1 // SPDX-License-Identifier: (GPL-2.0 OR BSD-3-Clause) 2 /* 3 * Copyright (C) 2017-2024 Jason A. Donenfeld <Jason@zx2c4.com>. All Rights Reserved. 4 * Copyright Matt Mackall <mpm@selenic.com>, 2003, 2004, 2005 5 * Copyright Theodore Ts'o, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999. All rights reserved. 6 * 7 * This driver produces cryptographically secure pseudorandom data. It is divided 8 * into roughly six sections, each with a section header: 9 * 10 * - Initialization and readiness waiting. 11 * - Fast key erasure RNG, the "crng". 12 * - Entropy accumulation and extraction routines. 13 * - Entropy collection routines. 14 * - Userspace reader/writer interfaces. 15 * - Sysctl interface. 16 * 17 * The high level overview is that there is one input pool, into which 18 * various pieces of data are hashed. Prior to initialization, some of that 19 * data is then "credited" as having a certain number of bits of entropy. 20 * When enough bits of entropy are available, the hash is finalized and 21 * handed as a key to a stream cipher that expands it indefinitely for 22 * various consumers. This key is periodically refreshed as the various 23 * entropy collectors, described below, add data to the input pool. 24 */ 25 26 #define pr_fmt(fmt) KBUILD_MODNAME ": " fmt 27 28 #include <linux/utsname.h> 29 #include <linux/module.h> 30 #include <linux/kernel.h> 31 #include <linux/major.h> 32 #include <linux/string.h> 33 #include <linux/fcntl.h> 34 #include <linux/slab.h> 35 #include <linux/random.h> 36 #include <linux/poll.h> 37 #include <linux/init.h> 38 #include <linux/fs.h> 39 #include <linux/blkdev.h> 40 #include <linux/interrupt.h> 41 #include <linux/mm.h> 42 #include <linux/nodemask.h> 43 #include <linux/spinlock.h> 44 #include <linux/kthread.h> 45 #include <linux/percpu.h> 46 #include <linux/ptrace.h> 47 #include <linux/workqueue.h> 48 #include <linux/irq.h> 49 #include <linux/ratelimit.h> 50 #include <linux/syscalls.h> 51 #include <linux/completion.h> 52 #include <linux/uuid.h> 53 #include <linux/uaccess.h> 54 #include <linux/suspend.h> 55 #include <linux/siphash.h> 56 #include <linux/sched/isolation.h> 57 #include <crypto/chacha.h> 58 #include <crypto/blake2s.h> 59 #include <vdso/datapage.h> 60 #include <asm/archrandom.h> 61 #include <asm/processor.h> 62 #include <asm/irq.h> 63 #include <asm/irq_regs.h> 64 #include <asm/io.h> 65 66 /********************************************************************* 67 * 68 * Initialization and readiness waiting. 69 * 70 * Much of the RNG infrastructure is devoted to various dependencies 71 * being able to wait until the RNG has collected enough entropy and 72 * is ready for safe consumption. 73 * 74 *********************************************************************/ 75 76 /* 77 * crng_init is protected by base_crng->lock, and only increases 78 * its value (from empty->early->ready). 79 */ 80 static enum { 81 CRNG_EMPTY = 0, /* Little to no entropy collected */ 82 CRNG_EARLY = 1, /* At least POOL_EARLY_BITS collected */ 83 CRNG_READY = 2 /* Fully initialized with POOL_READY_BITS collected */ 84 } crng_init __read_mostly = CRNG_EMPTY; 85 static DEFINE_STATIC_KEY_FALSE(crng_is_ready); 86 #define crng_ready() (static_branch_likely(&crng_is_ready) || crng_init >= CRNG_READY) 87 /* Various types of waiters for crng_init->CRNG_READY transition. */ 88 static DECLARE_WAIT_QUEUE_HEAD(crng_init_wait); 89 static struct fasync_struct *fasync; 90 static ATOMIC_NOTIFIER_HEAD(random_ready_notifier); 91 92 /* Control how we warn userspace. */ 93 static struct ratelimit_state urandom_warning = 94 RATELIMIT_STATE_INIT_FLAGS("urandom_warning", HZ, 3, RATELIMIT_MSG_ON_RELEASE); 95 static int ratelimit_disable __read_mostly = 0; 96 module_param_named(ratelimit_disable, ratelimit_disable, int, 0644); 97 MODULE_PARM_DESC(ratelimit_disable, "Disable random ratelimit suppression"); 98 99 /* 100 * Returns whether or not the input pool has been seeded and thus guaranteed 101 * to supply cryptographically secure random numbers. This applies to: the 102 * /dev/urandom device, the get_random_bytes function, and the get_random_{u8, 103 * u16,u32,u64,long} family of functions. 104 * 105 * Returns: true if the input pool has been seeded. 106 * false if the input pool has not been seeded. 107 */ 108 bool rng_is_initialized(void) 109 { 110 return crng_ready(); 111 } 112 EXPORT_SYMBOL(rng_is_initialized); 113 114 static void __cold crng_set_ready(struct work_struct *work) 115 { 116 static_branch_enable(&crng_is_ready); 117 } 118 119 /* Used by wait_for_random_bytes(), and considered an entropy collector, below. */ 120 static void try_to_generate_entropy(void); 121 122 /* 123 * Wait for the input pool to be seeded and thus guaranteed to supply 124 * cryptographically secure random numbers. This applies to: the /dev/urandom 125 * device, the get_random_bytes function, and the get_random_{u8,u16,u32,u64, 126 * long} family of functions. Using any of these functions without first 127 * calling this function forfeits the guarantee of security. 128 * 129 * Returns: 0 if the input pool has been seeded. 130 * -ERESTARTSYS if the function was interrupted by a signal. 131 */ 132 int wait_for_random_bytes(void) 133 { 134 while (!crng_ready()) { 135 int ret; 136 137 try_to_generate_entropy(); 138 ret = wait_event_interruptible_timeout(crng_init_wait, crng_ready(), HZ); 139 if (ret) 140 return ret > 0 ? 0 : ret; 141 } 142 return 0; 143 } 144 EXPORT_SYMBOL(wait_for_random_bytes); 145 146 /* 147 * Add a callback function that will be invoked when the crng is initialised, 148 * or immediately if it already has been. Only use this is you are absolutely 149 * sure it is required. Most users should instead be able to test 150 * `rng_is_initialized()` on demand, or make use of `get_random_bytes_wait()`. 151 */ 152 int __cold execute_with_initialized_rng(struct notifier_block *nb) 153 { 154 unsigned long flags; 155 int ret = 0; 156 157 spin_lock_irqsave(&random_ready_notifier.lock, flags); 158 if (crng_ready()) 159 nb->notifier_call(nb, 0, NULL); 160 else 161 ret = raw_notifier_chain_register((struct raw_notifier_head *)&random_ready_notifier.head, nb); 162 spin_unlock_irqrestore(&random_ready_notifier.lock, flags); 163 return ret; 164 } 165 166 /********************************************************************* 167 * 168 * Fast key erasure RNG, the "crng". 169 * 170 * These functions expand entropy from the entropy extractor into 171 * long streams for external consumption using the "fast key erasure" 172 * RNG described at <https://blog.cr.yp.to/20170723-random.html>. 173 * 174 * There are a few exported interfaces for use by other drivers: 175 * 176 * void get_random_bytes(void *buf, size_t len) 177 * u8 get_random_u8() 178 * u16 get_random_u16() 179 * u32 get_random_u32() 180 * u32 get_random_u32_below(u32 ceil) 181 * u32 get_random_u32_above(u32 floor) 182 * u32 get_random_u32_inclusive(u32 floor, u32 ceil) 183 * u64 get_random_u64() 184 * unsigned long get_random_long() 185 * 186 * These interfaces will return the requested number of random bytes 187 * into the given buffer or as a return value. This is equivalent to 188 * a read from /dev/urandom. The u8, u16, u32, u64, long family of 189 * functions may be higher performance for one-off random integers, 190 * because they do a bit of buffering and do not invoke reseeding 191 * until the buffer is emptied. 192 * 193 *********************************************************************/ 194 195 enum { 196 CRNG_RESEED_START_INTERVAL = HZ, 197 CRNG_RESEED_INTERVAL = 60 * HZ 198 }; 199 200 static struct { 201 u8 key[CHACHA_KEY_SIZE] __aligned(__alignof__(long)); 202 unsigned long generation; 203 spinlock_t lock; 204 } base_crng = { 205 .lock = __SPIN_LOCK_UNLOCKED(base_crng.lock) 206 }; 207 208 struct crng { 209 u8 key[CHACHA_KEY_SIZE]; 210 unsigned long generation; 211 local_lock_t lock; 212 }; 213 214 static DEFINE_PER_CPU(struct crng, crngs) = { 215 .generation = ULONG_MAX, 216 .lock = INIT_LOCAL_LOCK(crngs.lock), 217 }; 218 219 /* 220 * Return the interval until the next reseeding, which is normally 221 * CRNG_RESEED_INTERVAL, but during early boot, it is at an interval 222 * proportional to the uptime. 223 */ 224 static unsigned int crng_reseed_interval(void) 225 { 226 static bool early_boot = true; 227 228 if (unlikely(READ_ONCE(early_boot))) { 229 time64_t uptime = ktime_get_seconds(); 230 if (uptime >= CRNG_RESEED_INTERVAL / HZ * 2) 231 WRITE_ONCE(early_boot, false); 232 else 233 return max_t(unsigned int, CRNG_RESEED_START_INTERVAL, 234 (unsigned int)uptime / 2 * HZ); 235 } 236 return CRNG_RESEED_INTERVAL; 237 } 238 239 /* Used by crng_reseed() and crng_make_state() to extract a new seed from the input pool. */ 240 static void extract_entropy(void *buf, size_t len); 241 242 /* This extracts a new crng key from the input pool. */ 243 static void crng_reseed(struct work_struct *work) 244 { 245 static DECLARE_DELAYED_WORK(next_reseed, crng_reseed); 246 unsigned long flags; 247 unsigned long next_gen; 248 u8 key[CHACHA_KEY_SIZE]; 249 250 /* Immediately schedule the next reseeding, so that it fires sooner rather than later. */ 251 if (likely(system_dfl_wq)) 252 queue_delayed_work(system_dfl_wq, &next_reseed, crng_reseed_interval()); 253 254 extract_entropy(key, sizeof(key)); 255 256 /* 257 * We copy the new key into the base_crng, overwriting the old one, 258 * and update the generation counter. We avoid hitting ULONG_MAX, 259 * because the per-cpu crngs are initialized to ULONG_MAX, so this 260 * forces new CPUs that come online to always initialize. 261 */ 262 spin_lock_irqsave(&base_crng.lock, flags); 263 memcpy(base_crng.key, key, sizeof(base_crng.key)); 264 next_gen = base_crng.generation + 1; 265 if (next_gen == ULONG_MAX) 266 ++next_gen; 267 WRITE_ONCE(base_crng.generation, next_gen); 268 269 /* base_crng.generation's invalid value is ULONG_MAX, while 270 * vdso_k_rng_data->generation's invalid value is 0, so add one to the 271 * former to arrive at the latter. Use smp_store_release so that this 272 * is ordered with the write above to base_crng.generation. Pairs with 273 * the smp_rmb() before the syscall in the vDSO code. 274 * 275 * Cast to unsigned long for 32-bit architectures, since atomic 64-bit 276 * operations are not supported on those architectures. This is safe 277 * because base_crng.generation is a 32-bit value. On big-endian 278 * architectures it will be stored in the upper 32 bits, but that's okay 279 * because the vDSO side only checks whether the value changed, without 280 * actually using or interpreting the value. 281 */ 282 if (IS_ENABLED(CONFIG_VDSO_GETRANDOM)) 283 smp_store_release((unsigned long *)&vdso_k_rng_data->generation, next_gen + 1); 284 285 if (!static_branch_likely(&crng_is_ready)) 286 crng_init = CRNG_READY; 287 spin_unlock_irqrestore(&base_crng.lock, flags); 288 memzero_explicit(key, sizeof(key)); 289 } 290 291 /* 292 * This generates a ChaCha block using the provided key, and then 293 * immediately overwrites that key with half the block. It returns 294 * the resultant ChaCha state to the user, along with the second 295 * half of the block containing 32 bytes of random data that may 296 * be used; random_data_len may not be greater than 32. 297 * 298 * The returned ChaCha state contains within it a copy of the old 299 * key value, at index 4, so the state should always be zeroed out 300 * immediately after using in order to maintain forward secrecy. 301 * If the state cannot be erased in a timely manner, then it is 302 * safer to set the random_data parameter to &chacha_state->x[4] 303 * so that this function overwrites it before returning. 304 */ 305 static void crng_fast_key_erasure(u8 key[CHACHA_KEY_SIZE], 306 struct chacha_state *chacha_state, 307 u8 *random_data, size_t random_data_len) 308 { 309 u8 first_block[CHACHA_BLOCK_SIZE]; 310 311 BUG_ON(random_data_len > 32); 312 313 chacha_init_consts(chacha_state); 314 memcpy(&chacha_state->x[4], key, CHACHA_KEY_SIZE); 315 memset(&chacha_state->x[12], 0, sizeof(u32) * 4); 316 chacha20_block(chacha_state, first_block); 317 318 memcpy(key, first_block, CHACHA_KEY_SIZE); 319 memcpy(random_data, first_block + CHACHA_KEY_SIZE, random_data_len); 320 memzero_explicit(first_block, sizeof(first_block)); 321 } 322 323 /* 324 * This function returns a ChaCha state that you may use for generating 325 * random data. It also returns up to 32 bytes on its own of random data 326 * that may be used; random_data_len may not be greater than 32. 327 */ 328 static void crng_make_state(struct chacha_state *chacha_state, 329 u8 *random_data, size_t random_data_len) 330 { 331 unsigned long flags; 332 struct crng *crng; 333 334 BUG_ON(random_data_len > 32); 335 336 /* 337 * For the fast path, we check whether we're ready, unlocked first, and 338 * then re-check once locked later. In the case where we're really not 339 * ready, we do fast key erasure with the base_crng directly, extracting 340 * when crng_init is CRNG_EMPTY. 341 */ 342 if (!crng_ready()) { 343 bool ready; 344 345 spin_lock_irqsave(&base_crng.lock, flags); 346 ready = crng_ready(); 347 if (!ready) { 348 if (crng_init == CRNG_EMPTY) 349 extract_entropy(base_crng.key, sizeof(base_crng.key)); 350 crng_fast_key_erasure(base_crng.key, chacha_state, 351 random_data, random_data_len); 352 } 353 spin_unlock_irqrestore(&base_crng.lock, flags); 354 if (!ready) 355 return; 356 } 357 358 local_lock_irqsave(&crngs.lock, flags); 359 crng = raw_cpu_ptr(&crngs); 360 361 /* 362 * If our per-cpu crng is older than the base_crng, then it means 363 * somebody reseeded the base_crng. In that case, we do fast key 364 * erasure on the base_crng, and use its output as the new key 365 * for our per-cpu crng. This brings us up to date with base_crng. 366 */ 367 if (unlikely(crng->generation != READ_ONCE(base_crng.generation))) { 368 spin_lock(&base_crng.lock); 369 crng_fast_key_erasure(base_crng.key, chacha_state, 370 crng->key, sizeof(crng->key)); 371 crng->generation = base_crng.generation; 372 spin_unlock(&base_crng.lock); 373 } 374 375 /* 376 * Finally, when we've made it this far, our per-cpu crng has an up 377 * to date key, and we can do fast key erasure with it to produce 378 * some random data and a ChaCha state for the caller. All other 379 * branches of this function are "unlikely", so most of the time we 380 * should wind up here immediately. 381 */ 382 crng_fast_key_erasure(crng->key, chacha_state, random_data, random_data_len); 383 local_unlock_irqrestore(&crngs.lock, flags); 384 } 385 386 static void _get_random_bytes(void *buf, size_t len) 387 { 388 struct chacha_state chacha_state; 389 u8 tmp[CHACHA_BLOCK_SIZE]; 390 size_t first_block_len; 391 392 if (!len) 393 return; 394 395 first_block_len = min_t(size_t, 32, len); 396 crng_make_state(&chacha_state, buf, first_block_len); 397 len -= first_block_len; 398 buf += first_block_len; 399 400 while (len) { 401 if (len < CHACHA_BLOCK_SIZE) { 402 chacha20_block(&chacha_state, tmp); 403 memcpy(buf, tmp, len); 404 memzero_explicit(tmp, sizeof(tmp)); 405 break; 406 } 407 408 chacha20_block(&chacha_state, buf); 409 if (unlikely(chacha_state.x[12] == 0)) 410 ++chacha_state.x[13]; 411 len -= CHACHA_BLOCK_SIZE; 412 buf += CHACHA_BLOCK_SIZE; 413 } 414 415 chacha_zeroize_state(&chacha_state); 416 } 417 418 /* 419 * This returns random bytes in arbitrary quantities. The quality of the 420 * random bytes is as good as /dev/urandom. In order to ensure that the 421 * randomness provided by this function is okay, the function 422 * wait_for_random_bytes() should be called and return 0 at least once 423 * at any point prior. 424 */ 425 void get_random_bytes(void *buf, size_t len) 426 { 427 _get_random_bytes(buf, len); 428 } 429 EXPORT_SYMBOL(get_random_bytes); 430 431 static ssize_t get_random_bytes_user(struct iov_iter *iter) 432 { 433 struct chacha_state chacha_state; 434 u8 block[CHACHA_BLOCK_SIZE]; 435 size_t ret = 0, copied; 436 437 if (unlikely(!iov_iter_count(iter))) 438 return 0; 439 440 /* 441 * Immediately overwrite the ChaCha key at index 4 with random 442 * bytes, in case userspace causes copy_to_iter() below to sleep 443 * forever, so that we still retain forward secrecy in that case. 444 */ 445 crng_make_state(&chacha_state, (u8 *)&chacha_state.x[4], 446 CHACHA_KEY_SIZE); 447 /* 448 * However, if we're doing a read of len <= 32, we don't need to 449 * use chacha_state after, so we can simply return those bytes to 450 * the user directly. 451 */ 452 if (iov_iter_count(iter) <= CHACHA_KEY_SIZE) { 453 ret = copy_to_iter(&chacha_state.x[4], CHACHA_KEY_SIZE, iter); 454 goto out_zero_chacha; 455 } 456 457 for (;;) { 458 chacha20_block(&chacha_state, block); 459 if (unlikely(chacha_state.x[12] == 0)) 460 ++chacha_state.x[13]; 461 462 copied = copy_to_iter(block, sizeof(block), iter); 463 ret += copied; 464 if (!iov_iter_count(iter) || copied != sizeof(block)) 465 break; 466 467 BUILD_BUG_ON(PAGE_SIZE % sizeof(block) != 0); 468 if (ret % PAGE_SIZE == 0) { 469 if (signal_pending(current)) 470 break; 471 cond_resched(); 472 } 473 } 474 475 memzero_explicit(block, sizeof(block)); 476 out_zero_chacha: 477 chacha_zeroize_state(&chacha_state); 478 return ret ? ret : -EFAULT; 479 } 480 481 /* 482 * Batched entropy returns random integers. The quality of the random 483 * number is as good as /dev/urandom. In order to ensure that the randomness 484 * provided by this function is okay, the function wait_for_random_bytes() 485 * should be called and return 0 at least once at any point prior. 486 */ 487 488 #define DEFINE_BATCHED_ENTROPY(type) \ 489 struct batch_ ##type { \ 490 /* \ 491 * We make this 1.5x a ChaCha block, so that we get the \ 492 * remaining 32 bytes from fast key erasure, plus one full \ 493 * block from the detached ChaCha state. We can increase \ 494 * the size of this later if needed so long as we keep the \ 495 * formula of (integer_blocks + 0.5) * CHACHA_BLOCK_SIZE. \ 496 */ \ 497 type entropy[CHACHA_BLOCK_SIZE * 3 / (2 * sizeof(type))]; \ 498 local_lock_t lock; \ 499 unsigned long generation; \ 500 unsigned int position; \ 501 }; \ 502 \ 503 static DEFINE_PER_CPU(struct batch_ ##type, batched_entropy_ ##type) = { \ 504 .lock = INIT_LOCAL_LOCK(batched_entropy_ ##type.lock), \ 505 .position = UINT_MAX \ 506 }; \ 507 \ 508 type get_random_ ##type(void) \ 509 { \ 510 type ret; \ 511 unsigned long flags; \ 512 struct batch_ ##type *batch; \ 513 unsigned long next_gen; \ 514 \ 515 if (!crng_ready()) { \ 516 _get_random_bytes(&ret, sizeof(ret)); \ 517 return ret; \ 518 } \ 519 \ 520 local_lock_irqsave(&batched_entropy_ ##type.lock, flags); \ 521 batch = raw_cpu_ptr(&batched_entropy_##type); \ 522 \ 523 next_gen = READ_ONCE(base_crng.generation); \ 524 if (batch->position >= ARRAY_SIZE(batch->entropy) || \ 525 next_gen != batch->generation) { \ 526 _get_random_bytes(batch->entropy, sizeof(batch->entropy)); \ 527 batch->position = 0; \ 528 batch->generation = next_gen; \ 529 } \ 530 \ 531 ret = batch->entropy[batch->position]; \ 532 batch->entropy[batch->position] = 0; \ 533 ++batch->position; \ 534 local_unlock_irqrestore(&batched_entropy_ ##type.lock, flags); \ 535 return ret; \ 536 } \ 537 EXPORT_SYMBOL(get_random_ ##type); 538 539 DEFINE_BATCHED_ENTROPY(u8) 540 DEFINE_BATCHED_ENTROPY(u16) 541 DEFINE_BATCHED_ENTROPY(u32) 542 DEFINE_BATCHED_ENTROPY(u64) 543 544 u32 __get_random_u32_below(u32 ceil) 545 { 546 /* 547 * This is the slow path for variable ceil. It is still fast, most of 548 * the time, by doing traditional reciprocal multiplication and 549 * opportunistically comparing the lower half to ceil itself, before 550 * falling back to computing a larger bound, and then rejecting samples 551 * whose lower half would indicate a range indivisible by ceil. The use 552 * of `-ceil % ceil` is analogous to `2^32 % ceil`, but is computable 553 * in 32-bits. 554 */ 555 u32 rand = get_random_u32(); 556 u64 mult; 557 558 /* 559 * This function is technically undefined for ceil == 0, and in fact 560 * for the non-underscored constant version in the header, we build bug 561 * on that. But for the non-constant case, it's convenient to have that 562 * evaluate to being a straight call to get_random_u32(), so that 563 * get_random_u32_inclusive() can work over its whole range without 564 * undefined behavior. 565 */ 566 if (unlikely(!ceil)) 567 return rand; 568 569 mult = (u64)ceil * rand; 570 if (unlikely((u32)mult < ceil)) { 571 u32 bound = -ceil % ceil; 572 while (unlikely((u32)mult < bound)) 573 mult = (u64)ceil * get_random_u32(); 574 } 575 return mult >> 32; 576 } 577 EXPORT_SYMBOL(__get_random_u32_below); 578 579 #ifdef CONFIG_SMP 580 /* 581 * This function is called when the CPU is coming up, with entry 582 * CPUHP_RANDOM_PREPARE, which comes before CPUHP_WORKQUEUE_PREP. 583 */ 584 int __cold random_prepare_cpu(unsigned int cpu) 585 { 586 /* 587 * When the cpu comes back online, immediately invalidate both 588 * the per-cpu crng and all batches, so that we serve fresh 589 * randomness. 590 */ 591 per_cpu_ptr(&crngs, cpu)->generation = ULONG_MAX; 592 per_cpu_ptr(&batched_entropy_u8, cpu)->position = UINT_MAX; 593 per_cpu_ptr(&batched_entropy_u16, cpu)->position = UINT_MAX; 594 per_cpu_ptr(&batched_entropy_u32, cpu)->position = UINT_MAX; 595 per_cpu_ptr(&batched_entropy_u64, cpu)->position = UINT_MAX; 596 return 0; 597 } 598 #endif 599 600 601 /********************************************************************** 602 * 603 * Entropy accumulation and extraction routines. 604 * 605 * Callers may add entropy via: 606 * 607 * static void mix_pool_bytes(const void *buf, size_t len) 608 * 609 * After which, if added entropy should be credited: 610 * 611 * static void credit_init_bits(size_t bits) 612 * 613 * Finally, extract entropy via: 614 * 615 * static void extract_entropy(void *buf, size_t len) 616 * 617 **********************************************************************/ 618 619 enum { 620 POOL_BITS = BLAKE2S_HASH_SIZE * 8, 621 POOL_READY_BITS = POOL_BITS, /* When crng_init->CRNG_READY */ 622 POOL_EARLY_BITS = POOL_READY_BITS / 2 /* When crng_init->CRNG_EARLY */ 623 }; 624 625 static struct { 626 struct blake2s_ctx hash; 627 spinlock_t lock; 628 unsigned int init_bits; 629 } input_pool = { 630 .hash.h = { BLAKE2S_IV0 ^ (0x01010000 | BLAKE2S_HASH_SIZE), 631 BLAKE2S_IV1, BLAKE2S_IV2, BLAKE2S_IV3, BLAKE2S_IV4, 632 BLAKE2S_IV5, BLAKE2S_IV6, BLAKE2S_IV7 }, 633 .hash.outlen = BLAKE2S_HASH_SIZE, 634 .lock = __SPIN_LOCK_UNLOCKED(input_pool.lock), 635 }; 636 637 static void _mix_pool_bytes(const void *buf, size_t len) 638 { 639 blake2s_update(&input_pool.hash, buf, len); 640 } 641 642 /* 643 * This function adds bytes into the input pool. It does not 644 * update the initialization bit counter; the caller should call 645 * credit_init_bits if this is appropriate. 646 */ 647 static void mix_pool_bytes(const void *buf, size_t len) 648 { 649 unsigned long flags; 650 651 spin_lock_irqsave(&input_pool.lock, flags); 652 _mix_pool_bytes(buf, len); 653 spin_unlock_irqrestore(&input_pool.lock, flags); 654 } 655 656 /* 657 * This is an HKDF-like construction for using the hashed collected entropy 658 * as a PRF key, that's then expanded block-by-block. 659 */ 660 static void extract_entropy(void *buf, size_t len) 661 { 662 unsigned long flags; 663 u8 seed[BLAKE2S_HASH_SIZE], next_key[BLAKE2S_HASH_SIZE]; 664 struct { 665 unsigned long rdseed[32 / sizeof(long)]; 666 size_t counter; 667 } block; 668 size_t i, longs; 669 670 for (i = 0; i < ARRAY_SIZE(block.rdseed);) { 671 longs = arch_get_random_seed_longs(&block.rdseed[i], ARRAY_SIZE(block.rdseed) - i); 672 if (longs) { 673 i += longs; 674 continue; 675 } 676 longs = arch_get_random_longs(&block.rdseed[i], ARRAY_SIZE(block.rdseed) - i); 677 if (longs) { 678 i += longs; 679 continue; 680 } 681 block.rdseed[i++] = random_get_entropy(); 682 } 683 684 spin_lock_irqsave(&input_pool.lock, flags); 685 686 /* seed = HASHPRF(last_key, entropy_input) */ 687 blake2s_final(&input_pool.hash, seed); 688 689 /* next_key = HASHPRF(seed, RDSEED || 0) */ 690 block.counter = 0; 691 blake2s(seed, sizeof(seed), (const u8 *)&block, sizeof(block), next_key, sizeof(next_key)); 692 blake2s_init_key(&input_pool.hash, BLAKE2S_HASH_SIZE, next_key, sizeof(next_key)); 693 694 spin_unlock_irqrestore(&input_pool.lock, flags); 695 memzero_explicit(next_key, sizeof(next_key)); 696 697 while (len) { 698 i = min_t(size_t, len, BLAKE2S_HASH_SIZE); 699 /* output = HASHPRF(seed, RDSEED || ++counter) */ 700 ++block.counter; 701 blake2s(seed, sizeof(seed), (const u8 *)&block, sizeof(block), buf, i); 702 len -= i; 703 buf += i; 704 } 705 706 memzero_explicit(seed, sizeof(seed)); 707 memzero_explicit(&block, sizeof(block)); 708 } 709 710 #define credit_init_bits(bits) if (!crng_ready()) _credit_init_bits(bits) 711 712 static void __cold _credit_init_bits(size_t bits) 713 { 714 static DECLARE_WORK(set_ready, crng_set_ready); 715 unsigned int new, orig, add; 716 unsigned long flags; 717 int m; 718 719 if (!bits) 720 return; 721 722 add = min_t(size_t, bits, POOL_BITS); 723 724 orig = READ_ONCE(input_pool.init_bits); 725 do { 726 new = min_t(unsigned int, POOL_BITS, orig + add); 727 } while (!try_cmpxchg(&input_pool.init_bits, &orig, new)); 728 729 if (orig < POOL_READY_BITS && new >= POOL_READY_BITS) { 730 crng_reseed(NULL); /* Sets crng_init to CRNG_READY under base_crng.lock. */ 731 if (system_dfl_wq) 732 queue_work(system_dfl_wq, &set_ready); 733 atomic_notifier_call_chain(&random_ready_notifier, 0, NULL); 734 if (IS_ENABLED(CONFIG_VDSO_GETRANDOM)) 735 WRITE_ONCE(vdso_k_rng_data->is_ready, true); 736 wake_up_interruptible(&crng_init_wait); 737 kill_fasync(&fasync, SIGIO, POLL_IN); 738 pr_notice("crng init done\n"); 739 m = ratelimit_state_get_miss(&urandom_warning); 740 if (m) 741 pr_notice("%d urandom warning(s) missed due to ratelimiting\n", m); 742 } else if (orig < POOL_EARLY_BITS && new >= POOL_EARLY_BITS) { 743 spin_lock_irqsave(&base_crng.lock, flags); 744 /* Check if crng_init is CRNG_EMPTY, to avoid race with crng_reseed(). */ 745 if (crng_init == CRNG_EMPTY) { 746 extract_entropy(base_crng.key, sizeof(base_crng.key)); 747 crng_init = CRNG_EARLY; 748 } 749 spin_unlock_irqrestore(&base_crng.lock, flags); 750 } 751 } 752 753 754 /********************************************************************** 755 * 756 * Entropy collection routines. 757 * 758 * The following exported functions are used for pushing entropy into 759 * the above entropy accumulation routines: 760 * 761 * void add_device_randomness(const void *buf, size_t len); 762 * void add_hwgenerator_randomness(const void *buf, size_t len, size_t entropy, bool sleep_after); 763 * void add_bootloader_randomness(const void *buf, size_t len); 764 * void add_vmfork_randomness(const void *unique_vm_id, size_t len); 765 * void add_interrupt_randomness(int irq); 766 * void add_input_randomness(unsigned int type, unsigned int code, unsigned int value); 767 * void add_disk_randomness(struct gendisk *disk); 768 * 769 * add_device_randomness() adds data to the input pool that 770 * is likely to differ between two devices (or possibly even per boot). 771 * This would be things like MAC addresses or serial numbers, or the 772 * read-out of the RTC. This does *not* credit any actual entropy to 773 * the pool, but it initializes the pool to different values for devices 774 * that might otherwise be identical and have very little entropy 775 * available to them (particularly common in the embedded world). 776 * 777 * add_hwgenerator_randomness() is for true hardware RNGs, and will credit 778 * entropy as specified by the caller. If the entropy pool is full it will 779 * block until more entropy is needed. 780 * 781 * add_bootloader_randomness() is called by bootloader drivers, such as EFI 782 * and device tree, and credits its input depending on whether or not the 783 * command line option 'random.trust_bootloader' is set. 784 * 785 * add_vmfork_randomness() adds a unique (but not necessarily secret) ID 786 * representing the current instance of a VM to the pool, without crediting, 787 * and then force-reseeds the crng so that it takes effect immediately. 788 * 789 * add_interrupt_randomness() uses the interrupt timing as random 790 * inputs to the entropy pool. Using the cycle counters and the irq source 791 * as inputs, it feeds the input pool roughly once a second or after 64 792 * interrupts, crediting 1 bit of entropy for whichever comes first. 793 * 794 * add_input_randomness() uses the input layer interrupt timing, as well 795 * as the event type information from the hardware. 796 * 797 * add_disk_randomness() uses what amounts to the seek time of block 798 * layer request events, on a per-disk_devt basis, as input to the 799 * entropy pool. Note that high-speed solid state drives with very low 800 * seek times do not make for good sources of entropy, as their seek 801 * times are usually fairly consistent. 802 * 803 * The last two routines try to estimate how many bits of entropy 804 * to credit. They do this by keeping track of the first and second 805 * order deltas of the event timings. 806 * 807 **********************************************************************/ 808 809 static bool trust_cpu __initdata = true; 810 static bool trust_bootloader __initdata = true; 811 static int __init parse_trust_cpu(char *arg) 812 { 813 return kstrtobool(arg, &trust_cpu); 814 } 815 static int __init parse_trust_bootloader(char *arg) 816 { 817 return kstrtobool(arg, &trust_bootloader); 818 } 819 early_param("random.trust_cpu", parse_trust_cpu); 820 early_param("random.trust_bootloader", parse_trust_bootloader); 821 822 static int random_pm_notification(struct notifier_block *nb, unsigned long action, void *data) 823 { 824 unsigned long flags, entropy = random_get_entropy(); 825 826 /* 827 * Encode a representation of how long the system has been suspended, 828 * in a way that is distinct from prior system suspends. 829 */ 830 ktime_t stamps[] = { ktime_get(), ktime_get_boottime(), ktime_get_real() }; 831 832 spin_lock_irqsave(&input_pool.lock, flags); 833 _mix_pool_bytes(&action, sizeof(action)); 834 _mix_pool_bytes(stamps, sizeof(stamps)); 835 _mix_pool_bytes(&entropy, sizeof(entropy)); 836 spin_unlock_irqrestore(&input_pool.lock, flags); 837 838 if (crng_ready() && (action == PM_RESTORE_PREPARE || 839 (action == PM_POST_SUSPEND && !IS_ENABLED(CONFIG_PM_AUTOSLEEP) && 840 !IS_ENABLED(CONFIG_PM_USERSPACE_AUTOSLEEP)))) { 841 crng_reseed(NULL); 842 pr_notice("crng reseeded on system resumption\n"); 843 } 844 return 0; 845 } 846 847 static struct notifier_block pm_notifier = { .notifier_call = random_pm_notification }; 848 849 /* 850 * This is called extremely early, before time keeping functionality is 851 * available, but arch randomness is. Interrupts are not yet enabled. 852 */ 853 void __init random_init_early(const char *command_line) 854 { 855 unsigned long entropy[BLAKE2S_BLOCK_SIZE / sizeof(long)]; 856 size_t i, longs, arch_bits; 857 858 #if defined(LATENT_ENTROPY_PLUGIN) 859 static const u8 compiletime_seed[BLAKE2S_BLOCK_SIZE] __initconst __latent_entropy; 860 _mix_pool_bytes(compiletime_seed, sizeof(compiletime_seed)); 861 #endif 862 863 for (i = 0, arch_bits = sizeof(entropy) * 8; i < ARRAY_SIZE(entropy);) { 864 longs = arch_get_random_seed_longs(entropy, ARRAY_SIZE(entropy) - i); 865 if (longs) { 866 _mix_pool_bytes(entropy, sizeof(*entropy) * longs); 867 i += longs; 868 continue; 869 } 870 longs = arch_get_random_longs(entropy, ARRAY_SIZE(entropy) - i); 871 if (longs) { 872 _mix_pool_bytes(entropy, sizeof(*entropy) * longs); 873 i += longs; 874 continue; 875 } 876 arch_bits -= sizeof(*entropy) * 8; 877 ++i; 878 } 879 880 _mix_pool_bytes(init_utsname(), sizeof(*(init_utsname()))); 881 _mix_pool_bytes(command_line, strlen(command_line)); 882 883 /* Reseed if already seeded by earlier phases. */ 884 if (crng_ready()) 885 crng_reseed(NULL); 886 else if (trust_cpu) 887 _credit_init_bits(arch_bits); 888 } 889 890 /* 891 * This is called a little bit after the prior function, and now there is 892 * access to timestamps counters. Interrupts are not yet enabled. 893 */ 894 void __init random_init(void) 895 { 896 unsigned long entropy = random_get_entropy(); 897 ktime_t now = ktime_get_real(); 898 899 _mix_pool_bytes(&now, sizeof(now)); 900 _mix_pool_bytes(&entropy, sizeof(entropy)); 901 add_latent_entropy(); 902 903 /* 904 * If we were initialized by the cpu or bootloader before workqueues 905 * are initialized, then we should enable the static branch here. 906 */ 907 if (!static_branch_likely(&crng_is_ready) && crng_init >= CRNG_READY) 908 crng_set_ready(NULL); 909 910 /* Reseed if already seeded by earlier phases. */ 911 if (crng_ready()) 912 crng_reseed(NULL); 913 914 WARN_ON(register_pm_notifier(&pm_notifier)); 915 916 WARN(!entropy, "Missing cycle counter and fallback timer; RNG " 917 "entropy collection will consequently suffer."); 918 } 919 920 /* 921 * Add device- or boot-specific data to the input pool to help 922 * initialize it. 923 * 924 * None of this adds any entropy; it is meant to avoid the problem of 925 * the entropy pool having similar initial state across largely 926 * identical devices. 927 */ 928 void add_device_randomness(const void *buf, size_t len) 929 { 930 unsigned long entropy = random_get_entropy(); 931 unsigned long flags; 932 933 spin_lock_irqsave(&input_pool.lock, flags); 934 _mix_pool_bytes(&entropy, sizeof(entropy)); 935 _mix_pool_bytes(buf, len); 936 spin_unlock_irqrestore(&input_pool.lock, flags); 937 } 938 EXPORT_SYMBOL(add_device_randomness); 939 940 /* 941 * Interface for in-kernel drivers of true hardware RNGs. Those devices 942 * may produce endless random bits, so this function will sleep for 943 * some amount of time after, if the sleep_after parameter is true. 944 */ 945 void add_hwgenerator_randomness(const void *buf, size_t len, size_t entropy, bool sleep_after) 946 { 947 mix_pool_bytes(buf, len); 948 credit_init_bits(entropy); 949 950 /* 951 * Throttle writing to once every reseed interval, unless we're not yet 952 * initialized or no entropy is credited. 953 */ 954 if (sleep_after && !kthread_should_stop() && (crng_ready() || !entropy)) 955 schedule_timeout_interruptible(crng_reseed_interval()); 956 } 957 EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(add_hwgenerator_randomness); 958 959 /* 960 * Handle random seed passed by bootloader, and credit it depending 961 * on the command line option 'random.trust_bootloader'. 962 */ 963 void __init add_bootloader_randomness(const void *buf, size_t len) 964 { 965 mix_pool_bytes(buf, len); 966 if (trust_bootloader) 967 credit_init_bits(len * 8); 968 } 969 970 #if IS_ENABLED(CONFIG_VMGENID) 971 static BLOCKING_NOTIFIER_HEAD(vmfork_chain); 972 973 /* 974 * Handle a new unique VM ID, which is unique, not secret, so we 975 * don't credit it, but we do immediately force a reseed after so 976 * that it's used by the crng posthaste. 977 */ 978 void __cold add_vmfork_randomness(const void *unique_vm_id, size_t len) 979 { 980 add_device_randomness(unique_vm_id, len); 981 if (crng_ready()) { 982 crng_reseed(NULL); 983 pr_notice("crng reseeded due to virtual machine fork\n"); 984 } 985 blocking_notifier_call_chain(&vmfork_chain, 0, NULL); 986 } 987 #if IS_MODULE(CONFIG_VMGENID) 988 EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(add_vmfork_randomness); 989 #endif 990 991 int __cold register_random_vmfork_notifier(struct notifier_block *nb) 992 { 993 return blocking_notifier_chain_register(&vmfork_chain, nb); 994 } 995 EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(register_random_vmfork_notifier); 996 997 int __cold unregister_random_vmfork_notifier(struct notifier_block *nb) 998 { 999 return blocking_notifier_chain_unregister(&vmfork_chain, nb); 1000 } 1001 EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(unregister_random_vmfork_notifier); 1002 #endif 1003 1004 struct fast_pool { 1005 unsigned long pool[4]; 1006 unsigned long last; 1007 unsigned int count; 1008 struct timer_list mix; 1009 }; 1010 1011 static void mix_interrupt_randomness(struct timer_list *work); 1012 1013 static DEFINE_PER_CPU(struct fast_pool, irq_randomness) = { 1014 #ifdef CONFIG_64BIT 1015 #define FASTMIX_PERM SIPHASH_PERMUTATION 1016 .pool = { SIPHASH_CONST_0, SIPHASH_CONST_1, SIPHASH_CONST_2, SIPHASH_CONST_3 }, 1017 #else 1018 #define FASTMIX_PERM HSIPHASH_PERMUTATION 1019 .pool = { HSIPHASH_CONST_0, HSIPHASH_CONST_1, HSIPHASH_CONST_2, HSIPHASH_CONST_3 }, 1020 #endif 1021 .mix = __TIMER_INITIALIZER(mix_interrupt_randomness, 0) 1022 }; 1023 1024 /* 1025 * This is [Half]SipHash-1-x, starting from an empty key. Because 1026 * the key is fixed, it assumes that its inputs are non-malicious, 1027 * and therefore this has no security on its own. s represents the 1028 * four-word SipHash state, while v represents a two-word input. 1029 */ 1030 static void fast_mix(unsigned long s[4], unsigned long v1, unsigned long v2) 1031 { 1032 s[3] ^= v1; 1033 FASTMIX_PERM(s[0], s[1], s[2], s[3]); 1034 s[0] ^= v1; 1035 s[3] ^= v2; 1036 FASTMIX_PERM(s[0], s[1], s[2], s[3]); 1037 s[0] ^= v2; 1038 } 1039 1040 #ifdef CONFIG_SMP 1041 /* 1042 * This function is called when the CPU has just come online, with 1043 * entry CPUHP_AP_RANDOM_ONLINE, just after CPUHP_AP_WORKQUEUE_ONLINE. 1044 */ 1045 int __cold random_online_cpu(unsigned int cpu) 1046 { 1047 /* 1048 * During CPU shutdown and before CPU onlining, add_interrupt_ 1049 * randomness() may schedule mix_interrupt_randomness(), and 1050 * set the MIX_INFLIGHT flag. However, because the worker can 1051 * be scheduled on a different CPU during this period, that 1052 * flag will never be cleared. For that reason, we zero out 1053 * the flag here, which runs just after workqueues are onlined 1054 * for the CPU again. This also has the effect of setting the 1055 * irq randomness count to zero so that new accumulated irqs 1056 * are fresh. 1057 */ 1058 per_cpu_ptr(&irq_randomness, cpu)->count = 0; 1059 return 0; 1060 } 1061 #endif 1062 1063 static void mix_interrupt_randomness(struct timer_list *work) 1064 { 1065 struct fast_pool *fast_pool = container_of(work, struct fast_pool, mix); 1066 /* 1067 * The size of the copied stack pool is explicitly 2 longs so that we 1068 * only ever ingest half of the siphash output each time, retaining 1069 * the other half as the next "key" that carries over. The entropy is 1070 * supposed to be sufficiently dispersed between bits so on average 1071 * we don't wind up "losing" some. 1072 */ 1073 unsigned long pool[2]; 1074 unsigned int count; 1075 1076 /* Check to see if we're running on the wrong CPU due to hotplug. */ 1077 local_irq_disable(); 1078 if (fast_pool != this_cpu_ptr(&irq_randomness)) { 1079 local_irq_enable(); 1080 return; 1081 } 1082 1083 /* 1084 * Copy the pool to the stack so that the mixer always has a 1085 * consistent view, before we reenable irqs again. 1086 */ 1087 memcpy(pool, fast_pool->pool, sizeof(pool)); 1088 count = fast_pool->count; 1089 fast_pool->count = 0; 1090 fast_pool->last = jiffies; 1091 local_irq_enable(); 1092 1093 mix_pool_bytes(pool, sizeof(pool)); 1094 credit_init_bits(clamp_t(unsigned int, (count & U16_MAX) / 64, 1, sizeof(pool) * 8)); 1095 1096 memzero_explicit(pool, sizeof(pool)); 1097 } 1098 1099 void add_interrupt_randomness(int irq) 1100 { 1101 enum { MIX_INFLIGHT = 1U << 31 }; 1102 unsigned long entropy = random_get_entropy(); 1103 struct fast_pool *fast_pool = this_cpu_ptr(&irq_randomness); 1104 struct pt_regs *regs = get_irq_regs(); 1105 unsigned int new_count; 1106 1107 fast_mix(fast_pool->pool, entropy, 1108 (regs ? instruction_pointer(regs) : _RET_IP_) ^ swab(irq)); 1109 new_count = ++fast_pool->count; 1110 1111 if (new_count & MIX_INFLIGHT) 1112 return; 1113 1114 if (new_count < 1024 && !time_is_before_jiffies(fast_pool->last + HZ)) 1115 return; 1116 1117 fast_pool->count |= MIX_INFLIGHT; 1118 if (!timer_pending(&fast_pool->mix)) { 1119 fast_pool->mix.expires = jiffies; 1120 add_timer_on(&fast_pool->mix, raw_smp_processor_id()); 1121 } 1122 } 1123 EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(add_interrupt_randomness); 1124 1125 /* There is one of these per entropy source */ 1126 struct timer_rand_state { 1127 unsigned long last_time; 1128 long last_delta, last_delta2; 1129 }; 1130 1131 /* 1132 * This function adds entropy to the entropy "pool" by using timing 1133 * delays. It uses the timer_rand_state structure to make an estimate 1134 * of how many bits of entropy this call has added to the pool. The 1135 * value "num" is also added to the pool; it should somehow describe 1136 * the type of event that just happened. 1137 */ 1138 static void add_timer_randomness(struct timer_rand_state *state, unsigned int num) 1139 { 1140 unsigned long entropy = random_get_entropy(), now = jiffies, flags; 1141 long delta, delta2, delta3; 1142 unsigned int bits; 1143 1144 /* 1145 * If we're in a hard IRQ, add_interrupt_randomness() will be called 1146 * sometime after, so mix into the fast pool. 1147 */ 1148 if (in_hardirq()) { 1149 fast_mix(this_cpu_ptr(&irq_randomness)->pool, entropy, num); 1150 } else { 1151 spin_lock_irqsave(&input_pool.lock, flags); 1152 _mix_pool_bytes(&entropy, sizeof(entropy)); 1153 _mix_pool_bytes(&num, sizeof(num)); 1154 spin_unlock_irqrestore(&input_pool.lock, flags); 1155 } 1156 1157 if (crng_ready()) 1158 return; 1159 1160 /* 1161 * Calculate number of bits of randomness we probably added. 1162 * We take into account the first, second and third-order deltas 1163 * in order to make our estimate. 1164 */ 1165 delta = now - READ_ONCE(state->last_time); 1166 WRITE_ONCE(state->last_time, now); 1167 1168 delta2 = delta - READ_ONCE(state->last_delta); 1169 WRITE_ONCE(state->last_delta, delta); 1170 1171 delta3 = delta2 - READ_ONCE(state->last_delta2); 1172 WRITE_ONCE(state->last_delta2, delta2); 1173 1174 if (delta < 0) 1175 delta = -delta; 1176 if (delta2 < 0) 1177 delta2 = -delta2; 1178 if (delta3 < 0) 1179 delta3 = -delta3; 1180 if (delta > delta2) 1181 delta = delta2; 1182 if (delta > delta3) 1183 delta = delta3; 1184 1185 /* 1186 * delta is now minimum absolute delta. Round down by 1 bit 1187 * on general principles, and limit entropy estimate to 11 bits. 1188 */ 1189 bits = min(fls(delta >> 1), 11); 1190 1191 /* 1192 * As mentioned above, if we're in a hard IRQ, add_interrupt_randomness() 1193 * will run after this, which uses a different crediting scheme of 1 bit 1194 * per every 64 interrupts. In order to let that function do accounting 1195 * close to the one in this function, we credit a full 64/64 bit per bit, 1196 * and then subtract one to account for the extra one added. 1197 */ 1198 if (in_hardirq()) 1199 this_cpu_ptr(&irq_randomness)->count += max(1u, bits * 64) - 1; 1200 else 1201 _credit_init_bits(bits); 1202 } 1203 1204 void add_input_randomness(unsigned int type, unsigned int code, unsigned int value) 1205 { 1206 static unsigned char last_value; 1207 static struct timer_rand_state input_timer_state = { INITIAL_JIFFIES }; 1208 1209 /* Ignore autorepeat and the like. */ 1210 if (value == last_value) 1211 return; 1212 1213 last_value = value; 1214 add_timer_randomness(&input_timer_state, 1215 (type << 4) ^ code ^ (code >> 4) ^ value); 1216 } 1217 EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(add_input_randomness); 1218 1219 #ifdef CONFIG_BLOCK 1220 void add_disk_randomness(struct gendisk *disk) 1221 { 1222 if (!disk || !disk->random) 1223 return; 1224 /* First major is 1, so we get >= 0x200 here. */ 1225 add_timer_randomness(disk->random, 0x100 + disk_devt(disk)); 1226 } 1227 EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(add_disk_randomness); 1228 1229 void __cold rand_initialize_disk(struct gendisk *disk) 1230 { 1231 struct timer_rand_state *state; 1232 1233 /* 1234 * If kzalloc returns null, we just won't use that entropy 1235 * source. 1236 */ 1237 state = kzalloc_obj(struct timer_rand_state); 1238 if (state) { 1239 state->last_time = INITIAL_JIFFIES; 1240 disk->random = state; 1241 } 1242 } 1243 #endif 1244 1245 struct entropy_timer_state { 1246 unsigned long entropy; 1247 struct timer_list timer; 1248 atomic_t samples; 1249 unsigned int samples_per_bit; 1250 }; 1251 1252 /* 1253 * Each time the timer fires, we expect that we got an unpredictable jump in 1254 * the cycle counter. Even if the timer is running on another CPU, the timer 1255 * activity will be touching the stack of the CPU that is generating entropy. 1256 * 1257 * Note that we don't re-arm the timer in the timer itself - we are happy to be 1258 * scheduled away, since that just makes the load more complex, but we do not 1259 * want the timer to keep ticking unless the entropy loop is running. 1260 * 1261 * So the re-arming always happens in the entropy loop itself. 1262 */ 1263 static void __cold entropy_timer(struct timer_list *timer) 1264 { 1265 struct entropy_timer_state *state = container_of(timer, struct entropy_timer_state, timer); 1266 unsigned long entropy = random_get_entropy(); 1267 1268 mix_pool_bytes(&entropy, sizeof(entropy)); 1269 if (atomic_inc_return(&state->samples) % state->samples_per_bit == 0) 1270 credit_init_bits(1); 1271 } 1272 1273 /* 1274 * If we have an actual cycle counter, see if we can generate enough entropy 1275 * with timing noise. 1276 */ 1277 static void __cold try_to_generate_entropy(void) 1278 { 1279 enum { NUM_TRIAL_SAMPLES = 8192, MAX_SAMPLES_PER_BIT = HZ / 15 }; 1280 u8 stack_bytes[sizeof(struct entropy_timer_state) + SMP_CACHE_BYTES - 1]; 1281 struct entropy_timer_state *stack = PTR_ALIGN((void *)stack_bytes, SMP_CACHE_BYTES); 1282 unsigned int i, num_different = 0; 1283 unsigned long last = random_get_entropy(); 1284 cpumask_var_t timer_cpus; 1285 int cpu = -1; 1286 1287 for (i = 0; i < NUM_TRIAL_SAMPLES - 1; ++i) { 1288 stack->entropy = random_get_entropy(); 1289 if (stack->entropy != last) 1290 ++num_different; 1291 last = stack->entropy; 1292 } 1293 stack->samples_per_bit = DIV_ROUND_UP(NUM_TRIAL_SAMPLES, num_different + 1); 1294 if (stack->samples_per_bit > MAX_SAMPLES_PER_BIT) 1295 return; 1296 1297 atomic_set(&stack->samples, 0); 1298 timer_setup_on_stack(&stack->timer, entropy_timer, 0); 1299 if (!alloc_cpumask_var(&timer_cpus, GFP_KERNEL)) 1300 goto out; 1301 1302 while (!crng_ready() && !signal_pending(current)) { 1303 /* 1304 * Check !timer_pending() and then ensure that any previous callback has finished 1305 * executing by checking timer_delete_sync_try(), before queueing the next one. 1306 */ 1307 if (!timer_pending(&stack->timer) && timer_delete_sync_try(&stack->timer) >= 0) { 1308 unsigned int num_cpus; 1309 1310 /* 1311 * Preemption must be disabled here, both to read the current CPU number 1312 * and to avoid scheduling a timer on a dead CPU. 1313 */ 1314 preempt_disable(); 1315 1316 /* Only schedule callbacks on timer CPUs that are online. */ 1317 cpumask_and(timer_cpus, housekeeping_cpumask(HK_TYPE_TIMER), cpu_online_mask); 1318 num_cpus = cpumask_weight(timer_cpus); 1319 /* In very bizarre case of misconfiguration, fallback to all online. */ 1320 if (unlikely(num_cpus == 0)) { 1321 *timer_cpus = *cpu_online_mask; 1322 num_cpus = cpumask_weight(timer_cpus); 1323 } 1324 1325 /* Basic CPU round-robin, which avoids the current CPU. */ 1326 do { 1327 cpu = cpumask_next(cpu, timer_cpus); 1328 if (cpu >= nr_cpu_ids) 1329 cpu = cpumask_first(timer_cpus); 1330 } while (cpu == smp_processor_id() && num_cpus > 1); 1331 1332 /* Expiring the timer at `jiffies` means it's the next tick. */ 1333 stack->timer.expires = jiffies; 1334 1335 add_timer_on(&stack->timer, cpu); 1336 1337 preempt_enable(); 1338 } 1339 mix_pool_bytes(&stack->entropy, sizeof(stack->entropy)); 1340 schedule(); 1341 stack->entropy = random_get_entropy(); 1342 } 1343 mix_pool_bytes(&stack->entropy, sizeof(stack->entropy)); 1344 1345 free_cpumask_var(timer_cpus); 1346 out: 1347 timer_delete_sync(&stack->timer); 1348 timer_destroy_on_stack(&stack->timer); 1349 } 1350 1351 1352 /********************************************************************** 1353 * 1354 * Userspace reader/writer interfaces. 1355 * 1356 * getrandom(2) is the primary modern interface into the RNG and should 1357 * be used in preference to anything else. 1358 * 1359 * Reading from /dev/random has the same functionality as calling 1360 * getrandom(2) with flags=0. In earlier versions, however, it had 1361 * vastly different semantics and should therefore be avoided, to 1362 * prevent backwards compatibility issues. 1363 * 1364 * Reading from /dev/urandom has the same functionality as calling 1365 * getrandom(2) with flags=GRND_INSECURE. Because it does not block 1366 * waiting for the RNG to be ready, it should not be used. 1367 * 1368 * Writing to either /dev/random or /dev/urandom adds entropy to 1369 * the input pool but does not credit it. 1370 * 1371 * Polling on /dev/random indicates when the RNG is initialized, on 1372 * the read side, and when it wants new entropy, on the write side. 1373 * 1374 * Both /dev/random and /dev/urandom have the same set of ioctls for 1375 * adding entropy, getting the entropy count, zeroing the count, and 1376 * reseeding the crng. 1377 * 1378 **********************************************************************/ 1379 1380 SYSCALL_DEFINE3(getrandom, char __user *, ubuf, size_t, len, unsigned int, flags) 1381 { 1382 struct iov_iter iter; 1383 int ret; 1384 1385 if (flags & ~(GRND_NONBLOCK | GRND_RANDOM | GRND_INSECURE)) 1386 return -EINVAL; 1387 1388 /* 1389 * Requesting insecure and blocking randomness at the same time makes 1390 * no sense. 1391 */ 1392 if ((flags & (GRND_INSECURE | GRND_RANDOM)) == (GRND_INSECURE | GRND_RANDOM)) 1393 return -EINVAL; 1394 1395 if (!crng_ready() && !(flags & GRND_INSECURE)) { 1396 if (flags & GRND_NONBLOCK) 1397 return -EAGAIN; 1398 ret = wait_for_random_bytes(); 1399 if (unlikely(ret)) 1400 return ret; 1401 } 1402 1403 ret = import_ubuf(ITER_DEST, ubuf, len, &iter); 1404 if (unlikely(ret)) 1405 return ret; 1406 return get_random_bytes_user(&iter); 1407 } 1408 1409 static __poll_t random_poll(struct file *file, poll_table *wait) 1410 { 1411 poll_wait(file, &crng_init_wait, wait); 1412 return crng_ready() ? EPOLLIN | EPOLLRDNORM : EPOLLOUT | EPOLLWRNORM; 1413 } 1414 1415 static ssize_t write_pool_user(struct iov_iter *iter) 1416 { 1417 u8 block[BLAKE2S_BLOCK_SIZE]; 1418 ssize_t ret = 0; 1419 size_t copied; 1420 1421 if (unlikely(!iov_iter_count(iter))) 1422 return 0; 1423 1424 for (;;) { 1425 copied = copy_from_iter(block, sizeof(block), iter); 1426 ret += copied; 1427 mix_pool_bytes(block, copied); 1428 if (!iov_iter_count(iter) || copied != sizeof(block)) 1429 break; 1430 1431 BUILD_BUG_ON(PAGE_SIZE % sizeof(block) != 0); 1432 if (ret % PAGE_SIZE == 0) { 1433 if (signal_pending(current)) 1434 break; 1435 cond_resched(); 1436 } 1437 } 1438 1439 memzero_explicit(block, sizeof(block)); 1440 return ret ? ret : -EFAULT; 1441 } 1442 1443 static ssize_t random_write_iter(struct kiocb *kiocb, struct iov_iter *iter) 1444 { 1445 return write_pool_user(iter); 1446 } 1447 1448 static ssize_t urandom_read_iter(struct kiocb *kiocb, struct iov_iter *iter) 1449 { 1450 static int maxwarn = 10; 1451 1452 /* 1453 * Opportunistically attempt to initialize the RNG on platforms that 1454 * have fast cycle counters, but don't (for now) require it to succeed. 1455 */ 1456 if (!crng_ready()) 1457 try_to_generate_entropy(); 1458 1459 if (!crng_ready()) { 1460 if (!ratelimit_disable && maxwarn <= 0) 1461 ratelimit_state_inc_miss(&urandom_warning); 1462 else if (ratelimit_disable || __ratelimit(&urandom_warning)) { 1463 --maxwarn; 1464 pr_notice("%s: uninitialized urandom read (%zu bytes read)\n", 1465 current->comm, iov_iter_count(iter)); 1466 } 1467 } 1468 1469 return get_random_bytes_user(iter); 1470 } 1471 1472 static ssize_t random_read_iter(struct kiocb *kiocb, struct iov_iter *iter) 1473 { 1474 int ret; 1475 1476 if (!crng_ready() && 1477 ((kiocb->ki_flags & (IOCB_NOWAIT | IOCB_NOIO)) || 1478 (kiocb->ki_filp->f_flags & O_NONBLOCK))) 1479 return -EAGAIN; 1480 1481 ret = wait_for_random_bytes(); 1482 if (ret != 0) 1483 return ret; 1484 return get_random_bytes_user(iter); 1485 } 1486 1487 static long random_ioctl(struct file *f, unsigned int cmd, unsigned long arg) 1488 { 1489 int __user *p = (int __user *)arg; 1490 int ent_count; 1491 1492 switch (cmd) { 1493 case RNDGETENTCNT: 1494 /* Inherently racy, no point locking. */ 1495 if (put_user(input_pool.init_bits, p)) 1496 return -EFAULT; 1497 return 0; 1498 case RNDADDTOENTCNT: 1499 if (!capable(CAP_SYS_ADMIN)) 1500 return -EPERM; 1501 if (get_user(ent_count, p)) 1502 return -EFAULT; 1503 if (ent_count < 0) 1504 return -EINVAL; 1505 credit_init_bits(ent_count); 1506 return 0; 1507 case RNDADDENTROPY: { 1508 struct iov_iter iter; 1509 ssize_t ret; 1510 int len; 1511 1512 if (!capable(CAP_SYS_ADMIN)) 1513 return -EPERM; 1514 if (get_user(ent_count, p++)) 1515 return -EFAULT; 1516 if (ent_count < 0) 1517 return -EINVAL; 1518 if (get_user(len, p++)) 1519 return -EFAULT; 1520 ret = import_ubuf(ITER_SOURCE, p, len, &iter); 1521 if (unlikely(ret)) 1522 return ret; 1523 ret = write_pool_user(&iter); 1524 if (unlikely(ret < 0)) 1525 return ret; 1526 /* Since we're crediting, enforce that it was all written into the pool. */ 1527 if (unlikely(ret != len)) 1528 return -EFAULT; 1529 credit_init_bits(ent_count); 1530 return 0; 1531 } 1532 case RNDZAPENTCNT: 1533 case RNDCLEARPOOL: 1534 /* No longer has any effect. */ 1535 if (!capable(CAP_SYS_ADMIN)) 1536 return -EPERM; 1537 return 0; 1538 case RNDRESEEDCRNG: 1539 if (!capable(CAP_SYS_ADMIN)) 1540 return -EPERM; 1541 if (!crng_ready()) 1542 return -ENODATA; 1543 crng_reseed(NULL); 1544 return 0; 1545 default: 1546 return -EINVAL; 1547 } 1548 } 1549 1550 static int random_fasync(int fd, struct file *filp, int on) 1551 { 1552 return fasync_helper(fd, filp, on, &fasync); 1553 } 1554 1555 const struct file_operations random_fops = { 1556 .read_iter = random_read_iter, 1557 .write_iter = random_write_iter, 1558 .poll = random_poll, 1559 .unlocked_ioctl = random_ioctl, 1560 .compat_ioctl = compat_ptr_ioctl, 1561 .fasync = random_fasync, 1562 .llseek = noop_llseek, 1563 .splice_read = copy_splice_read, 1564 .splice_write = iter_file_splice_write, 1565 }; 1566 1567 const struct file_operations urandom_fops = { 1568 .read_iter = urandom_read_iter, 1569 .write_iter = random_write_iter, 1570 .unlocked_ioctl = random_ioctl, 1571 .compat_ioctl = compat_ptr_ioctl, 1572 .fasync = random_fasync, 1573 .llseek = noop_llseek, 1574 .splice_read = copy_splice_read, 1575 .splice_write = iter_file_splice_write, 1576 }; 1577 1578 1579 /******************************************************************** 1580 * 1581 * Sysctl interface. 1582 * 1583 * These are partly unused legacy knobs with dummy values to not break 1584 * userspace and partly still useful things. They are usually accessible 1585 * in /proc/sys/kernel/random/ and are as follows: 1586 * 1587 * - boot_id - a UUID representing the current boot. 1588 * 1589 * - uuid - a random UUID, different each time the file is read. 1590 * 1591 * - poolsize - the number of bits of entropy that the input pool can 1592 * hold, tied to the POOL_BITS constant. 1593 * 1594 * - entropy_avail - the number of bits of entropy currently in the 1595 * input pool. Always <= poolsize. 1596 * 1597 * - write_wakeup_threshold - the amount of entropy in the input pool 1598 * below which write polls to /dev/random will unblock, requesting 1599 * more entropy, tied to the POOL_READY_BITS constant. It is writable 1600 * to avoid breaking old userspaces, but writing to it does not 1601 * change any behavior of the RNG. 1602 * 1603 * - urandom_min_reseed_secs - fixed to the value CRNG_RESEED_INTERVAL. 1604 * It is writable to avoid breaking old userspaces, but writing 1605 * to it does not change any behavior of the RNG. 1606 * 1607 ********************************************************************/ 1608 1609 #ifdef CONFIG_SYSCTL 1610 1611 #include <linux/sysctl.h> 1612 1613 static int sysctl_random_min_urandom_seed = CRNG_RESEED_INTERVAL / HZ; 1614 static int sysctl_random_write_wakeup_bits = POOL_READY_BITS; 1615 static int sysctl_poolsize = POOL_BITS; 1616 static u8 sysctl_bootid[UUID_SIZE]; 1617 1618 /* 1619 * This function is used to return both the bootid UUID, and random 1620 * UUID. The difference is in whether table->data is NULL; if it is, 1621 * then a new UUID is generated and returned to the user. 1622 */ 1623 static int proc_do_uuid(const struct ctl_table *table, int write, void *buf, 1624 size_t *lenp, loff_t *ppos) 1625 { 1626 u8 tmp_uuid[UUID_SIZE], *uuid; 1627 char uuid_string[UUID_STRING_LEN + 1]; 1628 struct ctl_table fake_table = { 1629 .data = uuid_string, 1630 .maxlen = UUID_STRING_LEN 1631 }; 1632 1633 if (write) 1634 return -EPERM; 1635 1636 uuid = table->data; 1637 if (!uuid) { 1638 uuid = tmp_uuid; 1639 generate_random_uuid(uuid); 1640 } else { 1641 static DEFINE_SPINLOCK(bootid_spinlock); 1642 1643 spin_lock(&bootid_spinlock); 1644 if (!uuid[8]) 1645 generate_random_uuid(uuid); 1646 spin_unlock(&bootid_spinlock); 1647 } 1648 1649 snprintf(uuid_string, sizeof(uuid_string), "%pU", uuid); 1650 return proc_dostring(&fake_table, 0, buf, lenp, ppos); 1651 } 1652 1653 /* The same as proc_dointvec, but writes don't change anything. */ 1654 static int proc_do_rointvec(const struct ctl_table *table, int write, void *buf, 1655 size_t *lenp, loff_t *ppos) 1656 { 1657 return write ? 0 : proc_dointvec(table, 0, buf, lenp, ppos); 1658 } 1659 1660 static const struct ctl_table random_table[] = { 1661 { 1662 .procname = "poolsize", 1663 .data = &sysctl_poolsize, 1664 .maxlen = sizeof(int), 1665 .mode = 0444, 1666 .proc_handler = proc_dointvec, 1667 }, 1668 { 1669 .procname = "entropy_avail", 1670 .data = &input_pool.init_bits, 1671 .maxlen = sizeof(int), 1672 .mode = 0444, 1673 .proc_handler = proc_dointvec, 1674 }, 1675 { 1676 .procname = "write_wakeup_threshold", 1677 .data = &sysctl_random_write_wakeup_bits, 1678 .maxlen = sizeof(int), 1679 .mode = 0644, 1680 .proc_handler = proc_do_rointvec, 1681 }, 1682 { 1683 .procname = "urandom_min_reseed_secs", 1684 .data = &sysctl_random_min_urandom_seed, 1685 .maxlen = sizeof(int), 1686 .mode = 0644, 1687 .proc_handler = proc_do_rointvec, 1688 }, 1689 { 1690 .procname = "boot_id", 1691 .data = &sysctl_bootid, 1692 .mode = 0444, 1693 .proc_handler = proc_do_uuid, 1694 }, 1695 { 1696 .procname = "uuid", 1697 .mode = 0444, 1698 .proc_handler = proc_do_uuid, 1699 }, 1700 }; 1701 1702 /* 1703 * random_init() is called before sysctl_init(), 1704 * so we cannot call register_sysctl_init() in random_init() 1705 */ 1706 static int __init random_sysctls_init(void) 1707 { 1708 register_sysctl_init("kernel/random", random_table); 1709 return 0; 1710 } 1711 device_initcall(random_sysctls_init); 1712 #endif 1713