Eric Biggers <ebiggers@xxxxxxxxxx> writes: > The code looks fine, but the explanation needs some tweaks: > > On Mon, Apr 04, 2022 at 11:25:54AM +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. > > This explanation is inconsistent with the code, which uses FSTYP for only ext4 > and f2fs, and fscrypt for everything else including ubifs. > > A better explanation would be something like "Only use $FSTYP on filesystems > that never supported the 'fscrypt' prefix, i.e. ext4 and f2fs." > >> +# 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() > > The first part of this comment sort of implies that FSTYP is the default and > "fscrypt" is the exception, but it should be the other way around. > > How about: > > # When fscrypt keys are added using the legacy mechanism (process-subscribed > # keyrings rather than filesystem keyrings), they are normally named > # "fscrypt:KEYDESC" where KEYDESC is the 16-character key descriptor hex string. > # However, ext4 and f2fs didn't add support for the "fscrypt" prefix until > # kernel v4.8 and v4.6, respectively. Before that, they used "ext4" and "f2fs", > # respectively. To allow testing ext4 and f2fs encryption on kernels older than > # this, we use these filesystem-specific prefixes for ext4 and f2fs. Doh! Yes, of course I need to adjust the documentation. Sorry, I'll send v3 shortly. Thanks! Cheers, -- Luís