Re: [PATCH ghak90 V6 02/10] audit: add container id

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On July 8, 2019 8:12:56 PM Richard Guy Briggs <rgb@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

> On 2019-05-30 19:26, Paul Moore wrote:
>> On Thu, May 30, 2019 at 5:29 PM Tycho Andersen <tycho@xxxxxxxx> wrote:
>>> On Thu, May 30, 2019 at 03:29:32PM -0400, Paul Moore wrote:
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> [REMINDER: It is an "*audit* container ID" and not a general
>>>> "container ID" ;)  Smiley aside, I'm not kidding about that part.]
>>>
>>> This sort of seems like a distinction without a difference; presumably
>>> audit is going to want to differentiate between everything that people
>>> in userspace call a container. So you'll have to support all this
>>> insanity anyway, even if it's "not a container ID".
>>
>> That's not quite right.  Audit doesn't care about what a container is,
>> or is not, it also doesn't care if the "audit container ID" actually
>> matches the ID used by the container engine in userspace and I think
>> that is a very important line to draw.  Audit is simply given a value
>> which it calls the "audit container ID", it ensures that the value is
>> inherited appropriately (e.g. children inherit their parent's audit
>> container ID), and it uses the value in audit records to provide some
>> additional context for log analysis.  The distinction isn't limited to
>> the value itself, but also to how it is used; it is an "audit
>> container ID" and not a "container ID" because this value is
>> exclusively for use by the audit subsystem.  We are very intentionally
>> not adding a generic container ID to the kernel.  If the kernel does
>> ever grow a general purpose container ID we will be one of the first
>> ones in line to make use of it, but we are not going to be the ones to
>> generically add containers to the kernel.  Enough people already hate
>> audit ;)
>>
>>>> I'm not interested in supporting/merging something that isn't useful;
>>>> if this doesn't work for your use case then we need to figure out what
>>>> would work.  It sounds like nested containers are much more common in
>>>> the lxc world, can you elaborate a bit more on this?
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> As far as the possible solutions you mention above, I'm not sure I
>>>> like the per-userns audit container IDs, I'd much rather just emit the
>>>> necessary tracking information via the audit record stream and let the
>>>> log analysis tools figure it out.  However, the bigger question is how
>>>> to limit (re)setting the audit container ID when you are in a non-init
>>>> userns.  For reasons already mentioned, using capable() is a non
>>>> starter for everything but the initial userns, and using ns_capable()
>>>> is equally poor as it essentially allows any userns the ability to
>>>> munge it's audit container ID (obviously not good).  It appears we
>>>> need a different method for controlling access to the audit container
>>>> ID.
>>>
>>> One option would be to make it a string, and have it be append only.
>>> That should be safe with no checks.
>>>
>>> I know there was a long thread about what type to make this thing. I
>>> think you could accomplish the append-only-ness with a u64 if you had
>>> some rule about only allowing setting lower order bits than those that
>>> are already set. With 4 bits for simplicity:
>>>
>>> 1100         # initial container id
>>> 1100 -> 1011 # not allowed
>>> 1100 -> 1101 # allowed, but now 1101 is set in stone since there are
>>>       # no lower order bits left
>>>
>>> There are probably fancier ways to do it if you actually understand
>>> math :)
>>
>> ;)
>>
>>> Since userns nesting is limited to 32 levels (right now, IIRC), and
>>> you have 64 bits, this might be reasonable. You could just teach
>>> container engines to use the first say N bits for themselves, with a 1
>>> bit for the barrier at the end.
>>
>> I like the creativity, but I worry that at some point these
>> limitations are going to be raised (limits have a funny way of doing
>> that over time) and we will be in trouble.  I say "trouble" because I
>> want to be able to quickly do an audit container ID comparison and
>> we're going to pay a penalty for these larger values (we'll need this
>> when we add multiple auditd support and the requisite record routing).
>>
>> Thinking about this makes me also realize we probably need to think a
>> bit longer about audit container ID conflicts between orchestrators.
>> Right now we just take the value that is given to us by the
>> orchestrator, but if we want to allow multiple container orchestrators
>> to work without some form of cooperation in userspace (I think we have
>> to assume the orchestrators will not talk to each other) we likely
>> need to have some way to block reuse of an audit container ID.  We
>> would either need to prevent the orchestrator from explicitly setting
>> an audit container ID to a currently in use value, or instead generate
>> the audit container ID in the kernel upon an event triggered by the
>> orchestrator (e.g. a write to a /proc file).  I suspect we should
>> start looking at the idr code, I think we will need to make use of it.
>
> To address this, I'd suggest that it is enforced to only allow the
> setting of descendants and to maintain a master list of audit container
> identifiers (with a hash table if necessary later) that includes the
> container owner.
>
> This also allows the orchestrator/engine to inject processes into
> existing containers by checking that the audit container identifier is
> only used again by the same owner.
>
> I have working code for both.

Just a quick note that due to some holiday travel I'm not going to be able to adequately respond to your latest messages on this thread for at least another week, likely a bit more.  I'm only checking mail to put out fires, and the audit container ID work tends to be something that starts them ;)

--
paul moore
www.paul-moore.com








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