xref: /openbmc/linux/security/keys/Kconfig (revision 3745488e)
1# SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0-only
2#
3# Key management configuration
4#
5
6config KEYS
7	bool "Enable access key retention support"
8	select ASSOCIATIVE_ARRAY
9	help
10	  This option provides support for retaining authentication tokens and
11	  access keys in the kernel.
12
13	  It also includes provision of methods by which such keys might be
14	  associated with a process so that network filesystems, encryption
15	  support and the like can find them.
16
17	  Furthermore, a special type of key is available that acts as keyring:
18	  a searchable sequence of keys. Each process is equipped with access
19	  to five standard keyrings: UID-specific, GID-specific, session,
20	  process and thread.
21
22	  If you are unsure as to whether this is required, answer N.
23
24config KEYS_REQUEST_CACHE
25	bool "Enable temporary caching of the last request_key() result"
26	depends on KEYS
27	help
28	  This option causes the result of the last successful request_key()
29	  call that didn't upcall to the kernel to be cached temporarily in the
30	  task_struct.  The cache is cleared by exit and just prior to the
31	  resumption of userspace.
32
33	  This allows the key used for multiple step processes where each step
34	  wants to request a key that is likely the same as the one requested
35	  by the last step to save on the searching.
36
37	  An example of such a process is a pathwalk through a network
38	  filesystem in which each method needs to request an authentication
39	  key.  Pathwalk will call multiple methods for each dentry traversed
40	  (permission, d_revalidate, lookup, getxattr, getacl, ...).
41
42config PERSISTENT_KEYRINGS
43	bool "Enable register of persistent per-UID keyrings"
44	depends on KEYS
45	help
46	  This option provides a register of persistent per-UID keyrings,
47	  primarily aimed at Kerberos key storage.  The keyrings are persistent
48	  in the sense that they stay around after all processes of that UID
49	  have exited, not that they survive the machine being rebooted.
50
51	  A particular keyring may be accessed by either the user whose keyring
52	  it is or by a process with administrative privileges.  The active
53	  LSMs gets to rule on which admin-level processes get to access the
54	  cache.
55
56	  Keyrings are created and added into the register upon demand and get
57	  removed if they expire (a default timeout is set upon creation).
58
59config BIG_KEYS
60	bool "Large payload keys"
61	depends on KEYS
62	depends on TMPFS
63	select CRYPTO
64	select CRYPTO_AES
65	select CRYPTO_GCM
66	help
67	  This option provides support for holding large keys within the kernel
68	  (for example Kerberos ticket caches).  The data may be stored out to
69	  swapspace by tmpfs.
70
71	  If you are unsure as to whether this is required, answer N.
72
73config TRUSTED_KEYS
74	tristate "TRUSTED KEYS"
75	depends on KEYS && TCG_TPM
76	select CRYPTO
77	select CRYPTO_HMAC
78	select CRYPTO_SHA1
79	select CRYPTO_HASH_INFO
80	help
81	  This option provides support for creating, sealing, and unsealing
82	  keys in the kernel. Trusted keys are random number symmetric keys,
83	  generated and RSA-sealed by the TPM. The TPM only unseals the keys,
84	  if the boot PCRs and other criteria match.  Userspace will only ever
85	  see encrypted blobs.
86
87	  If you are unsure as to whether this is required, answer N.
88
89config ENCRYPTED_KEYS
90	tristate "ENCRYPTED KEYS"
91	depends on KEYS
92	select CRYPTO
93	select CRYPTO_HMAC
94	select CRYPTO_AES
95	select CRYPTO_CBC
96	select CRYPTO_SHA256
97	select CRYPTO_RNG
98	help
99	  This option provides support for create/encrypting/decrypting keys
100	  in the kernel.  Encrypted keys are kernel generated random numbers,
101	  which are encrypted/decrypted with a 'master' symmetric key. The
102	  'master' key can be either a trusted-key or user-key type.
103	  Userspace only ever sees/stores encrypted blobs.
104
105	  If you are unsure as to whether this is required, answer N.
106
107config KEY_DH_OPERATIONS
108       bool "Diffie-Hellman operations on retained keys"
109       depends on KEYS
110       select CRYPTO
111       select CRYPTO_HASH
112       select CRYPTO_DH
113       help
114	 This option provides support for calculating Diffie-Hellman
115	 public keys and shared secrets using values stored as keys
116	 in the kernel.
117
118	 If you are unsure as to whether this is required, answer N.
119