On 02/25/2014 03:18 PM, Matthew Wilcox wrote:
One of the primary uses for NV-DIMMs is to expose them as a block device
and use a filesystem to store files on the NV-DIMM. While that works,
it currently wastes memory and CPU time buffering the files in the page
cache. We have support in ext2 for bypassing the page cache, but it
has some races which are unfixable in the current design. This series
of patches rewrite the underlying support, and add support for direct
access to ext4.
I'm wondering if there is a potential security issue lurking here.
Some distributions use udisks2 to grant permission to local console
users to create new loop devices from files. File systems on these
block devices are then mounted. This is a replacement for several file
systems implemented in user space, and for the users, this is a good
thing because the in-kernel implementations are generally of higher quality.
What happens if we have DAX support in the entire stack, and an
enterprising user mounts a file system? Will she be able to fuzz the
file system or binfmt loaders concurrently, changing the bits while they
are being read?
Currently, it appears that the loop device duplicates pages in the page
cache, so this does not seem to be possible, but DAX support might
change this.
--
Florian Weimer / Red Hat Product Security Team
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