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Linux/Documentation/crypto/asymmetric-keys.rst

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Differences between /Documentation/crypto/asymmetric-keys.rst (Architecture sparc64) and /Documentation/crypto/asymmetric-keys.rst (Architecture i386)


  1 .. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0                 1 .. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0
  2                                                     2 
  3 =============================================       3 =============================================
  4 Asymmetric / Public-key Cryptography Key Type       4 Asymmetric / Public-key Cryptography Key Type
  5 =============================================       5 =============================================
  6                                                     6 
  7 .. Contents:                                        7 .. Contents:
  8                                                     8 
  9   - Overview.                                       9   - Overview.
 10   - Key identification.                            10   - Key identification.
 11   - Accessing asymmetric keys.                     11   - Accessing asymmetric keys.
 12     - Signature verification.                      12     - Signature verification.
 13   - Asymmetric key subtypes.                       13   - Asymmetric key subtypes.
 14   - Instantiation data parsers.                    14   - Instantiation data parsers.
 15   - Keyring link restrictions.                     15   - Keyring link restrictions.
 16                                                    16 
 17                                                    17 
 18 Overview                                           18 Overview
 19 ========                                           19 ========
 20                                                    20 
 21 The "asymmetric" key type is designed to be a      21 The "asymmetric" key type is designed to be a container for the keys used in
 22 public-key cryptography, without imposing any      22 public-key cryptography, without imposing any particular restrictions on the
 23 form or mechanism of the cryptography or form      23 form or mechanism of the cryptography or form of the key.
 24                                                    24 
 25 The asymmetric key is given a subtype that def     25 The asymmetric key is given a subtype that defines what sort of data is
 26 associated with the key and provides operation     26 associated with the key and provides operations to describe and destroy it.
 27 However, no requirement is made that the key d     27 However, no requirement is made that the key data actually be stored in the
 28 key.                                               28 key.
 29                                                    29 
 30 A completely in-kernel key retention and opera     30 A completely in-kernel key retention and operation subtype can be defined, but
 31 it would also be possible to provide access to     31 it would also be possible to provide access to cryptographic hardware (such as
 32 a TPM) that might be used to both retain the r     32 a TPM) that might be used to both retain the relevant key and perform
 33 operations using that key.  In such a case, th     33 operations using that key.  In such a case, the asymmetric key would then
 34 merely be an interface to the TPM driver.          34 merely be an interface to the TPM driver.
 35                                                    35 
 36 Also provided is the concept of a data parser.     36 Also provided is the concept of a data parser.  Data parsers are responsible
 37 for extracting information from the blobs of d     37 for extracting information from the blobs of data passed to the instantiation
 38 function.  The first data parser that recognis     38 function.  The first data parser that recognises the blob gets to set the
 39 subtype of the key and define the operations t     39 subtype of the key and define the operations that can be done on that key.
 40                                                    40 
 41 A data parser may interpret the data blob as c     41 A data parser may interpret the data blob as containing the bits representing a
 42 key, or it may interpret it as a reference to      42 key, or it may interpret it as a reference to a key held somewhere else in the
 43 system (for example, a TPM).                       43 system (for example, a TPM).
 44                                                    44 
 45                                                    45 
 46 Key Identification                                 46 Key Identification
 47 ==================                                 47 ==================
 48                                                    48 
 49 If a key is added with an empty name, the inst     49 If a key is added with an empty name, the instantiation data parsers are given
 50 the opportunity to pre-parse a key and to dete     50 the opportunity to pre-parse a key and to determine the description the key
 51 should be given from the content of the key.       51 should be given from the content of the key.
 52                                                    52 
 53 This can then be used to refer to the key, eit     53 This can then be used to refer to the key, either by complete match or by
 54 partial match.  The key type may also use othe     54 partial match.  The key type may also use other criteria to refer to a key.
 55                                                    55 
 56 The asymmetric key type's match function can t     56 The asymmetric key type's match function can then perform a wider range of
 57 comparisons than just the straightforward comp     57 comparisons than just the straightforward comparison of the description with
 58 the criterion string:                              58 the criterion string:
 59                                                    59 
 60   1) If the criterion string is of the form "i     60   1) If the criterion string is of the form "id:<hexdigits>" then the match
 61      function will examine a key's fingerprint     61      function will examine a key's fingerprint to see if the hex digits given
 62      after the "id:" match the tail.  For inst     62      after the "id:" match the tail.  For instance::
 63                                                    63 
 64         keyctl search @s asymmetric id:5acc214     64         keyctl search @s asymmetric id:5acc2142
 65                                                    65 
 66      will match a key with fingerprint::           66      will match a key with fingerprint::
 67                                                    67 
 68         1A00 2040 7601 7889 DE11  882C 3823 04     68         1A00 2040 7601 7889 DE11  882C 3823 04AD 5ACC 2142
 69                                                    69 
 70   2) If the criterion string is of the form "<     70   2) If the criterion string is of the form "<subtype>:<hexdigits>" then the
 71      match will match the ID as in (1), but wi     71      match will match the ID as in (1), but with the added restriction that
 72      only keys of the specified subtype (e.g.      72      only keys of the specified subtype (e.g. tpm) will be matched.  For
 73      instance::                                    73      instance::
 74                                                    74 
 75         keyctl search @s asymmetric tpm:5acc21     75         keyctl search @s asymmetric tpm:5acc2142
 76                                                    76 
 77 Looking in /proc/keys, the last 8 hex digits o     77 Looking in /proc/keys, the last 8 hex digits of the key fingerprint are
 78 displayed, along with the subtype::                78 displayed, along with the subtype::
 79                                                    79 
 80         1a39e171 I-----     1 perm 3f010000        80         1a39e171 I-----     1 perm 3f010000     0     0 asymmetric modsign.0: DSA 5acc2142 []
 81                                                    81 
 82                                                    82 
 83 Accessing Asymmetric Keys                          83 Accessing Asymmetric Keys
 84 =========================                          84 =========================
 85                                                    85 
 86 For general access to asymmetric keys from wit     86 For general access to asymmetric keys from within the kernel, the following
 87 inclusion is required::                            87 inclusion is required::
 88                                                    88 
 89         #include <crypto/public_key.h>             89         #include <crypto/public_key.h>
 90                                                    90 
 91 This gives access to functions for dealing wit     91 This gives access to functions for dealing with asymmetric / public keys.
 92 Three enums are defined there for representing     92 Three enums are defined there for representing public-key cryptography
 93 algorithms::                                       93 algorithms::
 94                                                    94 
 95         enum pkey_algo                             95         enum pkey_algo
 96                                                    96 
 97 digest algorithms used by those::                  97 digest algorithms used by those::
 98                                                    98 
 99         enum pkey_hash_algo                        99         enum pkey_hash_algo
100                                                   100 
101 and key identifier representations::              101 and key identifier representations::
102                                                   102 
103         enum pkey_id_type                         103         enum pkey_id_type
104                                                   104 
105 Note that the key type representation types ar    105 Note that the key type representation types are required because key
106 identifiers from different standards aren't ne    106 identifiers from different standards aren't necessarily compatible.  For
107 instance, PGP generates key identifiers by has    107 instance, PGP generates key identifiers by hashing the key data plus some
108 PGP-specific metadata, whereas X.509 has arbit    108 PGP-specific metadata, whereas X.509 has arbitrary certificate identifiers.
109                                                   109 
110 The operations defined upon a key are:            110 The operations defined upon a key are:
111                                                   111 
112   1) Signature verification.                      112   1) Signature verification.
113                                                   113 
114 Other operations are possible (such as encrypt    114 Other operations are possible (such as encryption) with the same key data
115 required for verification, but not currently s    115 required for verification, but not currently supported, and others
116 (eg. decryption and signature generation) requ    116 (eg. decryption and signature generation) require extra key data.
117                                                   117 
118                                                   118 
119 Signature Verification                            119 Signature Verification
120 ----------------------                            120 ----------------------
121                                                   121 
122 An operation is provided to perform cryptograp    122 An operation is provided to perform cryptographic signature verification, using
123 an asymmetric key to provide or to provide acc    123 an asymmetric key to provide or to provide access to the public key::
124                                                   124 
125         int verify_signature(const struct key     125         int verify_signature(const struct key *key,
126                              const struct publ    126                              const struct public_key_signature *sig);
127                                                   127 
128 The caller must have already obtained the key     128 The caller must have already obtained the key from some source and can then use
129 it to check the signature.  The caller must ha    129 it to check the signature.  The caller must have parsed the signature and
130 transferred the relevant bits to the structure    130 transferred the relevant bits to the structure pointed to by sig::
131                                                   131 
132         struct public_key_signature {             132         struct public_key_signature {
133                 u8 *digest;                       133                 u8 *digest;
134                 u8 digest_size;                   134                 u8 digest_size;
135                 enum pkey_hash_algo pkey_hash_    135                 enum pkey_hash_algo pkey_hash_algo : 8;
136                 u8 nr_mpi;                        136                 u8 nr_mpi;
137                 union {                           137                 union {
138                         MPI mpi[2];               138                         MPI mpi[2];
139                         ...                       139                         ...
140                 };                                140                 };
141         };                                        141         };
142                                                   142 
143 The algorithm used must be noted in sig->pkey_    143 The algorithm used must be noted in sig->pkey_hash_algo, and all the MPIs that
144 make up the actual signature must be stored in    144 make up the actual signature must be stored in sig->mpi[] and the count of MPIs
145 placed in sig->nr_mpi.                            145 placed in sig->nr_mpi.
146                                                   146 
147 In addition, the data must have been digested     147 In addition, the data must have been digested by the caller and the resulting
148 hash must be pointed to by sig->digest and the    148 hash must be pointed to by sig->digest and the size of the hash be placed in
149 sig->digest_size.                                 149 sig->digest_size.
150                                                   150 
151 The function will return 0 upon success or -EK    151 The function will return 0 upon success or -EKEYREJECTED if the signature
152 doesn't match.                                    152 doesn't match.
153                                                   153 
154 The function may also return -ENOTSUPP if an u    154 The function may also return -ENOTSUPP if an unsupported public-key algorithm
155 or public-key/hash algorithm combination is sp    155 or public-key/hash algorithm combination is specified or the key doesn't
156 support the operation; -EBADMSG or -ERANGE if     156 support the operation; -EBADMSG or -ERANGE if some of the parameters have weird
157 data; or -ENOMEM if an allocation can't be per    157 data; or -ENOMEM if an allocation can't be performed.  -EINVAL can be returned
158 if the key argument is the wrong type or is in    158 if the key argument is the wrong type or is incompletely set up.
159                                                   159 
160                                                   160 
161 Asymmetric Key Subtypes                           161 Asymmetric Key Subtypes
162 =======================                           162 =======================
163                                                   163 
164 Asymmetric keys have a subtype that defines th    164 Asymmetric keys have a subtype that defines the set of operations that can be
165 performed on that key and that determines what    165 performed on that key and that determines what data is attached as the key
166 payload.  The payload format is entirely at th    166 payload.  The payload format is entirely at the whim of the subtype.
167                                                   167 
168 The subtype is selected by the key data parser    168 The subtype is selected by the key data parser and the parser must initialise
169 the data required for it.  The asymmetric key     169 the data required for it.  The asymmetric key retains a reference on the
170 subtype module.                                   170 subtype module.
171                                                   171 
172 The subtype definition structure can be found     172 The subtype definition structure can be found in::
173                                                   173 
174         #include <keys/asymmetric-subtype.h>      174         #include <keys/asymmetric-subtype.h>
175                                                   175 
176 and looks like the following::                    176 and looks like the following::
177                                                   177 
178         struct asymmetric_key_subtype {           178         struct asymmetric_key_subtype {
179                 struct module           *owner    179                 struct module           *owner;
180                 const char              *name;    180                 const char              *name;
181                                                   181 
182                 void (*describe)(const struct     182                 void (*describe)(const struct key *key, struct seq_file *m);
183                 void (*destroy)(void *payload)    183                 void (*destroy)(void *payload);
184                 int (*query)(const struct kern    184                 int (*query)(const struct kernel_pkey_params *params,
185                              struct kernel_pke    185                              struct kernel_pkey_query *info);
186                 int (*eds_op)(struct kernel_pk    186                 int (*eds_op)(struct kernel_pkey_params *params,
187                               const void *in,     187                               const void *in, void *out);
188                 int (*verify_signature)(const     188                 int (*verify_signature)(const struct key *key,
189                                         const     189                                         const struct public_key_signature *sig);
190         };                                        190         };
191                                                   191 
192 Asymmetric keys point to this with their paylo    192 Asymmetric keys point to this with their payload[asym_subtype] member.
193                                                   193 
194 The owner and name fields should be set to the    194 The owner and name fields should be set to the owning module and the name of
195 the subtype.  Currently, the name is only used    195 the subtype.  Currently, the name is only used for print statements.
196                                                   196 
197 There are a number of operations defined by th    197 There are a number of operations defined by the subtype:
198                                                   198 
199   1) describe().                                  199   1) describe().
200                                                   200 
201      Mandatory.  This allows the subtype to di    201      Mandatory.  This allows the subtype to display something in /proc/keys
202      against the key.  For instance the name o    202      against the key.  For instance the name of the public key algorithm type
203      could be displayed.  The key type will di    203      could be displayed.  The key type will display the tail of the key
204      identity string after this.                  204      identity string after this.
205                                                   205 
206   2) destroy().                                   206   2) destroy().
207                                                   207 
208      Mandatory.  This should free the memory a    208      Mandatory.  This should free the memory associated with the key.  The
209      asymmetric key will look after freeing th    209      asymmetric key will look after freeing the fingerprint and releasing the
210      reference on the subtype module.             210      reference on the subtype module.
211                                                   211 
212   3) query().                                     212   3) query().
213                                                   213 
214      Mandatory.  This is a function for queryi    214      Mandatory.  This is a function for querying the capabilities of a key.
215                                                   215 
216   4) eds_op().                                    216   4) eds_op().
217                                                   217 
218      Optional.  This is the entry point for th    218      Optional.  This is the entry point for the encryption, decryption and
219      signature creation operations (which are     219      signature creation operations (which are distinguished by the operation ID
220      in the parameter struct).  The subtype ma    220      in the parameter struct).  The subtype may do anything it likes to
221      implement an operation, including offload    221      implement an operation, including offloading to hardware.
222                                                   222 
223   5) verify_signature().                          223   5) verify_signature().
224                                                   224 
225      Optional.  This is the entry point for si    225      Optional.  This is the entry point for signature verification.  The
226      subtype may do anything it likes to imple    226      subtype may do anything it likes to implement an operation, including
227      offloading to hardware.                      227      offloading to hardware.
228                                                   228 
229 Instantiation Data Parsers                        229 Instantiation Data Parsers
230 ==========================                        230 ==========================
231                                                   231 
232 The asymmetric key type doesn't generally want    232 The asymmetric key type doesn't generally want to store or to deal with a raw
233 blob of data that holds the key data.  It woul    233 blob of data that holds the key data.  It would have to parse it and error
234 check it each time it wanted to use it.  Furth    234 check it each time it wanted to use it.  Further, the contents of the blob may
235 have various checks that can be performed on i    235 have various checks that can be performed on it (eg. self-signatures, validity
236 dates) and may contain useful data about the k    236 dates) and may contain useful data about the key (identifiers, capabilities).
237                                                   237 
238 Also, the blob may represent a pointer to some    238 Also, the blob may represent a pointer to some hardware containing the key
239 rather than the key itself.                       239 rather than the key itself.
240                                                   240 
241 Examples of blob formats for which parsers cou    241 Examples of blob formats for which parsers could be implemented include:
242                                                   242 
243  - OpenPGP packet stream [RFC 4880].              243  - OpenPGP packet stream [RFC 4880].
244  - X.509 ASN.1 stream.                            244  - X.509 ASN.1 stream.
245  - Pointer to TPM key.                            245  - Pointer to TPM key.
246  - Pointer to UEFI key.                           246  - Pointer to UEFI key.
247  - PKCS#8 private key [RFC 5208].                 247  - PKCS#8 private key [RFC 5208].
248  - PKCS#5 encrypted private key [RFC 2898].       248  - PKCS#5 encrypted private key [RFC 2898].
249                                                   249 
250 During key instantiation each parser in the li    250 During key instantiation each parser in the list is tried until one doesn't
251 return -EBADMSG.                                  251 return -EBADMSG.
252                                                   252 
253 The parser definition structure can be found i    253 The parser definition structure can be found in::
254                                                   254 
255         #include <keys/asymmetric-parser.h>       255         #include <keys/asymmetric-parser.h>
256                                                   256 
257 and looks like the following::                    257 and looks like the following::
258                                                   258 
259         struct asymmetric_key_parser {            259         struct asymmetric_key_parser {
260                 struct module   *owner;           260                 struct module   *owner;
261                 const char      *name;            261                 const char      *name;
262                                                   262 
263                 int (*parse)(struct key_prepar    263                 int (*parse)(struct key_preparsed_payload *prep);
264         };                                        264         };
265                                                   265 
266 The owner and name fields should be set to the    266 The owner and name fields should be set to the owning module and the name of
267 the parser.                                       267 the parser.
268                                                   268 
269 There is currently only a single operation def    269 There is currently only a single operation defined by the parser, and it is
270 mandatory:                                        270 mandatory:
271                                                   271 
272   1) parse().                                     272   1) parse().
273                                                   273 
274      This is called to preparse the key from t    274      This is called to preparse the key from the key creation and update paths.
275      In particular, it is called during the ke    275      In particular, it is called during the key creation _before_ a key is
276      allocated, and as such, is permitted to p    276      allocated, and as such, is permitted to provide the key's description in
277      the case that the caller declines to do s    277      the case that the caller declines to do so.
278                                                   278 
279      The caller passes a pointer to the follow    279      The caller passes a pointer to the following struct with all of the fields
280      cleared, except for data, datalen and quo    280      cleared, except for data, datalen and quotalen [see
281      Documentation/security/keys/core.rst]::      281      Documentation/security/keys/core.rst]::
282                                                   282 
283         struct key_preparsed_payload {            283         struct key_preparsed_payload {
284                 char            *description;     284                 char            *description;
285                 void            *payload[4];      285                 void            *payload[4];
286                 const void      *data;            286                 const void      *data;
287                 size_t          datalen;          287                 size_t          datalen;
288                 size_t          quotalen;         288                 size_t          quotalen;
289         };                                        289         };
290                                                   290 
291      The instantiation data is in a blob point    291      The instantiation data is in a blob pointed to by data and is datalen in
292      size.  The parse() function is not permit    292      size.  The parse() function is not permitted to change these two values at
293      all, and shouldn't change any of the othe    293      all, and shouldn't change any of the other values _unless_ they are
294      recognise the blob format and will not re    294      recognise the blob format and will not return -EBADMSG to indicate it is
295      not theirs.                                  295      not theirs.
296                                                   296 
297      If the parser is happy with the blob, it     297      If the parser is happy with the blob, it should propose a description for
298      the key and attach it to ->description, -    298      the key and attach it to ->description, ->payload[asym_subtype] should be
299      set to point to the subtype to be used, -    299      set to point to the subtype to be used, ->payload[asym_crypto] should be
300      set to point to the initialised data for     300      set to point to the initialised data for that subtype,
301      ->payload[asym_key_ids] should point to o    301      ->payload[asym_key_ids] should point to one or more hex fingerprints and
302      quotalen should be updated to indicate ho    302      quotalen should be updated to indicate how much quota this key should
303      account for.                                 303      account for.
304                                                   304 
305      When clearing up, the data attached to ->    305      When clearing up, the data attached to ->payload[asym_key_ids] and
306      ->description will be kfree()'d and the d    306      ->description will be kfree()'d and the data attached to
307      ->payload[asm_crypto] will be passed to t    307      ->payload[asm_crypto] will be passed to the subtype's ->destroy() method
308      to be disposed of.  A module reference fo    308      to be disposed of.  A module reference for the subtype pointed to by
309      ->payload[asym_subtype] will be put.         309      ->payload[asym_subtype] will be put.
310                                                   310 
311                                                   311 
312      If the data format is not recognised, -EB    312      If the data format is not recognised, -EBADMSG should be returned.  If it
313      is recognised, but the key cannot for som    313      is recognised, but the key cannot for some reason be set up, some other
314      negative error code should be returned.      314      negative error code should be returned.  On success, 0 should be returned.
315                                                   315 
316      The key's fingerprint string may be parti    316      The key's fingerprint string may be partially matched upon.  For a
317      public-key algorithm such as RSA and DSA     317      public-key algorithm such as RSA and DSA this will likely be a printable
318      hex version of the key's fingerprint.        318      hex version of the key's fingerprint.
319                                                   319 
320 Functions are provided to register and unregis    320 Functions are provided to register and unregister parsers::
321                                                   321 
322         int register_asymmetric_key_parser(str    322         int register_asymmetric_key_parser(struct asymmetric_key_parser *parser);
323         void unregister_asymmetric_key_parser(    323         void unregister_asymmetric_key_parser(struct asymmetric_key_parser *subtype);
324                                                   324 
325 Parsers may not have the same name.  The names    325 Parsers may not have the same name.  The names are otherwise only used for
326 displaying in debugging messages.                 326 displaying in debugging messages.
327                                                   327 
328                                                   328 
329 Keyring Link Restrictions                         329 Keyring Link Restrictions
330 =========================                         330 =========================
331                                                   331 
332 Keyrings created from userspace using add_key     332 Keyrings created from userspace using add_key can be configured to check the
333 signature of the key being linked.  Keys witho    333 signature of the key being linked.  Keys without a valid signature are not
334 allowed to link.                                  334 allowed to link.
335                                                   335 
336 Several restriction methods are available:        336 Several restriction methods are available:
337                                                   337 
338   1) Restrict using the kernel builtin trusted    338   1) Restrict using the kernel builtin trusted keyring
339                                                   339 
340      - Option string used with KEYCTL_RESTRICT    340      - Option string used with KEYCTL_RESTRICT_KEYRING:
341        - "builtin_trusted"                        341        - "builtin_trusted"
342                                                   342 
343      The kernel builtin trusted keyring will b    343      The kernel builtin trusted keyring will be searched for the signing key.
344      If the builtin trusted keyring is not con    344      If the builtin trusted keyring is not configured, all links will be
345      rejected.  The ca_keys kernel parameter a    345      rejected.  The ca_keys kernel parameter also affects which keys are used
346      for signature verification.                  346      for signature verification.
347                                                   347 
348   2) Restrict using the kernel builtin and sec    348   2) Restrict using the kernel builtin and secondary trusted keyrings
349                                                   349 
350      - Option string used with KEYCTL_RESTRICT    350      - Option string used with KEYCTL_RESTRICT_KEYRING:
351        - "builtin_and_secondary_trusted"          351        - "builtin_and_secondary_trusted"
352                                                   352 
353      The kernel builtin and secondary trusted     353      The kernel builtin and secondary trusted keyrings will be searched for the
354      signing key.  If the secondary trusted ke    354      signing key.  If the secondary trusted keyring is not configured, this
355      restriction will behave like the "builtin    355      restriction will behave like the "builtin_trusted" option.  The ca_keys
356      kernel parameter also affects which keys     356      kernel parameter also affects which keys are used for signature
357      verification.                                357      verification.
358                                                   358 
359   3) Restrict using a separate key or keyring     359   3) Restrict using a separate key or keyring
360                                                   360 
361      - Option string used with KEYCTL_RESTRICT    361      - Option string used with KEYCTL_RESTRICT_KEYRING:
362        - "key_or_keyring:<key or keyring seria    362        - "key_or_keyring:<key or keyring serial number>[:chain]"
363                                                   363 
364      Whenever a key link is requested, the lin    364      Whenever a key link is requested, the link will only succeed if the key
365      being linked is signed by one of the desi    365      being linked is signed by one of the designated keys.  This key may be
366      specified directly by providing a serial     366      specified directly by providing a serial number for one asymmetric key, or
367      a group of keys may be searched for the s    367      a group of keys may be searched for the signing key by providing the
368      serial number for a keyring.                 368      serial number for a keyring.
369                                                   369 
370      When the "chain" option is provided at th    370      When the "chain" option is provided at the end of the string, the keys
371      within the destination keyring will also     371      within the destination keyring will also be searched for signing keys.
372      This allows for verification of certifica    372      This allows for verification of certificate chains by adding each
373      certificate in order (starting closest to    373      certificate in order (starting closest to the root) to a keyring.  For
374      instance, one keyring can be populated wi    374      instance, one keyring can be populated with links to a set of root
375      certificates, with a separate, restricted    375      certificates, with a separate, restricted keyring set up for each
376      certificate chain to be validated::          376      certificate chain to be validated::
377                                                   377 
378         # Create and populate a keyring for ro    378         # Create and populate a keyring for root certificates
379         root_id=`keyctl add keyring root-certs    379         root_id=`keyctl add keyring root-certs "" @s`
380         keyctl padd asymmetric "" $root_id < r    380         keyctl padd asymmetric "" $root_id < root1.cert
381         keyctl padd asymmetric "" $root_id < r    381         keyctl padd asymmetric "" $root_id < root2.cert
382                                                   382 
383         # Create and restrict a keyring for th    383         # Create and restrict a keyring for the certificate chain
384         chain_id=`keyctl add keyring chain ""     384         chain_id=`keyctl add keyring chain "" @s`
385         keyctl restrict_keyring $chain_id asym    385         keyctl restrict_keyring $chain_id asymmetric key_or_keyring:$root_id:chain
386                                                   386 
387         # Attempt to add each certificate in t    387         # Attempt to add each certificate in the chain, starting with the
388         # certificate closest to the root.        388         # certificate closest to the root.
389         keyctl padd asymmetric "" $chain_id <     389         keyctl padd asymmetric "" $chain_id < intermediateA.cert
390         keyctl padd asymmetric "" $chain_id <     390         keyctl padd asymmetric "" $chain_id < intermediateB.cert
391         keyctl padd asymmetric "" $chain_id <     391         keyctl padd asymmetric "" $chain_id < end-entity.cert
392                                                   392 
393      If the final end-entity certificate is su    393      If the final end-entity certificate is successfully added to the "chain"
394      keyring, we can be certain that it has a     394      keyring, we can be certain that it has a valid signing chain going back to
395      one of the root certificates.                395      one of the root certificates.
396                                                   396 
397      A single keyring can be used to verify a     397      A single keyring can be used to verify a chain of signatures by
398      restricting the keyring after linking the    398      restricting the keyring after linking the root certificate::
399                                                   399 
400         # Create a keyring for the certificate    400         # Create a keyring for the certificate chain and add the root
401         chain2_id=`keyctl add keyring chain2 "    401         chain2_id=`keyctl add keyring chain2 "" @s`
402         keyctl padd asymmetric "" $chain2_id <    402         keyctl padd asymmetric "" $chain2_id < root1.cert
403                                                   403 
404         # Restrict the keyring that already ha    404         # Restrict the keyring that already has root1.cert linked.  The cert
405         # will remain linked by the keyring.      405         # will remain linked by the keyring.
406         keyctl restrict_keyring $chain2_id asy    406         keyctl restrict_keyring $chain2_id asymmetric key_or_keyring:0:chain
407                                                   407 
408         # Attempt to add each certificate in t    408         # Attempt to add each certificate in the chain, starting with the
409         # certificate closest to the root.        409         # certificate closest to the root.
410         keyctl padd asymmetric "" $chain2_id <    410         keyctl padd asymmetric "" $chain2_id < intermediateA.cert
411         keyctl padd asymmetric "" $chain2_id <    411         keyctl padd asymmetric "" $chain2_id < intermediateB.cert
412         keyctl padd asymmetric "" $chain2_id <    412         keyctl padd asymmetric "" $chain2_id < end-entity.cert
413                                                   413 
414      If the final end-entity certificate is su    414      If the final end-entity certificate is successfully added to the "chain2"
415      keyring, we can be certain that there is     415      keyring, we can be certain that there is a valid signing chain going back
416      to the root certificate that was added be    416      to the root certificate that was added before the keyring was restricted.
417                                                   417 
418                                                   418 
419 In all of these cases, if the signing key is f    419 In all of these cases, if the signing key is found the signature of the key to
420 be linked will be verified using the signing k    420 be linked will be verified using the signing key.  The requested key is added
421 to the keyring only if the signature is succes    421 to the keyring only if the signature is successfully verified.  -ENOKEY is
422 returned if the parent certificate could not b    422 returned if the parent certificate could not be found, or -EKEYREJECTED is
423 returned if the signature check fails or the k    423 returned if the signature check fails or the key is blacklisted.  Other errors
424 may be returned if the signature check could n    424 may be returned if the signature check could not be performed.
                                                      

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