Conversation

This Tweet was deleted by the Tweet author. Learn more
Replying to
Does it read entropy from /dev/urandom to protect hash table against "Algorithmic Complexity Attacks"? Is getrandom(2) the solution? Or init API that receives entropy from caller?
1
Replying to and
On Linux, getrandom is always the right approach. The /dev/urandom and /dev/random APIs are obsolescent. They aren't always available since they require access to a populated /dev, there's the dynamic failure case from using dynamic allocation (of files) and the early init bug.
1
The maintainers should fix the early init security bug in /dev/urandom, but they aren't yet willing to do it based on the lackluster kernel entropy generation combined with broad deployment of broken environments not providing entropy such as poor virtual machine implementations.
2