On Thu, Oct 28, 2021 at 05:06:53PM -0500, Eric W. Biederman wrote: > Kees Cook <keescook@xxxxxxxxxxxx> writes: > > > On Thu, Oct 28, 2021 at 12:26:26PM -0500, Eric W. Biederman wrote: > >> Kees Cook <keescook@xxxxxxxxxxxx> writes: > >> > >> > On Thu, Oct 28, 2021 at 06:21:12PM +0200, Andrea Righi wrote: > >> >> The following sub-tests are failing in seccomp_bpf selftest: > >> >> > >> >> 18:56:54 DEBUG| [stdout] # selftests: seccomp: seccomp_bpf > >> >> ... > >> >> 18:56:57 DEBUG| [stdout] # # RUN TRACE_syscall.ptrace.kill_after ... > >> >> 18:56:57 DEBUG| [stdout] # # seccomp_bpf.c:2023:kill_after:Expected entry ? PTRACE_EVENTMSG_SYSCALL_ENTRY : PTRACE_EVENTMSG_SYSCALL_EXIT (1) == msg (0) > >> >> 18:56:57 DEBUG| [stdout] # # seccomp_bpf.c:2023:kill_after:Expected entry ? PTRACE_EVENTMSG_SYSCALL_ENTRY : PTRACE_EVENTMSG_SYSCALL_EXIT (2) == msg (1) > >> >> 18:56:57 DEBUG| [stdout] # # seccomp_bpf.c:2023:kill_after:Expected entry ? PTRACE_EVENTMSG_SYSCALL_ENTRY : PTRACE_EVENTMSG_SYSCALL_EXIT (1) == msg (2) > >> >> 18:56:57 DEBUG| [stdout] # # kill_after: Test exited normally instead of by signal (code: 12) > >> >> 18:56:57 DEBUG| [stdout] # # FAIL TRACE_syscall.ptrace.kill_after > >> >> ... > >> >> 18:56:57 DEBUG| [stdout] # # RUN TRACE_syscall.seccomp.kill_after ... > >> >> 18:56:57 DEBUG| [stdout] # # seccomp_bpf.c:1547:kill_after:Expected !ptrace_syscall (1) == IS_SECCOMP_EVENT(status) (0) > >> >> 18:56:57 DEBUG| [stdout] # # kill_after: Test exited normally instead of by signal (code: 0) > >> >> 18:56:57 DEBUG| [stdout] # # FAIL TRACE_syscall.seccomp.kill_after > >> >> 18:56:57 DEBUG| [stdout] # not ok 80 TRACE_syscall.seccomp.kill_after > >> >> ... > >> >> 18:56:57 DEBUG| [stdout] # # FAILED: 85 / 87 tests passed. > >> >> 18:56:57 DEBUG| [stdout] # # Totals: pass:85 fail:2 xfail:0 xpass:0 skip:0 error:0 > >> >> 18:56:57 DEBUG| [stdout] not ok 1 selftests: seccomp: seccomp_bpf # exit=1 > >> >> > >> >> I did some bisecting and found that the failures started to happen with: > >> >> > >> >> 307d522f5eb8 ("signal/seccomp: Refactor seccomp signal and coredump generation") > >> >> > >> >> Not sure if the test needs to be fixed after this commit, or if the > >> >> commit is actually introducing an issue. I'll investigate more, unless > >> >> someone knows already what's going on. > >> > > >> > Ah thanks for noticing; I will investigate... > >> > >> > >> I just did a quick read through of the test and while > >> I don't understand everything having a failure seems > >> very weird. > >> > >> I don't understand the comment: > >> /* Tracer will redirect getpid to getppid, and we should die. */ > >> > >> As I think what happens is it the bpf programs loads the signal > >> number. Tests to see if the signal number if GETPPID and allows > >> that system call and causes any other system call to be terminated. > > > > The test suite runs a series of seccomp filter vs syscalls under tracing, > > either with ptrace or with seccomp SECCOMP_RET_TRACE, to validate the > > expected behavioral states. It seems that what's happened is that the > > SIGSYS has suddenly become non-killing: > > > > # RUN TRACE_syscall.ptrace.kill_after ... > > # seccomp_bpf.c:1555:kill_after:Expected WSTOPSIG(status) & 0x80 (0) == 0x80 (128) > > # seccomp_bpf.c:1556:kill_after:WSTOPSIG: 31 > > # kill_after: Test exited normally instead of by signal (code: 12) > > # FAIL TRACE_syscall.ptrace.kill_after > > > > i.e. the ptracer no longer sees a dead tracee, which would pass through > > here: > > > > if (WIFSIGNALED(status) || WIFEXITED(status)) > > /* Child is dead. Time to go. */ > > return; > > > > So the above saw a SIG_TRAP|SIGSYS rather than a killing SIGSYS. i.e. > > instead of WIFSIGNALED(stauts) being true, it instead catches a > > PTRACE_EVENT_STOP for SIGSYS, which should be impossible (the process > > should be getting killed). > > Oh. This is being ptraced as part of the test? > > Yes. The signal started being delivered. As far as that goes that > sounds correct. > > Ptrace is allowed to intercept even fatal signals. Everything except > SIGKILL. > > Is this a condition we don't want even ptrace to be able to catch? > > I think we can arrange it so that even ptrace can't intercept this > signal. I need to sit this problem on the back burner for a few > minutes. It is an angle I had not considered. > > Is it a problem that the debugger can see the signal if the process does > not? Right, I'm trying to understand that too. However, my neighbor just lost power. :| What I was in the middle of checking was what ptrace "sees" going through a fatal SIGSYS; my initial debugging attempts were weird. -Kees -- Kees Cook