On Sun, Nov 18, 2018 at 9:51 AM Daniel Colascione <dancol@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > I'm not entirely sure that ship has sailed. In the kernel, we already > > have a bit of a distinction between a pid (and tid, etc -- I'm > > referring to struct pid) and a task. If we make a new > > process-management API, we could put a distinction like this into the > > API. > > It would be a disaster to have different APIs give callers a different > idea of process identity over its lifetime. The precedent is > well-established that execve and setreuid do not change a process's > identity. Invaliding some identifiers but not others in response to > supposedly-internal things a process might do under rare circumstances > is creating a bug machine.. Here's my point: if we're really going to make a new API to manipulate processes by their fd, I think we should have at least a decent idea of how that API will get extended in the future. Right now, we have an extremely awkward situation where opening an fd in /proc requires certain capabilities or uids, and using those fds often also checks current's capabilities, and the target process may have changed its own security context, including gaining privilege via SUID, SGID, or LSM transition rules in the mean time. This has been a huge source of security bugs. It would be nice to have a model for future APIs that avoids these problems. And I didn't say in my proposal that a process's identity should fundamentally change when it calls execve(). I'm suggesting that certain operations that could cause a process to gain privilege or otherwise require greater permission to introspect (mainly execve) could be handled by invalidating the new process management fds. Sure, if init re-execs itself, it's still PID 1, but that doesn't necessarily mean that: fd = process_open_management_fd(1); [init reexecs] process_do_something(fd); needs to work. > > > setresuid() has no effect > > here -- if you have W access to the process and the process calls > > setresuid(), you still have W access. > > Now you've created a situation in which an operation that security > policy previously blocked now becomes possible, invaliding previous > designs based on the old security invariant. That's the definition of > introducing a security hole. I think you're overstating your case. To a pretty good approximation, setresuid() allows the caller to remove elements from the set {ruid, suid, euid}, unless the caller has CAP_SETUID. If you could ptrace a process before it calls setresuid(), you might as well be able to ptrace() it after, since you could have just ptraced it and made it call setresuid() while still ptracing it. Similarly, it seems like it's probably safe to be able to open an fd that lets you watch the exit status of a process, have the process call setresuid(), and still see the exit status. Regardless of how you feel about these issues, if you're going to add an API by which you open an fd, wait for a process to exit, and read the exit status, you need to define the conditions under which you may open the fd and under which you may read the exit status once you have the fd. There are probably multiple valid answers, but the question still needs to be answered. My POLLERR hack, aside from being ugly, avoids this particular issue because it merely lets you wait for something you already could have observed using readdir().