veritytab — Configuration for verity block devices
/etc/veritytab
The /etc/veritytab
file describes
verity protected block devices that are set up during
system boot.
Empty lines and lines starting with the "#
"
character are ignored. Each of the remaining lines describes one
verity protected block device. Fields are delimited by
white space.
Each line is in the form
volume-name
data-device
hash-device
roothash
[options
]
The first four fields are mandatory, the remaining one is optional.
The first field contains the name of the resulting verity volume; its block device is set up
below /dev/mapper/
.
The second field contains a path to the underlying block data device, or a specification of a block device via
UUID=
followed by the UUID
.
The third field contains a path to the underlying block hash device, or a specification of a block device via
UUID=
followed by the UUID
.
The fourth field is the roothash
in hexadecimal.
The fifth field, if present, is a comma-delimited list of options. The following options are recognized:
superblock=BOOL
¶Use dm-verity with or without permanent on-disk superblock.
format=NUMBER
¶Specifies the hash version type. Format type "0
" is original Chrome OS version. Format type "1
" is
modern version.
data-block-size=BYTES
¶Used block size for the data device. (Note kernel supports only page-size as maximum here; Multiples of 512 bytes.)
hash-block-size=BYTES
¶Used block size for the hash device. (Note kernel supports only page-size as maximum here; Multiples of 512 bytes.)
data-blocks=BLOCKS
¶Number of blocks of data device used in verification. If not specified, the whole device is used.
hash-offset=BYTES
¶Offset of hash area/superblock on "hash-device
". (Multiples of 512 bytes.)
salt=HEX
¶Salt used for format or verification. Format is a hexadecimal string; 256 bytes long maximum;
"-
" is the special value for empty.
uuid=UUID
¶Use the provided UUID
instead of generating new one. The UUID
must be
provided in standard UUID format, e.g. "12345678-1234-1234-1234-123456789abc
".
ignore-corruption
, restart-on-corruption
, panic-on-corruption
¶Defines what to do if a data verity problem is detected (data corruption). Without these
options kernel fails the IO operation with I/O error. With --ignore-corruption
option the
corruption is only logged. With --restart-on-corruption
or
--panic-on-corruption
the kernel is restarted (panicked) immediately.
(You have to provide way how to avoid restart loops.)
ignore-zero-blocks
¶Instruct kernel to not verify blocks that are expected to contain zeroes and always directly return zeroes instead.
Use this option only in very specific cases. This option is available since Linux kernel version 4.5.
check-at-most-once
¶Instruct kernel to verify blocks only the first time they are read from the data device, rather than every time.
It provides a reduced level of security because only offline tampering of the data device's content will be detected, not online tampering. This option is available since Linux kernel version 4.17.
hash=HASH
¶Hash algorithm for dm-verity. This should be the name of the algorithm, like "sha1". For default see veritysetup --help.
fec-device=PATH
¶Use forward error correction (FEC) to recover from corruption if hash verification fails. Use encoding data from the specified device. The fec device argument can be block device or file image. If fec device path doesn't exist, it will be created as file. Note: block sizes for data and hash devices must match. Also, if the verity data_device is encrypted the fec_device should be too.
fec-offset=BYTES
¶This is the offset, in bytes, from the start of the FEC device to the beginning of the encoding data. (Aligned on 512 bytes.)
fec-roots=NUM
¶Number of generator roots. This equals to the number of parity bytes in the encoding data. In RS(M, N) encoding, the number of roots is M-N. M is 255 and M-N is between 2 and 24 (including).
root-hash-signature=PATH
|base64:HEX
¶A base64 string encoding the root hash signature prefixed by "base64:
" or a
path to roothash signature file used to verify the root hash (in kernel). This feature requires Linux kernel
version 5.4 or more recent.
_netdev
¶Marks this veritysetup device as requiring network. It will be
started after the network is available, similarly to
systemd.mount(5)
units marked with _netdev
. The service unit to set up this device
will be ordered between remote-fs-pre.target
and
remote-veritysetup.target
, instead of
veritysetup-pre.target
and
veritysetup.target
.
Hint: if this device is used for a mount point that is specified in
fstab(5),
the _netdev
option should also be used for the mount
point. Otherwise, a dependency loop might be created where the mount point
will be pulled in by local-fs.target
, while the
service to configure the network is usually only started after
the local file system has been mounted.
noauto
¶This device will not be added to veritysetup.target
.
This means that it will not be automatically enabled on boot, unless something else pulls
it in. In particular, if the device is used for a mount point, it'll be enabled
automatically during boot, unless the mount point itself is also disabled with
noauto
.
nofail
¶This device will not be a hard dependency of
veritysetup.target
. It'll still be pulled in and started, but the system
will not wait for the device to show up and be enabled, and boot will not fail if this is
unsuccessful. Note that other units that depend on the enabled device may still fail. In
particular, if the device is used for a mount point, the mount point itself also needs to
have the nofail
option, or the boot will fail if the device is not enabled
successfully.
x-initrd.attach
¶Setup this verity protected block device in the initrd, similarly to
systemd.mount(5)
units marked with x-initrd.mount
.
Although it's not necessary to mark the mount entry for the root file system with
x-initrd.mount
, x-initrd.attach
is still recommended with
the verity protected block device containing the root file system as otherwise systemd
will attempt to detach the device during the regular system shutdown while it's still in
use. With this option the device will still be detached but later after the root file
system is unmounted.
All other verity protected block devices that contain file systems mounted in the initrd should use this option.
At early boot and when the system manager configuration is reloaded, this file is translated into native systemd units by systemd-veritysetup-generator(8).
Example 1. /etc/veritytab example
Set up two verity protected block devices. One using device blocks, another using files.
usr PARTUUID=783e45ae-7aa3-484a-beef-a80ff9c19cbb PARTUUID=21dc1dfe-4c33-8b48-98a9-918a22eb3e37 36e3f740ad502e2c25e2a23d9c7c17bf0fdad2300b7580842d4b7ec1fb0fa263 auto data /etc/data /etc/hash a5ee4b42f70ae1f46a08a7c92c2e0a20672ad2f514792730f5d49d7606ab8fdf auto