On Fri, Apr 01, 2022 at 11:45:53AM +0100, Luís Henriques wrote: > fscrypt keys have used the $FSTYP as prefix. However this format is being > deprecated -- newer kernels already allow the usage of the generic > 'fscrypt:' prefix for ext4 and f2fs. This patch allows the usage of this > new prefix for testing filesystems that have never supported the old > format, but keeping the $FSTYP prefix for filesystems that support it, so > that old kernels can be tested. > > Signed-off-by: Luís Henriques <lhenriques@xxxxxxx> > --- > common/encrypt | 38 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++----------- > 1 file changed, 27 insertions(+), 11 deletions(-) > > diff --git a/common/encrypt b/common/encrypt > index f90c4ef05a3f..897c97e0f6fa 100644 > --- a/common/encrypt > +++ b/common/encrypt > @@ -250,6 +250,27 @@ _num_to_hex() > fi > } > > +# Keys are named $FSTYP:KEYDESC where KEYDESC is the 16-character key descriptor > +# hex string. Newer kernels (ext4 4.8 and later, f2fs 4.6 and later) also allow > +# the common key prefix "fscrypt:" in addition to their filesystem-specific key > +# prefix ("ext4:", "f2fs:"). It would be nice to use the common key prefix, but > +# for now use the filesystem- specific prefix for these 2 filesystems to make it > +# possible to test older kernels, and the "fscrypt" prefix for anything else. > +_get_fs_keyprefix() > +{ > + local prefix="" > + > + case $FSTYP in > + ext4|f2fs|ubifs) > + prefix="$FSTYP" > + ;; > + *) > + prefix="fscrypt" > + ;; > + esac > + echo $prefix > +} ubifs can use the "fscrypt" prefix, since there was never a kernel that supported ubifs encryption but not the "fscrypt" prefix. Also, the "prefix" local variable is unnecessary. So: case $FSTYP in ext4|f2fs) echo $FSTYP ;; *) echo fscrypt ;; esac Otherwise, this patch looks fine if we want to keep supporting testing kernels older than 4.8. However, since 4.4 is no longer a supported LTS kernel, perhaps this is no longer needed and we could just always use "fscrypt"? I'm not sure what xfstests's policy on old kernels is. - Eric