> On May 29, 2019, at 8:53 AM, Casey Schaufler <casey@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >> On 5/29/2019 4:00 AM, David Howells wrote: >> Jann Horn <jannh@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> >>>> +void post_mount_notification(struct mount *changed, >>>> + struct mount_notification *notify) >>>> +{ >>>> + const struct cred *cred = current_cred(); >>> This current_cred() looks bogus to me. Can't mount topology changes >>> come from all sorts of places? For example, umount_mnt() from >>> umount_tree() from dissolve_on_fput() from __fput(), which could >>> happen pretty much anywhere depending on where the last reference gets >>> dropped? >> IIRC, that's what Casey argued is the right thing to do from a security PoV. >> Casey? > > You need to identify the credential of the subject that triggered > the event. If it isn't current_cred(), the cred needs to be passed > in to post_mount_notification(), or derived by some other means. Taking a step back, why do we care who triggered the event? It seems to me that we should care whether the event happened and whether the *receiver* is permitted to know that. (And receiver means whoever subscribed, presumably, not whoever called read() or mmap().)