CONFIG_CRYPTO_SHA256 denotes the generic C implementation of the SHA-256
shash algorithm, which is selected as the default crypto shash provider
for fsverity. However, fsverity has no strict link time dependency, and
the same shash could be exposed by an optimized implementation, and arm64
has a number of those (scalar, NEON-based and one based on special crypto
instructions). In such cases, it makes little sense to require that the
generic C implementation is incorporated as well, given that it will never
be called.

To address this, relax the 'select' clause to 'imply' so that the generic
driver can be omitted from the build if desired.

Signed-off-by: Ard Biesheuvel <a...@kernel.org>
---
 fs/verity/Kconfig | 8 ++++++--
 1 file changed, 6 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-)

diff --git a/fs/verity/Kconfig b/fs/verity/Kconfig
index 88fb25119899..24d1b54de807 100644
--- a/fs/verity/Kconfig
+++ b/fs/verity/Kconfig
@@ -3,9 +3,13 @@
 config FS_VERITY
        bool "FS Verity (read-only file-based authenticity protection)"
        select CRYPTO
-       # SHA-256 is selected as it's intended to be the default hash algorithm.
+       # SHA-256 is implied as it's intended to be the default hash algorithm.
        # To avoid bloat, other wanted algorithms must be selected explicitly.
-       select CRYPTO_SHA256
+       # Note that CRYPTO_SHA256 denotes the generic C implementation, but
+       # some architectures provided optimized implementations of the same
+       # algorithm that may be used instead. In this case, CRYPTO_SHA256 may
+       # be omitted even if SHA-256 is being used.
+       imply CRYPTO_SHA256
        help
          This option enables fs-verity.  fs-verity is the dm-verity
          mechanism implemented at the file level.  On supported
-- 
2.30.2

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