From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 Return-Path: Date: Mon, 24 Jan 2011 18:34:29 -0300 From: Vinicius Costa Gomes To: Brian Gix Cc: linux-bluetooth@vger.kernel.org Subject: Re: LE Kernel (bluetooth-le-2.6) and LE Security Manager Message-ID: <20110124213429.GA15121@piper> References: <001c01cb931d$dc4cb3a0$94e61ae0$@org> <20101203220534.GA16709@eris> <1295895817.2656.26.camel@ubuntuLab1> MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii In-Reply-To: <1295895817.2656.26.camel@ubuntuLab1> Sender: linux-bluetooth-owner@vger.kernel.org List-ID: Hi Brian, On 11:03 Mon 24 Jan, Brian Gix wrote: > Hi Vinicius, > > I am sorry that it has taken so long to test the snapshot that you > placed on gitorious, but I have now done so. > > On Fri, 2010-12-03 at 19:05 -0300, Vinicius Costa Gomes wrote: > > Hi Brian, > > > > On 11:11 Fri 03 Dec, Brian Gix wrote: > > > > > > Hi Claudio, Johan & All, > > > > > > Is this LE capable kernel that Ville is working on, the development stream > > > for the LE Security Manager? And if so, is it in a partial fleshed out > > > state? > > > > There is a simple implementation of SMP here[1] on my "devel" branch. I am > > cleaning it up for sending it for review. > > > > If you want to help, have any comments or just want to tell us what you are > > working on, please drop by #bluez on freenode, or send an email. > > I have been able to verify that the Just Works negotiation of the Short > Term Key does work against an independent implementation of the LE > Security Manager, as long as I have requested no MITM protection. I > have the following comments: > > 1. You currently reject security if I *do* request MITM protection. > This should not be done. The correct functionality should be to > continue the negotiation. Even though I requested MITM, it will be > clear to both sides that JUST_WORKS methodology has been used, and so > when the Keys are generated and exchanged, both sides will indicate in > their Key Database that they are no-MITM keys. If I then actually > *needed* MITM protection, then whatever functionality requiring that > level of security will fail with an insufficient security error code. > However, security should *never* be rejected unless there is a > fundamental incompatibility such as no level of security actually > supported. This is the only functionality that I found to be actually > incorrect. > I was assuming that the meaning of setting the MITM protection bit, was that it was *requiring* MITM protection, and when that couldn't be fulfilled the Pairing Request should be rejected. So my assumption was incorrect, going to fix it soon. > 2. Currently, you are not exchanging any permanent keys, which I am sure > you are aware. This makes it impossible to test much else, such as > command signing, or security requests that use the generated keys. > This is being worked on, but nothing ready for testing yet. > If you have a later version of SM that could be uploaded to your devel > branch on gitorious, I would be more than happy (and in fact would love > to be able) to test that for you as well. > > This is the git configuration I used for testing, which only has your SM > up to the end of last December, and is so about a month old: > > remote.origin.url=git://gitorious.org/bluetooth-next/bluetooth-next.git > branch.devel.remote=origin > branch.devel.merge=refs/heads/devel > > > Thanks for doing the SM, > > -- > Brian Gix > bgix@codeaurora.org > Employee of Qualcomm Innovation Center, Inc. > Qualcomm Innovation Center, Inc. is a member of Code Aurora Forum > Cheers, -- Vinicius