From: Brian Masney <bmasney@xxxxxxxxxx> commit a680b1832ced3b5fa7c93484248fd221ea0d614b upstream. The generate function in struct rng_alg expects that the destination buffer is completely filled if the function returns 0. qcom_rng_read() can run into a situation where the buffer is partially filled with randomness and the remaining part of the buffer is zeroed since qcom_rng_generate() doesn't check the return value. This issue can be reproduced by running the following from libkcapi: kcapi-rng -b 9000000 > OUTFILE The generated OUTFILE will have three huge sections that contain all zeros, and this is caused by the code where the test 'val & PRNG_STATUS_DATA_AVAIL' fails. Let's fix this issue by ensuring that qcom_rng_read() always returns with a full buffer if the function returns success. Let's also have qcom_rng_generate() return the correct value. Here's some statistics from the ent project (https://www.fourmilab.ch/random/) that shows information about the quality of the generated numbers: $ ent -c qcom-random-before Value Char Occurrences Fraction 0 606748 0.067416 1 33104 0.003678 2 33001 0.003667 ... 253 � 32883 0.003654 254 � 33035 0.003671 255 � 33239 0.003693 Total: 9000000 1.000000 Entropy = 7.811590 bits per byte. Optimum compression would reduce the size of this 9000000 byte file by 2 percent. Chi square distribution for 9000000 samples is 9329962.81, and randomly would exceed this value less than 0.01 percent of the times. Arithmetic mean value of data bytes is 119.3731 (127.5 = random). Monte Carlo value for Pi is 3.197293333 (error 1.77 percent). Serial correlation coefficient is 0.159130 (totally uncorrelated = 0.0). Without this patch, the results of the chi-square test is 0.01%, and the numbers are certainly not random according to ent's project page. The results improve with this patch: $ ent -c qcom-random-after Value Char Occurrences Fraction 0 35432 0.003937 1 35127 0.003903 2 35424 0.003936 ... 253 � 35201 0.003911 254 � 34835 0.003871 255 � 35368 0.003930 Total: 9000000 1.000000 Entropy = 7.999979 bits per byte. Optimum compression would reduce the size of this 9000000 byte file by 0 percent. Chi square distribution for 9000000 samples is 258.77, and randomly would exceed this value 42.24 percent of the times. Arithmetic mean value of data bytes is 127.5006 (127.5 = random). Monte Carlo value for Pi is 3.141277333 (error 0.01 percent). Serial correlation coefficient is 0.000468 (totally uncorrelated = 0.0). This change was tested on a Nexus 5 phone (msm8974 SoC). Signed-off-by: Brian Masney <bmasney@xxxxxxxxxx> Fixes: ceec5f5b5988 ("crypto: qcom-rng - Add Qcom prng driver") Cc: stable@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx # 4.19+ Reviewed-by: Bjorn Andersson <bjorn.andersson@xxxxxxxxxx> Reviewed-by: Andrew Halaney <ahalaney@xxxxxxxxxx> Signed-off-by: Herbert Xu <herbert@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> --- drivers/crypto/qcom-rng.c | 17 ++++++++++------- 1 file changed, 10 insertions(+), 7 deletions(-) --- a/drivers/crypto/qcom-rng.c +++ b/drivers/crypto/qcom-rng.c @@ -7,6 +7,7 @@ #include <linux/acpi.h> #include <linux/clk.h> #include <linux/crypto.h> +#include <linux/iopoll.h> #include <linux/module.h> #include <linux/of.h> #include <linux/platform_device.h> @@ -42,16 +43,19 @@ static int qcom_rng_read(struct qcom_rng { unsigned int currsize = 0; u32 val; + int ret; /* read random data from hardware */ do { - val = readl_relaxed(rng->base + PRNG_STATUS); - if (!(val & PRNG_STATUS_DATA_AVAIL)) - break; + ret = readl_poll_timeout(rng->base + PRNG_STATUS, val, + val & PRNG_STATUS_DATA_AVAIL, + 200, 10000); + if (ret) + return ret; val = readl_relaxed(rng->base + PRNG_DATA_OUT); if (!val) - break; + return -EINVAL; if ((max - currsize) >= WORD_SZ) { memcpy(data, &val, WORD_SZ); @@ -60,11 +64,10 @@ static int qcom_rng_read(struct qcom_rng } else { /* copy only remaining bytes */ memcpy(data, &val, max - currsize); - break; } } while (currsize < max); - return currsize; + return 0; } static int qcom_rng_generate(struct crypto_rng *tfm, @@ -86,7 +89,7 @@ static int qcom_rng_generate(struct cryp mutex_unlock(&rng->lock); clk_disable_unprepare(rng->clk); - return 0; + return ret; } static int qcom_rng_seed(struct crypto_rng *tfm, const u8 *seed,