On 10/30/20 8:14 PM, Jann Horn wrote: > On Thu, Oct 29, 2020 at 3:19 PM Michael Kerrisk (man-pages) > <mtk.manpages@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> On 10/29/20 2:42 AM, Jann Horn wrote: >>> On Mon, Oct 26, 2020 at 10:55 AM Michael Kerrisk (man-pages) >>> <mtk.manpages@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: >>>> static bool >>>> getTargetPathname(struct seccomp_notif *req, int notifyFd, >>>> char *path, size_t len) >>>> { >>>> char procMemPath[PATH_MAX]; >>>> >>>> snprintf(procMemPath, sizeof(procMemPath), "/proc/%d/mem", req->pid); >>>> >>>> int procMemFd = open(procMemPath, O_RDONLY); >>>> if (procMemFd == -1) >>>> errExit("\tS: open"); >>>> >>>> /* Check that the process whose info we are accessing is still alive. >>>> If the SECCOMP_IOCTL_NOTIF_ID_VALID operation (performed >>>> in checkNotificationIdIsValid()) succeeds, we know that the >>>> /proc/PID/mem file descriptor that we opened corresponds to the >>>> process for which we received a notification. If that process >>>> subsequently terminates, then read() on that file descriptor >>>> will return 0 (EOF). */ >>>> >>>> checkNotificationIdIsValid(notifyFd, req->id); >>>> >>>> /* Read bytes at the location containing the pathname argument >>>> (i.e., the first argument) of the mkdir(2) call */ >>>> >>>> ssize_t nread = pread(procMemFd, path, len, req->data.args[0]); >>>> if (nread == -1) >>>> errExit("pread"); >>> >>> As discussed at >>> <https://lore.kernel.org/r/CAG48ez0m4Y24ZBZCh+Tf4ORMm9_q4n7VOzpGjwGF7_Fe8EQH=Q@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, >>> we need to re-check checkNotificationIdIsValid() after reading remote >>> memory but before using the read value in any way. Otherwise, the >>> syscall could in the meantime get interrupted by a signal handler, the >>> signal handler could return, and then the function that performed the >>> syscall could free() allocations or return (thereby freeing buffers on >>> the stack). >>> >>> In essence, this pread() is (unavoidably) a potential use-after-free >>> read; and to make that not have any security impact, we need to check >>> whether UAF read occurred before using the read value. This should >>> probably be called out elsewhere in the manpage, too... >> >> Thanks very much for pointing me at this! >> >> So, I want to conform that the fix to the code is as simple as >> adding a check following the pread() call, something like: >> >> [[ >> ssize_t nread = pread(procMemFd, path, len, req->data.args[argNum]); >> if (nread == -1) >> errExit("Supervisor: pread"); >> >> if (nread == 0) { >> fprintf(stderr, "\tS: pread() of /proc/PID/mem " >> "returned 0 (EOF)\n"); >> exit(EXIT_FAILURE); >> } >> >> if (close(procMemFd) == -1) >> errExit("Supervisor: close-/proc/PID/mem"); >> >> + /* Once again check that the notification ID is still valid. The >> + case we are particularly concerned about here is that just >> + before we fetched the pathname, the target's blocked system >> + call was interrupted by a signal handler, and after the handler >> + returned, the target carried on execution (past the interrupted >> + system call). In that case, we have no guarantees about what we >> + are reading, since the target's memory may have been arbitrarily >> + changed by subsequent operations. */ >> + >> + if (!notificationIdIsValid(notifyFd, req->id, "post-open")) >> + return false; >> + >> /* We have no guarantees about what was in the memory of the target >> process. We therefore treat the buffer returned by pread() as >> untrusted input. The buffer should be terminated by a null byte; >> if not, then we will trigger an error for the target process. */ >> >> if (strnlen(path, nread) < nread) >> return true; >> ]] > > Yeah, that should do the job. Thanks. > With the caveat that a cancelled syscall > could've also led to the memory being munmap()ed, so the nread==0 case > could also happen legitimately - so you might want to move this check > up above the nread==0 (mm went away) and nread==-1 (mm still exists, > but read from address failed, errno EIO) checks if the error message > shouldn't appear spuriously. In any case, I've been refactoring (simplifying) that code a little. I haven't so far rearranged the order of the checks, but I already log message for the nread==0 case. (Instead, there will eventually be an error when the response is sent.) I also haven't exactly tested the scenario you describe in the seccomp unotify scenario, but I think the above is not correct. Here are two scenarios I did test, simply with mmap() and /proc/PID/mem (no seccomp involved): Scenario 1: A creates a mapping at address X B opens /proc/A/mem and and lseeks on resulting FD to offset X A terminates B reads from FD ==> read() returns 0 (EOF) Scenario 2: A creates a mapping at address X B opens /proc/A/mem and and lseeks on resulting FD to offset X A unmaps mapping at address X B reads from FD ==> read() returns -1 / EIO. That last scenario seems to contradict what you say, since I think you meant that in this case read() should return 0 in that case. Have I misunderstood you? Thanks, Michael -- Michael Kerrisk Linux man-pages maintainer; http://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/ Linux/UNIX System Programming Training: http://man7.org/training/