There are certain subtle differences in behavior when we're encrypted
with the STK, such as allowing re-encryption even though the security
level stays the same. Because of this, add a flag to track whether we're
encrypted with an STK or not.
Signed-off-by: Johan Hedberg <johan.hedberg@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Marcel Holtmann <marcel@holtmann.org>
HCI_CONN_AUTH,
HCI_CONN_SECURE,
HCI_CONN_FIPS,
+ HCI_CONN_STK_ENCRYPT,
};
static inline bool hci_conn_ssp_enabled(struct hci_conn *conn)
* using a distributed LTK.
*/
if (ltk->type == SMP_STK) {
+ set_bit(HCI_CONN_STK_ENCRYPT, &conn->flags);
list_del(<k->list);
kfree(ltk);
+ } else {
+ clear_bit(HCI_CONN_STK_ENCRYPT, &conn->flags);
}
hci_dev_unlock(hdev);
hci_le_start_enc(hcon, ediv, rand, stk);
hcon->enc_key_size = smp->enc_key_size;
+ set_bit(HCI_CONN_STK_ENCRYPT, &hcon->flags);
} else {
u8 stk[16], auth;
__le64 rand = 0;
hci_le_start_enc(hcon, key->ediv, key->rand, key->val);
hcon->enc_key_size = key->enc_size;
+ /* We never store STKs for master role, so clear this flag */
+ clear_bit(HCI_CONN_STK_ENCRYPT, &hcon->flags);
+
return true;
}