+ Kees because this is related to W^X memfd and security. On Fri, Jan 3, 2025 at 7:14 AM Jann Horn <jannh@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On Fri, Dec 6, 2024 at 7:19 PM Lorenzo Stoakes > <lorenzo.stoakes@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On Thu, Dec 05, 2024 at 05:09:22PM -0800, Isaac J. Manjarres wrote: > > > + if (is_exec_sealed(seals)) { > > > > Are we intentionally disallowing a MAP_PRIVATE memfd's mapping's execution? > > I've not tested this scenario so don't know if we somehow disallow this in > > another way but note on write checks we only care about shared mappings. > > > > I mean one could argue that a MAP_PRIVATE situation is the same as copying > > the data into an anon buffer and doing what you want with it, here you > > could argue the same... > > > > So probably we should only care about VM_SHARED? > > FWIW I think it doesn't make sense to distinguish between > shared/private mappings here - in the scenario described in the cover > letter, it wouldn't matter that much to an attacker whether the > mapping is shared or private (as long as the VMA contents haven't been > CoWed already). +1 on this. The concept of blocking this for only shared mapping is questionable. > But you're also right that in the scenario described, > an attacker might also be able to create a writable+executable anon > VMA and copy into that, or map another memfd that hasn't been sealed, > or stuff like that. We can block such things - but not by only > providing sealing operations on individual memfds. I think this > instead requires policy that applies at the process level, either > using system-wide SELinux policy or using process sandboxing APIs. >