On Thu, Sep 13, 2018 at 12:12 PM, Paul Moore <paul@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > None of the above deals with the user experience or support burden a > distro would have by forcing stacking on. If we make it an option the Just to make sure we're clear here: this series does not provide "extreme" stacking: SELinux, AppArmor, and SMACK remain boot-exclusive no matter what the CONFIGs. > distros can choose for themselves; picking a kernel build config is > not something new to distros, and I think Casey's text adequately > explains CONFIG_SECURITY_STACKING in terms that would be sufficient. I absolutely want stacking to be configurable, but I want to point out that there is no operational difference between CONFIG_SECURITY_STACKING=n and CONFIG_SECURITY_STACKING=y in the code here: - all the new accessor and allocation code is exercised in both cases - with stacking enabled: selinux, apparmor, and smack have an offset of 0 into blobs (and only one can be enabled at a time) - with stacking disabled: selinux, apparmor, and smack have an offset of 0 into blobs (and only one can be enabled at a time) The only behavioral difference is TOMOYO: 1- with stacking disabled and TOMOYO as the only major LSM, it will have a 0 offset into blobs (like above) 2- with stacking enabled and TOMOYO as the only major LSM, it will have a 0 offset into blobs (like above) 3- with stacking disabled and another major LSM is enabled, TOMOYO will be disabled (like always) 4- with stacking enabled and another major LSM is enabled, TOMOYO will have a non-0 offset into blobs and will run after selinux or smack or run before apparmor (based on link ordering defined by the Makefile). Note that cases 1, 2, and 3 are identical in behavior to before this series. Only case 4 is different, which is why I'm saying that instead of creating a redundant and needlessly complex config, or reinventing the "enable" wheel, we should simply drop the no-op CONFIG_SECURITY_STACKING config and provide TOMOYO with an "enable" parameter (and CONFIG). And it should be _separate_ from the "security=" line. This will be the SAME outcome for distros: if they want stacking, they choose the "enable TOMOYO by default" CONFIG. If they don't want stacking, they don't. > I currently have a neutral stance on stacking, making it mandatory > pushes me more towards a "no". This is why I'm trying to explain myself: the infrastructure proposed here is always exercised, no matter the CONFIG. From that sense it is "mandatory" no matter what the config is. There isn't a reality where you could "turn off stacking", because it's not stacking until you actually stack something, and that will be disabled by default as I've proposed it. Let me put this another way: if we simply leave off patch 10, we can take the other 9 patches (modulo feedback), and we only have to decide how to expose "stacking"; all the infrastructure work for supporting it is done. I'm arguing that "security=" is likely insufficient to describe what we want, and instead we should focus on individual LSM enablement via parameters ("tomoyo.enabled=1"). If _ordering_ becomes an issue, we could either use parameter order, or use "security=" again maybe, but for now, ordering is already defined by the Makefile (and security/security.c). "Stacking" only exists if you try to enable one of [selinux, apparmor, or smack] AND tomoyo. CONFIG_SECURITY_STACKING is redundant: if you want to disable stacking, you just disable tomoyo if you have another LSM (which we can already enforce in the Kconfig). If you want something more explicit than per-LSM config, then a simple "security.lsm_stack=1/0" with a CONFIG for the default would be fine. I'm trying to argue against what appears to be needless complexity around CONFIG_SECURITY_STACK as it was proposed, since it doesn't provide a meaningful operational change, since exclusivity of major LSMs is already handled. > As far as the cpp ifdef's, and other conditionals are concerned, I > remain unconvinced this is any worse than any other significant > feature that is a build time option. That's fine. That's just a code style issue. What I'm trying to show is that by lifting the allocation logic up out of the LSMs, we've actually simplified the logic. The "stacking" part will only become a distro-choice once they knowingly enable TOMOYO or build in SARA and/or Landlock in the future. -Kees -- Kees Cook Pixel Security