• James Bottomley's avatar
    security: keys: trusted: fix TPM2 authorizations · de66514d
    James Bottomley authored
    In TPM 1.2 an authorization was a 20 byte number.  The spec actually
    recommended you to hash variable length passwords and use the sha1
    hash as the authorization.  Because the spec doesn't require this
    hashing, the current authorization for trusted keys is a 40 digit hex
    number.  For TPM 2.0 the spec allows the passing in of variable length
    passwords and passphrases directly, so we should allow that in trusted
    keys for ease of use.  Update the 'blobauth' parameter to take this
    into account, so we can now use plain text passwords for the keys.
    
    so before
    
    keyctl add trusted kmk "new 32 blobauth=f572d396fae9206628714fb2ce00f72e94f2258fkeyhandle=81000001" @u
    
    after we will accept both the old hex sha1 form as well as a new
    directly supplied password:
    
    keyctl add trusted kmk "new 32 blobauth=hello keyhandle=81000001" @u
    
    Since a sha1 hex code must be exactly 40 bytes long and a direct
    password must be 20 or less, we use the length as the discriminator
    for which form is input.
    
    Note this is both and enhancement and a potential bug fix.  The TPM
    2.0 spec requires us to strip leading zeros, meaning empyty
    authorization is a zero length HMAC whereas we're currently passing in
    20 bytes of zeros.  A lot of TPMs simply accept this as OK, but the
    Microsoft TPM emulator rejects it with TPM_RC_BAD_AUTH, so this patch
    makes the Microsoft TPM emulator work with trusted keys.
    
    Fixes: 0fe54803 ("keys, trusted: seal/unseal with TPM 2.0 chips")
    Signed-off-by: default avatarJames Bottomley <James.Bottomley@HansenPartnership.com>
    Reviewed-by: default avatarJarkko Sakkinen <jarkko@kernel.org>
    Tested-by: default avatarJarkko Sakkinen <jarkko@kernel.org>
    Signed-off-by: default avatarJarkko Sakkinen <jarkko@kernel.org>
    de66514d
trusted_tpm2.c 7.76 KB