From: Sasha Levin Subject: Re: [PATCH] random: add blocking facility to urandom Date: Wed, 07 Sep 2011 23:23:13 +0300 Message-ID: <1315426993.3576.38.camel@lappy> References: <1314974248-1511-1-git-send-email-jarod@redhat.com> <4E67B75B.8010500@redhat.com> <20110907192737.GD20571@thunk.org> <201109071602.24519.sgrubb@redhat.com> Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Cc: Ted Ts'o , Jarod Wilson , linux-crypto@vger.kernel.org, Matt Mackall , Neil Horman , Herbert Xu , Stephan Mueller , lkml To: Steve Grubb Return-path: Received: from mail-wy0-f174.google.com ([74.125.82.174]:47328 "EHLO mail-wy0-f174.google.com" rhost-flags-OK-OK-OK-OK) by vger.kernel.org with ESMTP id S1754420Ab1IGUXg (ORCPT ); Wed, 7 Sep 2011 16:23:36 -0400 In-Reply-To: <201109071602.24519.sgrubb@redhat.com> Sender: linux-crypto-owner@vger.kernel.org List-ID: 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.