Re: [PATCH v6 1/1] use crc32 instead of md5 for hibernation e820 integrity check
From: Eric Biggers
Date: Mon Apr 12 2021 - 15:21:04 EST
On Mon, Apr 12, 2021 at 03:04:58PM -0400, Chris von Recklinghausen wrote:
> On 4/12/21 1:45 PM, Eric Biggers wrote:
> > On Mon, Apr 12, 2021 at 10:09:32AM -0400, Chris von Recklinghausen wrote:
> > > Suspend fails on a system in fips mode because md5 is used for the e820
> > > integrity check and is not available. Use crc32 instead.
> > >
> > > This patch changes the integrity check algorithm from md5 to crc32.
> > >
> > > The purpose of the integrity check is to detect possible differences
> > > between the memory map used at the time when the hibernation image is
> > > about to be loaded into memory and the memory map used at the image
> > > creation time, because it is generally unsafe to load the image if the
> > > current memory map doesn't match the one used when it was created. so
> > > it is not intended as a cryptographic integrity check.
> > This still doesn't actually explain why a non-cryptographic checksum is
> > sufficient. "Detection of possible differences" could very well require
> > cryptographic authentication; it depends on whether malicious changes need to be
> > detected or not.
>
> Hi Eric,
>
> The cases that the commit comments for 62a03defeabd mention are the same as
> for this patch, e.g.
>
> 1. Without this patch applied, it is possible that BIOS has
> provided an inconsistent memory map, but the resume kernel is still
> able to restore the image anyway(e.g, E820_RAM region is the superset
> of the previous one), although the system might be unstable. So this
> patch tries to treat any inconsistent e820 as illegal.
>
> 2. Another case is, this patch replies on comparing the e820_saved, but
> currently the e820_save might not be strictly the same across
> hibernation, even if BIOS has provided consistent e820 map - In
> theory mptable might modify the BIOS-provided e820_saved dynamically
> in early_reserve_e820_mpc_new, which would allocate a buffer from
> E820_RAM, and marks it from E820_RAM to E820_RESERVED).
> This is a potential and rare case we need to deal with in OS in
> the future.
>
> Maybe they should be added to the comments with this patch as well? In any
> case, the above comments only mention detecting consequences of BIOS
> issues/actions on the e820 map and not intrusions from attackers requiring
> cryptographic protection. Does that seem to be a reasonable explanation to
> you? If so I can add these to the commit comments.
>
> I'll make the other changes you suggest below.
>
> Thanks,
>
Those details are still missing the high-level point. Is this just meant to
detect non-malicious changes (presumably caused by BIOS bugs), or is it meant to
detect malicious changes? That's all that really needs to be mentioned.
- Eric