On 30.09.2021 02:31, Andrew Morton wrote: > On Wed, 29 Sep 2021 22:01:33 +0300 Alexander Popov <alex.popov@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >> On 29.09.2021 21:58, Alexander Popov wrote: >>> Currently, the Linux kernel provides two types of reaction to kernel >>> warnings: >>> 1. Do nothing (by default), >>> 2. Call panic() if panic_on_warn is set. That's a very strong reaction, >>> so panic_on_warn is usually disabled on production systems. >>> >>> From a safety point of view, the Linux kernel misses a middle way of >>> handling kernel warnings: >>> - The kernel should stop the activity that provokes a warning, >>> - But the kernel should avoid complete denial of service. >>> >>> From a security point of view, kernel warning messages provide a lot of >>> useful information for attackers. Many GNU/Linux distributions allow >>> unprivileged users to read the kernel log, so attackers use kernel >>> warning infoleak in vulnerability exploits. See the examples: >>> https://a13xp0p0v.github.io/2020/02/15/CVE-2019-18683.html >>> https://a13xp0p0v.github.io/2021/02/09/CVE-2021-26708.html >>> >>> Let's introduce the pkill_on_warn boot parameter. >>> If this parameter is set, the kernel kills all threads in a process >>> that provoked a kernel warning. This behavior is reasonable from a safety >>> point of view described above. It is also useful for kernel security >>> hardening because the system kills an exploit process that hits a >>> kernel warning. >>> >>> Signed-off-by: Alexander Popov <alex.popov@xxxxxxxxx> >> >> This patch was tested using CONFIG_LKDTM. >> The kernel kills a process that performs this: >> echo WARNING > /sys/kernel/debug/provoke-crash/DIRECT >> >> If you are fine with this approach, I will prepare a patch adding the >> pkill_on_warn sysctl. > > Why do we need a boot parameter? Isn't a sysctl all we need for this > feature? I would say we need both sysctl and boot parameter for pkill_on_warn. That would be consistent with panic_on_warn, ftrace_dump_on_oops and oops/panic_on_oops. > Also, > > if (pkill_on_warn && system_state >= SYSTEM_RUNNING) > do_group_exit(SIGKILL); > > - why do we care about system_state? An explanatory code comment > seems appropriate. > > - do we really want to do this in states > SYSTEM_RUNNING? If so, why? A kernel warning may occur at any moment. I don't have a deep understanding of possible side effects on early boot stages. So I decided that at least it's safer to avoid interfering before SYSTEM_RUNNING. Best regards, Alexander