On 12.02.2020 16:32, Stephen Smalley wrote: > On 2/12/20 3:53 AM, Alexey Budankov wrote: >> Hi Stephen, >> >> On 22.01.2020 17:07, Stephen Smalley wrote: >>> On 1/22/20 5:45 AM, Alexey Budankov wrote: >>>> >>>> On 21.01.2020 21:27, Alexey Budankov wrote: >>>>> >>>>> On 21.01.2020 20:55, Alexei Starovoitov wrote: >>>>>> On Tue, Jan 21, 2020 at 9:31 AM Alexey Budankov >>>>>> <alexey.budankov@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >>>>>>> >>>>>>> >>>>>>> On 21.01.2020 17:43, Stephen Smalley wrote: >>>>>>>> On 1/20/20 6:23 AM, Alexey Budankov wrote: >>>>>>>>> >> <SNIP> >>>>>>>>> Introduce CAP_PERFMON capability designed to secure system performance >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> Why _noaudit()? Normally only used when a permission failure is non-fatal to the operation. Otherwise, we want the audit message. >>>> >>>> So far so good, I suggest using the simplest version for v6: >>>> >>>> static inline bool perfmon_capable(void) >>>> { >>>> return capable(CAP_PERFMON) || capable(CAP_SYS_ADMIN); >>>> } >>>> >>>> It keeps the implementation simple and readable. The implementation is more >>>> performant in the sense of calling the API - one capable() call for CAP_PERFMON >>>> privileged process. >>>> >>>> Yes, it bloats audit log for CAP_SYS_ADMIN privileged and unprivileged processes, >>>> but this bloating also advertises and leverages using more secure CAP_PERFMON >>>> based approach to use perf_event_open system call. >>> >>> I can live with that. We just need to document that when you see both a CAP_PERFMON and a CAP_SYS_ADMIN audit message for a process, try only allowing CAP_PERFMON first and see if that resolves the issue. We have a similar issue with CAP_DAC_READ_SEARCH versus CAP_DAC_OVERRIDE. >> >> I am trying to reproduce this double logging with CAP_PERFMON. >> I am using the refpolicy version with enabled perf_event tclass [1], in permissive mode. >> When running perf stat -a I am observing this AVC audit messages: >> >> type=AVC msg=audit(1581496695.666:8691): avc: denied { open } for pid=2779 comm="perf" scontext=user_u:user_r:user_systemd_t tcontext=user_u:user_r:user_systemd_t tclass=perf_event permissive=1 >> type=AVC msg=audit(1581496695.666:8691): avc: denied { kernel } for pid=2779 comm="perf" scontext=user_u:user_r:user_systemd_t tcontext=user_u:user_r:user_systemd_t tclass=perf_event permissive=1 >> type=AVC msg=audit(1581496695.666:8691): avc: denied { cpu } for pid=2779 comm="perf" scontext=user_u:user_r:user_systemd_t tcontext=user_u:user_r:user_systemd_t tclass=perf_event permissive=1 >> type=AVC msg=audit(1581496695.666:8692): avc: denied { write } for pid=2779 comm="perf" scontext=user_u:user_r:user_systemd_t tcontext=user_u:user_r:user_systemd_t tclass=perf_event permissive=1 >> >> However there is no capability related messages around. I suppose my refpolicy should >> be modified somehow to observe capability related AVCs. >> >> Could you please comment or clarify on how to enable caps related AVCs in order >> to test the concerned logging. > > The new perfmon permission has to be defined in your policy; you'll have a message in dmesg about "Permission perfmon in class capability2 not defined in policy.". You can either add it to the common cap2 definition in refpolicy/policy/flask/access_vectors and rebuild your policy or extract your base module as CIL, add it there, and insert the updated module. Yes, I already have it like this: common cap2 { <------>mac_override<--># unused by SELinux <------>mac_admin <------>syslog <------>wake_alarm <------>block_suspend <------>audit_read <------>perfmon } dmesg stopped reporting perfmon as not defined but audit.log still doesn't report CAP_PERFMON denials. BTW, audit even doesn't report CAP_SYS_ADMIN denials, however perfmon_capable() does check for it. ~Alexey > > _______________________________________________ Intel-gfx mailing list Intel-gfx@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://lists.freedesktop.org/mailman/listinfo/intel-gfx