gui-init: make sure that reseal_tpm_disk_decryption_key happens only on successful TOTP/HOTP sealing, reusing cached TPM Owner password
Signed-off-by: Thierry Laurion <insurgo@riseup.net>
Add comments after reboot/poweroff to clarify what they do. These
commands are here partly for discoverability by users who might not
know what to do in a recovery shell, so clarifying their purpose helps
those users figure out what to do.
Signed-off-by: Jonathon Hall <jonathon.hall@puri.sm>
Enabling DEBUG/TRACE options from board config vs from configuration menu is different.
When enabled in board config, /etc/config is from ROM, and sourced early and make TRACE/DEBUG calls appear early.
If added through configuration menu, those are /etc/config.user overrides extracted from CBFS and then sourced after combine_configs call
If for whatever reason early DEBUG is needed on a platform, enabling in board config is needed.
For runtime debugging, enabling Debug output from configuration menu is enough
As on master otherwise with --disable-asm:
config.status: executing gcrypt-conf commands
Libgcrypt v1.10.1 has been configured as follows:
Platform: GNU/Linux (x86_64-pc-linux-musl)
Hardware detection module: none
Enabled cipher algorithms: arcfour blowfish cast5 des aes twofish
serpent rfc2268 seed camellia idea salsa20
gost28147 chacha20 sm4
Enabled digest algorithms: crc gostr3411-94 md4 md5 rmd160 sha1
sha256 sha512 sha3 tiger whirlpool stribog
blake2 sm3
Enabled kdf algorithms: s2k pkdf2 scrypt
Enabled pubkey algorithms: dsa elgamal rsa ecc
Random number generator: default
Try using jitter entropy: yes
Using linux capabilities: no
FIPS module version:
Try using Padlock crypto: n/a
Try using AES-NI crypto: n/a
Try using Intel SHAEXT: n/a
Try using Intel PCLMUL: n/a
Try using Intel SSE4.1: n/a
Try using DRNG (RDRAND): n/a
Try using Intel AVX: n/a
Try using Intel AVX2: n/a
Try using ARM NEON: n/a
Try using ARMv8 crypto: n/a
Try using PPC crypto: n/a
By disabling --disable-asm in libgcrypt 1.10.1:
config.status: executing gcrypt-conf commands
Libgcrypt v1.10.1 has been configured as follows:
Platform: GNU/Linux (x86_64-pc-linux-musl)
Hardware detection module: libgcrypt_la-hwf-x86
Enabled cipher algorithms: arcfour blowfish cast5 des aes twofish
serpent rfc2268 seed camellia idea salsa20
gost28147 chacha20 sm4
Enabled digest algorithms: crc gostr3411-94 md4 md5 rmd160 sha1
sha256 sha512 sha3 tiger whirlpool stribog
blake2 sm3
Enabled kdf algorithms: s2k pkdf2 scrypt
Enabled pubkey algorithms: dsa elgamal rsa ecc
Random number generator: default
Enabled digest algorithms: crc gostr3411-94 md4 md5 rmd160 sha1
sha256 sha512 sha3 tiger whirlpool stribog
blake2 sm3
Enabled kdf algorithms: s2k pkdf2 scrypt
Enabled pubkey algorithms: dsa elgamal rsa ecc
Random number generator: default
Try using jitter entropy: yes
Using linux capabilities: no
FIPS module version:
Try using Padlock crypto: yes
Try using AES-NI crypto: yes
Try using Intel SHAEXT: yes
Try using Intel PCLMUL: yes
Try using Intel SSE4.1: yes
Try using DRNG (RDRAND): yes
Try using Intel AVX: yes
Try using Intel AVX2: yes
Try using ARM NEON: n/a
Try using ARMv8 crypto: n/a
Try using PPC crypto: n/a
To support PPC crypto, it seems we will need yasm.
To support linux capabilities, libcap would be required as well later on. :/ another point for rng-tools (which also depends on libcap-ng)
Squash of #1502 + moving logo/bootsplash files under branding/Heads
- Move logos and bootsplashes from blobs to branding/Heads/
- Makefile: add support for BRAND_DIR which depends on BRAND_NAME which defaults to Heads if no branding
- Boards coreboot configs: change bootsplash directory to depend on BRAND_DIR (instead of BLOBS_DIR) in bootsplash enabled configs
- Branding/Heads/bootsplash-1024x768.jpg points to branding/Heads/d-wid-ThePlexus_coreboot-linuxboot-heads_background-plain_DonateQrCode.jpg
- xcf file deleted. Original still under #1502 to reuse for modification without recompressing (blobs/heads.xcf)
- CREDITS file created to point to original authors, remixers (Open for details)
- Thanks to: @d-wid for remixing Bing's AI generated Janus logo, @ThePlexus for Qubes Box concept and @ThrillerAtPlay for its matrix background