On Tue, Nov 05, 2019 at 07:01:41PM +0100, Mickaël Salaün wrote: > > On 05/11/2019 18:18, Alexei Starovoitov wrote: > > On Mon, Nov 04, 2019 at 06:21:43PM +0100, Mickaël Salaün wrote: > >> Add a first Landlock hook that can be used to enforce a security policy > >> or to audit some process activities. For a sandboxing use-case, it is > >> needed to inform the kernel if a task can legitimately debug another. > >> ptrace(2) can also be used by an attacker to impersonate another task > >> and remain undetected while performing malicious activities. > >> > >> Using ptrace(2) and related features on a target process can lead to a > >> privilege escalation. A sandboxed task must then be able to tell the > >> kernel if another task is more privileged, via ptrace_may_access(). > >> > >> Signed-off-by: Mickaël Salaün <mic@xxxxxxxxxxx> > > ... > >> +static int check_ptrace(struct landlock_domain *domain, > >> + struct task_struct *tracer, struct task_struct *tracee) > >> +{ > >> + struct landlock_hook_ctx_ptrace ctx_ptrace = { > >> + .prog_ctx = { > >> + .tracer = (uintptr_t)tracer, > >> + .tracee = (uintptr_t)tracee, > >> + }, > >> + }; > > > > So you're passing two kernel pointers obfuscated as u64 into bpf program > > yet claiming that the end goal is to make landlock unprivileged?! > > The most basic security hole in the tool that is aiming to provide security. > > How could you used these pointers without dedicated BPF helpers? This > context items are typed as PTR_TO_TASK and can't be used without a > dedicated helper able to deal with ARG_PTR_TO_TASK. Moreover, pointer > arithmetic is explicitly forbidden (and I added tests for that). Did I > miss something? It's a pointer leak. > > > > > I think the only way bpf-based LSM can land is both landlock and KRSI > > developers work together on a design that solves all use cases. > > As I said in a previous cover letter [1], that would be great. I think > that the current Landlock bases (almost everything from this series > except the seccomp interface) should meet both needs, but I would like > to have the point of view of the KRSI developers. > > [1] https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/20191029171505.6650-1-mic@xxxxxxxxxxx/ > > > BPF is capable > > to be a superset of all existing LSMs whereas landlock and KRSI propsals today > > are custom solutions to specific security concerns. BPF subsystem was extended > > with custom things in the past. In networking we have lwt, skb, tc, xdp, sk > > program types with a lot of overlapping functionality. We couldn't figure out > > how to generalize them into single 'networking' program. Now we can and we > > should. Accepting two partially overlapping bpf-based LSMs would be repeating > > the same mistake again. > > I'll let the LSM maintainers comment on whether BPF could be a superset > of all LSM, but given the complexity of an access-control system, I have > some doubts though. Anyway, we need to start somewhere and then iterate. > This patch series is a first step. I would like KRSI folks to speak up. So far I don't see any sharing happening between landlock and KRSI. You're claiming this set is a first step. They're claiming the same about their patches. I'd like to set a patchset that was jointly developed.