On Mon, Sep 21, 2020 at 06:09:22PM +0200, Christoph Hellwig wrote: > [adding Linus and Al] > > On Mon, Sep 21, 2020 at 04:51:35PM +0200, Ondrej Mosnacek wrote: > > Hi folks, > > > > It seems that after commit 13c164b1a186 ("autofs: switch to > > kernel_write") there is now an extra LSM permission required (for the > > current task to write to the automount pipe) for processes accessing > > some yet-to-to-be mounted directory on which an autofs mount is set > > up. The call chain is: > > [...] > > autofs_wait() -> > > autofs_notify_daemon() -> > > autofs_write() -> > > kernel_write() -> > > rw_verify_area() -> > > security_file_permission() > > > > The bug report that led me to this commit is at [1]. > > > > Technically, this is a regression for LSM users, since this is a > > kernel-internal operation and an LSM permission for the current task > > shouldn't be required. Can this patch be reverted? Perhaps > > __kernel_{read|write}() could instead be renamed to kernel_*_nocheck() > > so that the name is more descriptive? > > So we obviously should not break existing user space and need to fix > this ASAP. The trivial "fix" would be to export __kernel_write again > and switch autofs to use it. The other option would be a FMODE flag > to bypass security checks, only to be set if the callers ensures > they've been valided (i.e. in autofs_prepare_pipe). > > Any opinions? Reexport for now. Incidentally, what is LSM doing rejecting writes into a pipe?