Re: [RFC] IMA Log Snapshotting Design Proposal

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Thanks a lot Stefan for looking into this proposal,
and providing your feedback. We really appreciate it.

On 8/7/23 15:49, Stefan Berger wrote:


On 8/1/23 17:21, James Bottomley wrote:
On Tue, 2023-08-01 at 12:12 -0700, Sush Shringarputale wrote:
[...]
Truncating IMA log to reclaim memory is not feasible, since it makes
the log go out of sync with the TPM PCR quote making remote
attestation fail.

This assumption isn't entirely true.  It's perfectly possible to shard
an IMA log using two TPM2_Quote's for the beginning and end PCR values
to validate the shard.  The IMA log could be truncated in the same way
(replace the removed part of the log with a TPM2_Quote and AK, so the
log still validates from the beginning quote to the end).

If you use a TPM2_Quote mechanism to save the log, all you need to do
is have the kernel generate the quote with an internal AK.  You can
keep a record of the quote and the AK at the beginning of the truncated
kernel log.  If the truncated entries are saved in a file shard it

The truncation seems dangerous to me. Maybe not all the scenarios with an attestation client (client = reading logs and quoting) are possible then anymore, such as starting an attestation client only after truncation but a verifier must have witnessed the
system's PCRs and log state before the truncation occurred.
You are correct that truncation on it’s own is dangerous. It needs to be
accompanied by (a) saving the IMA log data to disk as snapshots, (b) adding the
necessary TPM PCR quotes to the current IMA log (as James mentioned above),
(c) attestation clients having an ability to send the past snapshots to the
remote-attestation-service (verifiers), (d) and verifiers having an ability
to use the snapshots along with current IMA logs for the purpose of attestation. All these points are explained in the original RFC email in sections B.1 through B.5 [1].

I think an ima-buf (or similar) log entry in IMA log would have to appear at the beginning of the truncated log stating the value of all PCRs that IMA touched (typically only PCR 10 but it can be others). The needs to be done since the quote itself doesn't provide the state of the individual PCRs. This would at least allow an attestation client to re-read the log from the beginning (when it is re-start or started for the first time after the truncation).
 Agreed. See the description of snapshot_aggregate in Section B.5 in the
original RFC email [1].
However, this alone (without the
internal AK quoting the old state) could lead to abuse where I could create totally fake IMA logs stating the state of the PCRs at the beginning (so the verifier syncs its internal PCR state to this state).
Yes, the PCR quotes sent to the verifier must be signed by the AK that
is trusted by the verifier. That assumption is true regardless of IMA log
snapshotting feature.
Further, even with the AK-quote that
you propose I may be able to create fake logs and trick a verifier into
trusting the machine IFF it doesn't know what kernel this system was booted with that I may have hacked to provide a fake AK-quote that just happens to match the
PCR state presented at the beginning of the log.

If the Kernel is compromised, then all-bets are off.
(Regardless of IMA log snapshotting feature.)
=> Can a truncated log be made safe for attestation when the attestation starts
only after the truncation occurred?

Yes. If the “PCR quotes in the snapshot_aggregate event in IMA log”
+ "replay of rest of the events in IMA log" results in the “final PCR quotes” that matches with the “AK signed PCR quotes” sent by the client, then the truncated IMA log can be trusted. The verifier can either ‘trust’ the “PCR quotes in the snapshot_aggregate event in IMA log” or it can ask for the (n-1)th snapshot shard
to check the past events.

=> Even if attestation was occurring 'what' state does an attestation server need to carry around for an attested-to system so that the truncation is 'safe' and I cannot create fake AK-quotes and fake IMA logs with initial PCR states?
Assuming most of the client devices take a snapshot at specific checkpoints,
the “PCR quotes in the snapshot_aggregate event in IMA log” will be the same for them.
The remote attestation server will have to remember these golden PCR quotes.
It doesn't have to remember the state of each client device.

Can I ever restart the client and have it read the truncated log from the
beginning and what type of verification needs to happen on the server then?

Yes, restarting the client should be possible.
It seems like the server would have to remember the state of the IMA PCRs upon last truncation to detect a possible attack. This would make staring to monitor a system after truncation impossible -- would be good to know these details.

The server is not forced to remember the state of IMA PCRs. It can
always ask for the last n snapshot files (shards) and replay the events. Even
though the data is truncated from the IMA log, it is not totally lost. It is
simply being transferred to the disk. It is saved by UM as snapshot files/shards.
The goal of IMA snapshotting is to reduce the Kernel memory pressure on the
client devices - to save them from out-of-memory errors which are harder to manage on long running clients. It comes with a cost of additional work on the server
side to attest those clients.


Being said that, in the current proposal, taking a snapshots is totally optional and controlled by UM attestation clients. If the attestation-clients/services are not-ready/don’t-want to take advantage of IMA log snapshotting, they don’t have to.

No snapshot will be taken, and the client-service can process the monolithic IMA
log just like they do today.

[1] https://lore.kernel.org/all/c5737141-7827-1c83-ab38-0119dcfea485@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx/#t




should have a beginning and end quote and a record of the AK used.
Since verifiers like Keylime are already using this beginning and end
quote for sharded logs, it's the most natural format to feed to
something externally for verification and it means you don't have to
invent a new format to do the same thing.

Regards,

James


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