Re: early x86 unseeded randomness

From: Michael Ellerman
Date: Tue Aug 15 2017 - 08:48:48 EST


Ingo Molnar <mingo@xxxxxxxxxx> writes:

> * Willy Tarreau <w@xxxxxx> wrote:
>
>> Nowadays we could use similar methods using RDTSC providing more accurate
>> counting. This doesn't provide a lot of entropy of course, given that a
>> 2 GHz machine will at most count 31 bits there. But I tend to think that
>> what matters during early boot is to transform something highly predictable
>> into something unlikely to be predicted (ie: an exploit having to scan 2^31
>> possible addresses will not be really usable). It's also possible to do the
>> same with the PIT0 counter ticking at 18.2 Hz without any correlation with
>> the RTC by the way, and roughly provide 25 more bits. And if you expect
>> that the BIOS has emitted a 800 Hz beep at boot, you could still have a
>> divider of 1491 in PIT2 providing 10 more bits, though with a bit of
>> correlation with PIT0 since they use the same 1.19 MHz source. These
>> methods increase the boot time by up to one second though, but my point
>> here is that when you have nothing it's always a bit better.
>
> One other thing besides trying to extract entropy via timing would be to utilize
> more of the machine's environment in seeding the random number generator.
>
> For example on x86 the E820 table is available very early on and its addresses
> could be mixed into the random pool. An external attacker often would not know the
> precise hardware configuration.
>
> Likewise the boot parameters string could be mixed into the initial random pool as
> well - and this way distributions could create per installation seed simply by
> appending a random number to the boot string.

In fact that could be a per-boot seed, if you just re-ran update-grub in
the shutdown scripts with a new value.

cheers