[Cc'ing JJ, Matthew, Micah, Kentaro, Casey - maintainers of securityfs usages, not already cc'ed] On Tue, 2022-02-01 at 15:37 -0500, Stefan Berger wrote: > From: Christian Brauner <brauner@xxxxxxxxxx> > > When securityfs creates a new file or directory via > securityfs_create_dentry() it will take an additional reference on the > newly created dentry after it has attached the new inode to the new > dentry and added it to the hashqueues. > If we contrast this with debugfs which has the same underlying logic as > securityfs. It uses a similar pairing as securityfs. Where securityfs > has the securityfs_create_dentry() and securityfs_remove() pairing, > debugfs has the __debugfs_create_file() and debugfs_remove() pairing. > > In contrast to securityfs, debugfs doesn't take an additional reference > on the newly created dentry in __debugfs_create_file() which would need > to be put in debugfs_remove(). > > The additional dget() isn't a problem per se. In the current > implementation of securityfs each created dentry pins the filesystem via > until it is removed. Since it is virtually guaranteed that there is at > least one user of securityfs that has created dentries the initial > securityfs mount cannot go away until all dentries have been removed. > > Since most of the users of the initial securityfs mount don't go away > until the system is shutdown the initial securityfs won't go away when > unmounted. Instead a mount will usually surface the same superblock as > before. The additional dget() doesn't matter in this scenario since it > is required that all dentries have been cleaned up by the respective > users before the superblock can be destroyed, i.e. superblock shutdown > is tied to the lifetime of the associated dentries. > > However, in order to support ima namespaces we need to extend securityfs > to support being mounted outside of the initial user namespace. For > namespaced users the pinning logic doesn't make sense. Whereas in the > initial namespace the securityfs instance and the associated data > structures of its users can't go away for reason explained earlier users > of non-initial securityfs instances do go away when the last users of > the namespace are gone. > > So for those users we neither want to duplicate the pinning logic nor > make the global securityfs instance display different information based > on the namespace. Both options would be really messy and hacky. > > Instead we will simply give each namespace its own securityfs instance > similar to how each ipc namespace has its own mqueue instance and all > entries in there are cleaned up on umount or when the last user of the > associated namespace is gone. > > This means that the superblock's lifetime isn't tied to the dentries. > Instead the last umount, without any fds kept open, will trigger a clean > shutdown. But now the additional dget() gets in the way. Instead of > being able to rely on the generic superblock shutdown logic we would > need to drop the additional dentry reference during superblock shutdown > for all associated users. That would force the use of a generic > coordination mechanism for current and future users of securityfs which > is unnecessary. Simply remove the additional dget() in > securityfs_dentry_create(). > > In securityfs_remove() we will call dget() to take an additional > reference on the dentry about to be removed. After simple_unlink() or > simple_rmdir() have dropped the dentry refcount we can call d_delete() > which will either turn the dentry into negative dentry if our earlier > dget() is the only reference to the dentry, i.e. it has no other users, > or remove it from the hashqueues in case there are additional users. > > All of these changes should not have any effect on the userspace > semantics of the initial securityfs mount. > > Signed-off-by: Christian Brauner <brauner@xxxxxxxxxx> Thanks, Christian, Stefan. Reviewed-by: Mimi Zohar <zohar@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> This change is really independent of the IMA namespacing. Based on Greg's request of unification of where platform specific variables/keys/etc are stored, the consensus so far seems to be 'securityfs/secrets'. Although this patch isn't a bug fix, let's try and get this upstreamed. The current securityfs usages are apparmor, lockdown, safesetid, tomoyo, core LSM ("security/lsm"), and the TPM. Only on failure to create securityfs files or directories, are previously created securityfs files/directories removed. The one exception seems to be the TPM, which may be built as a kernel module. -- thanks, Mimi