Re: [PATCH v2 3/5] NFSD: Remove ima_file_check call

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> On Mar 21, 2019, at 6:44 AM, Mimi Zohar <zohar@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> 
> On Wed, 2019-03-20 at 08:40 -0500, Chuck Lever wrote:
>> 
>>> On Mar 19, 2019, at 3:29 PM, Mimi Zohar <zohar@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>>> 
>>> On Fri, 2019-03-08 at 16:29 -0500, Chuck Lever wrote:
>>> 
>>> Thanks Serge for bringing this thread to my attention.  Sorry for the
>>> delay in responding ...
>>> 
>>>>> On Mar 8, 2019, at 4:23 PM, Bruce Fields <bfields@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>>>>> 
>>>>> On Fri, Mar 08, 2019 at 04:11:06PM -0500, Chuck Lever wrote:
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> On Mar 8, 2019, at 4:10 PM, bfields@xxxxxxxxxxxx wrote:
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> On Thu, Mar 07, 2019 at 10:28:54AM -0500, Chuck Lever wrote:
>>>>>>>> The NFS server needs to allow NFS clients to perform their own
>>>>>>>> attestation and measurement.
>>> 
>>> Measurement and attestation is only one aspect.  The other aspect is
>>> verifying the integrity of files.  Shouldn't the NFS server verify the
>>> integrity of a file before allowing it to be served (eg. malware)?
>> 
>> Hi Mimi, thanks for the review.
>> 
>> Architecturally, the server is not using the file's data, it is
>> merely part of the filesystem that stores it. But that said, there
>> are several concrete reasons why I feel an NFS server should not be
>> involved in measurement/attestation, but only with storing file
>> content and IMA metadata.
> 
> "Remote attestation" is the process of verifying the measurement list
> against the TPM PCRs, based on a TPM quote.  I think you meant
> "measurement/appraisal".
> 
>> 
>> 1. The broadest attack surface for a remote filesystem is modification
>> of data in flight. Attestation of the file on the server is not going
>> to defend against that attack, only attestation on the client will do
>> that. Is there a good reason to pay the cost of double attestation?
> 
> Doesn't the server have a responsibility to provide files that have
> not been unintentionally or maliciously altered?

It's a design goal of any filesystem to present unaltered file data
to applications. But the responsibility is end-to-end. Adding extra
checks in the middle introduce a cost. Measuring on the client is
sufficient, and it is equivalent to what local filesystems do (and,
it allows each client to apply its own security policy).

I'm going to claim here without proof that there is little value in
using IMA on an NFS server that serves NFS clients that are not
IMA-aware. :-)


>> 2. It is possible (perhaps even likely) that the NFS server and a
>> client of that server will have different IMA policies and even
>> different file signing authorities.
> 
> That doesn't negate the due diligence on the server's part of
> preventing the spread of malware.

Commercial NFS servers (like NetApp filers) perform malware and
integrity checking via a scrubbing agent rather than checking in a
hot path. Filesystems are not only responsible for leaving data
unchanged, they also have performance requirements.


>> A third, perhaps related, reason is that NFS can run on non-Linux NFS
>> servers which would not have any attestation at all. An NFS client
>> should not have to rely on the server for attestation, but should
>> trust only its own measurement of each file, which would be done as
>> late as possible before use.
> 
> The ima_file_check() hook can also audit the file, providing
> additional forensic information (eg. the file hash).

IIUC, you are talking about troubleshooting, which should be
rare. That can be done with tools on the server if needed, but
IMO can be avoided in performance-sensitive paths.


> Mimi
> 
>> 
>> Lastly, the NFS protocol does not enable an NFS client to tell a
>> server how the file is to be used. For example, the server's policy
>> might block execution of an unverifiable file, but the server won't
>> have any way of knowing how the client is going to use that file.
>> The client might be opening the file to copy it or update its IMA
>> metadata.
>> 
>> Speaking of protocol, there's no special error code that reports an
>> integrity verification failure. The client just sees that the UID
>> does not have access to the file. There's no way the user or client
>> can do anything to clear this condition via NFS without IMA support.
>> 
>> If these reasons make sense, should I add them to the patch description?

--
Chuck Lever






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