| .. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 |
| |
| .. _fsverity: |
| |
| ======================================================= |
| fs-verity: read-only file-based authenticity protection |
| ======================================================= |
| |
| Introduction |
| ============ |
| |
| fs-verity (``fs/verity/``) is a support layer that filesystems can |
| hook into to support transparent integrity and authenticity protection |
| of read-only files. Currently, it is supported by the ext4 and f2fs |
| filesystems. Like fscrypt, not too much filesystem-specific code is |
| needed to support fs-verity. |
| |
| fs-verity is similar to `dm-verity |
| <https://www.kernel.org/doc/Documentation/device-mapper/verity.txt>`_ |
| but works on files rather than block devices. On regular files on |
| filesystems supporting fs-verity, userspace can execute an ioctl that |
| causes the filesystem to build a Merkle tree for the file and persist |
| it to a filesystem-specific location associated with the file. |
| |
| After this, the file is made readonly, and all reads from the file are |
| automatically verified against the file's Merkle tree. Reads of any |
| corrupted data, including mmap reads, will fail. |
| |
| Userspace can use another ioctl to retrieve the root hash (actually |
| the "file measurement", which is a hash that includes the root hash) |
| that fs-verity is enforcing for the file. This ioctl executes in |
| constant time, regardless of the file size. |
| |
| fs-verity is essentially a way to hash a file in constant time, |
| subject to the caveat that reads which would violate the hash will |
| fail at runtime. |
| |
| Use cases |
| ========= |
| |
| By itself, the base fs-verity feature only provides integrity |
| protection, i.e. detection of accidental (non-malicious) corruption. |
| |
| However, because fs-verity makes retrieving the file hash extremely |
| efficient, it's primarily meant to be used as a tool to support |
| authentication (detection of malicious modifications) or auditing |
| (logging file hashes before use). |
| |
| Trusted userspace code (e.g. operating system code running on a |
| read-only partition that is itself authenticated by dm-verity) can |
| authenticate the contents of an fs-verity file by using the |
| `FS_IOC_MEASURE_VERITY`_ ioctl to retrieve its hash, then verifying a |
| digital signature of it. |
| |
| A standard file hash could be used instead of fs-verity. However, |
| this is inefficient if the file is large and only a small portion may |
| be accessed. This is often the case for Android application package |
| (APK) files, for example. These typically contain many translations, |
| classes, and other resources that are infrequently or even never |
| accessed on a particular device. It would be slow and wasteful to |
| read and hash the entire file before starting the application. |
| |
| Unlike an ahead-of-time hash, fs-verity also re-verifies data each |
| time it's paged in. This ensures that malicious disk firmware can't |
| undetectably change the contents of the file at runtime. |
| |
| fs-verity does not replace or obsolete dm-verity. dm-verity should |
| still be used on read-only filesystems. fs-verity is for files that |
| must live on a read-write filesystem because they are independently |
| updated and potentially user-installed, so dm-verity cannot be used. |
| |
| The base fs-verity feature is a hashing mechanism only; actually |
| authenticating the files is up to userspace. However, to meet some |
| users' needs, fs-verity optionally supports a simple signature |
| verification mechanism where users can configure the kernel to require |
| that all fs-verity files be signed by a key loaded into a keyring; see |
| `Built-in signature verification`_. Support for fs-verity file hashes |
| in IMA (Integrity Measurement Architecture) policies is also planned. |
| |
| User API |
| ======== |
| |
| FS_IOC_ENABLE_VERITY |
| -------------------- |
| |
| The FS_IOC_ENABLE_VERITY ioctl enables fs-verity on a file. It takes |
| in a pointer to a struct fsverity_enable_arg, defined as |
| follows:: |
| |
| struct fsverity_enable_arg { |
| __u32 version; |
| __u32 hash_algorithm; |
| __u32 block_size; |
| __u32 salt_size; |
| __u64 salt_ptr; |
| __u32 sig_size; |
| __u32 __reserved1; |
| __u64 sig_ptr; |
| __u64 __reserved2[11]; |
| }; |
| |
| This structure contains the parameters of the Merkle tree to build for |
| the file, and optionally contains a signature. It must be initialized |
| as follows: |
| |
| - ``version`` must be 1. |
| - ``hash_algorithm`` must be the identifier for the hash algorithm to |
| use for the Merkle tree, such as FS_VERITY_HASH_ALG_SHA256. See |
| ``include/uapi/linux/fsverity.h`` for the list of possible values. |
| - ``block_size`` must be the Merkle tree block size. Currently, this |
| must be equal to the system page size, which is usually 4096 bytes. |
| Other sizes may be supported in the future. This value is not |
| necessarily the same as the filesystem block size. |
| - ``salt_size`` is the size of the salt in bytes, or 0 if no salt is |
| provided. The salt is a value that is prepended to every hashed |
| block; it can be used to personalize the hashing for a particular |
| file or device. Currently the maximum salt size is 32 bytes. |
| - ``salt_ptr`` is the pointer to the salt, or NULL if no salt is |
| provided. |
| - ``sig_size`` is the size of the signature in bytes, or 0 if no |
| signature is provided. Currently the signature is (somewhat |
| arbitrarily) limited to 16128 bytes. See `Built-in signature |
| verification`_ for more information. |
| - ``sig_ptr`` is the pointer to the signature, or NULL if no |
| signature is provided. |
| - All reserved fields must be zeroed. |
| |
| FS_IOC_ENABLE_VERITY causes the filesystem to build a Merkle tree for |
| the file and persist it to a filesystem-specific location associated |
| with the file, then mark the file as a verity file. This ioctl may |
| take a long time to execute on large files, and it is interruptible by |
| fatal signals. |
| |
| FS_IOC_ENABLE_VERITY checks for write access to the inode. However, |
| it must be executed on an O_RDONLY file descriptor and no processes |
| can have the file open for writing. Attempts to open the file for |
| writing while this ioctl is executing will fail with ETXTBSY. (This |
| is necessary to guarantee that no writable file descriptors will exist |
| after verity is enabled, and to guarantee that the file's contents are |
| stable while the Merkle tree is being built over it.) |
| |
| On success, FS_IOC_ENABLE_VERITY returns 0, and the file becomes a |
| verity file. On failure (including the case of interruption by a |
| fatal signal), no changes are made to the file. |
| |
| FS_IOC_ENABLE_VERITY can fail with the following errors: |
| |
| - ``EACCES``: the process does not have write access to the file |
| - ``EBADMSG``: the signature is malformed |
| - ``EBUSY``: this ioctl is already running on the file |
| - ``EEXIST``: the file already has verity enabled |
| - ``EFAULT``: the caller provided inaccessible memory |
| - ``EINTR``: the operation was interrupted by a fatal signal |
| - ``EINVAL``: unsupported version, hash algorithm, or block size; or |
| reserved bits are set; or the file descriptor refers to neither a |
| regular file nor a directory. |
| - ``EISDIR``: the file descriptor refers to a directory |
| - ``EKEYREJECTED``: the signature doesn't match the file |
| - ``EMSGSIZE``: the salt or signature is too long |
| - ``ENOKEY``: the fs-verity keyring doesn't contain the certificate |
| needed to verify the signature |
| - ``ENOPKG``: fs-verity recognizes the hash algorithm, but it's not |
| available in the kernel's crypto API as currently configured (e.g. |
| for SHA-512, missing CONFIG_CRYPTO_SHA512). |
| - ``ENOTTY``: this type of filesystem does not implement fs-verity |
| - ``EOPNOTSUPP``: the kernel was not configured with fs-verity |
| support; or the filesystem superblock has not had the 'verity' |
| feature enabled on it; or the filesystem does not support fs-verity |
| on this file. (See `Filesystem support`_.) |
| - ``EPERM``: the file is append-only; or, a signature is required and |
| one was not provided. |
| - ``EROFS``: the filesystem is read-only |
| - ``ETXTBSY``: someone has the file open for writing. This can be the |
| caller's file descriptor, another open file descriptor, or the file |
| reference held by a writable memory map. |
| |
| FS_IOC_MEASURE_VERITY |
| --------------------- |
| |
| The FS_IOC_MEASURE_VERITY ioctl retrieves the measurement of a verity |
| file. The file measurement is a digest that cryptographically |
| identifies the file contents that are being enforced on reads. |
| |
| This ioctl takes in a pointer to a variable-length structure:: |
| |
| struct fsverity_digest { |
| __u16 digest_algorithm; |
| __u16 digest_size; /* input/output */ |
| __u8 digest[]; |
| }; |
| |
| ``digest_size`` is an input/output field. On input, it must be |
| initialized to the number of bytes allocated for the variable-length |
| ``digest`` field. |
| |
| On success, 0 is returned and the kernel fills in the structure as |
| follows: |
| |
| - ``digest_algorithm`` will be the hash algorithm used for the file |
| measurement. It will match ``fsverity_enable_arg::hash_algorithm``. |
| - ``digest_size`` will be the size of the digest in bytes, e.g. 32 |
| for SHA-256. (This can be redundant with ``digest_algorithm``.) |
| - ``digest`` will be the actual bytes of the digest. |
| |
| FS_IOC_MEASURE_VERITY is guaranteed to execute in constant time, |
| regardless of the size of the file. |
| |
| FS_IOC_MEASURE_VERITY can fail with the following errors: |
| |
| - ``EFAULT``: the caller provided inaccessible memory |
| - ``ENODATA``: the file is not a verity file |
| - ``ENOTTY``: this type of filesystem does not implement fs-verity |
| - ``EOPNOTSUPP``: the kernel was not configured with fs-verity |
| support, or the filesystem superblock has not had the 'verity' |
| feature enabled on it. (See `Filesystem support`_.) |
| - ``EOVERFLOW``: the digest is longer than the specified |
| ``digest_size`` bytes. Try providing a larger buffer. |
| |
| FS_IOC_GETFLAGS |
| --------------- |
| |
| The existing ioctl FS_IOC_GETFLAGS (which isn't specific to fs-verity) |
| can also be used to check whether a file has fs-verity enabled or not. |
| To do so, check for FS_VERITY_FL (0x00100000) in the returned flags. |
| |
| The verity flag is not settable via FS_IOC_SETFLAGS. You must use |
| FS_IOC_ENABLE_VERITY instead, since parameters must be provided. |
| |
| statx |
| ----- |
| |
| Since Linux v5.5, the statx() system call sets STATX_ATTR_VERITY if |
| the file has fs-verity enabled. This can perform better than |
| FS_IOC_GETFLAGS and FS_IOC_MEASURE_VERITY because it doesn't require |
| opening the file, and opening verity files can be expensive. |
| |
| Accessing verity files |
| ====================== |
| |
| Applications can transparently access a verity file just like a |
| non-verity one, with the following exceptions: |
| |
| - Verity files are readonly. They cannot be opened for writing or |
| truncate()d, even if the file mode bits allow it. Attempts to do |
| one of these things will fail with EPERM. However, changes to |
| metadata such as owner, mode, timestamps, and xattrs are still |
| allowed, since these are not measured by fs-verity. Verity files |
| can also still be renamed, deleted, and linked to. |
| |
| - Direct I/O is not supported on verity files. Attempts to use direct |
| I/O on such files will fall back to buffered I/O. |
| |
| - DAX (Direct Access) is not supported on verity files, because this |
| would circumvent the data verification. |
| |
| - Reads of data that doesn't match the verity Merkle tree will fail |
| with EIO (for read()) or SIGBUS (for mmap() reads). |
| |
| - If the sysctl "fs.verity.require_signatures" is set to 1 and the |
| file's verity measurement is not signed by a key in the fs-verity |
| keyring, then opening the file will fail. See `Built-in signature |
| verification`_. |
| |
| Direct access to the Merkle tree is not supported. Therefore, if a |
| verity file is copied, or is backed up and restored, then it will lose |
| its "verity"-ness. fs-verity is primarily meant for files like |
| executables that are managed by a package manager. |
| |
| File measurement computation |
| ============================ |
| |
| This section describes how fs-verity hashes the file contents using a |
| Merkle tree to produce the "file measurement" which cryptographically |
| identifies the file contents. This algorithm is the same for all |
| filesystems that support fs-verity. |
| |
| Userspace only needs to be aware of this algorithm if it needs to |
| compute the file measurement itself, e.g. in order to sign the file. |
| |
| .. _fsverity_merkle_tree: |
| |
| Merkle tree |
| ----------- |
| |
| The file contents is divided into blocks, where the block size is |
| configurable but is usually 4096 bytes. The end of the last block is |
| zero-padded if needed. Each block is then hashed, producing the first |
| level of hashes. Then, the hashes in this first level are grouped |
| into 'blocksize'-byte blocks (zero-padding the ends as needed) and |
| these blocks are hashed, producing the second level of hashes. This |
| proceeds up the tree until only a single block remains. The hash of |
| this block is the "Merkle tree root hash". |
| |
| If the file fits in one block and is nonempty, then the "Merkle tree |
| root hash" is simply the hash of the single data block. If the file |
| is empty, then the "Merkle tree root hash" is all zeroes. |
| |
| The "blocks" here are not necessarily the same as "filesystem blocks". |
| |
| If a salt was specified, then it's zero-padded to the closest multiple |
| of the input size of the hash algorithm's compression function, e.g. |
| 64 bytes for SHA-256 or 128 bytes for SHA-512. The padded salt is |
| prepended to every data or Merkle tree block that is hashed. |
| |
| The purpose of the block padding is to cause every hash to be taken |
| over the same amount of data, which simplifies the implementation and |
| keeps open more possibilities for hardware acceleration. The purpose |
| of the salt padding is to make the salting "free" when the salted hash |
| state is precomputed, then imported for each hash. |
| |
| Example: in the recommended configuration of SHA-256 and 4K blocks, |
| 128 hash values fit in each block. Thus, each level of the Merkle |
| tree is approximately 128 times smaller than the previous, and for |
| large files the Merkle tree's size converges to approximately 1/127 of |
| the original file size. However, for small files, the padding is |
| significant, making the space overhead proportionally more. |
| |
| .. _fsverity_descriptor: |
| |
| fs-verity descriptor |
| -------------------- |
| |
| By itself, the Merkle tree root hash is ambiguous. For example, it |
| can't a distinguish a large file from a small second file whose data |
| is exactly the top-level hash block of the first file. Ambiguities |
| also arise from the convention of padding to the next block boundary. |
| |
| To solve this problem, the verity file measurement is actually |
| computed as a hash of the following structure, which contains the |
| Merkle tree root hash as well as other fields such as the file size:: |
| |
| struct fsverity_descriptor { |
| __u8 version; /* must be 1 */ |
| __u8 hash_algorithm; /* Merkle tree hash algorithm */ |
| __u8 log_blocksize; /* log2 of size of data and tree blocks */ |
| __u8 salt_size; /* size of salt in bytes; 0 if none */ |
| __le32 sig_size; /* must be 0 */ |
| __le64 data_size; /* size of file the Merkle tree is built over */ |
| __u8 root_hash[64]; /* Merkle tree root hash */ |
| __u8 salt[32]; /* salt prepended to each hashed block */ |
| __u8 __reserved[144]; /* must be 0's */ |
| }; |
| |
| Note that the ``sig_size`` field must be set to 0 for the purpose of |
| computing the file measurement, even if a signature was provided (or |
| will be provided) to `FS_IOC_ENABLE_VERITY`_. |
| |
| Built-in signature verification |
| =============================== |
| |
| With CONFIG_FS_VERITY_BUILTIN_SIGNATURES=y, fs-verity supports putting |
| a portion of an authentication policy (see `Use cases`_) in the |
| kernel. Specifically, it adds support for: |
| |
| 1. At fs-verity module initialization time, a keyring ".fs-verity" is |
| created. The root user can add trusted X.509 certificates to this |
| keyring using the add_key() system call, then (when done) |
| optionally use keyctl_restrict_keyring() to prevent additional |
| certificates from being added. |
| |
| 2. `FS_IOC_ENABLE_VERITY`_ accepts a pointer to a PKCS#7 formatted |
| detached signature in DER format of the file measurement. On |
| success, this signature is persisted alongside the Merkle tree. |
| Then, any time the file is opened, the kernel will verify the |
| file's actual measurement against this signature, using the |
| certificates in the ".fs-verity" keyring. |
| |
| 3. A new sysctl "fs.verity.require_signatures" is made available. |
| When set to 1, the kernel requires that all verity files have a |
| correctly signed file measurement as described in (2). |
| |
| File measurements must be signed in the following format, which is |
| similar to the structure used by `FS_IOC_MEASURE_VERITY`_:: |
| |
| struct fsverity_signed_digest { |
| char magic[8]; /* must be "FSVerity" */ |
| __le16 digest_algorithm; |
| __le16 digest_size; |
| __u8 digest[]; |
| }; |
| |
| fs-verity's built-in signature verification support is meant as a |
| relatively simple mechanism that can be used to provide some level of |
| authenticity protection for verity files, as an alternative to doing |
| the signature verification in userspace or using IMA-appraisal. |
| However, with this mechanism, userspace programs still need to check |
| that the verity bit is set, and there is no protection against verity |
| files being swapped around. |
| |
| Filesystem support |
| ================== |
| |
| fs-verity is currently supported by the ext4 and f2fs filesystems. |
| The CONFIG_FS_VERITY kconfig option must be enabled to use fs-verity |
| on either filesystem. |
| |
| ``include/linux/fsverity.h`` declares the interface between the |
| ``fs/verity/`` support layer and filesystems. Briefly, filesystems |
| must provide an ``fsverity_operations`` structure that provides |
| methods to read and write the verity metadata to a filesystem-specific |
| location, including the Merkle tree blocks and |
| ``fsverity_descriptor``. Filesystems must also call functions in |
| ``fs/verity/`` at certain times, such as when a file is opened or when |
| pages have been read into the pagecache. (See `Verifying data`_.) |
| |
| ext4 |
| ---- |
| |
| ext4 supports fs-verity since Linux v5.4 and e2fsprogs v1.45.2. |
| |
| To create verity files on an ext4 filesystem, the filesystem must have |
| been formatted with ``-O verity`` or had ``tune2fs -O verity`` run on |
| it. "verity" is an RO_COMPAT filesystem feature, so once set, old |
| kernels will only be able to mount the filesystem readonly, and old |
| versions of e2fsck will be unable to check the filesystem. Moreover, |
| currently ext4 only supports mounting a filesystem with the "verity" |
| feature when its block size is equal to PAGE_SIZE (often 4096 bytes). |
| |
| ext4 sets the EXT4_VERITY_FL on-disk inode flag on verity files. It |
| can only be set by `FS_IOC_ENABLE_VERITY`_, and it cannot be cleared. |
| |
| ext4 also supports encryption, which can be used simultaneously with |
| fs-verity. In this case, the plaintext data is verified rather than |
| the ciphertext. This is necessary in order to make the file |
| measurement meaningful, since every file is encrypted differently. |
| |
| ext4 stores the verity metadata (Merkle tree and fsverity_descriptor) |
| past the end of the file, starting at the first 64K boundary beyond |
| i_size. This approach works because (a) verity files are readonly, |
| and (b) pages fully beyond i_size aren't visible to userspace but can |
| be read/written internally by ext4 with only some relatively small |
| changes to ext4. This approach avoids having to depend on the |
| EA_INODE feature and on rearchitecturing ext4's xattr support to |
| support paging multi-gigabyte xattrs into memory, and to support |
| encrypting xattrs. Note that the verity metadata *must* be encrypted |
| when the file is, since it contains hashes of the plaintext data. |
| |
| Currently, ext4 verity only supports the case where the Merkle tree |
| block size, filesystem block size, and page size are all the same. It |
| also only supports extent-based files. |
| |
| f2fs |
| ---- |
| |
| f2fs supports fs-verity since Linux v5.4 and f2fs-tools v1.11.0. |
| |
| To create verity files on an f2fs filesystem, the filesystem must have |
| been formatted with ``-O verity``. |
| |
| f2fs sets the FADVISE_VERITY_BIT on-disk inode flag on verity files. |
| It can only be set by `FS_IOC_ENABLE_VERITY`_, and it cannot be |
| cleared. |
| |
| Like ext4, f2fs stores the verity metadata (Merkle tree and |
| fsverity_descriptor) past the end of the file, starting at the first |
| 64K boundary beyond i_size. See explanation for ext4 above. |
| Moreover, f2fs supports at most 4096 bytes of xattr entries per inode |
| which wouldn't be enough for even a single Merkle tree block. |
| |
| Currently, f2fs verity only supports a Merkle tree block size of 4096. |
| Also, f2fs doesn't support enabling verity on files that currently |
| have atomic or volatile writes pending. |
| |
| Implementation details |
| ====================== |
| |
| Verifying data |
| -------------- |
| |
| fs-verity ensures that all reads of a verity file's data are verified, |
| regardless of which syscall is used to do the read (e.g. mmap(), |
| read(), pread()) and regardless of whether it's the first read or a |
| later read (unless the later read can return cached data that was |
| already verified). Below, we describe how filesystems implement this. |
| |
| Pagecache |
| ~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| For filesystems using Linux's pagecache, the ``->readpage()`` and |
| ``->readpages()`` methods must be modified to verify pages before they |
| are marked Uptodate. Merely hooking ``->read_iter()`` would be |
| insufficient, since ``->read_iter()`` is not used for memory maps. |
| |
| Therefore, fs/verity/ provides a function fsverity_verify_page() which |
| verifies a page that has been read into the pagecache of a verity |
| inode, but is still locked and not Uptodate, so it's not yet readable |
| by userspace. As needed to do the verification, |
| fsverity_verify_page() will call back into the filesystem to read |
| Merkle tree pages via fsverity_operations::read_merkle_tree_page(). |
| |
| fsverity_verify_page() returns false if verification failed; in this |
| case, the filesystem must not set the page Uptodate. Following this, |
| as per the usual Linux pagecache behavior, attempts by userspace to |
| read() from the part of the file containing the page will fail with |
| EIO, and accesses to the page within a memory map will raise SIGBUS. |
| |
| fsverity_verify_page() currently only supports the case where the |
| Merkle tree block size is equal to PAGE_SIZE (often 4096 bytes). |
| |
| In principle, fsverity_verify_page() verifies the entire path in the |
| Merkle tree from the data page to the root hash. However, for |
| efficiency the filesystem may cache the hash pages. Therefore, |
| fsverity_verify_page() only ascends the tree reading hash pages until |
| an already-verified hash page is seen, as indicated by the PageChecked |
| bit being set. It then verifies the path to that page. |
| |
| This optimization, which is also used by dm-verity, results in |
| excellent sequential read performance. This is because usually (e.g. |
| 127 in 128 times for 4K blocks and SHA-256) the hash page from the |
| bottom level of the tree will already be cached and checked from |
| reading a previous data page. However, random reads perform worse. |
| |
| Block device based filesystems |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| Block device based filesystems (e.g. ext4 and f2fs) in Linux also use |
| the pagecache, so the above subsection applies too. However, they |
| also usually read many pages from a file at once, grouped into a |
| structure called a "bio". To make it easier for these types of |
| filesystems to support fs-verity, fs/verity/ also provides a function |
| fsverity_verify_bio() which verifies all pages in a bio. |
| |
| ext4 and f2fs also support encryption. If a verity file is also |
| encrypted, the pages must be decrypted before being verified. To |
| support this, these filesystems allocate a "post-read context" for |
| each bio and store it in ``->bi_private``:: |
| |
| struct bio_post_read_ctx { |
| struct bio *bio; |
| struct work_struct work; |
| unsigned int cur_step; |
| unsigned int enabled_steps; |
| }; |
| |
| ``enabled_steps`` is a bitmask that specifies whether decryption, |
| verity, or both is enabled. After the bio completes, for each needed |
| postprocessing step the filesystem enqueues the bio_post_read_ctx on a |
| workqueue, and then the workqueue work does the decryption or |
| verification. Finally, pages where no decryption or verity error |
| occurred are marked Uptodate, and the pages are unlocked. |
| |
| Files on ext4 and f2fs may contain holes. Normally, ``->readpages()`` |
| simply zeroes holes and sets the corresponding pages Uptodate; no bios |
| are issued. To prevent this case from bypassing fs-verity, these |
| filesystems use fsverity_verify_page() to verify hole pages. |
| |
| ext4 and f2fs disable direct I/O on verity files, since otherwise |
| direct I/O would bypass fs-verity. (They also do the same for |
| encrypted files.) |
| |
| Userspace utility |
| ================= |
| |
| This document focuses on the kernel, but a userspace utility for |
| fs-verity can be found at: |
| |
| https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/ebiggers/fsverity-utils.git |
| |
| See the README.md file in the fsverity-utils source tree for details, |
| including examples of setting up fs-verity protected files. |
| |
| Tests |
| ===== |
| |
| To test fs-verity, use xfstests. For example, using `kvm-xfstests |
| <https://github.com/tytso/xfstests-bld/blob/master/Documentation/kvm-quickstart.md>`_:: |
| |
| kvm-xfstests -c ext4,f2fs -g verity |
| |
| FAQ |
| === |
| |
| This section answers frequently asked questions about fs-verity that |
| weren't already directly answered in other parts of this document. |
| |
| :Q: Why isn't fs-verity part of IMA? |
| :A: fs-verity and IMA (Integrity Measurement Architecture) have |
| different focuses. fs-verity is a filesystem-level mechanism for |
| hashing individual files using a Merkle tree. In contrast, IMA |
| specifies a system-wide policy that specifies which files are |
| hashed and what to do with those hashes, such as log them, |
| authenticate them, or add them to a measurement list. |
| |
| IMA is planned to support the fs-verity hashing mechanism as an |
| alternative to doing full file hashes, for people who want the |
| performance and security benefits of the Merkle tree based hash. |
| But it doesn't make sense to force all uses of fs-verity to be |
| through IMA. As a standalone filesystem feature, fs-verity |
| already meets many users' needs, and it's testable like other |
| filesystem features e.g. with xfstests. |
| |
| :Q: Isn't fs-verity useless because the attacker can just modify the |
| hashes in the Merkle tree, which is stored on-disk? |
| :A: To verify the authenticity of an fs-verity file you must verify |
| the authenticity of the "file measurement", which is basically the |
| root hash of the Merkle tree. See `Use cases`_. |
| |
| :Q: Isn't fs-verity useless because the attacker can just replace a |
| verity file with a non-verity one? |
| :A: See `Use cases`_. In the initial use case, it's really trusted |
| userspace code that authenticates the files; fs-verity is just a |
| tool to do this job efficiently and securely. The trusted |
| userspace code will consider non-verity files to be inauthentic. |
| |
| :Q: Why does the Merkle tree need to be stored on-disk? Couldn't you |
| store just the root hash? |
| :A: If the Merkle tree wasn't stored on-disk, then you'd have to |
| compute the entire tree when the file is first accessed, even if |
| just one byte is being read. This is a fundamental consequence of |
| how Merkle tree hashing works. To verify a leaf node, you need to |
| verify the whole path to the root hash, including the root node |
| (the thing which the root hash is a hash of). But if the root |
| node isn't stored on-disk, you have to compute it by hashing its |
| children, and so on until you've actually hashed the entire file. |
| |
| That defeats most of the point of doing a Merkle tree-based hash, |
| since if you have to hash the whole file ahead of time anyway, |
| then you could simply do sha256(file) instead. That would be much |
| simpler, and a bit faster too. |
| |
| It's true that an in-memory Merkle tree could still provide the |
| advantage of verification on every read rather than just on the |
| first read. However, it would be inefficient because every time a |
| hash page gets evicted (you can't pin the entire Merkle tree into |
| memory, since it may be very large), in order to restore it you |
| again need to hash everything below it in the tree. This again |
| defeats most of the point of doing a Merkle tree-based hash, since |
| a single block read could trigger re-hashing gigabytes of data. |
| |
| :Q: But couldn't you store just the leaf nodes and compute the rest? |
| :A: See previous answer; this really just moves up one level, since |
| one could alternatively interpret the data blocks as being the |
| leaf nodes of the Merkle tree. It's true that the tree can be |
| computed much faster if the leaf level is stored rather than just |
| the data, but that's only because each level is less than 1% the |
| size of the level below (assuming the recommended settings of |
| SHA-256 and 4K blocks). For the exact same reason, by storing |
| "just the leaf nodes" you'd already be storing over 99% of the |
| tree, so you might as well simply store the whole tree. |
| |
| :Q: Can the Merkle tree be built ahead of time, e.g. distributed as |
| part of a package that is installed to many computers? |
| :A: This isn't currently supported. It was part of the original |
| design, but was removed to simplify the kernel UAPI and because it |
| wasn't a critical use case. Files are usually installed once and |
| used many times, and cryptographic hashing is somewhat fast on |
| most modern processors. |
| |
| :Q: Why doesn't fs-verity support writes? |
| :A: Write support would be very difficult and would require a |
| completely different design, so it's well outside the scope of |
| fs-verity. Write support would require: |
| |
| - A way to maintain consistency between the data and hashes, |
| including all levels of hashes, since corruption after a crash |
| (especially of potentially the entire file!) is unacceptable. |
| The main options for solving this are data journalling, |
| copy-on-write, and log-structured volume. But it's very hard to |
| retrofit existing filesystems with new consistency mechanisms. |
| Data journalling is available on ext4, but is very slow. |
| |
| - Rebuilding the Merkle tree after every write, which would be |
| extremely inefficient. Alternatively, a different authenticated |
| dictionary structure such as an "authenticated skiplist" could |
| be used. However, this would be far more complex. |
| |
| Compare it to dm-verity vs. dm-integrity. dm-verity is very |
| simple: the kernel just verifies read-only data against a |
| read-only Merkle tree. In contrast, dm-integrity supports writes |
| but is slow, is much more complex, and doesn't actually support |
| full-device authentication since it authenticates each sector |
| independently, i.e. there is no "root hash". It doesn't really |
| make sense for the same device-mapper target to support these two |
| very different cases; the same applies to fs-verity. |
| |
| :Q: Since verity files are immutable, why isn't the immutable bit set? |
| :A: The existing "immutable" bit (FS_IMMUTABLE_FL) already has a |
| specific set of semantics which not only make the file contents |
| read-only, but also prevent the file from being deleted, renamed, |
| linked to, or having its owner or mode changed. These extra |
| properties are unwanted for fs-verity, so reusing the immutable |
| bit isn't appropriate. |
| |
| :Q: Why does the API use ioctls instead of setxattr() and getxattr()? |
| :A: Abusing the xattr interface for basically arbitrary syscalls is |
| heavily frowned upon by most of the Linux filesystem developers. |
| An xattr should really just be an xattr on-disk, not an API to |
| e.g. magically trigger construction of a Merkle tree. |
| |
| :Q: Does fs-verity support remote filesystems? |
| :A: Only ext4 and f2fs support is implemented currently, but in |
| principle any filesystem that can store per-file verity metadata |
| can support fs-verity, regardless of whether it's local or remote. |
| Some filesystems may have fewer options of where to store the |
| verity metadata; one possibility is to store it past the end of |
| the file and "hide" it from userspace by manipulating i_size. The |
| data verification functions provided by ``fs/verity/`` also assume |
| that the filesystem uses the Linux pagecache, but both local and |
| remote filesystems normally do so. |
| |
| :Q: Why is anything filesystem-specific at all? Shouldn't fs-verity |
| be implemented entirely at the VFS level? |
| :A: There are many reasons why this is not possible or would be very |
| difficult, including the following: |
| |
| - To prevent bypassing verification, pages must not be marked |
| Uptodate until they've been verified. Currently, each |
| filesystem is responsible for marking pages Uptodate via |
| ``->readpages()``. Therefore, currently it's not possible for |
| the VFS to do the verification on its own. Changing this would |
| require significant changes to the VFS and all filesystems. |
| |
| - It would require defining a filesystem-independent way to store |
| the verity metadata. Extended attributes don't work for this |
| because (a) the Merkle tree may be gigabytes, but many |
| filesystems assume that all xattrs fit into a single 4K |
| filesystem block, and (b) ext4 and f2fs encryption doesn't |
| encrypt xattrs, yet the Merkle tree *must* be encrypted when the |
| file contents are, because it stores hashes of the plaintext |
| file contents. |
| |
| So the verity metadata would have to be stored in an actual |
| file. Using a separate file would be very ugly, since the |
| metadata is fundamentally part of the file to be protected, and |
| it could cause problems where users could delete the real file |
| but not the metadata file or vice versa. On the other hand, |
| having it be in the same file would break applications unless |
| filesystems' notion of i_size were divorced from the VFS's, |
| which would be complex and require changes to all filesystems. |
| |
| - It's desirable that FS_IOC_ENABLE_VERITY uses the filesystem's |
| transaction mechanism so that either the file ends up with |
| verity enabled, or no changes were made. Allowing intermediate |
| states to occur after a crash may cause problems. |