On Thu, Jan 07, 2021 at 07:37:05AM +0100, Stephan Mueller wrote: > Am Montag, dem 04.01.2021 um 14:20 -0800 schrieb Eric Biggers: > > On Mon, Jan 04, 2021 at 10:45:57PM +0100, Stephan Müller wrote: > > > The HKDF addition is used to replace the implementation in the filesystem > > > crypto extension. This code was tested by using an EXT4 encrypted file > > > system that was created and contains files written to by the current > > > implementation. Using the new implementation a successful read of the > > > existing files was possible and new files / directories were created > > > and read successfully. These newly added file system objects could be > > > successfully read using the current code. Yet if there is a test suite > > > to validate whether the invokcation of the HKDF calculates the same > > > result as the existing implementation, I would be happy to validate > > > the implementation accordingly. > > > > See https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/latest/filesystems/fscrypt.html#tests > > for how to run the fscrypt tests. 'kvm-xfstests -c ext4 generic/582' should > > be > > enough for this, though you could run all the tests if you want. > > I ran the $(kvm-xfstests -c encrypt -g auto) on 5.11-rc2 with and without my > HKDF changes. I.e. the testing shows the same results for both kernels which > seems to imply that my HKDF changes do not change the behavior. > > I get the following errors in both occasions - let me know if I should dig a > bit more.
The command you ran runs almost all xfstests with the test_dummy_encryption mount option enabled, which is different from running the encryption tests -- and in fact it skips the real encryption tests, so it doesn't test the correctness of HKDF at all. It looks like you saw some unrelated test failures. Sorry if I wasn't clear -- by "all tests" I meant all encryption tests, i.e. 'kvm-xfstests -c ext4 -g encrypt'. Also, even the single test generic/582 should be sufficient to test HKDF, as I mentioned. - Eric