On 30.10.19 09:15, Mike Rapoport wrote:
On Tue, Oct 29, 2019 at 12:02:34PM +0100, David Hildenbrand wrote:
On 27.10.19 11:17, Mike Rapoport wrote:
From: Mike Rapoport <rppt@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
The mappings created with MAP_EXCLUSIVE are visible only in the context of
the owning process and can be used by applications to store secret
information that will not be visible not only to other processes but to the
kernel as well.
The pages in these mappings are removed from the kernel direct map and
marked with PG_user_exclusive flag. When the exclusive area is unmapped,
the pages are mapped back into the direct map.
Just a thought, the kernel is still able to indirectly read the contents of
these pages by doing a kdump from kexec environment, right?
Right.
Also, I wonder
what would happen if you map such pages via /dev/mem into another user space
application and e.g., use them along with kvm [1].
Do you mean that one application creates MAP_EXCLUSIVE and another
applications accesses the same physical pages via /dev/mem?
Exactly.
With /dev/mem all physical memory is visible...
Okay, so the statement "information that will not be visible not only to
other processes but to the kernel as well" is not correct. There are
easy ways to access that information if you really want to (might
require root permissions, though).
--
Thanks,
David / dhildenb