On Tue, Oct 10, 2023 at 10:08:43AM +0200, Alexander Graf wrote: > > On 10.10.23 10:03, Greg Kroah-Hartman wrote: > > > > On Tue, Oct 10, 2023 at 09:55:25AM +0200, Alexander Graf wrote: > > > Hey Greg, > > > > > > On 10.10.23 08:13, Greg Kroah-Hartman wrote: > > > > On Mon, Oct 09, 2023 at 09:20:52PM +0000, Alexander Graf wrote: > > > > > To fully support the Nitro Secure Module communication protocol, we need > > > > > to encode and decode CBOR binary data. Import an MIT licensed library > > > > > from https://github.com/libmcu/cbor (commit f3d1696f886) so that we can > > > > > easily consume CBOR data. > > > > What is "CBOR"? I don't see a description of it here. > > > > > > CBOR is the "Concise Binary Object Representation" > > > (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CBOR) binary format. > > > > > > > > > > And I guess you are going to keep this in sync with upstream? Or do you > > > > really need the full library here (you #ifdef the float stuff out), does > > > > your module really need all of the functionality and complexity of this > > > > library, or can it use just a much smaller one instead? > > > > > > CBOR knows a total of 9 data types: > > > > > > - Unsigned integers > > > - Signed integers > > > - Binary string > > > - UTF-8 string > > > - Arrays > > > - Maps (like a python dictionary) > > > - Semantic tag > > > - Bools > > > - Floats > > > > > > Out of these, the NSM communication protocol uses all except Semantic tags > > > and Floats. The CBOR library that this patch imports does not have special > > > handling for Semantic tags, which leaves only floats which are already > > > #ifdef'ed out. That means there is not much to trim. > > > > > > What you see here is what's needed to parse CBOR in kernel - if that's what > > > we want to do. I'm happy to rip it out again and make it a pure user space > > > problem to do CBOR :). > > Yes, why are we parsing this in the kernel? What could go wrong with > > adding yet-another-parser in privileged context? :) > > > > Why does this have to be in the kernel, the data sent/recieved is over > > virtio, so why does the kernel have to parse it? I couldn't figure that > > out from the driver, yet the driver seems to have a lot of hard-coded > > parsing logic in it to assume specific message formats? > > > The parsing doesn't have to be in kernel and it probably shouldn't be > either. V3 of the patch was punting all the parsing to user space, at which > point you and Arnd said I should give it a try to do the protocol parsing in > kernel space instead. That's why the parser is here. Arnd said that, not me :) > If we conclude that all this in-kernel parsing is not worth it, I'm very > happy to just go back to the the v3 ioctl interface and post v5 with hwrng > merged into misc, but remove all CBOR logic again :) I think the less parsers we have in the kernel, the safer we are for obvious reasons. Unless you have a parser for this in rust? :) I don't really know, having a generic interface is good, but at the expense of this api is probably not good. individual ioctls might be better if there are not going to be any other drivers for this type of thing? it's a tough call, let's see what a unified driver, no parser, looks like, that should be pretty simple and small so maybe stick with that? thanks, greg k-h