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From: Daniel Hodges <hodgesd@meta.com>
To: Ignat Korchagin <ignat@cloudflare.com>
Cc: Eric Biggers <ebiggers@kernel.org>,
	David Howells <dhowells@redhat.com>,
	Lukas Wunner <lukas@wunner.de>,
	Herbert Xu <herbert@gondor.apana.org.au>,
	"David S . Miller" <davem@davemloft.net>,
	<keyrings@vger.kernel.org>, <linux-crypto@vger.kernel.org>,
	<linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org>
Subject: Re: [PATCH] crypto: pkcs7 - use constant-time digest comparison
Date: Sun, 1 Feb 2026 05:07:38 -0800	[thread overview]
Message-ID: <aX9P2Y4AUuetwIPF@fb.com> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <CALrw=nG0Pj1W-bZ6qQax0WnxSayCtYx97ivRuQMsVZHbsQZong@mail.gmail.com>

On Sun, Feb 01, 2026 at 11:55:26AM +0100, Ignat Korchagin wrote:
> On Sun, Feb 1, 2026 at 5:41 AM Eric Biggers <ebiggers@kernel.org> wrote:
> >
> > On Sat, Jan 31, 2026 at 07:55:03PM -0800, Daniel Hodges wrote:
> > > This creates a timing side-channel that could allow an
> > > attacker to forge valid signatures by measuring verification time
> > > and recovering the expected digest value byte-by-byte.
> >
> > Good luck with that.  The memcmp just checks that the CMS object
> > includes the hash of the data as a signed attribute.  It's a consistency
> > check of two attacker-controlled values, which happens before the real
> > signature check.  You may be confusing it with a MAC comparison.
> 
> On top of that the CMS object and the hash inside is "public", so even
> if you have state-of-the-art quantum computer thing you can just take
> the object and forge the signature "offline"
> 
> > - Eric

I just went through the code flow again and that makes sense, sorry
about that!

      reply	other threads:[~2026-02-01 13:07 UTC|newest]

Thread overview: 4+ messages / expand[flat|nested]  mbox.gz  Atom feed  top
2026-02-01  3:55 [PATCH] crypto: pkcs7 - use constant-time digest comparison Daniel Hodges
2026-02-01  4:41 ` Eric Biggers
2026-02-01 10:55   ` Ignat Korchagin
2026-02-01 13:07     ` Daniel Hodges [this message]

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