On 10/09/2020 19:04, Matthew Wilcox wrote: > On Thu, Sep 10, 2020 at 06:46:09PM +0200, Mickaël Salaün wrote: >> This ninth patch series rework the previous AT_INTERPRETED and O_MAYEXEC >> series with a new syscall: introspect_access(2) . Access check are now >> only possible on a file descriptor, which enable to avoid possible race >> conditions in user space. > > But introspection is about examining _yourself_. This isn't about > doing that. It's about doing ... something ... to a script that you're > going to execute. If the script were going to call the syscall, then > it might be introspection. Or if the interpreter were measuring itself, > that would be introspection. But neither of those would be useful things > to do, because an attacker could simply avoid doing them. Picking a good name other than "access" (or faccessat2) is not easy. The idea with introspect_access() is for the calling task to ask the kernel if this task should allows to do give access to a kernel resource which is already available to this task. In this sense, we think that introspection makes sense because it is the choice of the task to allow or deny an access. > > So, bad name. What might be better? sys_security_check()? > sys_measure()? sys_verify_fd()? I don't know. > "security_check" looks quite broad, "measure" doesn't make sense here, "verify_fd" doesn't reflect that it is an access check. Yes, not easy, but if this is the only concern we are on the good track. :) Other ideas: - interpret_access (mainly, but not only, for interpreters) - indirect_access - may_access - faccessat3