On Fri, Feb 14, 2020 at 7:37 PM Christian Brauner <christian.brauner@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > This adds a set of helpers to translate between kfsuid/kfsgid and their > userspace fsuid/fsgid counter parts relative to a given user namespace. > > - kuid_t make_kfsuid(struct user_namespace *from, uid_t fsuid) > Maps a user-namespace fsuid pair into a kfsuid. > If no fsuid mappings have been written it behaves identical to calling > make_kuid(). This ensures backwards compatibility for workloads unaware > or not in need of fsid mappings. [...] > +#ifdef CONFIG_USER_NS_FSID > +/** > + * make_kfsuid - Map a user-namespace fsuid pair into a kuid. > + * @ns: User namespace that the fsuid is in > + * @fsuid: User identifier > + * > + * Maps a user-namespace fsuid pair into a kernel internal kfsuid, > + * and returns that kfsuid. > + * > + * When there is no mapping defined for the user-namespace kfsuid > + * pair INVALID_UID is returned. Callers are expected to test > + * for and handle INVALID_UID being returned. INVALID_UID > + * may be tested for using uid_valid(). > + */ > +kuid_t make_kfsuid(struct user_namespace *ns, uid_t fsuid) > +{ > + unsigned extents = ns->fsuid_map.nr_extents; > + smp_rmb(); > + > + /* Map the fsuid to a global kernel fsuid */ > + if (extents == 0) > + return KUIDT_INIT(map_id_down(&ns->uid_map, fsuid)); > + > + return KUIDT_INIT(map_id_down(&ns->fsuid_map, fsuid)); > +} > +EXPORT_SYMBOL(make_kfsuid); What effect is this fallback going to have for nested namespaces? Let's say we have an outer namespace N1 with this uid_map: 0 100000 65535 and with this fsuid_map: 0 300000 65535 Now from in there, a process that is not aware of the existence of fsuid mappings creates a new user namespace N2 with the following uid_map: 0 1000 1 At this point, if a process in N2 does chown("foo", 0, 0), is that going to make "foo" owned by kuid 101000, which isn't even mapped in N1? > @@ -1215,11 +1376,13 @@ static bool new_idmap_permitted(const struct file *file, > uid_eq(ns->owner, cred->euid)) { > u32 id = new_map->extent[0].lower_first; > if (cap_setid == CAP_SETUID) { > - kuid_t uid = make_kuid(ns->parent, id); > + kuid_t uid = map_fsid ? make_kfsuid(ns->parent, id) : > + make_kuid(ns->parent, id); > if (uid_eq(uid, cred->euid)) > return true; Let's say we have an outer user namespace N1 with this uid_map: 0 1000 3000 and this fsuid_map: 0 2000 3000 and in that namespace, a process is running as UID 1000 (which means kernel-euid=2000, kernel-fsuid=3000). Now this process unshares its user namespace and from this nested user namespace N2, tries to write the following fsuid_map: 0 1000 1 This should work, since the only ID it maps is the one the process had in N1; but the code is AFAICS going to run as follows: if ((new_map->nr_extents == 1) && (new_map->extent[0].count == 1) && uid_eq(ns->owner, cred->euid)) { // branch taken u32 id = new_map->extent[0].lower_first; if (cap_setid == CAP_SETUID) { // branch taken // uid = make_kfsuid(ns->parent, 1000) = 3000 kuid_t uid = map_fsid ? make_kfsuid(ns->parent, id) : make_kuid(ns->parent, id); // uid_eq(3000, 2000) if (uid_eq(uid, cred->euid)) // not taken return true; } else [...] } Instead, I think what would succeed is this, which shouldn't be allowed: 0 0 1 which AFAICS will evaluate as follows: if ((new_map->nr_extents == 1) && (new_map->extent[0].count == 1) && uid_eq(ns->owner, cred->euid)) { // branch taken u32 id = new_map->extent[0].lower_first; if (cap_setid == CAP_SETUID) { // branch taken // uid = make_kfsuid(ns->parent, 0) = 2000 kuid_t uid = map_fsid ? make_kfsuid(ns->parent, id) : make_kuid(ns->parent, id); // uid_eq(2000, 2000) if (uid_eq(uid, cred->euid)) // taken return true; } else [...] } > } else if (cap_setid == CAP_SETGID) { > - kgid_t gid = make_kgid(ns->parent, id); > + kgid_t gid = map_fsid ? make_kfsgid(ns->parent, id) : > + make_kgid(ns->parent, id); > if (!(ns->flags & USERNS_SETGROUPS_ALLOWED) && > gid_eq(gid, cred->egid)) > return true; > -- > 2.25.0 >