On Sun, Aug 30, 2020 at 05:05:45PM +0200, Jann Horn wrote: > On Sat, Aug 29, 2020 at 4:00 AM Rich Felker <dalias@xxxxxxxx> wrote: > > The pwrite function, originally defined by POSIX (thus the "p"), is > > defined to ignore O_APPEND and write at the offset passed as its > > argument. However, historically Linux honored O_APPEND if set and > > ignored the offset. This cannot be changed due to stability policy, > > but is documented in the man page as a bug. > > > > Now that there's a pwritev2 syscall providing a superset of the pwrite > > functionality that has a flags argument, the conforming behavior can > > be offered to userspace via a new flag. > [...] > > diff --git a/include/linux/fs.h b/include/linux/fs.h > [...] > > @@ -3411,6 +3413,8 @@ static inline int kiocb_set_rw_flags(struct kiocb *ki, rwf_t flags) > > ki->ki_flags |= (IOCB_DSYNC | IOCB_SYNC); > > if (flags & RWF_APPEND) > > ki->ki_flags |= IOCB_APPEND; > > + if (flags & RWF_NOAPPEND) > > + ki->ki_flags &= ~IOCB_APPEND; > > return 0; > > } > > Linux enforces the S_APPEND flag (set by "chattr +a") only at open() > time, not at write() time: > > # touch testfile > # exec 100>testfile > # echo foo > testfile > # cat testfile > foo > # chattr +a testfile > # echo bar > testfile > bash: testfile: Operation not permitted > # echo bar >&100 > # cat testfile > bar > # > > At open() time, the kernel enforces that you can't use O_WRONLY/O_RDWR > without also setting O_APPEND if the file is marked as append-only: > > static int may_open(const struct path *path, int acc_mode, int flag) > { > [...] > /* > * An append-only file must be opened in append mode for writing. > */ > if (IS_APPEND(inode)) { > if ((flag & O_ACCMODE) != O_RDONLY && !(flag & O_APPEND)) > return -EPERM; > if (flag & O_TRUNC) > return -EPERM; > } > [...] > } > > It seems to me like your patch will permit bypassing S_APPEND by > opening an append-only file with O_WRONLY|O_APPEND, then calling > pwritev2() with RWF_NOAPPEND? I think you'll have to add an extra > check for IS_APPEND() somewhere. > > > One could also argue that if an O_APPEND file descriptor is handed > across privilege boundaries, a programmer might reasonably expect that > the recipient will not be able to use the file descriptor for > non-append writes; if that is not actually true, that should probably > be noted in the open.2 manpage, at the end of the description of > O_APPEND. fcntl F_SETFL can remove O_APPEND, so it is not a security boundary. I'm not sure how this interacts with S_APPEND; presumably fcntl rechecks it. So just checking IS_APPEND in the code paths used by pwritev2 (and erroring out rather than silently writing output at the wrong place) should suffice to preserve all existing security invariants. Rich