On Tue, 5 Dec 2017 18:01:46 +0800 Gary Lin <glin@xxxxxxxx> wrote: > The series of patches introduce Security Version to EFI stub. > > Security Version is a monotonically increasing number and designed to > prevent the user from loading an insecure kernel accidentally. The > bootloader maintains a list of security versions corresponding to > different distributions. After fixing a critical vulnerability, the > distribution kernel maintainer bumps the "version", and the bootloader > updates the list automatically. This seems a mindbogglingly complicated way to implement something you could do with a trivial script in the package that updates the list of iffy kernels and when generating the new grub.conf puts them in a menu of 'old insecure' kernels. Why do you even need this in the EFI stub ? What happens if you want to invalidate an old kernel but not push a new one ? Today if you've got a package that maintains the list of 'iffy' kernels you can push a tiny package, under your scheme you've got to push new kernels which is an un-necessary and high risk OS change. It just feels like an attempt to solve the problem in completely the wrong place. Alan -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-efi" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html