On Thu, 21 Jan 2021 at 10:54, Christophe Leroy <christophe.leroy@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > Le 21/01/2021 à 08:31, Ard Biesheuvel a écrit : > > On Thu, 21 Jan 2021 at 06:35, Christophe Leroy > > <christophe.leroy@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >> > >> > >> > >> Le 20/01/2021 à 23:23, Ard Biesheuvel a écrit : > >>> On Wed, 20 Jan 2021 at 19:59, Christophe Leroy > >>> <christophe.leroy@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >>>> > >>>> Talitos Security Engine AESU considers any input > >>>> data size that is not a multiple of 16 bytes to be an error. > >>>> This is not a problem in general, except for Counter mode > >>>> that is a stream cipher and can have an input of any size. > >>>> > >>>> Test Manager for ctr(aes) fails on 4th test vector which has > >>>> a length of 499 while all previous vectors which have a 16 bytes > >>>> multiple length succeed. > >>>> > >>>> As suggested by Freescale, round up the input data length to the > >>>> nearest 16 bytes. > >>>> > >>>> Fixes: 5e75ae1b3cef ("crypto: talitos - add new crypto modes") > >>>> Signed-off-by: Christophe Leroy <christophe.leroy@xxxxxxxxxx> > >>> > >>> Doesn't this cause the hardware to write outside the given buffer? > >> > >> > >> Only the input length is modified. Not the output length. > >> > >> The ERRATA says: > >> > >> The input data length (in the descriptor) can be rounded up to the nearest 16B. Set the > >> data-in length (in the descriptor) to include X bytes of data beyond the payload. Set the > >> data-out length to only output the relevant payload (don't need to output the padding). > >> SEC reads from memory are not destructive, so the extra bytes included in the AES-CTR > >> operation can be whatever bytes are contiguously trailing the payload. > > > > So what happens if the input is not 16 byte aligned, and rounding it > > up causes it to extend across a page boundary into a page that is not > > mapped by the IOMMU/SMMU? > > > > What is the IOMMU/SMMU ? > > The mpc8xx, mpc82xx and mpc83xx which embed the Talitos Security Engine don't have such thing, the > security engine uses DMA and has direct access to the memory bus for reading and writing. > OK, good. So the only case where this could break is when the DMA access spills over into a page that does not exist, and I suppose this could only happen if the transfer involves a buffer located at the very top of DRAM, right?