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Përditësimi: 2 ditë 13 orë më parë

Felipe Borges: GNOME will be mentoring 9 new contributors in Google Summer of Code 2023

Pre, 05/05/2023 - 11:15pd

We are happy to announce that GNOME was assigned nine slots for Google Summer of Code projects this year!

GSoC is a program focused on bringing new contributors into open source software development. A number of long term GNOME developers are former GSoC interns, making the program a very valuable entry point for new members in our project.

In 2023 we will mentoring the following projects:

Project Title Contributor Assigned Mentor(s) Make GNOME platform demos for Workbench Akshay Warrier Sonny Piers
Andy Holmes Rust and GTK 4 Bustle Rewrite Dave Patrick Caberto Bilal Elmoussaoui
Maximilian Create a New “System” panel in GNOME Settings Gotam Gorabh Felipe Borges Implement backlog search in Polari IRC client Gurmannat Sohal Carlos Garnacho
Florian Müllner Integrate GNOME Network Displays features into GNOME Settings Pedro Sader Azevedo Felipe Borges
Claudio Wunder
Jonas Ådahl
Anupam Kumar GNOME Crosswords Anagram Support Pratham Gupta jrb Make GNOME Platform Demos for Workbench Sriyansh Shivam Sonny Piers
Andy Holmes Add Acrostic Puzzles to GNOME Crosswords Tanmay Patil jrb Flatpak synching between machines Tim FB Rasmus Thomsen

As part of the contributor’s acceptance into GSoC they are expected to actively participate in the Community Bonding period (May 4 – 28). The Community Bonding period is intended to help prepare contributors to start contributing at full speed starting May 29.

The new contributors will soon get their blogs added to Planet GNOME making it easy for the GNOME community to get to know them and the projects that they will be working on.

We would like to also thank our mentors for supporting GSoC and helping new contributors enter our project.

If you have any doubts, feel free to reply to this Discourse topic or message us privately at soc-admins@gnome.org

** This is a repost from https://discourse.gnome.org/t/announcement-gnome-will-be-mentoring-9-new-contributors-in-google-summer-of-code-2023/15232

Matthew Garrett: Twitter's e2ee DMs are better than nothing

Enj, 04/05/2023 - 11:49md
(Edit 2023-05-10: This has now launched for a subset of Twitter users. The code that existed to notify users that device identities had changed does not appear to have been enabled - as a result, in its current form, Twitter can absolutely MITM conversations and read your messages)

Elon Musk appeared on an interview with Tucker Carlson last month, with one of the topics being the fact that Twitter could be legally compelled to hand over users' direct messages to government agencies since they're held on Twitter's servers and aren't encrypted. Elon talked about how they were in the process of implementing proper encryption for DMs that would prevent this - "You could put a gun to my head and I couldn't tell you. That's how it should be."

tl;dr - in the current implementation, while Twitter could subvert the end-to-end nature of the encryption, it could not do so without users being notified. If any user involved in a conversation were to ignore that notification, all messages in that conversation (including ones sent in the past) could then be decrypted. This isn't ideal, but it still seems like an improvement over having no encryption at all. More technical discussion follows.

For context: all information about Twitter's implementation here has been derived from reverse engineering version 9.86.0 of the Android client and 9.56.1 of the iOS client (the current versions at time of writing), and the feature hasn't yet launched. While it's certainly possible that there could be major changes in the protocol between now launch, Elon has asserted that they plan to launch the feature this week so it's plausible that this reflects what'll ship.

For it to be impossible for Twitter to read DMs, they need to not only be encrypted, they need to be encrypted with a key that's not available to Twitter. This is what's referred to as "end-to-end encryption", or e2ee - it means that the only components in the communication chain that have access to the unencrypted data are the endpoints. Even if the message passes through other systems (and even if it's stored on other systems), those systems do not have access to the keys that would be needed to decrypt the data.

End-to-end encrypted messengers were initially popularised by Signal, but the Signal protocol has since been incorporated into WhatsApp and is probably much more widely used there. Millions of people per day are sending messages to each other that pass through servers controlled by third parties, but those third parties are completely unable to read the contents of those messages. This is the scenario that Elon described, where there's no degree of compulsion that could cause the people relaying messages to and from people to decrypt those messages afterwards.

But for this to be possible, both ends of the communication need to be able to encrypt messages in a way the other end can decrypt. This is usually performed using AES, a well-studied encryption algorithm with no known significant weaknesses. AES is a form of what's referred to as a symmetric encryption, one where encryption and decryption are performed with the same key. This means that both ends need access to that key, which presents us with a bootstrapping problem. Until a shared secret is obtained, there's no way to communicate securely, so how do we generate that shared secret? A common mechanism for this is something called Diffie Hellman key exchange, which makes use of asymmetric encryption. In asymmetric encryption, an encryption key can be split into two components - a public key and a private key. Both devices involved in the communication combine their private key and the other party's public key to generate a secret that can only be decoded with access to the private key. As long as you know the other party's public key, you can now securely generate a shared secret with them. Even a third party with access to all the public keys won't be able to identify this secret. Signal makes use of a variation of Diffie-Hellman called Extended Triple Diffie-Hellman that has some desirable properties, but it's not strictly necessary for the implementation of something that's end-to-end encrypted.

Although it was rumoured that Twitter would make use of the Signal protocol, and in fact there are vestiges of code in the Twitter client that still reference Signal, recent versions of the app have shipped with an entirely different approach that appears to have been written from scratch. It seems simple enough. Each device generates an asymmetric keypair using the NIST P-256 elliptic curve, along with a device identifier. The device identifier and the public half of the key are uploaded to Twitter using a new API endpoint called /1.1/keyregistry/register. When you want to send an encrypted DM to someone, the app calls /1.1/keyregistry/extract_public_keys with the IDs of the users you want to communicate with, and gets back a list of their public keys. It then looks up the conversation ID (a numeric identifier that corresponds to a given DM exchange - for a 1:1 conversation between two people it doesn't appear that this ever changes, so if you DMed an account 5 years ago and then DM them again now from the same account, the conversation ID will be the same) in a local database to retrieve a conversation key. If that key doesn't exist yet, the sender generates a random one. The message is then encrypted with the conversation key using AES in GCM mode, and the conversation key is then put through Diffie-Hellman with each of the recipients' public device keys. The encrypted message is then sent to Twitter along with the list of encrypted conversation keys. When each of the recipients' devices receives the message it checks whether it already has a copy of the conversation key, and if not performs its half of the Diffie-Hellman negotiation to decrypt the encrypted conversation key. One it has the conversation key it decrypts it and shows it to the user.

What would happen if Twitter changed the registered public key associated with a device to one where they held the private key, or added an entirely new device to a user's account? If the app were to just happily send a message with the conversation key encrypted with that new key, Twitter would be able to decrypt that and obtain the conversation key. Since the conversation key is tied to the conversation, not any given pair of devices, obtaining the conversation key means you can then decrypt every message in that conversation, including ones sent before the key was obtained.

(An aside: Signal and WhatsApp make use of a protocol called Sesame which involves additional secret material that's shared between every device a user owns, hence why you have to do that QR code dance whenever you add a new device to your account. I'm grossly over-simplifying how clever the Signal approach is here, largely because I don't understand the details of it myself. The Signal protocol uses something called the Double Ratchet Algorithm to implement the actual message encryption keys in such a way that even if someone were able to successfully impersonate a device they'd only be able to decrypt messages sent after that point even if they had encrypted copies of every previous message in the conversation)

How's this avoided? Based on the UI that exists in the iOS version of the app, in a fairly straightforward way - each user can only have a single device that supports encrypted messages. If the user (or, in our hypothetical, a malicious Twitter) replaces the device key, the client will generate a notification. If the user pays attention to that notification and verifies with the recipient through some out of band mechanism that the device has actually been replaced, then everything is fine. But, if any participant in the conversation ignores this warning, the holder of the subverted key can obtain the conversation key and decrypt the entire history of the conversation. That's strictly worse than anything based on Signal, where such impersonation would simply not work, but even in the Twitter case it's not possible for someone to silently subvert the security.

So when Elon says Twitter wouldn't be able to decrypt these messages even if someone held a gun to his head, there's a condition applied to that - it's true as long as nobody fucks up. This is clearly better than the messages just not being encrypted at all in the first place, but overall it's a weaker solution than Signal. If you're currently using Twitter DMs, should you turn on encryption? As long as the limitations aren't too limiting, definitely! Should you use this in preference to Signal or WhatsApp? Almost certainly not. This seems like a genuine incremental improvement, but it'd be easy to interpret what Elon says as providing stronger guarantees than actually exist.

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Jonas Ådahl: Vivid colors in Brno

Enj, 04/05/2023 - 9:09md

Co-authored by Sebastian Wick & Jonas Ådahl.

During April 24 to 26 Red Hat invited people working on compositors and display drivers to come together to collaborate on bringing the Linux graphics stack to the next level. There were three high level topics that were discussed at length: Color Management, High Dynamic Range (HDR) and Variable Refresh Rate (VRR). This post will go through the discussions that took place, and occasional rough consensus reached among the people who attended.

The event itself aimed to be both as inclusive and engaging as possible, meaning participants could attend both in person, in the Red Hat office in Brno, Czech Republic, or remotely via a video link. The format of the event was structured in a way aiming to give remote attendees and physical attendees an equal opportunity to participate in discussions. While the hallway track can be a great way to collaborate, discussions accessible remotely were prioritized by having two available rooms with their own video link.

This meant that if the main room wanted to continue on the same topic, while some wanted to do a breakout session, they could go to the other room, and anyone attending remotely could tag along by connecting to the other video link. In the end, the break out room became the room where people collaborated on various things in a less structured manner, leaving the main room to cover the main topics. A reason for this is that the microphones in both rooms were a bit too good, effectively catching any conversation anyone had anywhere in the room. Making one of the rooms a bit more chaotic, while the other focused, also allowed for both ways of collaborating.

For the kernel side, people working on AMD, Intel and NVIDIA drivers were among the attendees, and for user space there was representation from gamescope, GNOME, KDE, smithay, Wayland, weston and wlroots. Some of those people are community contributors and some of them were attending on behalf of Red Hat, Canonical, System76, sourcehut, Collabora, Blue Systems, Igalia, AMD, Intel, Google, and NVIDIA. We had a lot of productive discussion, ending up in total with a 20 (!) page document of notes.

Color management & HDR Wayland

Color management in the Linux graphics stack is shifting in the way it is implemented, away from the style used in X11 where the display server (X.org) takes a hands-off approach and the end result is dependent on individual client capabilities, to an architecture where the Wayland display server takes an active role to ensure that all clients, be them color aware or not, show up on screen correctly.

Pekka Paalanen and Sebastian Wick gave a summary of the current state of digital color on Linux and Wayland. For full details, see the Color and HDR documentation repository.

They described the in-development color-representation and color-management Wayland protocols. The color-representation protocol lets clients describe the way color channels are encoded and the color-management protocol lets clients describe the color channels’ meaning to completely describe the appearance of surfaces. It also gives clients information about how it can optimize its content to the target monitor capabilities to minimize the color transformations in the compositor.

Another key aspect of the Wayland color protocols in development is that compositors will be able to choose what they want to support. This allows for example to implement HDR without involving ICC workflows.

There is already a broad consensus that this type of active color management aligns with the Wayland philosophy and while work is needed in compositors and client toolkits alike, the protocols in question are ready for prototyping and review from the wider community.

Colors in kernel drivers & compositors

There are two parts to HDR and color management for compositors. The first one is to create content from different SDR and HDR sources using color transformations. The second is signaling the monitor to enter the desired mode. Given the current state of kernel API capabilities, compositors are in general required to handle all of their color transformations using shaders during composition. For the short term we will focus on removing the last blockers for HDR signaling and in the long term work on making it possible to offload color space conversions to the display hardware which should ideally make it possible to power down the GPU while playing e.g. a movie

Short term

Entering HDR mode is done by setting the colorimetry (KMS Colorspace property) and overriding the transfer characteristics (KMS HDR_OUTPUT_METADATA property).

Unfortunately the design of the Colorspace property does not mix well with the current broader KMS design where the output format is an implementation detail of the driver. We’re going to tweak the behavior of the Colorspace property such that it doesn’t directly control the InfoFrame but lets the driver choose the correct variant and transparently convert to YCC using the correct matrix if required. This should allow AMD to support HDR signaling upstream as well.

The HDR_OUTPUT_METADATA property is a bit weird as well and should be documented. Changing it might require a mode set and changing the transfer characteristics part of the blob will make monitors glitch, while changing other parameters must not require a mode set and must not glitch.

Both landing support upstream for the AMD driver, and improvements to the documentation should happen soon, enabling proper upstream HDR signaling.

Vendor specific uAPI for color pipelines

Recently a proposal for adding vendor specific properties for exposing hardware color pipelines via KMS has been posted, and while it is great to see work being done to improve situation in the Linux kernel, there are concerns that this opens up for per vendor API that end up necessary for compositors to implement, effectively reintroducing per vendor GPU drivers in userspace outside of mesa.

Still, upstream support in the kernel has its upsides, as it for example makes it much easier to experiment. A way forward discussed is to propose that vendor specific color pipeline properties should be handled with care, by requiring them to be clearly documented as experimental, and disabled by default both with a build configuration, and a off-by-default module parameter.

A proposal for this will be sent by Harry Wentland to the relevant kernel mailing lists.

Color pipelines in KMS

Long term, KMS should support color pipelines without any experimental flags, and there is a wide agreement that it should be done with a vendor agnostic API. To achieve this, a proposal was discussed at length, but to summarize it, the goal is to introduce a new KMS object for color operations. A color operation object exposes a low level mathematical function (e.g. Matrix multiplication, 1D or 3D look up tables) and a link to the next operation. To declare a color pipeline, drivers construct a linked list of these operations, for example 1D LUT → Matrix → 1D LUT to describe the current DEGAMMA_LUT → CTM → GAMMA_LUT KMS pipeline.

The discussions primarily focused on per plane color pipelines for the pre-blending stage, but the same concept should be reusable for the post blending stage on the CRTC.

Eventually this work should also make it possible to cleanly separate KMS properties which change the colors (i.e. color operations) from properties changing the mode and signaling to sinks, such as Broadcast RGB, Colorspace, max_bpc.

It was also agreed that user space needs more control over the output format, i.e. what is transmitted over the wire. Right now this is a driver implementation detail and chosen such that the bandwidth requirements of the selected mode will be satisfied. In particular making it possible to turn off YCC subsampling, specifying the minimum bit depth and specifying the compression strength for DCC seems to have consensus.

There are a lot more details that handle all the quirks that hardware may have. For more details and further discussion about the color pipeline proposal, head over to the RFC that Simon Ser just sent to the relevant mailing lists.

Testing & VKMS

Testability of color pipelines and KMS in general was a topic that was brought up as well, with two areas of interest: testing compositors and the generic DRM layer in the kernel using VKMS, and testing actual kernel drivers.

The state of VKMS is to some degree problematic; it currently lacks a large enough pool of established contributors that can take maintainership responsibilities, i.e. reviewing and landing code, but at the same time, there is an urge to make it a more central part of GPU driver development in general, where it can take a more active role in ensuring cross driver conformance. Discussions on how to create more incentive for both kernel developers and compositor developers to help out were discussed, and while ability to test compositors is a relatively good incentive, an idea discussed was to require new DRM properties to always get a VKMS implementation as well to be able to land. This is, however, not easy, since a significant amount of bootstrapping is needed to make that viable. Some ideas were thrown around, and hopefully something will come out of it; keep an eye on the relevant mailing lists for something related to this area.

For testing actual drivers, the usage of Chamelium was discussed, and while everyone agreed it’s something that is definitely nice to have, it takes a significant amount of resources to maintain wired up CI runners for the community to rely on. Ideally a setup that can be shared across the different compositors and GPU drivers would be great, but it’s a significant task to handle.

Variable Refresh Rate Smoothing out refresh rate changes

Variable Refresh Rate monitors driven at a certain mode have a minimum and maximum refresh cycle duration and the actual duration can be chosen for every refresh cycle. One problem with most existing VRR monitors however is that when the refresh duration changes too quickly, they tend to produce visible glitches. They appear as brightness changes for a fraction of a second and can be very jarring. To avoid them, each refresh cycle must change the duration only up to some fixed amount. The amount however varies between monitors, with some having no restriction at all.

A VESA certification is currently being deployed aiming to certify monitors where any change in the refresh cycle duration does not result in glitches. For all other monitors, the increase and decrease in duration which does not result in glitches is unknown if not provided by optional EDID/DisplayID data blocks.

Driving monitors glitch-free without machine readable information therefore requires another approach. One idea is to make the limits configurable. Requiring all users to tweak and fiddle to make it work good enough, however, is not very user friendly, so another idea that was discussed is to maintain a database similar to the one used by libinput, but in libdisplay-info, that contains the required information about monitors, even if there is no such information made available by the vendor.

With all of the required information, the smoothing of refresh rate changes still needs to happen somewhere. It was debated whether this should be handled transparently by the kernel, or if it should be completely up to user space. There are pros and cons to both ways, for example better timing ability in the kernel, but less black box magic if handled by user space. In the end, the conclusion is for user space components (i.e. compositors) to handle this themselves first, and then reconsider some point in the future if that is enough, or whether new kernel uAPI is needed.

Low Framerate Compensation

The usual frame rates that a VRR monitor can achieve typically do not cover a bunch of often used low frame rates, such as 30, 25, or 24 Hz. To still be able to show such content without stutter, the display can be driven at a multiple of the target frame rate and present new content on every n-th refresh cycle.

Right now this Low Framerate Compensation (LFC) feature is built into the kernel driver, and when VRR is enabled, user space can transparently present content at refresh rates even lower than what the display supports. While this seems like a good idea, there are problems with this approach. For example the cursor can only be updated when there is a content update, making it very sluggish because of the low rate of content updates even though the screen refreshes multiple times. This either requires a special KMS commit which does not result in an immediate page flip but ends up on the refresh cycles inserted by LFC, or implementing LFC in user space instead. Like with the refresh rate change smoothing talked about earlier, moving LFC to user space might be possible but also might require some help from the kernel to be able to time page flips well enough.

Wayland

For VRR to work, applications need to provide content updates on a surface in a semi-regular interval. GUI applications for example often only draw when something changed which makes the updates irregular, driving VRR to its minimum refresh rate until e.g. an animation is playing and VRR is ramping up the refresh rate over multiple refresh cycles. This results in choppy mouse cursor movements and animations for some time. GUI applications sometimes do provide semi-regular updates, e.g. during animations or video playback. Some applications, like games, always provide semi-regular updates.

Currently there is no1 Wayland protocol letting applications advertise that a surface works with VRR at a moment in time, or at all. There is no way for a compositor to automatically determine if an app or a surface is suitable for VRR as well. For wayland native applications a protocol to communicate this information could be created but there are a lot of applications out there which would work fine with VRR but will not get updated to support this protocol.

Maintaining a database similar to the one mentioned above, but for applications, was discussed, but there is no clear winner in how to do so, and where to store the data. Maintaining a list is cumbersome, and complicates the ability for applications to work with VRR on release, or on distributions with out of date databases. Another idea was a desktop file entry stating support, but this too has its downsides. All in all, there is no clear path forward in how to actually enable VRR for applications transparently without causing issues.

1. Except for a protocol proposal.

Wrap-up

The hackfest was a huge success! Not only was this a good opportunity to get everyone up to speed and learn about what everyone is doing, having people with different backgrounds in the discussions made it possible to discuss problems, ideas and solutions spanning all the way from clients over compositors, to drivers and hardware. Especially on the color and HDR topics we came up with good, actionable consensus and a clear path to where we want to go. For VRR we managed to pin-point the remaining issues and know which parts require more experimentation.

For GNOME, Color management, HDR and VRR are all topics that are being actively worked on, and the future is both bright and dynamic, not only when it comes to luminescence and color intensity, but also when it comes to the rate monitors present all these intense colors.

Dor Askayo who has been working on bringing VRR to GNOME attended part of the hackfest, and together we can hopefully bring experimental VRR to GNOME soon. There will be more work needed to iron out the overall experience, as covered above, but getting the fundamental building blocks in place is a critical first step.

For HDR, work has been going on to attach color state information to the scene graph, and at the hackfest Georges Basile Stavracas, Sebastian Wick and Jonas Ådahl sat down and sketched out a new Clutter rendering API that aims replace the current Clutter paint nodes API that is used in Mutter and GNOME Shell, which will make color transformations a first class citizen. We will initially focus on using shaders for everything, but down the road, the goal is to utilize the future color pipeline KMS uAPI for both performance and power consumption improvements.

We’d like to thank Red Hat for organizing and hosting the hackfest and for allowing us to work on these interesting topics, Red Hat and Collabora for sponsoring food and refreshments, and especially Carlos Soriano Sanchez and Tomas Popela for actually doing all the work making the event happen. It was great. Also thanks to Jakub Steiner for the illustration, and Carlos Soriano Sanchez for the photo from the hackfest.

For another great hackfest write-up, head over to Simon Ser’s blog post.