On Thu, Feb 6, 2020 at 4:14 PM Mimi Zohar <zohar@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > The implications of exporting and removing records from the IMA- > measurement list needs to be considered carefully. Verifying a TPM > quote will become dependent on knowing where the measurements are > stored. The existing measurement list is stored in kernel memory and, > barring a kernel memory attack, is protected from modification. > Before upstreaming this or a similar patch, there needs to be a > discussion as to how the measurement list will be protected once is it > exported to userspace. > > This patch now attempts to address two very different scenarios. The > first scenario is where userspace is requesting exporting and removing > of the measurement list records. The other scenario is the kernel > exporting and removing of the measurement list records. Conflating > these two different use cases might not be the right solution, as we > originally thought. > > The kernel already exports the IMA measurement list to userspace via a > securityfs file. From a userspace perspective, missing is the ability > of removing N number of records. In this scenario, userspace would be > responsible for safely storing the measurements (e.g. blockchain). > The kernel would only be responsible for limiting permission, perhaps > based on a capability, before removing records from the measurement > list. This is a good point. I will adapt the patch to this. > In the kernel usecase, somehow the kernel would need to safely export > the measurement list, or some portion of the measurement list, to a > file and then delete that portion. What protects the exported records > stored in a file from modification? Are we looking at protecting this file from a root exploit and the potential DOS it might cause? In the original patch the file was root writable only. As far as further limitations go, the easiest would probably be to use the file immutable bit. If the kernel opens the file and sets the immutable bit, it is the only entity that can ever write to it - not even another root task could directly write to it. The kernel could, as long as it keeps the file open. > Instead of exporting the measurement records, one option as suggested > by Amir Goldstein, would be to use a vfs_tmpfile() to get an anonymous > file for backing store. The existing securityfs measurement lists > would then read from this private copy of the anonymous file. > > I've Cc'ed fsdevel for additional comments/suggestions. I didn't quickly see what the actual problem is that the vfs_tmpfile solves in this context, will check. -- Janne