On Fri, May 12 2023 at 12:28, Matthew Garrett wrote: > On Fri, May 12, 2023 at 01:18:45PM +0200, Ard Biesheuvel wrote: >> On Fri, 12 May 2023 at 13:04, Matthew Garrett <mjg59@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> > >> > On Tue, May 09, 2023 at 06:21:44PM -0700, Eric Biggers wrote: >> > >> > > SHA-1 is insecure. Why are you still using SHA-1? Don't TPMs support SHA-2 >> > > now? >> > >> > TXT is supported on some TPM 1.2 systems as well. TPM 2 systems are also >> > at the whim of the firmware in terms of whether the SHA-2 banks are >> > enabled. But even if the SHA-2 banks are enabled, if you suddenly stop >> > extending the SHA-1 banks, a malicious actor can later turn up and >> > extend whatever they want into them and present a SHA-1-only >> > attestation. Ideally whatever is handling that attestation should know >> > whether or not to expect an attestation with SHA-2, but the easiest way >> > to maintain security is to always extend all banks. >> > >> >> Wouldn't it make more sense to measure some terminating event into the >> SHA-1 banks instead? > > Unless we assert that SHA-1 events are unsupported, it seems a bit odd > to force a policy on people who have both banks enabled. People with > mixed fleets are potentially going to be dealing with SHA-1 measurements > for a while yet, and while there's obviously a security benefit in using > SHA-2 instead it'd be irritating to have to maintain two attestation > policies. Why? If you have a mixed fleet then it's not too much asked to provide two data sets. On a TPM2 system you can enforce SHA-2 and only fallback to SHA-1 on TPM 1.2 hardware. No? Thanks, tglx