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Instead of succeeding when either the firmware reports a TPM device
or we find a TPM device, let's check that the firmware reports a TPM
device and the TPM subsystem is enabled in the kernel.
To check whether the subsystem enabled, we check if the relevant
subdirectory in /sys exists at all.
(cherry picked from commit 300bba79c22e4be1effe2faad0e59ac725d396a1)
(cherry picked from commit 1757446e8bc4dc076badd5c1ad53a0021c42638c)
We use authenticated encryption, and that deserves mention. This in
particular relevant as the fact they are authenticated makes the
credentials useful as initrd parameterization items.
This is supposed to be useful when generating credentials for immutable
initrd environments, where it is is relevant to support credentials even
on systems lacking a TPM2 chip.
With this, if `systemd-creds encrypt --with-key=auto-initrd` is used a
credential will be encrypted/signed with the TPM2 if it is available and
recognized by the firmware. Otherwise it will be encrypted/signed with
the fixed empty key, thus providing no confidentiality or authenticity.
The idea is that distributions use this mode to generically create
credentials that are as locked down as possible on the specific
platform.