On 8/4/22 10:09, Josh Triplett wrote: > On Tue, Aug 02, 2022 at 09:40:50PM +0200, Helge Deller wrote: >> On 8/1/22 18:57, Josh Triplett wrote: >>> On Mon, Aug 01, 2022 at 05:20:13PM +0200, Helge Deller wrote: >>>> This patch series allows the arch-specific kernel fault handlers to dump >>>> in addition to the typical info (IP address, fault type, backtrace and so on) >>>> the command line of the faulting process. >>>> >>>> The motivation for this patch is that it's sometimes quite hard to find out and >>>> annoying to not know which program *exactly* faulted when looking at the syslog. >>>> >>>> Some examples from the syslog are: >>>> >>>> On parisc: >>>> do_page_fault() command='cc1' type=15 address=0x00000000 in libc-2.33.so[f6abb000+184000] >>>> CPU: 1 PID: 13472 Comm: cc1 Tainted: G E 5.10.133+ #45 >>>> Hardware name: 9000/785/C8000 >>>> >>>> -> We see the "cc1" compiler crashed, but it would be useful to know which file was compiled. >>>> >>>> With this patch series, the kernel now prints in addition: >>>> cc1[13472] cmdline: /usr/lib/gcc/hppa-linux-gnu/12/cc1 -quiet @/tmp/ccRkFSfY -imultilib . -imultiarch hppa-linux-gnu -D USE_MINIINTERPRETER -D NO_REGS -D _HPUX_SOURCE -D NOSMP -D THREADED_RTS -include /build/ghc/ghc-9.0.2/includes/dist-install/build/ghcversion.h -iquote compiler/GHC/Iface -quiet -dumpdir /tmp/ghc13413_0/ -dumpbase ghc_5.hc -dumpbase-ext .hc -O -Wimplicit -fno-PIC -fwrapv -fno-builtin -fno-strict-aliasing -o /tmp/ghc13413_0/ghc_5.s >>>> >>>> -> now we know that cc1 crashed while compiling some haskell code. >>> >>> This does seem really useful for debugging. >> >> Yes. >> >>> However, it's also an information disclosure in various ways. The >>> arguments of a program are often more sensitive than the name, and logs >>> have a tendency to end up in various places, such as bug reports. >>> >>> An example of how this can be an issue: >>> - You receive an email or other message with a sensitive link to follow >>> - You open the link, which launches `firefox https://...` >>> - You continue browsing from that window >>> - Firefox crashes (and recovers and restarts, so you don't think >>> anything of it) >>> - Later, you report a bug on a different piece of software, and the bug >>> reporting process includes a copy of the kernel log >> >> Yes, that's a possible way how such information can leak. >> >>> I am *not* saying that we shouldn't do this; it seems quite helpful. >>> However, I think we need to arrange to treat this as sensitive >>> information, similar to kptr_restrict. >> >> I wonder what the best solution could be. >> >> A somewhat trivial solution is to combine it with the dmesg_restrict sysctl, e.g.: >> >> * When ``dmesg_restrict`` is set to 0 there are no restrictions for users to read >> dmesg. In this case my patch would limit the information (based on example above): >> cc1[13472] cmdline: /usr/lib/gcc/hppa-linux-gnu/12/cc1 [note: other parameters hidden due to dmesg_restrict=0 sysctl] >> So it would show the full argv[0] with a hint that people would need to change dmesg_restrict. >> >> * When ``dmesg_restrict`` is set to 1, users must have ``CAP_SYSLOG`` to use dmesg(8) >> and the patch could output all parameters: >> cc1[13472] cmdline: /usr/lib/gcc/hppa-linux-gnu/12/cc1 -quiet @/tmp/ccRkFSfY -imultilib . -imultiarch hppa-linux-gnu .... >> >> That would of course still leave few possible corner-cases where information >> could leak, but since usually programs shouldn't crash and that >> people usually shouldn't put sensitive information into the parameter >> list directly, it's somewhat unlikely to happen. >> >> Another different solution would be to add another sysctl. >> >> Any other ideas? > > I don't think we should overload the meaning of dmesg_restrict. But > overloading kptr_restrict seems reasonable to me. (Including respecting > kptr_restrict==2 by not showing this at all.) I'm fine with kptr_restrict, but I'm puzzled for which value of kptr_restrict the command line should be shown then. By looking at the meaning of kptr_restrict, I think the command line should be hidden for values 0-2. Do you suggest to add a new value "3" or am I missing something? Helge