On Thu, 2024-02-15 at 23:43 -0500, Paul Moore wrote: > On Feb 15, 2024 Roberto Sassu <roberto.sassu@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > IMA and EVM are not effectively LSMs, especially due to the fact that in > > the past they could not provide a security blob while there is another LSM > > active. > > > > That changed in the recent years, the LSM stacking feature now makes it > > possible to stack together multiple LSMs, and allows them to provide a > > security blob for most kernel objects. While the LSM stacking feature has > > some limitations being worked out, it is already suitable to make IMA and > > EVM as LSMs. > > > > The main purpose of this patch set is to remove IMA and EVM function calls, > > hardcoded in the LSM infrastructure and other places in the kernel, and to > > register them as LSM hook implementations, so that those functions are > > called by the LSM infrastructure like other regular LSMs. > > As discussed earlier, I've just merged this into the lsm/dev tree; a big > thank you to Roberto for working on this and to all helped along the way > with reviews, testing, etc. I've wanted to see IMA/EVM integrated as > proper LSMs for a while and I'm very happy to finally see it happening. Thank you, and thanks to all! That's an excellent news! Excited about that! > Mimi, Roberto, I'm going to hold off on merging anything into the lsm/dev > tree for a few days in case you decide you would prefer to take these > patches yourselves. If I don't hear anything from the two of you, I'll > plan to send these to Linus during the next merge window. Perfect! Roberto