
Hi Sean,
On Sat, 2 Dec 2023 at 12:38, Sean Anderson seanga2@gmail.com wrote:
On 12/2/23 14:33, Sean Anderson wrote:
Both SHA1 and (especially) MD5 are no longer as safe as they once were for cryptographic use. Replaces examples which use them with examples using SHA256 instead. This will provide more-secure defaults for users who use documentation examples as a base for their own use. This is not too necessary for non-verified-boot scenarios (since someone could just replace the checksum), but I wanted to be complete.
Signed-off-by: Sean Anderson seanga2@gmail.com
I forgot to mention this in the commit message, but all the new hashes were generated like
echo fake kernel hash | sha256sum
which should be fine, since the actual values were just for example anyway.
Ah, I was wondering about that.
Reviewed-by: Simon Glass sjg@chromium.org
Regards, Simon