On Thu, Mar 9, 2023 at 5:13 PM Edgecombe, Rick P <rick.p.edgecombe@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > +Joao regarding mixed mode designs > > On Fri, 2023-03-10 at 00:51 +0100, Borislav Petkov wrote: > > On Thu, Mar 09, 2023 at 04:56:37PM +0000, Edgecombe, Rick P wrote: > > > There is a proc that shows if shadow stack is enabled in a thread. > > > It > > > does indeed come later in the series. > > > > Not good enough: > > > > 1. buried somewhere in proc where no one knows about it > > > > 2. it is per thread so user needs to grep *all* > > See "x86: Expose thread features in /proc/$PID/status" for the patch. > We could emit something in dmesg I guess? The logic would be: > - Record the presence of elf SHSTK bit on exec > - On shadow stack disable, if it had the elf bit, pr_info("bad!") > > > > > > ... We previously tried to add some batch operations to improve > > > the > > > performance, but tglx had suggested to start with something > > > simple. > > > So we end up with this simple composable API. > > > > I agree with starting simple and thanks for explaining this in > > detail. > > > > TBH, though, it already sounds like a mess to me. I guess a mess > > we'll > > have to deal with because there will always be this case of some > > shared object/lib not being enabled for shstk because of raisins. > > The compatibility problems are totally the mess in this whole thing. > When you try to look at a "permissive" mode that actually works it gets > even more complex. Joao and I have been banging our heads on that > problem for months. > > But there are some expected users of this that say: we compile and > check our known set of binaries, we won't get any surprises. So it's > more of a distro problem. > > > > > And TBH #2, I would've done it even simpler: if some shared object > > can't > > do shadow stack, we disable it for the whole process. I mean, what's > > the > > point? > > You mean a late loaded dlopen()ed DSO? The enabling logic can't know > this will happen ahead of time. > > If you mean if the shared objects in the elf all support shadow stack, > then this is what happens. The complication is that the loader wants to > enable shadow stack before it has checked the elf libs so it doesn't > underflow the shadow stack when it returns from the function that does > this checking. > > So it does: > 1. Enable shadow stack > 2. Call elf libs checking functions > 3. If all good, lock shadow stack. Else, disable shadow stack. > 4. Return from elf checking functions and if shstk is enabled, don't > underflow because it was enabled in step 1 and we have return addresses > from 2 on the shadow stack > > I'm wondering if this can't be improved in glibc to look like: > 1. Check elf libs, and record it somewhere > 2. Wait until just the right spot > 3. If all good, enable and lock shadow stack. I will try it out. > But it depends on the loader code design which I don't know well > enough. > > > Only some of the stack is shadowed so an attacker could find > > a way to keep the process perhaps run this shstk-unsupporting shared > > object more/longer and ROP its way around the system. > > I hope non-permissive mode is the standard usage eventually. > > > > > But I tend to oversimplify things sometimes so... > > > > What I'd like to have, though, is a kernel cmdline param which > > disables > > permissive mode and userspace can't do anything about it. So that > > once > > you boot your kernel, you can know that everything that runs on the > > machine has shstk and is properly protected. > > Szabolcs Nagy was commenting something similar in another thread, for > supporting kernel enforced security policies. I think the way to do it > would have the kernel detect the the elf bit itself (like it used to) > and enable shadow stack on exec. If you can't rely on userspace to call > in to enable it, it's not clear at what point the kernel should check > that it did. > > But then if you trigger off of the elf bit in the kernel, you get all > the regression issues of the old glibcs at that point. But it is > already an "I don't care if I crash" mode, so... > > I think if you trust your libc, glibc could implement this in userspace > too. It would be useful even as as testing override. > > > > > Also, it'll allow for faster fixing of all those shared objects to > > use > > shstk by way of political pressure. -- H.J.