On Wed, Nov 04, 2020 at 12:39:13PM +0100, Hagen Paul Pfeifer wrote: > > On 11/03/2020 5:30 PM Mike Rapoport <rppt@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > > > As long as the task share the file descriptor, they can share the > > > > secretmem pages, pretty much like normal memfd. > > > > > > Including process_vm_readv() and process_vm_writev()? Let's take a hypothetical > > > "dbus-daemon-secure" service that receives data from process A and wants to > > > copy/distribute it to data areas of N other processes. Much like dbus but without > > > SOCK_DGRAM rather direct copy into secretmem/mmap pages (ring-buffer). Should be > > > possible, right? > > > > I'm not sure I follow you here. > > For process_vm_readv() and process_vm_writev() secremem will be only > > accessible on the local part, but not on the remote. > > So copying data to secretmem pages using process_vm_writev wouldn't > > work. > > A hypothetical "dbus-daemon-secure" service will not be *process related* with communication > peers. E.g. a password-input process (reading a password into secured-memory page) will > transfer the password to dbus-daemon-secure and this service will hand-over the password to > two additional applications: a IPsec process on CPU0 und CPU1 (which itself use a > secured-memory page). > > So four applications IPC chain: > password-input -> dbus-daemon-secure -> {IPsec0, IPsec1} > > - password-input: uses a secured page to read/save the password locally after reading from TTY > - dbus-daemon-secure: uses a secured page for IPC (legitimate user can write and read into the secured page) > - IPSecN has secured page to save the password locally (and probably other data as well), IPC memory is memset'ed after copy > > Goal: the whole password is never saved/touched on non secured pages during IPC transfer. > > Question: maybe a *file-descriptor passing* mechanism can do the trick? I.e. dbus-daemon-secure > allocates via memfd_secret/mmap secure pages and permitted processes will get the descriptor/mmaped-page > passed so they can use the pages directly? Yes, this will work. The processes that share the memfd_secret file descriptor will have access to the same memory pages, pretty much like with shared memory. > Hagen -- Sincerely yours, Mike.