Kernel-4.18.0-80.el8_verity

dm-verity

Device-Mapper’s “verity” target provides transparent integrity checking of
block devices using a cryptographic digest provided by the kernel crypto API.
This target is read-only.

Construction Parameters

<version> <dev> <hash_dev>
<data_block_size> <hash_block_size>
<num_data_blocks> <hash_start_block>
<algorithm> <digest> <salt>
[<#opt_params> <opt_params>]
This is the type of the on-disk hash format.
0 is the original format used in the Chromium OS.
  The salt is appended when hashing, digests are stored continuously and
  the rest of the block is padded with zeroes.

1 is the current format that should be used for new devices.
  The salt is prepended when hashing and each digest is
  padded with zeroes to the power of two.
This is the device containing data, the integrity of which needs to be checked. It may be specified as a path, like /dev/sdaX, or a device number, :. This is the device that supplies the hash tree data. It may be specified similarly to the device path and may be the same device. If the same device is used, the hash_start should be outside the configured dm-verity device. The block size on a data device in bytes. Each block corresponds to one digest on the hash device. The size of a hash block in bytes. The number of data blocks on the data device. Additional blocks are inaccessible. You can place hashes to the same partition as data, in this case hashes are placed after . This is the offset, in -blocks, from the start of hash_dev to the root block of the hash tree. The cryptographic hash algorithm used for this device. This should be the name of the algorithm, like "sha1". The hexadecimal encoding of the cryptographic hash of the root hash block and the salt. This hash should be trusted as there is no other authenticity beyond this point. The hexadecimal encoding of the salt value.

<#opt_params>
Number of optional parameters. If there are no optional parameters,
the optional paramaters section can be skipped or #opt_params can be zero.
Otherwise #opt_params is the number of following arguments.

Example of optional parameters section:
    1 ignore_corruption

ignore_corruption
Log corrupted blocks, but allow read operations to proceed normally.

restart_on_corruption
Restart the system when a corrupted block is discovered. This option is
not compatible with ignore_corruption and requires user space support to
avoid restart loops.

ignore_zero_blocks
Do not verify blocks that are expected to contain zeroes and always return
zeroes instead. This may be useful if the partition contains unused blocks
that are not guaranteed to contain zeroes.

use_fec_from_device
Use forward error correction (FEC) to recover from corruption if hash
verification fails. Use encoding data from the specified device. This
may be the same device where data and hash blocks reside, in which case
fec_start must be outside data and hash areas.

If the encoding data covers additional metadata, it must be accessible
on the hash device after the hash blocks.

Note: block sizes for data and hash devices must match. Also, if the
verity <dev> is encrypted the <fec_dev> should be too.

fec_roots
Number of generator roots. This equals to the number of parity bytes in
the encoding data. For example, in RS(M, N) encoding, the number of roots
is M-N.

fec_blocks
The number of encoding data blocks on the FEC device. The block size for
the FEC device is .

fec_start
This is the offset, in blocks, from the start of the
FEC device to the beginning of the encoding data.

check_at_most_once
Verify data blocks only the first time they are read from the data device,
rather than every time. This reduces the overhead of dm-verity so that it
can be used on systems that are memory and/or CPU constrained. However, it
provides a reduced level of security because only offline tampering of the
data device’s content will be detected, not online tampering.

Hash blocks are still verified each time they are read from the hash device,
since verification of hash blocks is less performance critical than data
blocks, and a hash block will not be verified any more after all the data
blocks it covers have been verified anyway.

Theory of operation

dm-verity is meant to be set up as part of a verified boot path. This
may be anything ranging from a boot using tboot or trustedgrub to just
booting from a known-good device (like a USB drive or CD).

When a dm-verity device is configured, it is expected that the caller
has been authenticated in some way (cryptographic signatures, etc).
After instantiation, all hashes will be verified on-demand during
disk access. If they cannot be verified up to the root node of the
tree, the root hash, then the I/O will fail. This should detect
tampering with any data on the device and the hash data.

Cryptographic hashes are used to assert the integrity of the device on a
per-block basis. This allows for a lightweight hash computation on first read
into the page cache. Block hashes are stored linearly, aligned to the nearest
block size.

If forward error correction (FEC) support is enabled any recovery of
corrupted data will be verified using the cryptographic hash of the
corresponding data. This is why combining error correction with
integrity checking is essential.

Hash Tree

Each node in the tree is a cryptographic hash. If it is a leaf node, the hash
of some data block on disk is calculated. If it is an intermediary node,
the hash of a number of child nodes is calculated.

Each entry in the tree is a collection of neighboring nodes that fit in one
block. The number is determined based on block_size and the size of the
selected cryptographic digest algorithm. The hashes are linearly-ordered in
this entry and any unaligned trailing space is ignored but included when
calculating the parent node.

The tree looks something like:

alg = sha256, num_blocks = 32768, block_size = 4096

                             [   root    ]
                            /    . . .    \
                 [entry_0]                 [entry_1]
                /  . . .  \                 . . .   \
     [entry_0_0]   . . .  [entry_0_127]    . . . .  [entry_1_127]
       / ... \             /   . . .  \             /           \
 blk_0 ... blk_127  blk_16256   blk_16383      blk_32640 . . . blk_32767

On-disk format

The verity kernel code does not read the verity metadata on-disk header.
It only reads the hash blocks which directly follow the header.
It is expected that a user-space tool will verify the integrity of the
verity header.

Alternatively, the header can be omitted and the dmsetup parameters can
be passed via the kernel command-line in a rooted chain of trust where
the command-line is verified.

Directly following the header (and with sector number padded to the next hash
block boundary) are the hash blocks which are stored a depth at a time
(starting from the root), sorted in order of increasing index.

The full specification of kernel parameters and on-disk metadata format
is available at the cryptsetup project’s wiki page
https://gitlab.com/cryptsetup/cryptsetup/wikis/DMVerity

Status

V (for Valid) is returned if every check performed so far was valid.
If any check failed, C (for Corruption) is returned.

Example

Set up a device:

dmsetup create vroot –readonly –table \

"0 2097152 verity 1 /dev/sda1 /dev/sda2 4096 4096 262144 1 sha256 "\
"4392712ba01368efdf14b05c76f9e4df0d53664630b5d48632ed17a137f39076 "\
"1234000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000"

A command line tool veritysetup is available to compute or verify
the hash tree or activate the kernel device. This is available from
the cryptsetup upstream repository https://gitlab.com/cryptsetup/cryptsetup/
(as a libcryptsetup extension).

Create hash on the device:

veritysetup format /dev/sda1 /dev/sda2


Root hash: 4392712ba01368efdf14b05c76f9e4df0d53664630b5d48632ed17a137f39076

Activate the device:

veritysetup create vroot /dev/sda1 /dev/sda2 \

4392712ba01368efdf14b05c76f9e4df0d53664630b5d48632ed17a137f39076