On Thu, 2019-04-25 at 07:55 -0400, Mimi Zohar wrote: > On Wed, 2019-04-24 at 14:33 +0000, Robert Holmes wrote: > > This patch completes commit 278311e417be ("kexec, KEYS: Make use of > > platform keyring for signature verify") which, while adding the > > platform keyring for bzImage verification, neglected to also add > > this keyring for module verification. > > > > As such, kernel modules signed with keys from the MokList variable > > were not successfully verified. > > Using the platform keyring keys for verifying kernel modules was not > neglected, but rather intentional. This patch description should > clearly explain the reason for needing to verify kernel module > signatures based on the pre-boot keys. (Hint: verifying kernel > modules based on the pre-boot keys was previously rejected.) To clarify here: most Linux systems use shim/mok to pivot the root of trust away from the Secure Boot db variable to the new MokList/shim built in keys. This makes the actual secure boot db outside the expected Linux Kernel trust boundary *unless* the user has taken ownership of the system and is actually using db for their own trusted keys. This makes the policy for what pre-boot keys to trust within the Linux boundary very complex, which is why we default to not using the pre-boot keys at all. James