Re: [PATCH 01/04] Add multi-precision-integer maths library
From: David Härdeman
Date: Fri Jan 27 2006 - 15:40:59 EST
On Fri, Jan 27, 2006 at 08:07:50PM +0000, David Howells wrote:
Christoph Hellwig <hch@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
This is ugly as hell. If we decided to add it it really needs a major
cleanup, fitting into linux style and removal of unused functionality,
the assembly bits needs to move to an asm/ header, etc.
Which would make it harder to compare against the original, and so potentially
harder to track bug fixes in the original was my thinking.
I think it might still work quite well with a subset since each function
is quite self-contained and a bugfix in one function would still be
quite easy to match to the corresponding function in the in-kernel code
even if it has been refactored and moved around.
But to be honest I'd say anything that requires bigints shouldn't go into
the kernel at all. Could someone explain why they want dsa support in
kernelspace?
Well... I'd like to revisit module signing at some point, though I imagine
it'll cause the LKML to melt again by those who think that I shouldn't have
the right to sign my modules because they imagine it impinges on their
rights:-) But I suspect the reason David wants this is so that he can encrypt
something with keys that he's not actually permitted to retrieve
directly. David?
The reason that I wanted DSA-keys supported by the in-kernel key stuff
is that it allows for some cool stuff which is either impossible or very
hard to do otherwise.
For example, a backup daemon which wishes to store the backup on another
host using ssh. Usually this is solved by storing an unencrypted key in
the fs or by providing a connection to a ssh-agent which has been
preloaded with the proper key(s). Both are quite inelegant solutions.
With the in-kernel support, the daemon can request the key using the
request_key call, and (provided proper scripts are written), the user
who controls the relevant key can supply it. This in turn means that the
backup daemon can sign using the key and read its public parts but not
the private key.
So yes, that is one example of doing "something" with keys that the
process is not allowed to retrieve directly (the key itself could be
supplied from removable storage or something and given a few minutes of
time-to-live).
It also means that users would not have to run ssh-agent and would not
have to bother with making sure that only one instance of ssh-agent is
running even if they are logged in multiple times.
The in-kernel key management also protects the key against many of the
different ways in which a user-space daemon could be attacked (ptrace,
swap-out, coredump, etc).
In addition, the dsa key code can be used to implement signed binaries
and signed modules.
For now I'll create a version of mpilib which has been stripped down to
only the functions that are in use by the dsa-crypto stuff, hopefully
this will substantially reduce the size and amount of code. I'll get
back when I have some results.
Regards,
David
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