On Tue, Jun 16, 2020 at 9:49 AM Kees Cook <keescook@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > For systems that provide multiple syscall maps based on architectures > (e.g. AUDIT_ARCH_X86_64 and AUDIT_ARCH_I386 via CONFIG_COMPAT), allow > a fast way to pin the process to a specific syscall mapping, instead of > needing to generate all filters with an architecture check as the first > filter action. This seems reasonable; but can we maybe also add X86-specific handling for that X32 mess? AFAIK there are four ways to do syscalls with AUDIT_ARCH_X86_64: 1. normal x86-64 syscall, X32 bit unset (native case) 2. normal x86-64 syscall, X32 bit set (for X32 code calling syscalls with no special X32 version) 3. x32-specific syscall, X32 bit unset (never happens legitimately) 4. x32-specific syscall, X32 bit set (for X32 code calling syscalls with special X32 version) (I got this wrong when I wrote the notes on x32 in the seccomp manpage...) Can we add a flag for AUDIT_ARCH_X86_64 that says either "I want native x64-64" (enforcing case 1) or "I want X32" (enforcing case 2 or 4, and in case 2 checking that the syscall has no X32 equivalent)? (Of course, if the kernel is built without X32 support, we can leave out these extra checks.) > +static long seccomp_pin_architecture(void) > +{ > +#ifdef CONFIG_COMPAT > + u32 arch = syscall_get_arch(current); > + > + /* How did you even get here? */ > + if (current->seccomp.arch && current->seccomp.arch != arch) > + return -EBUSY; > + > + current->seccomp.arch = arch; > +#endif > + return 0; > +} Are you intentionally writing this such that SECCOMP_PIN_ARCHITECTURE only has an effect once you've installed a filter, and propagation to other threads happens when a filter is installed with TSYNC? I guess that is a possible way to design the API, but it seems like something that should at least be pointed out explicitly.