On Thu, Sep 24, 2020 at 4:36 AM Ondrej Mosnacek <omosnace@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On Wed, Sep 23, 2020 at 3:55 AM Ian Kent <raven@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On Tue, 2020-09-22 at 09:33 +0200, Ondrej Mosnacek wrote: > > > On Mon, Sep 21, 2020 at 6:30 PM Al Viro <viro@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> > > > wrote: > > > > 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). > > > > > > IMHO that sounds like an overkill in this scenario. I don't think it > > > makes sense to do the LSM check here (or at least not against the > > > current task's creds), because it is not the current task that wants > > > to communicate with the daemon, it just wants to to access some > > > directory on the system that just happens to be special to the > > > kernel, > > > which needs to do some communication on the side to service this > > > request. So if we do want to do any LSM check here, there should at > > > least be some "bool internal" flag passed to the LSM, signalizing > > > that > > > this is an internal read/write operation that wasn't directly > > > initiated/requested by the current process. SELinux could then either > > > use the kernel secid instead of the current task's secid or skip the > > > check completely in such case. > > > > Perhaps, but see below. > > > > > > > > I'd like Stephen to weigh in on this, but it looks he might be on > > > vacation right now... > > > > > > > > Any opinions? > > > > > > > > Reexport for now. Incidentally, what is LSM doing rejecting writes > > > > into a pipe? > > > > > > With SELinux at least, what is allowed or denied is defined in the > > > policy. And the policy usually defaults to everything denied and then > > > you add rules to allow what needs (and makes sense) to be allowed. > > > Since until kernel 5.8 random processes didn't need to write to pipes > > > created by the automount daemon, it has never been explicitly allowed > > > and so the automounting now fails. It is in no way obvious that all > > > processes should have the permission to talk to the automount daemon > > > just to traverse the filesystem... > > > > I think you might have misunderstood what lead to this, just a bit. > > > > Previously the __kern_write() function was used for this communication > > and Christoph's patch changed that to use kern_write() instead. > > > > In theory that's a good idea because kern_write() adds some additional > > sanity checks, one being a call to rw_verify_area() which is where the > > security_file_permission() call fails. > > > > So previously any random process could avoid these checks by calling > > __kern_write() so the change to kern_write() is, in theory, that's a > > good thing and simply reverting that hunk in Christoph's patch > > probably isn't the best thing to do. > > I understand that and I'm not proposing the revert as a long-term fix. > For a long-term solution I propose using kernel_write() and extending > it to allow the caller to suppress (just) the > security_file_permission() call. Then each caller would have to decide > whether the LSM check makes sense in that situation or not. It seems > safer against future mistakes than leaving it up to the caller to call > security_file_permission() explicitly (I predict that no new user > would even realize that the call might be needed). > > > > > But any random process does need to be able to write to the automount > > daemon pipe for trailing path components and the root dentry of autofs > > mounts, depending on case. > > > > So it's true that any write to any autofs dentry probably doesn't > > need to be allowed but I question what that gets us in terms of > > security improvement over allowing pipe writes for automount_t > > labelled pipes in selinux policy since they must be within an autofs > > mounted file system. > > The difference is not in security, but in usability. The kernel > communicating with the autofs daemon is an internal detail that > shouldn't need special rules in policy. Even if we want to do any LSM > checking here, the subject should be kernel_t, not the current running > process. The process doesn't have any control on whether the kernel > does the communication and it doesn't control the content of the > communication, so the permission check as it is doesn't make any > sense. People writing the policy should be burdened by low-level > details about how the kernel works internally as little as possible. > > > > > But Stephen has a different recommendation (and that appears to > > consider the cause I outlined above) so I'll wait to see what others > > think about the recommendations. > > As I said above, I think Stephen's approach is less future-proof. And > it seems that rw_verify_area() has many other callers, most/all of > which probably service actual requests from userspace and we'd need to > retain the security_file_permission() call in those cases. > > Let me try to put my proposal into a patch, so we have something > concrete to talk about... Up-thread I thought Linus indicated he didn't really want a flag to disable pemission checking due to potential abuse (and I agree). Historically we have taken one of two approaches for these situations: 1) Provide a separate interface like kernel_write() for use when we don't want permission checking and don't have it call the security hook at all. If you prefer kernel_write_nosec() that's fine but I think that's somewhat implicit in the fact that it is a kernel-initiated write, not a userspace write (which would hopefully go through vfs_write() or similar and end up calling the hook). 2) Temporarily override creds to the init_cred or the result of prepare_kernel_creds() before calling any credential-checking functions and then revert creds afterward. The problem with #2 is that it still requires that the policy allow kernel_t (or its equivalent) to be able to write to these pipes, which wasn't previously necessary and thus might not be allowed in all policies (e.g. Android?). #1 avoids any need for policy for these operations.