On Tue, Mar 05, 2024 at 11:32:04AM +0100, Christian Brauner wrote: > On Tue, Mar 05, 2024 at 02:12:26AM -0800, Kees Cook wrote: > > On Tue, Mar 05, 2024 at 10:58:25AM +0100, Christian Brauner wrote: > > > Since the write handler for /proc/<pid>/mem does raise FOLL_FORCE > > > unconditionally it likely would implicitly. But I'm not familiar enough > > > with FOLL_FORCE to say for sure. > > > > I should phrase the question better. :) Is the supervisor writing into > > read-only regions of the child process? > > Hm... I suspect we don't. Let's take two concrete examples so you can > tell me. > > Incus intercepts the sysinfo() syscall. It prepares a struct sysinfo > with cgroup aware values for the supervised process and then does: > > unix.Pwrite(siov.memFd, &sysinfo, sizeof(struct sysinfo), seccomp_data.args[0])) > > It also intercepts some bpf system calls attaching bpf programs for the > caller. If that fails we update the log buffer for the supervised > process: > > union bpf_attr attr = {}, new_attr = {}; > > // read struct bpf_attr from mem_fd > ret = pread(mem_fd, &attr, attr_len, req->data.args[1]); > if (ret < 0) > return -errno; > > // Do stuff with attr. Stuff fails. Update log buffer for supervised process: > if ((new_attr.log_size) > 0 && (pwrite(mem_fd, new_attr.log_buf, new_attr.log_size, attr.log_buf) != new_attr.log_size)) This is almost certainly in writable memory (either stack or .data). > But I'm not sure if there are other use-cases that would require this. Maybe this option needs to be per-process (like no_new_privs), and with a few access levels: - as things are now - no FOLL_FORCE unless by ptracer - no writes unless by ptracer - no FOLL_FORCE ever - no writes ever - no reads unless by ptracer - no reads ever Which feels more like 3 toggles: read, write, FOLL_FORCE. Each set to "DAC", "ptracer", and "none"? -- Kees Cook