On Thu, 2022-10-13 at 08:39 +0200, Nikolaus Voss wrote:
Commit cd3bc044af48 ("KEYS: encrypted: Instantiate key with user-provided
decrypted data") added key instantiation with user provided decrypted data.
The user data is hex-ascii-encoded but was just memcpy'ed to the binary buffer.
Fix this to use hex2bin instead.
Old keys created from user provided decrypted data saved with "keyctl pipe"
are still valid, however if the key is recreated from decrypted data the
old key must be converted to the correct format. This can be done with a
small shell script, e.g.:
BROKENKEY=abcdefABCDEF1234567890aaaaaaaaaa
NEWKEY=$(echo -ne $BROKENKEY | xxd -p -c32)
keyctl add user masterkey "$(cat masterkey.bin)" @u
keyctl add encrypted testkey "new user:masterkey 32 $NEWKEY" @u
It is encouraged to switch to a new key because the effective key size
of the old keys is only half of the specified size.
Both the old and new decrypted data size is 32 bytes. Is the above
statement necessary, especially since the Documentation example does
the equivalent?
The corresponding test for the Linux Test Project ltp has also been
fixed (see link below).
The LTP patch still needs to be revised, but the "Link" is a reference
to the discussion. Is the above statement necessary?
Fixes: cd3bc044af48 ("KEYS: encrypted: Instantiate key with user-provided decrypted data")
Cc: stable <stable@xxxxxxxxxx>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/ltp/20221006081709.92303897@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx/
Signed-off-by: Nikolaus Voss <nikolaus.voss@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Otherwise,
Reviewed-by: Mimi Zohar <zohar@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>