Message ID | 20230601072444.2033855-1-coxu@redhat.com (mailing list archive) |
---|---|
Headers | show |
Series | Support kdump with LUKS encryption by reusing LUKS volume key | expand |
On Thu, Jun 01, 2023 at 03:24:39PM +0800, Coiby Xu wrote:
> [PATCH 0/5] Support kdump with LUKS encryption by reusing LUKS volume key
The kernel has no concept of LUKS at all. It provides dm-crypt, which LUKS
happens to use. But LUKS is a userspace concept.
This is a kernel patchset, so why does it make sense for it to be talking about
LUKS at all? Perhaps you mean dm-crypt?
- Eric
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On 6/2/23 23:34, Eric Biggers wrote: > On Thu, Jun 01, 2023 at 03:24:39PM +0800, Coiby Xu wrote: >> [PATCH 0/5] Support kdump with LUKS encryption by reusing LUKS volume key > > The kernel has no concept of LUKS at all. It provides dm-crypt, which LUKS > happens to use. But LUKS is a userspace concept. > > This is a kernel patchset, so why does it make sense for it to be talking about > LUKS at all? Perhaps you mean dm-crypt? Exactly. I had the same comment almost a year ago... and it still applies: https://lore.kernel.org/all/c857dcf8-024e-ab8a-fd26-295ce2e0ae41@gmail.com/ Anyway, please fix the naming before this patchset can be read or reviewed! LUKS is user-space key management only (on-disk metadata); the kernel has no idea how the key is derived or what LUKS is - dm-crypt only knows the key (either through keyring or directly in the mapping table). Polluting kernel namespace with "luks" names variables is wrong - dm-crypt is used in many other mappings (plain, bitlocker, veracrypt, ...) Just use the dm-crypt key, do not reference LUKS at all. Milan -- dm-devel mailing list dm-devel@redhat.com https://listman.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/dm-devel
Hi Eric and Milan, On Sat, Jun 03, 2023 at 11:22:52AM +0200, Milan Broz wrote: >On 6/2/23 23:34, Eric Biggers wrote: >>On Thu, Jun 01, 2023 at 03:24:39PM +0800, Coiby Xu wrote: >>>[PATCH 0/5] Support kdump with LUKS encryption by reusing LUKS volume key >> >>The kernel has no concept of LUKS at all. It provides dm-crypt, which LUKS >>happens to use. But LUKS is a userspace concept. >> >>This is a kernel patchset, so why does it make sense for it to be talking about >>LUKS at all? Perhaps you mean dm-crypt? > >Exactly. Thanks for raising the above concern! The use cases like CoreOS and Confidential VMs explicitly want kdump to work for LUKS. And correct me if I'm wrong, I think the two problems addressed by this patch set only apply to LUKS so the kdump part of the kernel only cares about the LUKS case. If there are use cases where similar approach is needed, I'll be happy to make the solution more generic. > >I had the same comment almost a year ago... and it still applies: >https://lore.kernel.org/all/c857dcf8-024e-ab8a-fd26-295ce2e0ae41@gmail.com/ > > Anyway, please fix the naming before this patchset can be read or reviewed! > > LUKS is user-space key management only (on-disk metadata); the kernel has > no idea how the key is derived or what LUKS is - dm-crypt only knows the key > (either through keyring or directly in the mapping table). > > Polluting kernel namespace with "luks" names variables is wrong - dm-crypt > is used in many other mappings (plain, bitlocker, veracrypt, ...) > Just use the dm-crypt key, do not reference LUKS at all. Thanks for the reminding! That comment was on the first RFC version. But starting with "RFC v2", there is no longer any interaction with dm-crypt (to save a copy of the LUKS volume key for the kdump kernel) and now I make cryptsetup talks to the kdump part of the kernel via the sysfs to reuse the volume key. So only the kdump part of the kernel needs to know LUKS which is what it cares. Thus I don't think there is any kernel namespace pollution now. > >Milan >
On 6/5/23 04:31, Coiby Xu wrote: > Hi Eric and Milan, > > On Sat, Jun 03, 2023 at 11:22:52AM +0200, Milan Broz wrote: >> On 6/2/23 23:34, Eric Biggers wrote: >>> On Thu, Jun 01, 2023 at 03:24:39PM +0800, Coiby Xu wrote: >>>> [PATCH 0/5] Support kdump with LUKS encryption by reusing LUKS volume key >>> >>> The kernel has no concept of LUKS at all. It provides dm-crypt, which LUKS >>> happens to use. But LUKS is a userspace concept. >>> >>> This is a kernel patchset, so why does it make sense for it to be talking about >>> LUKS at all? Perhaps you mean dm-crypt? >> >> Exactly. > > Thanks for raising the above concern! The use cases like CoreOS and > Confidential VMs explicitly want kdump to work for LUKS. And correct me > if I'm wrong, I think the two problems addressed by this patch set only > apply to LUKS so the kdump part of the kernel only cares about the LUKS > case. If there are use cases where similar approach is needed, I'll be > happy to make the solution more generic. > >> >> I had the same comment almost a year ago... and it still applies: >> https://lore.kernel.org/all/c857dcf8-024e-ab8a-fd26-295ce2e0ae41@gmail.com/ >> >> Anyway, please fix the naming before this patchset can be read or reviewed! >> >> LUKS is user-space key management only (on-disk metadata); the kernel has >> no idea how the key is derived or what LUKS is - dm-crypt only knows the key >> (either through keyring or directly in the mapping table). >> >> Polluting kernel namespace with "luks" names variables is wrong - dm-crypt >> is used in many other mappings (plain, bitlocker, veracrypt, ...) >> Just use the dm-crypt key, do not reference LUKS at all. > > Thanks for the reminding! That comment was on the first RFC version. But > starting with "RFC v2", there is no longer any interaction with dm-crypt > (to save a copy of the LUKS volume key for the kdump kernel) and now I > make cryptsetup talks to the kdump part of the kernel via the sysfs to > reuse the volume key. So only the kdump part of the kernel needs to know > LUKS which is what it cares. Thus I don't think there is any kernel > namespace pollution now. Hi, I am sorry if I did understand correctly, but I thought that kdump is part of the kernel. I am trying to say that kernel generally has no concept of LUKS; this is a userspace abstraction for key management. Even the cryptsetup dm-crypt configuration mapping table generated from LUKS has nothing LUKS special in it (only in DM-UUID as a name prefix). So I do not understand why you need to mention LUKS even in kdump part. Perhaps it is still only a naming problem, nothing more. All you need is to preserve key and configuration parameters (for dm-crypt). If it is set by cryptsetup, dmsetup, or any other way is not important - on this kernel layer, it has nothing to do with LUKS key management metadata. No problem if you support only LUKS in userspace, but really, all this machinery should work for any dm-crypt devices. Perhaps your patch even works for it already. Milan -- dm-devel mailing list dm-devel@redhat.com https://listman.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/dm-devel
On Mon, Jun 05, 2023 at 09:09:49AM +0200, Milan Broz wrote: >On 6/5/23 04:31, Coiby Xu wrote: >>Hi Eric and Milan, >> >>On Sat, Jun 03, 2023 at 11:22:52AM +0200, Milan Broz wrote: >>>On 6/2/23 23:34, Eric Biggers wrote: >>>>On Thu, Jun 01, 2023 at 03:24:39PM +0800, Coiby Xu wrote: >>>>>[PATCH 0/5] Support kdump with LUKS encryption by reusing LUKS volume key >>>> >>>>The kernel has no concept of LUKS at all. It provides dm-crypt, which LUKS >>>>happens to use. But LUKS is a userspace concept. >>>> >>>>This is a kernel patchset, so why does it make sense for it to be talking about >>>>LUKS at all? Perhaps you mean dm-crypt? >>> >>>Exactly. >> >>Thanks for raising the above concern! The use cases like CoreOS and >>Confidential VMs explicitly want kdump to work for LUKS. And correct me >>if I'm wrong, I think the two problems addressed by this patch set only >>apply to LUKS so the kdump part of the kernel only cares about the LUKS >>case. If there are use cases where similar approach is needed, I'll be >>happy to make the solution more generic. >> >>> >>>I had the same comment almost a year ago... and it still applies: >>>https://lore.kernel.org/all/c857dcf8-024e-ab8a-fd26-295ce2e0ae41@gmail.com/ >>> >>>Anyway, please fix the naming before this patchset can be read or reviewed! >>> >>>LUKS is user-space key management only (on-disk metadata); the kernel has >>>no idea how the key is derived or what LUKS is - dm-crypt only knows the key >>>(either through keyring or directly in the mapping table). >>> >>>Polluting kernel namespace with "luks" names variables is wrong - dm-crypt >>>is used in many other mappings (plain, bitlocker, veracrypt, ...) >>>Just use the dm-crypt key, do not reference LUKS at all. >> >>Thanks for the reminding! That comment was on the first RFC version. But >>starting with "RFC v2", there is no longer any interaction with dm-crypt >>(to save a copy of the LUKS volume key for the kdump kernel) and now I >>make cryptsetup talks to the kdump part of the kernel via the sysfs to >>reuse the volume key. So only the kdump part of the kernel needs to know >>LUKS which is what it cares. Thus I don't think there is any kernel >>namespace pollution now. > >Hi, > >I am sorry if I did understand correctly, but I thought that kdump is part >of the kernel. Yes, there is the kernel part of the kdump although there is also the userspace part to make the feature complete:) > >I am trying to say that kernel generally has no concept of LUKS; >this is a userspace abstraction for key management. > >Even the cryptsetup dm-crypt configuration mapping table generated from LUKS >has nothing LUKS special in it (only in DM-UUID as a name prefix). > >So I do not understand why you need to mention LUKS even in kdump part. >Perhaps it is still only a naming problem, nothing more. > >All you need is to preserve key and configuration parameters (for dm-crypt). >If it is set by cryptsetup, dmsetup, or any other way is not important - on this >kernel layer, it has nothing to do with LUKS key management metadata. > >No problem if you support only LUKS in userspace, but really, all this machinery >should work for any dm-crypt devices. Perhaps your patch even works for it already. Thanks for the explanation! After reflecting on your words for some time, I realize I had an implicit assumption. I assumed is if I use a name like dm_crypt_key instead of luks_volume_key, I need to support all mappings like plain, bitlocker, veracrypt as mentioned by you and this could mean much more efforts. So I'm not motivated to do that as currently users only request kdump to work for LUKS. But maybe I can divide the efforts into the kernel part and userspace part. For the kernel part, almost no effort is needed since only renaming is needed as pointed out by you. For the userpace part, maybe it's OK to support preserving key only for LUKS2 in cryptsetup as hinted by your last paragraph? Does it look good to you from the viewpoint of the maintainer of cryptsetup? > >Milan >
On 6/6/23 13:02, Coiby Xu wrote: > On Mon, Jun 05, 2023 at 09:09:49AM +0200, Milan Broz wrote: >> On 6/5/23 04:31, Coiby Xu wrote: >>> Hi Eric and Milan, >>> >>> On Sat, Jun 03, 2023 at 11:22:52AM +0200, Milan Broz wrote: >>>> On 6/2/23 23:34, Eric Biggers wrote: >>>>> On Thu, Jun 01, 2023 at 03:24:39PM +0800, Coiby Xu wrote: >>>>>> [PATCH 0/5] Support kdump with LUKS encryption by reusing LUKS volume key >>>>> >>>>> The kernel has no concept of LUKS at all. It provides dm-crypt, which LUKS >>>>> happens to use. But LUKS is a userspace concept. >>>>> >>>>> This is a kernel patchset, so why does it make sense for it to be talking about >>>>> LUKS at all? Perhaps you mean dm-crypt? >>>> >>>> Exactly. >>> >>> Thanks for raising the above concern! The use cases like CoreOS and >>> Confidential VMs explicitly want kdump to work for LUKS. And correct me >>> if I'm wrong, I think the two problems addressed by this patch set only >>> apply to LUKS so the kdump part of the kernel only cares about the LUKS >>> case. If there are use cases where similar approach is needed, I'll be >>> happy to make the solution more generic. >>> >>>> >>>> I had the same comment almost a year ago... and it still applies: >>>> https://lore.kernel.org/all/c857dcf8-024e-ab8a-fd26-295ce2e0ae41@gmail.com/ >>>> >>>> Anyway, please fix the naming before this patchset can be read or reviewed! >>>> >>>> LUKS is user-space key management only (on-disk metadata); the kernel has >>>> no idea how the key is derived or what LUKS is - dm-crypt only knows the key >>>> (either through keyring or directly in the mapping table). >>>> >>>> Polluting kernel namespace with "luks" names variables is wrong - dm-crypt >>>> is used in many other mappings (plain, bitlocker, veracrypt, ...) >>>> Just use the dm-crypt key, do not reference LUKS at all. >>> >>> Thanks for the reminding! That comment was on the first RFC version. But >>> starting with "RFC v2", there is no longer any interaction with dm-crypt >>> (to save a copy of the LUKS volume key for the kdump kernel) and now I >>> make cryptsetup talks to the kdump part of the kernel via the sysfs to >>> reuse the volume key. So only the kdump part of the kernel needs to know >>> LUKS which is what it cares. Thus I don't think there is any kernel >>> namespace pollution now. >> >> Hi, >> >> I am sorry if I did understand correctly, but I thought that kdump is part >> of the kernel. > > Yes, there is the kernel part of the kdump although there is also the > userspace part to make the feature complete:) > >> >> I am trying to say that kernel generally has no concept of LUKS; >> this is a userspace abstraction for key management. >> >> Even the cryptsetup dm-crypt configuration mapping table generated from LUKS >> has nothing LUKS special in it (only in DM-UUID as a name prefix). >> >> So I do not understand why you need to mention LUKS even in kdump part. >> Perhaps it is still only a naming problem, nothing more. >> >> All you need is to preserve key and configuration parameters (for dm-crypt). >> If it is set by cryptsetup, dmsetup, or any other way is not important - on this >> kernel layer, it has nothing to do with LUKS key management metadata. >> >> No problem if you support only LUKS in userspace, but really, all this machinery >> should work for any dm-crypt devices. Perhaps your patch even works for it already. > > Thanks for the explanation! After reflecting on your words for some > time, I realize I had an implicit assumption. I assumed is if I use a > name like dm_crypt_key instead of luks_volume_key, I need to support all > mappings like plain, bitlocker, veracrypt as mentioned by you and this > could mean much more efforts. So I'm not motivated to do that as > currently users only request kdump to work for LUKS. Thanks, I think it is perfectly fine to implement just subset here. > But maybe I can divide the efforts into the kernel part and userspace > part. For the kernel part, almost no effort is needed since only > renaming is needed as pointed out by you. For the userpace part, maybe > it's OK to support preserving key only for LUKS2 in cryptsetup as hinted > by your last paragraph? Does it look good to you from the viewpoint of > the maintainer of cryptsetup? My comment was just about proper naming in kernel, it is of course up to you what you want to support in userspace (and even in kernel, extensions can be added later). Only LUKS2 uses keyring for volume key in dm-crypt as default option anyway. I do not think you need any cryptsetup patches, all you need is to write decrypted volume key from LUKS metadata with cryptsetup luksDump ---dump-volume-key -volume-key-file <out> <device> (or any code equivalent with libcryptsetup), am I correct? Milan -- dm-devel mailing list dm-devel@redhat.com https://listman.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/dm-devel
On Wed, Jun 07, 2023 at 08:14:44AM +0200, Milan Broz wrote: >On 6/6/23 13:02, Coiby Xu wrote: >>On Mon, Jun 05, 2023 at 09:09:49AM +0200, Milan Broz wrote: >>>On 6/5/23 04:31, Coiby Xu wrote: >>>>Hi Eric and Milan, >>>> >>>>On Sat, Jun 03, 2023 at 11:22:52AM +0200, Milan Broz wrote: >>>>>On 6/2/23 23:34, Eric Biggers wrote: >>>>>>On Thu, Jun 01, 2023 at 03:24:39PM +0800, Coiby Xu wrote: >>>>>>>[PATCH 0/5] Support kdump with LUKS encryption by reusing LUKS volume key >>>>>> >>>>>>The kernel has no concept of LUKS at all. It provides dm-crypt, which LUKS >>>>>>happens to use. But LUKS is a userspace concept. >>>>>> >>>>>>This is a kernel patchset, so why does it make sense for it to be talking about >>>>>>LUKS at all? Perhaps you mean dm-crypt? >>>>> >>>>>Exactly. >>>> >>>>Thanks for raising the above concern! The use cases like CoreOS and >>>>Confidential VMs explicitly want kdump to work for LUKS. And correct me >>>>if I'm wrong, I think the two problems addressed by this patch set only >>>>apply to LUKS so the kdump part of the kernel only cares about the LUKS >>>>case. If there are use cases where similar approach is needed, I'll be >>>>happy to make the solution more generic. >>>> >>>>> >>>>>I had the same comment almost a year ago... and it still applies: >>>>>https://lore.kernel.org/all/c857dcf8-024e-ab8a-fd26-295ce2e0ae41@gmail.com/ >>>>> >>>>>Anyway, please fix the naming before this patchset can be read or reviewed! >>>>> >>>>>LUKS is user-space key management only (on-disk metadata); the kernel has >>>>>no idea how the key is derived or what LUKS is - dm-crypt only knows the key >>>>>(either through keyring or directly in the mapping table). >>>>> >>>>>Polluting kernel namespace with "luks" names variables is wrong - dm-crypt >>>>>is used in many other mappings (plain, bitlocker, veracrypt, ...) >>>>>Just use the dm-crypt key, do not reference LUKS at all. >>>> >>>>Thanks for the reminding! That comment was on the first RFC version. But >>>>starting with "RFC v2", there is no longer any interaction with dm-crypt >>>>(to save a copy of the LUKS volume key for the kdump kernel) and now I >>>>make cryptsetup talks to the kdump part of the kernel via the sysfs to >>>>reuse the volume key. So only the kdump part of the kernel needs to know >>>>LUKS which is what it cares. Thus I don't think there is any kernel >>>>namespace pollution now. >>> >>>Hi, >>> >>>I am sorry if I did understand correctly, but I thought that kdump is part >>>of the kernel. >> >>Yes, there is the kernel part of the kdump although there is also the >>userspace part to make the feature complete:) >> >>> >>>I am trying to say that kernel generally has no concept of LUKS; >>>this is a userspace abstraction for key management. >>> >>>Even the cryptsetup dm-crypt configuration mapping table generated from LUKS >>>has nothing LUKS special in it (only in DM-UUID as a name prefix). >>> >>>So I do not understand why you need to mention LUKS even in kdump part. >>>Perhaps it is still only a naming problem, nothing more. >>> >>>All you need is to preserve key and configuration parameters (for dm-crypt). >>>If it is set by cryptsetup, dmsetup, or any other way is not important - on this >>>kernel layer, it has nothing to do with LUKS key management metadata. >>> >>>No problem if you support only LUKS in userspace, but really, all this machinery >>>should work for any dm-crypt devices. Perhaps your patch even works for it already. >> >>Thanks for the explanation! After reflecting on your words for some >>time, I realize I had an implicit assumption. I assumed is if I use a >>name like dm_crypt_key instead of luks_volume_key, I need to support all >>mappings like plain, bitlocker, veracrypt as mentioned by you and this >>could mean much more efforts. So I'm not motivated to do that as >>currently users only request kdump to work for LUKS. > >Thanks, I think it is perfectly fine to implement just subset here. > [...] > >My comment was just about proper naming in kernel, it is of course up to you >what you want to support in userspace (and even in kernel, extensions can >be added later). Thanks for the confirmation! > >Only LUKS2 uses keyring for volume key in dm-crypt as default option anyway. Thanks for the info! >I do not think you need any cryptsetup patches, all you need is to write >decrypted volume key from LUKS metadata with > cryptsetup luksDump ---dump-volume-key -volume-key-file <out> <device> >(or any code equivalent with libcryptsetup), am I correct? Correct me if I'm wrong, but I don't think there will be a safer way to preserve key without patching cryptsetup. Actually the --dump-volume-key approach has been proposed before and I agree with your conclusion [1] on that approach i.e. "passing volume key this way is quite insecure". Without patching cryptsetup, even if I save the volume key in the memory reserved for the kdump kernel, I need to retrieve this key in the userspace to unlock the LUKS device which may lead to quite a security vulnerability. I respect the efforts from you and the cryptsetup community to make LUKS as secure as possible. And kdump is used in product environment. Kdump is to a server as a black box is to an aircraft. So by no means I want to reverse the used security measures and patching cryptsetup can allow to keep the security measures. One concern raised by you against "FRC v1" was a copy of the LUKS volume key for the kdump kernel creates an attack vector. I took this feedback seriously and have sought advice from my colleagues to implement the countermeasures ([PATCH 1/5] and [Patch 4/5]). [1] https://yhbt.net/lore/all/e5abd089-3398-fdb4-7991-0019be434b79@gmail.com/ > >Milan >
On 6/7/23 14:39, Coiby Xu wrote: ... >> I do not think you need any cryptsetup patches, all you need is to write >> decrypted volume key from LUKS metadata with >> cryptsetup luksDump ---dump-volume-key -volume-key-file <out> <device> >> (or any code equivalent with libcryptsetup), am I correct? > > Correct me if I'm wrong, but I don't think there will be a safer way to > preserve key without patching cryptsetup. Actually the --dump-volume-key > approach has been proposed before and I agree with your conclusion [1] > on that approach i.e. "passing volume key this way is quite insecure". > Without patching cryptsetup, even if I save the volume key in the memory > reserved for the kdump kernel, I need to retrieve this key in the > userspace to unlock the LUKS device which may lead to quite a security > vulnerability. Hm, where are the patches for cryptsetup, then? I am afraid we do not want to add such specific things there. But we are just going to merge a patchset that changes how we use keyring where you can tell cryptsetup to store/link key under some specific name and to specific keyring (see https://gitlab.com/cryptsetup/cryptsetup/-/merge_requests/492) (Please talk to Red Hat cryptsetup maintainers for more info, I just mentioned this mail to them today.) > I respect the efforts from you and the cryptsetup community to make LUKS > as secure as possible. And kdump is used in product environment. Kdump > is to a server as a black box is to an aircraft. So by no means I want > to reverse the used security measures and patching cryptsetup can allow > to keep the security measures. One concern raised by you against "FRC > v1" was a copy of the LUKS volume key for the kdump kernel creates an > attack vector. I took this feedback seriously and have sought advice > from my colleagues to implement the countermeasures ([PATCH 1/5] and > [Patch 4/5]). > > [1] https://yhbt.net/lore/all/e5abd089-3398-fdb4-7991-0019be434b79@gmail.com/ Yes, I appreciate that. And it is perfectly ok if your customers accept the trade-off and security risk of handling the key this way. Anyway, I feel we are going in circles here, and as it seems to be my fault, I do not want to sound grumpy as I am perhaps missing some context. Could you please talk to internal RH cryptsetup maintainers first and discuss your solution? They know what we can do here can help to find an acceptable solution. (I added cc to Ondra.) Thanks, Milan -- dm-devel mailing list dm-devel@redhat.com https://listman.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/dm-devel
On Thu, Jun 08, 2023 at 12:39:26PM +0200, Milan Broz wrote: >On 6/7/23 14:39, Coiby Xu wrote: >... >>>I do not think you need any cryptsetup patches, all you need is to write >>>decrypted volume key from LUKS metadata with >>> cryptsetup luksDump ---dump-volume-key -volume-key-file <out> <device> >>>(or any code equivalent with libcryptsetup), am I correct? >> >>Correct me if I'm wrong, but I don't think there will be a safer way to >>preserve key without patching cryptsetup. Actually the --dump-volume-key >>approach has been proposed before and I agree with your conclusion [1] >>on that approach i.e. "passing volume key this way is quite insecure". >>Without patching cryptsetup, even if I save the volume key in the memory >>reserved for the kdump kernel, I need to retrieve this key in the >>userspace to unlock the LUKS device which may lead to quite a security >>vulnerability. > >Hm, where are the patches for cryptsetup, then? I am afraid we do not want >to add such specific things there. Thanks for cleaning up the text to make the discussion easier! Sorry I only mentioned it [3] in the cover letter and didn't provide one in previous reply. [3] was done in a quick-and-dirty way (I plan to send a formal merge request after finishing the kernel part) and there is no need to read it. Let's me explain what [3] does here instead, 1) After unlocking the LUKS-encrypted device, if cryptsetup finds /sys/kernel/crash_luks_volume_key exists, it will write the key description of the volume key to it to notify the kernel to save a copy of this logon key linked to its thread keyring for the kdump kernel 2) After the 1st kernel crashes, if crytpsetup finds it's in the kdump kernel, instead of deriving the volume key from a passphrase, it will write the key description to /sys/kernel/crash_luks_volume_key to ask the kdump kernel to link the saved key to its thread keyring. [3] https://gitlab.com/coxu/cryptsetup/-/commit/750a46d933fac82e0c994b5c41de40a0b8cac647 > >But we are just going to merge a patchset that changes how we use keyring >where you can tell cryptsetup to store/link key under some specific name >and to specific keyring >(see https://gitlab.com/cryptsetup/cryptsetup/-/merge_requests/492) >(Please talk to Red Hat cryptsetup maintainers for more info, >I just mentioned this mail to them today.) Thanks for pointing me to the above MR which looks promising! Unlike treating the kdump use case as a special case [3], it just provides a generic way with the implemented options --link-vk-to-keyring and --volume-key-keyring. > >>I respect the efforts from you and the cryptsetup community to make LUKS >>as secure as possible. And kdump is used in product environment. Kdump >>is to a server as a black box is to an aircraft. So by no means I want >>to reverse the used security measures and patching cryptsetup can allow >>to keep the security measures. One concern raised by you against "FRC >>v1" was a copy of the LUKS volume key for the kdump kernel creates an >>attack vector. I took this feedback seriously and have sought advice >>from my colleagues to implement the countermeasures ([PATCH 1/5] and >>[Patch 4/5]). >> >>[1] https://yhbt.net/lore/all/e5abd089-3398-fdb4-7991-0019be434b79@gmail.com/ > >Yes, I appreciate that. And it is perfectly ok if your customers accept >the trade-off and security risk of handling the key this way. > >Anyway, I feel we are going in circles here, and as it seems to be my fault, >I do not want to sound grumpy as I am perhaps missing some context. Actually I should thank you for your patience! You have been always offering your feedback on this work kindly and promptly starting with the first proposed solution [1]. > >Could you please talk to internal RH cryptsetup maintainers first and discuss >your solution? They know what we can do here can help to find an acceptable >solution. (I added cc to Ondra.) Sure, I'll talk to them first. Thanks for letting Ondra know! > >Thanks, >Milan >