Re: [PATCH] fs/open: add new RESOLVE_EMPTY_PATH flag for openat2

[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

 



On Thu, Jan 13, 2022 at 05:46:43PM +1100, Aleksa Sarai wrote:
> On 2022-01-12, Andrey Zhadchenko <andrey.zhadchenko@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> > On 1/12/22 17:51, Christian Brauner wrote:
> > > On Thu, Jan 13, 2022 at 01:34:19AM +1100, Aleksa Sarai wrote:
> > > > On 2022-01-12, Andrey Zhadchenko <andrey.zhadchenko@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> > > > > If you have an opened O_PATH file, currently there is no way to re-open
> > > > > it with other flags with openat/openat2. As a workaround it is possible
> > > > > to open it via /proc/self/fd/<X>, however
> > > > > 1) You need to ensure that /proc exists
> > > > > 2) You cannot use O_NOFOLLOW flag
> > > > 
> > > > There is also another issue -- you can mount on top of magic-links so if
> > > > you're a container runtime that has been tricked into creating bad
> > > > mounts of top of /proc/ subdirectories there's no way of detecting that
> > > > this has happened. (Though I think in the long-term we will need to
> > > > make it possible for unprivileged users to create a procfs mountfd if
> > > > they have hidepid=4,subset=pids set -- there are loads of things
> > > > containers need to touch in procfs which can be overmounted in malicious
> > > > ways.)
> > > 
> > > Yeah, though I see this as a less pressing issue for now. I'd rather
> > > postpone this and make userspace work a bit more. There are ways to
> > > design programs so you know that the procfs instance you're interacting
> > > with is the one you want to interact with without requiring unprivileged
> > > mounting outside of a userns+pidns+mountns pair. ;)
> > > 
> > > > 
> > > > > Both problems may look insignificant, but they are sensitive for CRIU.
> > > > > First of all, procfs may not be mounted in the namespace where we are
> > > > > restoring the process. Secondly, if someone opens a file with O_NOFOLLOW
> > > > > flag, it is exposed in /proc/pid/fdinfo/<X>. So CRIU must also open the
> > > > > file with this flag during restore.
> > > > > 
> > > > > This patch adds new constant RESOLVE_EMPTY_PATH for resolve field of
> > > > > struct open_how and changes getname() call to getname_flags() to avoid
> > > > > ENOENT for empty filenames.
> > > > 
> > > > This is something I've wanted to implement for a while, but from memory
> > > > we need to add some other protections in place before enabling this.
> > > > 
> > > > The main one is disallowing re-opening of a path when it was originally
> > > > opened with a different set of modes. [1] is the patch I originally
> > I looked at this patch. However I am not able to reproduce the problem.
> > For example, I can't open /proc/self/exe as RDWR with the following:
> > fd1 = open(/proc/self/exe, O_PATH)
> > fd2 = open(/proc/self/fd/3, O_RDWR) <- error
> > or open file with incorrect flags via O_PATH to O_PATH fd from proc
> > This is fixed or did I understand this problem wrong?
> 
> You will get -ETXTBSY because the /proc/self/exe is still a current->mm
> of a process. What you need to do is have two processes (or fork+exec a
> process and do this):

Note that not too long ago someone proposed to remove the -ETXTBSY
restriction and I argued against doing that in order to not make these
attacks easier.

> 
>  1. Grab the /proc/$pid/exe handle of the target process.
>  2. Wait for the target process to do an exec() of another program (or
>     exit).
>  3. *Then* re-open the fd with write permissions. This is allowed
>     because the file is no longer being used as the current->mm of a
> 	process and thus is treated like a regular file handle even though
> 	it was only ever resolveable through /proc/self/exe which should
> 	(semantically) only ever be readable.
> 
> This attack was used against runc in 2016 and a similar attack was
> possible with some later CVEs (I think there was also one against LXC at
> some point but I might be mistaken). There were other bugs which lead to

(IIrc, it only affects privileged containers and we did write the fix for this
together.)

> this vector being usable, but my view is that this shouldn't have been
> possible in the first place.
> 
> I can cook up a simple example if the above description isn't explaining
> the issue thoroughly enough.
> 
> > > > wrote as part of the openat2(2) (but I dropped it since I wasn't sure
> > > > whether it might break some systems in subtle ways -- though according
> > > > to my testing there wasn't an issue on any of my machines).
> > > 
> > > Oh this is the discussion we had around turning an opath fd into a say
> > > O_RDWR fd, I think.
> > > So yes, I think restricting fd reopening makes sense. However, going
> > > from an O_PATH fd to e.g. an fd with O_RDWR does make sense and needs to
> > > be the default anyway. So we would need to implement this as a denylist
> > > anyway. The default is that opath fds can be reopened with whatever and
> > > only if the opath creator has restricted reopening will it fail, i.e.
> > > it's similar to a denylist.
> > > 
> > > But this patch wouldn't prevent that or hinder the upgrade mask
> > > restriction afaict.
> > 
> > This issue is actually more complicated than I thought.
> > 
> > What do you think of the following:
> > 1. Add new O_EMPTYPATH constant
> > 2. When we open something with O_PATH, remember access flags (currently
> > we drop all flags in do_dentry_open() for O_PATH fds). This is similar
> > to Aleksa Sarai idea, but I do not think we should add some new fields,
> > because CRIU needs to be able to see it. Just leave access flags
> > untouched.
> 
> There are two problems with this:
> 
>  * The problem with this is that O_PATH and O_PATH|O_RDONLY are
>    identical. O_RDONLY is defined as 0. I guess by new fields you're
>    referring to what you'd get from fcntl(F_GETFL)?
> 
>    What you're suggesting here is the openat2() O_PATH access mask
>    stuff. That is a feature I think would be useful, but it's not
>    necessary to get O_EMPTYPATH working.

Yes, that's crucial to notice. I don't think we need to make the
patchsets dependent on each other which is what I mentioned in my
earlier mail.

> 
>    If you really need to be able to get the O_PATH re-opening mask of a
>    file descriptor (which you probably do for CRIU) we can add that
>    information to F_GETFL or some other such interface.

fcntl() would certainly be a sensible choice for that.

> 
>  * We need to make sure that the default access modes of O_PATH on
>    magic links are correct. We can't simply allow any access mode in
>    that case, because if we do then we haven't really solved the
>    /proc/self/exe issue.

Or alternatively we make O_EMPTYPATH not work on magic links.

> 
> > 3. for openat(fd, "", O_EMPTYPATH | <access flags>) additionally check
> > access flags against the ones we remembered for O_PATH fd
> 
>  * We also need to add the same restrictions for opening through
>    /proc/self/fd/$n.
> 
> > This won't solve magiclinks problems but there at least will be API to
> > avoid procfs and which allow to add some restrictions.
> 
> I think the magic link problems need to be solved if we're going to
> enshrine this fd reopening behaviour by adding an O_* flag for it.

As I understand it there are two naive options:
1. We do add O_EMPTYPATH before introducing upgrade masks. In this case
   O_EMPTYPATH would be unrestricted by default. Meaning, you can go
   from an O_PATH fd to an fd with any access mask.
   So after the introduction of upgrade masks, O_EMPTYPATH is restricted
   iff the O_PATH fd has opened with an upgrade mask.
2. We do introduce upgrade masks before introducing O_EMPTYPATH.
   Iiuc, we could then introduce O_EMPTYPATH in a more restricted
   manner such that O_EMPTYPATH will be restricted by default,
   i.e. it wouldn't allow reopening an O_PATH fd _unless_ an upgrade
   mask has been specified. The problem with this approach is that
   /proc/self/fd/$n would break that logic and we can't change that
   behavior without regressions.
   Additionally, this might  make O_EMPTYPATH less useful for some users
   in case they are not in control of the O_PATH fd handed to them
   and the opener has not opened the O_PATH fd with an upgrade mask.

So I think 2. is out of the question which means that we can add
O_EMPTYPATH first or add upgrade masks first or together; it wouldn't
really matter afaict.



[Index of Archives]     [Linux USB Devel]     [Video for Linux]     [Linux Audio Users]     [Yosemite News]     [Linux Kernel]     [Linux SCSI]

  Powered by Linux