On Wed, Sep 22, 2021 at 08:34:23AM -0700, Andy Lutomirski wrote: > On Wed, Sep 22, 2021, at 5:25 AM, Christian Brauner wrote: > > On Mon, Sep 20, 2021 at 11:36:47AM -0700, Andy Lutomirski wrote: > >> On Mon, Sep 20, 2021 at 11:16 AM Luis Chamberlain <mcgrof@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >> > > >> > On Mon, Sep 20, 2021 at 04:51:19PM +0200, Thomas Weißschuh wrote: > >> > >> > > > Do you mean it literally invokes /sbin/modprobe? If so, hooking this > >> > > > at /sbin/modprobe and calling out to the container manager seems like > >> > > > a decent solution. > >> > > > >> > > Yes it does. Thanks for the idea, I'll see how this works out. > >> > > >> > Would documentation guiding you in that way have helped? If so > >> > I welcome a patch that does just that. > >> > >> If someone wants to make this classy, we should probably have the > >> container counterpart of a standardized paravirt interface. There > >> should be a way for a container to, in a runtime-agnostic way, issue > >> requests to its manager, and requesting a module by (name, Linux > >> kernel version for which that name makes sense) seems like an > >> excellent use of such an interface. > > > > I always thought of this in two ways we currently do this: > > > > 1. Caller transparent container manager requests. > > This is the seccomp notifier where we transparently handle syscalls > > including intercepting init_module() where we parse out the module to > > be loaded from the syscall args of the container and if it is > > allow-listed load it for the container otherwise continue the syscall > > letting it fail or failing directly through seccomp return value. > > Specific problems here include aliases and dependencies. My modules.alias file, for example, has: > > alias net-pf-16-proto-16-family-wireguard wireguard > > If I do modprobe net-pf-16-proto-16-family-wireguard, modprobe parses some files in /lib/modules/`uname -r` and issues init_module() asking for 'wireguard'. So hooking init_module() is at the wrong layer -- for that to work, the container's /sbin/modprobe needs to already have figured out that the desired module is wireguard and have a .ko for it. You can't use the container's .ko module. For this you would need to trust the image that the container wants you to load. The container manager should always load a host module. > > > > > 2. A process in the container explicitly calling out to the container > > manager. > > One example how this happens is systemd-nspawn via dbus messages > > between systemd in the container and systemd outside the container to > > e.g. allocate a new terminal in the container (kinda insecure but > > that's another issue) or other stuff. > > > > So what was your idea: would it be like a device file that could be > > exposed to the container where it writes requestes to the container > > manager? What would be the advantage to just standardizing a socket > > protocol which is what we do for example (it doesn't do module loading > > of course as we handle that differently): > > My idea is standardizing *something*. I think it would be nice if, for example, distros could ship a /sbin/modprobe that would do the right thing inside any compliant container runtime as well as when running outside a container. > > I suppose container managers could also bind-mount over /sbin/modprobe, but that's more intrusive. I don't see this is a big issue because that is fairly trivial. I think we never want to trust the container's modules. What probably should be happening is that the manager exposes a list of modules the container can request in some form. We have precedence for doing something like this. So now modprobe and similar tools can be made aware that if they are in a container they should request that module from the container manager be it via a socket request or something else. Nesting will be a bit funny but can probably be made to work by just bind-mounting the outermost socket into the container or relaying the request.