[PATCH 1/3] crypto: mxs-dcp: Add support for hardware provided keys

Ahmad Fatoum a.fatoum at pengutronix.de
Wed Jul 14 11:01:11 UTC 2021


Hi,

On 14.07.21 12:39, Richard Weinberger wrote:
> Ahmad,
> 
> ----- Ursprüngliche Mail -----
>> Von: "Ahmad Fatoum" <a.fatoum at pengutronix.de>
>> Let's trade reviews to get the ball rolling?
> 
> Sounds like a fair deal. :-)

:)

> [...]
> 
>>> --- a/drivers/crypto/mxs-dcp.c
>>> +++ b/drivers/crypto/mxs-dcp.c
>>> @@ -15,6 +15,7 @@
>>>  #include <linux/platform_device.h>
>>>  #include <linux/stmp_device.h>
>>>  #include <linux/clk.h>
>>> +#include <linux/mxs-dcp.h>
>>
>> The CAAM specific headers are in <soc/fsl/*.h>.
>> Should this be done likewise here as well?
> 
> I have no preferences. If soc/fsl/ is the way to go, fine by me.

I think it's the more appropriate place, but if the maintainers
are fine with <linux/mxs-dcp.h>, I don't mind.

> 
> [...]
> 
>>> @@ -219,15 +224,18 @@ static int mxs_dcp_run_aes(struct dcp_async_ctx *actx,
>>>  	struct dcp *sdcp = global_sdcp;
>>>  	struct dcp_dma_desc *desc = &sdcp->coh->desc[actx->chan];
>>>  	struct dcp_aes_req_ctx *rctx = skcipher_request_ctx(req);
>>> +	dma_addr_t src_phys, dst_phys, key_phys = {0};
>>
>> Why = {0}; ? dma_addr_t is a scalar type and the value is always
>> written here before access.
> 
> Initializing a scalar with {} is allowed in C, the braces are optional.
> I like the braces because it works even when the underlaying type changes.
> But that's just a matter of taste.
> 
> key_phys is initialized because it triggered a false positive gcc warning
> on one of my targets. Let me re-run again to be sure, the code saw a lot of
> refactoring since that.
>  
> [...]
>   
>>> +static int mxs_dcp_aes_setrefkey(struct crypto_skcipher *tfm, const u8 *key,
>>> +				 unsigned int len)
>>> +{
>>> +	struct dcp_async_ctx *actx = crypto_skcipher_ctx(tfm);
>>> +	int ret = -EINVAL;
>>> +
>>> +	if (len != DCP_PAES_KEYSIZE)
>>> +		goto out;
>>
>> Nitpick: there is no cleanup, so why not return -EINVAL here
>> and unconditionally return 0 below?
> 
> What is the benefit?

Similar to why you wouldn't write: 

  if (len == DCP_PAES_KEYSIZE) { 
  	/* longer code block */
  }

  return ret;

Code is easier to scan through with early-exits.

> Usually I try to use goto to have a single exit point of a function
> but I don't have a strong preference...

It's just a nitpick. I am fine with it either way.

>>> +
>>> +	actx->key_len = len;
>>> +	actx->refkey = true;
>>> +
>>> +	switch (key[0]) {
>>> +	case DCP_PAES_KEY_SLOT0:
>>> +	case DCP_PAES_KEY_SLOT1:
>>> +	case DCP_PAES_KEY_SLOT2:
>>> +	case DCP_PAES_KEY_SLOT3:
>>> +	case DCP_PAES_KEY_UNIQUE:
>>> +	case DCP_PAES_KEY_OTP:
>>> +		memcpy(actx->key, key, len);
>>> +		ret = 0;
>>> +	}
>>
>> In the error case you return -EINVAL below, but you still write
>> into actx. Is that intentional?
> 
> You mean acts->key_len and actk->refkey?
> Is this a problem?

It's easier to reason about code when it doesn't leave objects
it operates on in invalid states on failure. Changing key_len,
but leaving actx->key uninitialized is surprising IMO.

I can't judge whether this is a problem in practice, but less
surprises are a worthwhile goal.

Cheers,
Ahmad

> 
> Thanks,
> //richard
> 


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