Dimitri John Ledkov 31b4dea5f0 bootctl: calculate secureboot state taking MokSBStateRT into account (#39298)
shim is often used as part of the EFI boot chain with Linux kernels.

shim has an option to disable all verification of binaries it loads.
This can be performed by end-user using mokutil / mokmanager EFI app,
which set BootServices only variable MokSBState. shim honors that, and
mirrors it as readonly MokSBStateRT for the post-ExitBootService access.

Thus presense of MokSBStateRT is an indicator that shim was used during
boot chain.

Some OEM vendors are known to set MokSBState variable, without user
having done so.

When verification is disabled, one should assume secureboot is insecure,
because any EFI binary was allowed to run, including but not limited to
unsigned or revoked:
- grub
- systemd-boot
- UKI
- linux kernel

Linux kernel also has code to check this variable, and correctly report
that Secure Boot is disabled, see:
-
3a86608788/drivers/firmware/efi/libstub/secureboot.c (L57)

With this change bootctl output changes like this:
```diff
 System:
       Firmware: n/a (n/a)
  Firmware Arch: x64
-   Secure Boot: enabled (user)
+   Secure Boot: disabled (insecure)
   TPM2 Support: yes
   Measured UKI: no
   Boot into FW: supported
```

This implementation is trying to mimic mokutil behaviour like this one:
```
$ mokutil --sb-state
SecureBoot enabled
SecureBoot validation is disabled in shim
```

As well as the linux kernel behavior of:
```
$ journalctl -b | grep 'Secure boot disabled'
kernel: Secure boot disabled
```

Note that MokSBState is extended into PCR7 as well as also into PCR14.
For more details see https://github.com/rhboot/shim/blob/main/README.tpm
2025-11-12 08:47:44 +09:00
2025-11-09 18:57:20 +01:00
2025-10-07 13:00:12 +01:00
2025-03-07 17:27:20 +01:00
2025-11-11 22:09:14 +09:00
2025-10-20 11:39:25 +01:00
2025-09-17 12:08:03 +02:00
2025-06-05 14:39:20 +02:00
2025-10-07 13:00:12 +01:00
2025-11-09 18:09:31 +09:00
2025-11-09 04:53:46 +09:00
2025-05-22 01:37:05 +09:00
2025-07-10 18:09:17 +02:00
2025-11-04 14:12:39 +01:00

Systemd

System and Service Manager

OBS Packages Status
Semaphore CI 2.0 Build Status
Coverity Scan Status
OSS-Fuzz Status
CIFuzz
CII Best Practices
Fossies codespell report
Translation status
Coverage Status
Packaging status
OpenSSF Scorecard

Details

Most documentation is available on systemd's web site.

Assorted, older, general information about systemd can be found in the systemd Wiki.

Information about build requirements is provided in the README file.

Consult our NEWS file for information about what's new in the most recent systemd versions.

Please see the Code Map for information about this repository's layout and content.

Please see the Hacking guide for information on how to hack on systemd and test your modifications.

Please see our Contribution Guidelines for more information about filing GitHub Issues and posting GitHub Pull Requests.

When preparing patches for systemd, please follow our Coding Style Guidelines.

If you are looking for support, please contact our mailing list, join our IRC channel #systemd on libera.chat or Matrix channel

Stable branches with backported patches are available in the stable repo.

We have a security bug bounty program sponsored by the Sovereign Tech Fund hosted on YesWeHack

Repositories with distribution packages built from git main are available on OBS

Description
No description provided
Readme Cite this repository 321 MiB
Languages
C 89%
Python 5.1%
Shell 4.5%
Meson 1.2%