On 2/17/2023 16:05, Jarkko Sakkinen wrote:
Perhaps tpm_amd_* ?
When Jason first proposed this patch I feel the intent was it could cover multiple deficiencies. But as this is the only one for now, sure re-naming it is fine.
Also, just a question: is there any legit use for fTPM's, which are not updated? I.e. why would want tpm_crb to initialize with a dysfunctional firmware?> I.e. the existential question is: is it better to workaround the
issue and
let pass through, or make the user aware that the firmware would really need an update.
On 2/17/2023 16:35, Jarkko Sakkinen wrote:
Hmm, no reply since Mario posted this.
Jarkko, James, what's your stance on this? Does the patch look fine from your point of view? And does the situation justify merging this on the last minute for 6.2? Or should we merge it early for 6.3 and then backport to stable?
Ciao, Thorsten
As I stated in earlier response: do we want to forbid tpm_crb in this case or do we want to pass-through with a faulty firmware?
Not weighting either choice here I just don't see any motivating points in the commit message to pick either, that's all.
BR, Jarkko
Even if you're not using RNG functionality you can still do plenty of other things with the TPM. The RNG functionality is what tripped up this issue though. All of these issues were only raised because the kernel started using it by default for RNG and userspace wants random numbers all the time.
If the firmware was easily updatable from all the OEMs I would lean on trying to encourage people to update. But alas this has been available for over a year and a sizable number of OEMs haven't distributed a fix.
The major issue I see with forbidding tpm_crb is that users may have been using the fTPM for something and taking it away in an update could lead to a no-boot scenario if they're (for example) tying a policy to PCR values and can no longer access those.
If the consensus were to go that direction instead I would want to see a module parameter that lets users turn on the fTPM even knowing this problem exists so they could recover. That all seems pretty expensive to me for this problem.