On Mon, Jan 27, 2025 at 4:41 PM Andrew Morton <akpm@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On Mon, 27 Jan 2025 14:21:14 -0800 Andrii Nakryiko <andrii@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > It's very common for various tracing and profiling toolis to need to > > access /proc/PID/maps contents for stack symbolization needs to learn > > which shared libraries are mapped in memory, at which file offset, etc. > > Currently, access to /proc/PID/maps requires CAP_SYS_PTRACE (unless we > > are looking at data for our own process, which is a trivial case not too > > relevant for profilers use cases). > > > > Unfortunately, CAP_SYS_PTRACE implies way more than just ability to > > discover memory layout of another process: it allows to fully control > > arbitrary other processes. This is problematic from security POV for > > applications that only need read-only /proc/PID/maps (and other similar > > read-only data) access, and in large production settings CAP_SYS_PTRACE > > is frowned upon even for the system-wide profilers. > > > > On the other hand, it's already possible to access similar kind of > > information (and more) with just CAP_PERFMON capability. E.g., setting > > up PERF_RECORD_MMAP collection through perf_event_open() would give one > > similar information to what /proc/PID/maps provides. > > > > CAP_PERFMON, together with CAP_BPF, is already a very common combination > > for system-wide profiling and observability application. As such, it's > > reasonable and convenient to be able to access /proc/PID/maps with > > CAP_PERFMON capabilities instead of CAP_SYS_PTRACE. > > > > For procfs, these permissions are checked through common mm_access() > > helper, and so we augment that with cap_perfmon() check *only* if > > requested mode is PTRACE_MODE_READ. I.e., PTRACE_MODE_ATTACH wouldn't be > > permitted by CAP_PERFMON. So /proc/PID/mem, which uses > > PTRACE_MODE_ATTACH, won't be permitted by CAP_PERFMON, but > > /proc/PID/maps, /proc/PID/environ, and a bunch of other read-only > > contents will be allowable under CAP_PERFMON. > > > > Besides procfs itself, mm_access() is used by process_madvise() and > > process_vm_{readv,writev}() syscalls. The former one uses > > PTRACE_MODE_READ to avoid leaking ASLR metadata, and as such CAP_PERFMON > > seems like a meaningful allowable capability as well. > > > > process_vm_{readv,writev} currently assume PTRACE_MODE_ATTACH level of > > permissions (though for readv PTRACE_MODE_READ seems more reasonable, > > but that's outside the scope of this change), and as such won't be > > affected by this patch. > > > > This should be documented somewhere, so we can tell our users what we > did. Documentation/filesystems/proc.rst seems to be the place. . Wow, that's a big file :) Funny enough, that file mentions ptrace only in the context of /proc/<pid>/timerslack_ns, nothing else. Hm.. Should I add a common section saying something about how either CAP_SYS_PTRACE or CAP_PERFMON provides access to other process' user space information? If that's ok, I can send that as a follow up patch (as I bet there will be a bunch of iteration on exact form, shape, wording, placement).