking as much as possible (quick pass). There may be additional code ripe for deletion.
Convert OCF consumers (ipsec, geom_eli, krb5, cryptodev) to handle-style interface. The conversion is largely mechnical.
The change is documented in crypto.9.
Inspired by https://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/freebsd-arch/2018-January/018835.html .
No objection from: ae (ipsec portion) Reported by: jhb
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Revision tags: release/11.2.0 |
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#
3728855a |
| 27-Nov-2017 |
Pedro F. Giffuni <pfg@FreeBSD.org> |
sys/geom: adoption of SPDX licensing ID tags.
Mainly focus on files that use BSD 2-Clause license, however the tool I was using misidentified many licenses so this was mostly a manual - error prone
sys/geom: adoption of SPDX licensing ID tags.
Mainly focus on files that use BSD 2-Clause license, however the tool I was using misidentified many licenses so this was mostly a manual - error prone - task.
The Software Package Data Exchange (SPDX) group provides a specification to make it easier for automated tools to detect and summarize well known opensource licenses. We are gradually adopting the specification, noting that the tags are considered only advisory and do not, in any way, superceed or replace the license texts.
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Revision tags: release/10.4.0 |
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#
b754c279 |
| 13-Sep-2017 |
Navdeep Parhar <np@FreeBSD.org> |
MFH @ r323558.
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5be4ad9e |
| 09-Sep-2017 |
Enji Cooper <ngie@FreeBSD.org> |
MFhead@r323343
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ea5eee64 |
| 09-Sep-2017 |
Conrad Meyer <cem@FreeBSD.org> |
Fix information leak in geli(8) integrity mode
In integrity mode, a larger logical sector (e.g., 4096 bytes) spans several physical sectors (e.g., 512 bytes) on the backing device. Due to hash over
Fix information leak in geli(8) integrity mode
In integrity mode, a larger logical sector (e.g., 4096 bytes) spans several physical sectors (e.g., 512 bytes) on the backing device. Due to hash overhead, a 4096 byte logical sector takes 8.5625 512-byte physical sectors. This means that only 288 bytes (256 data + 32 hash) of the last 512 byte sector are used.
The memory allocation used to store the encrypted data to be written to the physical sectors comes from malloc(9) and does not use M_ZERO.
Previously, nothing initialized the final physical sector backing each logical sector, aside from the hash + encrypted data portion. So 224 bytes of kernel heap memory was leaked to every block :-(.
This patch addresses the issue by initializing the trailing portion of the physical sector in every logical sector to zeros before use. A much simpler but higher overhead fix would be to tag the entire allocation M_ZERO.
PR: 222077 Reported by: Maxim Khitrov <max AT mxcrypt.com> Reviewed by: emaste Security: yes Sponsored by: Dell EMC Isilon Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12272
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Revision tags: release/11.1.0 |
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#
02ebdc78 |
| 31-Oct-2016 |
Dimitry Andric <dim@FreeBSD.org> |
Merge ^/head r307736 through r308146.
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#
ae8b1f90 |
| 31-Oct-2016 |
Ruslan Bukin <br@FreeBSD.org> |
Fix alignment issues on MIPS: align the pointers properly.
All the 5520 GEOM_ELI tests passed successfully on MIPS64EB.
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL Sponsored by: HEIF5 Differential Revision: https://
Fix alignment issues on MIPS: align the pointers properly.
All the 5520 GEOM_ELI tests passed successfully on MIPS64EB.
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL Sponsored by: HEIF5 Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D7905
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Revision tags: release/11.0.1, release/11.0.0, release/10.3.0 |
|
#
11d38a57 |
| 28-Oct-2015 |
Baptiste Daroussin <bapt@FreeBSD.org> |
Merge from head
Sponsored by: Gandi.net
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f94594b3 |
| 12-Sep-2015 |
Baptiste Daroussin <bapt@FreeBSD.org> |
Finish merging from head, messed up in previous attempt
|