On Sat, Mar 25, 2023 at 02:51:05PM +0000, Lorenzo Stoakes wrote: > On Fri, Mar 24, 2023 at 01:36:46PM -0700, Andrew Morton wrote: > > (switched to email. Please respond via emailed reply-to-all, not via the > > bugzilla web interface). > > > > On Fri, 24 Mar 2023 03:34:23 +0000 bugzilla-daemon@xxxxxxxxxx wrote: > > > > > https://bugzilla.kernel.org/show_bug.cgi?id=217238 > > > > > > Bug ID: 217238 > > > Summary: Creating shared read-only map is denied after add > > > write seal to a memfd > > > Product: Memory Management > > > Version: 2.5 > > > Kernel Version: 6.2.8 > > > Hardware: All > > > OS: Linux > > > Tree: Mainline > > > Status: NEW > > > Severity: normal > > > Priority: P1 > > > Component: Other > > > Assignee: akpm@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx > > > Reporter: yshuiv7@xxxxxxxxx > > > Regression: No > > > > > > Test case: > > > > > > int main() { > > > int fd = memfd_create("test", MFD_ALLOW_SEALING); > > > write(fd, "test", 4); > > > fcntl(fd, F_ADD_SEALS, F_SEAL_WRITE); > > > > > > void *ret = mmap(NULL, 4, PROT_READ, MAP_SHARED, fd, 0); > > > } > > > > > > This fails with EPERM. This is in contradiction with what's described in the > > > documentation of F_SEAL_WRITE. > > > > > > -- > > > You may reply to this email to add a comment. > > > > > > You are receiving this mail because: > > > You are the assignee for the bug. > > > > This issue seems to be the result of the use of the memfd's shmem region's > page cache object (struct address_space)'s i_mmap_writable field to denote > whether it is write-sealed. > > The kernel assumes that a VM_SHARED mapping might become writable at any > time via mprotect(), therefore treats VM_SHARED mappings as if they were > writable as far as i_mmap_writable is concerned (this field's primary use > is to determine whether, for architectures that require it, flushing must > occur if this is set to avoid aliasing, see filemap_read() for example). > > In theory we could convert all such checks to VM_SHARED | VM_WRITE > (importantly including on fork) and then update mprotect() to check > mapping_map_writable() if a user tries to make unwritable memory > writable. > > I suspect however there are reasons relating to locking that make it > unreasonable to try to do this, but I may be mistaken (others might have > some insight on this). I also see some complexity around this in the > security checks on marking shared writable mappings executable (e.g. in > mmap_violation_check()). > > In any case, it doesn't really make much sense to have a write-sealed > shared mapping, since you're essentially saying 'nothing _at all_ can write > to this' so it may as well be private. The semantics are unfortunate here, > the memory will still be shared read-only by MAP_PRIVATE mappings. > > A better choice here might be F_SEAL_FUTURE_WRITE (available from kernel > >=5.1) which does permit shared read-only mappings as this is explicitly > checked for in seal_check_future_write() invoked from shmem_mmap(). > > Regardless, I think the conclusion is that this is not a bug, but rather > that the documentation needs to be updated. > Adding docs people to cc list (sorry didn't think to do this in first reply).