On Wed, Feb 03, 2021 at 01:09:30PM +0100, Michal Hocko wrote: > On Tue 02-02-21 10:55:40, James Bottomley wrote: > > On Tue, 2021-02-02 at 20:15 +0200, Mike Rapoport wrote: > > > On Tue, Feb 02, 2021 at 03:34:29PM +0100, David Hildenbrand wrote: > > > > On 02.02.21 15:32, Michal Hocko wrote: > > > > Well the safest security statement is that we never expose the data to > > the kernel because it's a very clean security statement and easy to > > enforce. It's also the easiest threat model to analyse. Once we do > > start exposing the secret to the kernel it alters the threat profile > > and the analysis and obviously potentially provides the ROP gadget to > > an attacker to do the same. Instinct tells me that the loss of > > security doesn't really make up for the ability to swap or migrate but > > if there were a case for doing the latter, it would have to be a > > security policy of the user (i.e. a user should be able to decide their > > data is too sensitive to expose to the kernel). > > The security/threat model should be documented in the changelog as > well. I am not a security expert but I would tend to agree that not > allowing even temporal mapping for data copying (in the kernel) is the > most robust approach. Whether that is generally necessary for users I do > not know. > > From the API POV I think it makes sense to have two > modes. NEVER_MAP_IN_KERNEL which would imply no migrateability, no > copy_{from,to}_user, no gup or any other way for the kernel to access > content of the memory. Maybe even zero the content on the last unmap to > never allow any data leak. ALLOW_TEMPORARY would unmap the page from > the direct mapping but it would still allow temporary mappings for > data copying inside the kernel (thus allow CoW, copy*user, migration). > Which one should be default and which an opt-in I do not know. A less > restrictive mode to be default and the more restrictive an opt-in via > flags makes a lot of sense to me though. The default is already NEVER_MAP_IN_KERNEL, so there is no explicit flag for this. ALLOW_TEMPORARY should be opt-in, IMHO, and we can add it on top later on. -- Sincerely yours, Mike.