Provided by: cryptsetup-bin_2.4.3-1ubuntu1.3_amd64 bug

NAME

       veritysetup - manage dm-verity (block level verification) volumes

SYNOPSIS

       veritysetup <options> <action> <action args>

DESCRIPTION

       Veritysetup is used to configure dm-verity managed device-mapper mappings.

       Device-mapper  verity  target  provides  read-only  transparent integrity checking of block devices using
       kernel crypto API.

       The dm-verity devices are always read-only.

       Veritysetup supports these operations:

       format <data_device> <hash_device>

              Calculates and permanently stores hash verification  data  for  data_device.   Hash  area  can  be
              located on the same device after data if specified by --hash-offset option.

              Note you need to provide root hash string for device verification or activation. Root hash must be
              trusted.

              The  data  or hash device argument can be block device or file image.  If hash device path doesn't
              exist, it will be created as file.

              <options> can be [--hash, --no-superblock, --format, --data-block-size, --hash-block-size, --data-
              blocks, --hash-offset, --salt, --uuid, --root-hash-file]

              If option --root-hash-file is used, the root hash is stored in hex-encoded text format in <path>.

       open <data_device> <name> <hash_device> <root_hash>
       open <data_device> <name> <hash_device> --root-hash-file <path>
       create <name> <data_device> <hash_device> <root_hash>  (OBSOLETE syntax)

              Creates a mapping with <name> backed by device <data_device> and using <hash_device> for in-kernel
              verification.

              The <root_hash> is a hexadecimal string.

              <options> can be [--hash-offset, --no-superblock, --ignore-corruption or  --restart-on-corruption,
              --panic-on-corruption,  --ignore-zero-blocks, --check-at-most-once, --root-hash-signature, --root-
              hash-file]

              If option --root-hash-file is used, the root hash is read from <path> instead of from the  command
              line parameter. Expects hex-encoded text, without terminating newline.

              If  option  --no-superblock  is  used,  you  have  to use as the same options as in initial format
              operation.

       verify <data_device> <hash_device> <root_hash>
       verify <data_device> <hash_device> --root-hash-file <path>

              Verifies data on data_device with use of hash blocks stored on hash_device.

              This command performs userspace verification, no kernel device is created.

              The <root_hash> is a hexadecimal string.

              If option --root-hash-file is used, the root hash is read from <path> instead of from the  command
              line parameter. Expects hex-encoded text, without terminating newline.

              <options> can be [--hash-offset, --no-superblock, --root-hash-file]

              If  option  --no-superblock  is  used,  you  have  to use as the same options as in initial format
              operation.

       close <name>

              Removes existing mapping <name>.

              For backward compatibility there is remove command alias for close command.

              <options> can be [--deferred] or [--cancel-deferred]

       status <name>

              Reports status for the active verity mapping <name>.

       dump <hash_device>

              Reports parameters of verity device from on-disk stored superblock.

              <options> can be [--hash-offset]

OPTIONS

       --verbose, -v
              Print more information on command execution.

       --debug
              Run in debug mode with full diagnostic logs. Debug output lines are always prefixed by '#'.

       --no-superblock
              Create or use dm-verity without permanent on-disk superblock.

       --format=number
              Specifies the hash version type.  Format type 0 is original Chrome OS version. Format  type  1  is
              current version.

       --data-block-size=bytes
              Used block size for the data device.  (Note kernel supports only page-size as maximum here.)

       --hash-block-size=bytes
              Used block size for the hash device.  (Note kernel supports only page-size as maximum here.)

       --data-blocks=blocks
              Size 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.  Value must be aligned to disk sector offset.

       --salt=hex string
              Salt used for format or verification.  Format is a hexadecimal string.

       --uuid=UUID
              Use the provided UUID for format command 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 data integrity 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.)

              WARNING:  Use these options only for very specific cases.  These options are available since Linux
              kernel version 4.1.

       --ignore-zero-blocks
              Instruct kernel to not verify blocks that are expected  to  contain  zeroes  and  always  directly
              return zeroes instead.

              WARNING: 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.

              WARNING: 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. For default see --help option.

       --version
              Show the program version.

       --fec-device=fec_device
              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.  For format, if fec device path doesn't
              exist, it will be created as file.

              Block  sizes  for  data and hash devices must match.  Also, if the verity data_device is encrypted
              the fec_device should be too.

              FEC calculation covers data, hash area, and optional foreign metadata stored on  the  same  device
              with  the  hash  tree  (additional  space after hash area).  Size of this optional additional area
              protected by FEC is calculated from image sizes, so you must be sure that you use the same  images
              for activation.

              If  the  hash device is in a separate image, metadata covers the whole rest of the image after the
              hash area.

              If hash and FEC device is in the image, metadata ends on the FEC area offset.

       --fec-offset=bytes
              This is the offset, in bytes, from the start of the FEC device to the beginning  of  the  encoding
              data.

       --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-file=FILE
              Path to file with stored root hash in hex-encoded text.

       --root-hash-signature=FILE
              Path to roothash signature file used to verify the root hash (in kernel).  This  feature  requires
              Linux kernel version 5.4 or more recent.

       --deferred
              Defers device removal in close command until the last user closes it.

       --cancel-deferred
              Removes a previously configured deferred device removal in close command.

       RETURN CODES
              Veritysetup returns 0 on success and a non-zero value on error.

              Error codes are:
                  1 wrong parameters
                  2 no permission
                  3 out of memory
                  4 wrong device specified
                  5 device already exists or device is busy.

EXAMPLES

       veritysetup --data-blocks=256 format <data_device> <hash_device>

       Calculates  and  stores  verification  data  on hash_device for the first 256 blocks (of block-size).  If
       hash_device does not exist, it is created (as file image).

       veritysetup format --root-hash-file <path> <data_device> <hash_device>

       Calculates and stores verification data on hash_device for the whole data_device, and store the root hash
       as hex-encoded text in <path>.

       veritysetup --data-blocks=256 --hash-offset=1052672 format <device> <device>

       Verification data (hashes) is stored on the same device as data (starting at  hash-offset).   Hash-offset
       must be greater than number of blocks in data-area.

       veritysetup --data-blocks=256 --hash-offset=1052672 create test-device <device> <device> <root_hash>

       Activates the verity device named test-device. Options --data-blocks and --hash-offset are the same as in
       the format command. The <root_hash> was calculated in format command.

       veritysetup --data-blocks=256 --hash-offset=1052672 verify <data_device> <hash_device> <root_hash>

       Verifies device without activation (in userspace).

       veritysetup   --data-blocks=256   --hash-offset=1052672   --root-hash-file  <path>  verify  <data_device>
       <hash_device>

       Verifies device without activation (in userspace). Root hash passed via a file rather than inline.

       veritysetup --fec-device=<fec_device> --fec-roots=10 format <data_device> <hash_device>

       Calculates and stores verification and encoding data for data_device.

REPORTING BUGS

       Report bugs, including ones in the documentation, on the cryptsetup mailing list  at  <dm-crypt@saout.de>
       or  in  the  'Issues'  section  on LUKS website.  Please attach the output of the failed command with the
       --debug option added.

AUTHORS

       The first implementation of veritysetup was written by Chrome OS authors.

       This version is based on verification code written by Mikulas Patocka <mpatocka@redhat.com> and rewritten
       for libcryptsetup by Milan Broz <gmazyland@gmail.com>.

COPYRIGHT

       Copyright © 2012-2021 Red Hat, Inc.
       Copyright © 2012-2021 Milan Broz

       This is free software; see the source for copying  conditions.   There  is  NO  warranty;  not  even  for
       MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.

SEE ALSO

       The project website at https://gitlab.com/cryptsetup/cryptsetup

       The          verity          on-disk          format          specification          available         at
       https://gitlab.com/cryptsetup/cryptsetup/wikis/DMVerity

veritysetup                                       January 2021                                    VERITYSETUP(8)