Re: [PATCH v10 18/27] integrity/ima: Define ns_status for storing namespaced iint data

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On 2/23/22 11:12, Mimi Zohar wrote:
On Tue, 2022-02-01 at 15:37 -0500, Stefan Berger wrote:
From: Mehmet Kayaalp <mkayaalp@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>

Add an rbtree to the IMA namespace structure that stores a namespaced
version of iint->flags in ns_status struct. Similar to the
integrity_iint_cache, both the iint and ns_status are looked up using the
inode pointer value. The lookup, allocate, and insertion code is also
similar.

In subsequent patches we will have to find all ns_status entries an iint
is being used in and reset flags there. To do this, connect a list of
ns_status to the integrity_iint_cache and provide a reader-writer
lock in the integrity_iint_cache to lock access to the list.

To simplify the code in the non-namespaces case embed an ns_status in
the integrity_iint_cache and have it linked into the iint's ns_status list
when calling ima_get_ns_status().

When getting an ns_status first try to find it in the RB tree. Here we can
run into the situation that an ns_status found in the RB tree has a
different iint associated with it for the same inode. In this case we need
to delete the ns_status structure and get a new one.

There are two cases for freeing:
- when the iint is freed (inode deletion): Walk the list of ns_status
   entries and disconnect each ns_status from the list; take the
   writer lock to protect access to the list; also, take the item off the
   per-namespace rbtree

- when the ima_namepace is freed: While walking the rbtree, remove the
   ns_status from the list while also holding the iint's writer lock;
   to be able to grab the lock we have to have a pointer to the iint on
   the ns_status structure.

To avoid an ns_status to be freed by the two cases concurrently, prevent
these two cases to run concurrently. Therefore, groups of threads
deleting either inodes or ima_namespaces are allowed to run concurrently
but no two threads may run and one delete an inode and the other an
ima_namespace.
The locking involved here is really complex.  I'm sure you thought
about it a lot, but isn't there a better alternative?

I am afraid this is a difficult question and a short and concise answer is not possible...

The complexity of the locking is driven by concurrency and the data structures that are involved. The data structures (existing global iint rbtree, ns_status structure, and per namespace rbtree for ns_status) and how they are organized and connected (via linked lists) are a consequence of the fact that we need to be able to handle files shared between IMA namespaces (and the host) so that re-auditing, re-measuring and re-appraisal of files after file modifications or modifications of the security.ima xattr (by any namespaces) can be done efficiently. Furthermore, it helps to efficiently remove all the status information that an IMA namespace has kept for files it audited/measured/appraised. The goal was to make this as scalable as possible by having each namespace get out of the way of other namespaces by preventing them from locking each other out too much. The single biggest problem are files shared between IMA namespaces.

The best argument for the design I can come up with is the 'Big O notation' describing the time complexity of operations.


The existing global iint rbtree maintains IMA status information for each inode. Lookup and insertion of data into the gloab iint rbtree  is O(log(n)), thus optimal.

To accommodate re-auditing/re-measurement/re-appraisal, which is driven by resetting status flags, I connected a list of ns_status structures, in which each namespace maintains its status information for each inode, to the iint maintained in that global rbtree. The resetting of status flags is fast because traversing the list after a lookup in the tree is O(n). Lookup + resetting the flags therefore is O(log(n) + n). If the list didn't exist we would have to search all IMA namespaces for the inode to be able to reset the flags, resulting in O(n * log(n)) time complexity, which is of course much worse. So, the list of ns_status linked to an iint has a good reason: better time complexity to traverse the list and reset status flags. Beside  that it also supports fast handling of deletion of files where the iint has to be delete from the global rbtree and the ns_status list it holds must also be deleted (each ns_status also needs to be delete from a per IMA-namespace rbtree then)


There's also a per-IMA namespace rbtree for each inode that serves two purposes:

a) Fast lookup of ns_status (O(log(n)) for an IMA namespace; at least to insert an ns_status into this tree we need not write-lock the iint tree but the initial iint creation required the write-locking of the iint tree

b) Maintaining a collection of inodes that the namespace has audited/measured/appraised for efficient deletion upon IMA namespace teardown: We can traverse this tree in O(n) time and determine which iints have no more namespace users and delete them from the iint tree.


Now the dilemma with this is that an ns_status structure is connected to a list hanging off the iint and on top of this it is part of an rbtree. And this is where the 'group locking' is coming from. What we need to prevent is that an ns_status is deleted from its iint list (when a file is deleted) while it is also deleted from the per-IMA namespace rbtree (when the namespace is deleted). Both must not be done concurrently. What is possible is that a group of threads may tear down namespaces and the other group may act on file deletion, but threads from both groups must not run concurrently.


Now we can at least look at two alternatives for the per-IMA namespace rbtree.

1) One alternative is to use a list instead of an rbtree. We would loose the fast lookup via the per IMA namespace tree and get O(n) lookup times but quick insertion into the list [O(1)]. We still would have the collection of inodes. And we would still have the dilemma that an ns_status would be connected to two lists, thus requiring the group locking. I don't think using a list instead of an rbtree is a solution.

2) We could try to get rid of the per-IMA namespace rbtree altogether and just use the global iint rbtree that exists today with a list of ns_status connected to its iints. If we do this we would loose the knowledge of which inodes a namespace has an ns_status structure for. The only way we would find this is by traversing the global iint tree (O(n)) and follow each iint list (O(m)) to see whether we find an ns_status holding information about the iint. The time complexity for this would be O(n*m) but much less than O(n^2). A downside would also be that we would have to keep a lock on the global iint rbtree while traversing it, thus locking out those that want to add inodes to the tree. On the upside it would allow us to get rid of the group locking. Lookup of an ns_status in the global iint tree would be O(n) + O(m) and insertion would be O(n) + O(1).


Certainly, the alternative is 2) with its own trade-offs. My guess is some sort of yielding could probably also be helpful there then to avoid blocking higher priority operations than deleting of a namespace.


+/*
+ * ima_free_ns_status_tree - free all items on the ns_status_tree and take each
+ *                           one off the list; yield to ns_list free'ers
+ *
+ * This function is called when an ima_namespace is freed. All entries in the
+ * rbtree will be taken off their list and collected in a garbage collection
+ * list and freed at the end. This allows to walk the rbtree again.
+ */
+void ima_free_ns_status_tree(struct ima_namespace *ns)
+{
+	struct ns_status *ns_status, *next;
+	struct llist_node *node;
+	LLIST_HEAD(garbage);
+	unsigned int ctr;
+	bool restart;
+
+	do {
+		ctr = 0;
+		restart = false;
+
+		lock_group(GRP_NS_STATUS_TREE);
+		write_lock(&ns->ns_tree_lock);
+
+		rbtree_postorder_for_each_entry_safe(ns_status, next,
+						     &ns->ns_status_tree,
+						     rb_node) {
+			write_lock(&ns_status->iint->ns_list_lock);
+			if (!list_empty(&ns_status->ns_next)) {
+				list_del_init(&ns_status->ns_next);
+				llist_add(&ns_status->gc_llist, &garbage);
+				ctr++;
+			}
At this point when the namespace is being deleted, no entries are being
added to the rbtree, so it is safe to remove the nodes here.  There's
no need to first create a list and then remove them.


We are traversing the per-namespace rbtree here and later on in this series (21/27) we try to determine which iints are now unused in the global iint tree and delete the iints there. Due to the locking that's necessary to remove the iint from the global rbtree all the ns_status are collected in this list here already now. True, in this patch here it is not necessary but in 21/27 it will be necessary to have them on this list. I had thought about merging the patches but its complex enough as-is.


   Stefan



+			write_unlock(&ns_status->iint->ns_list_lock);
+
+			/*
+			 * After some progress yield to any waiting ns_list
+			 * free'ers.
+			 */
+			if (atomic_read(&ns_list_waiters) > 0 && ctr >= 5) {
+				restart = true;
+				break;
+			}
Giving priority to removing entries in the iint cache is important, but
I wish there was a better alternative.

+		}
+
+		write_unlock(&ns->ns_tree_lock);
+		unlock_group(GRP_NS_STATUS_TREE);
+	} while (restart);
+
+	node = llist_del_all(&garbage);
+	llist_for_each_entry_safe(ns_status, next, node, gc_llist)
+		ns_status_free(ns, ns_status);
+
+	kmem_cache_destroy(ns->ns_status_cache);
+}



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