Re: [RFC PATCH 1/2] random: emit reseed notifications for PRNGs

From: Greg KH
Date: Wed Aug 23 2023 - 06:07:17 EST


On Wed, Aug 23, 2023 at 11:27:11AM +0200, Babis Chalios wrote:
> Hi Greg,
>
> On 23/8/23 11:08, Greg KH wrote:
> > CAUTION: This email originated from outside of the organization. Do not click links or open attachments unless you can confirm the sender and know the content is safe.
> >
> >
> >
> > On Wed, Aug 23, 2023 at 11:01:05AM +0200, Babis Chalios wrote:
> > > Sometimes, PRNGs need to reseed. For example, on a regular timer
> > > interval, to ensure nothing consumes a random value for longer than e.g.
> > > 5 minutes, or when VMs get cloned, to ensure seeds don't leak in to
> > > clones.
> > >
> > > The notification happens through a 32bit epoch value that changes every
> > > time cached entropy is no longer valid, hence PRNGs need to reseed. User
> > > space applications can get hold of a pointer to this value through
> > > /dev/(u)random. We introduce a new ioctl() that returns an anonymous
> > > file descriptor. From this file descriptor we can mmap() a single page
> > > which includes the epoch at offset 0.
> > >
> > > random.c maintains the epoch value in a global shared page. It exposes
> > > a registration API for kernel subsystems that are able to notify when
> > > reseeding is needed. Notifiers register with random.c and receive a
> > > unique 8bit ID and a pointer to the epoch. When they need to report a
> > > reseeding event they write a new epoch value which includes the
> > > notifier ID in the first 8 bits and an increasing counter value in the
> > > remaining 24 bits:
> > >
> > > RNG epoch
> > > *-------------*---------------------*
> > > | notifier id | epoch counter value |
> > > *-------------*---------------------*
> > > 8 bits 24 bits
> > Why not just use 32/32 for a full 64bit value, or better yet, 2
> > different variables? Why is 32bits and packing things together here
> > somehow simpler?
>
> We made it 32 bits so that we can read/write it atomically in all 32bit
> architectures.
> Do you think that's not a problem?

What 32bit platforms care about this type of interface at all?

thanks,

greg k-h