[<prev] [next>] [<thread-prev] [thread-next>] [day] [month] [year] [list]
Message-ID: <1315426993.3576.38.camel@lappy>
Date: Wed, 07 Sep 2011 23:23:13 +0300
From: Sasha Levin <levinsasha928@...il.com>
To: Steve Grubb <sgrubb@...hat.com>
Cc: Ted Ts'o <tytso@....edu>, Jarod Wilson <jarod@...hat.com>,
linux-crypto@...r.kernel.org, Matt Mackall <mpm@...enic.com>,
Neil Horman <nhorman@...hat.com>,
Herbert Xu <herbert.xu@...hat.com>,
Stephan Mueller <stephan.mueller@...ec.com>,
lkml <linux-kernel@...r.kernel.org>
Subject: Re: [PATCH] random: add blocking facility to urandom
On Wed, 2011-09-07 at 16:02 -0400, Steve Grubb wrote:
> On Wednesday, September 07, 2011 03:27:37 PM Ted Ts'o wrote:
> > On Wed, Sep 07, 2011 at 02:26:35PM -0400, Jarod Wilson wrote:
> > > We're looking for a generic solution here that doesn't require
> > > re-educating every single piece of userspace. And anything done in
> > > userspace is going to be full of possible holes -- there needs to be
> > > something in place that actually *enforces* the policy, and
> > > centralized accounting/tracking, lest you wind up with multiple
> > > processes racing to grab the entropy.
> >
> > Yeah, but there are userspace programs that depend on urandom not
> > blocking... so your proposed change would break them.
>
> The only time this kicks in is when a system is under attack. If you have set this and
> the system is running as normal, you will never notice it even there. Almost all uses
> of urandom grab 4 bytes and seed openssl or libgcrypt or nss. It then uses those
> libraries. There are the odd cases where something uses urandom to generate a key or
> otherwise grab a chunk of bytes, but these are still small reads in the scheme of
> things. Can you think of any legitimate use of urandom that grabs 100K or 1M from
> urandom? Even those numbers still won't hit the sysctl on a normally function system.
>
As far as I remember, several wipe utilities are using /dev/urandom to
overwrite disks (possibly several times).
Something similar probably happens for getting junk on disks before
creating an encrypted filesystem on top of them.
--
Sasha.
--
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in
the body of a message to majordomo@...r.kernel.org
More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/
Powered by blists - more mailing lists