On Wed, Jul 31, 2019 at 11:38:02AM -0700, Eric Biggers wrote: > > This is perhaps different from what users expect from unlink(). It's well known > that unlink() just deletes the filename, not the file itself if it's still open > or has other links. And unlink() by itself isn't meant for use cases where the > file absolutely must be securely erased. But FS_IOC_REMOVE_ENCRYPTION_KEY > really is meant primarily for that sort of thing. Seems to me that part of the confusion is FS_IOC_REMOVE_ENCRYPTION_KEY does two things. One is "remove the user's handle on the key". The other is "purge all keys" (which requires root). So it does two different things with one ioctl. > To give a concrete example: my patch for the userspace tool > https://github.com/google/fscrypt adds a command 'fscrypt lock' which locks an > encrypted directory. If, say, someone runs 'fscrypt unlock' as uid 0 and then > 'fscrypt lock' as uid 1000, then FS_IOC_REMOVE_ENCRYPTION_KEY can't actually > remove the key. I need to make the tool show a proper error message in this > case. To do so, it would help to get a unique error code (e.g. EUSERS) from > FS_IOC_REMOVE_ENCRYPTION_KEY, rather than get the ambiguous error code ENOKEY > and have to call FS_IOC_GET_ENCRYPTION_KEY_STATUS to get the real status. What about having "fscrypt lock" call FS_IOC_GET_ENCRYPTION_KEY_STATUS and print a warning message saying, "we can't lock it because N other users who have registered a key". I'd argue fscrypt should do this regardless of whether or not FS_IOC_REMOVE_ENCRYPTION_KEY returns EUSERS or not. > Also, we already have the EBUSY case. This means that the ioctl removed the > master key secret itself; however, some files were still in-use, so the key > remains in the "incompletely removed" state. If we were actually going for > unlink() semantics, then for consistency this case really ought to return 0 and > unlink the key object, and people who care about in-use files would need to use > FS_IOC_GET_ENCRYPTION_KEY_STATUS. But most people *will* care about this, and > may even want to retry the ioctl later, which isn't something youh can do with > pure unlink() semantics. It seems to me that the EBUSY and EUSERS errors should be status bits which gets returned to the user in a bitfield --- and if the key has been removed, or the user's claim on the key's existence has been removed, the ioctl returns success. That way we don't have to deal with the semantic disconnect where some errors don't actually change system state, and other errors that *do* change system state (as in, the key gets removed, or the user's claim on the key gets removed), but still returns than error. We could also add a flag which indicates where if there are files that are still busy, or there are other users keeping a key in use, the ioctl fails hard and returns an error. At least that way we keep consistency where an error means, "nothing has changed". - Ted P.S. BTW, one of the comments which I didn't make was the documentation didn't adequately explain which error codes means, "success but with a caveat", and which errors means, "we failed and didn't do anything". But since I was arguing for changing the behavior, I decided not to complain about the documentation.