Thanks, I think this is much more helpful. On Tue, Sep 30, 2008 at 03:17:21PM -0500, Tom Tucker wrote: > +Security > +-------- > + > + NFSRDMA exploits the RDMA capabilities of the IB and iWARP > + transports to more efficiently exchange RPC data between the client > + and the server. This section discusses the security implications of > + the exchange of memory information on the wire when the wire may be > + monitorable by an untrusted application. The identifier that > + encapsulates this memory information is called an RKEY. > + > + A principal exploit is that a node on the local network could snoop > + RDMA packets containing RKEY and then forge a packet with this RKEY > + to write and/or read the memory of the peer to which the RKEY > + referred. > + > + If the underlying RDMA device is capable of Fast Memory > + Registration, then NFSRDMA is no less secure than TCP with > + auth_unix. However, if the device does not support Fast Memory > + Registration, then such a node could write anywhere in the server's > + memory using the method above. At mount time, the server sends a The server doesn't really know about mounts, especially not at this level, so I assume you mean either server start time or client connect time? > + string to the message log to indicate whether or not Fast Memory > + Registration is being used. If Fast Memory Registration is being > + used, the string > + > + "svcrdma: Using Fast Memory Registration" > + > + is logged, otherwise, > + > + "svcrdma: Using a Global DMA MR" > + > + will be logged. It'd be nicer to have something that can be queried by a program--a file in proc or nfsd, for example--without having to grep through log files. (Or is it possible the drivers already export enough information under sysfs someplace to figure this out with a simple script?) Or maybe the non-fast registration stuff should be under a separate configuration option entirely? Distro's could eventually enable only the safer configurations and people doing testing could build their own kernels with the rest enabled. My initial impulse is to be a bit scared of the non-fast-registration case, but maybe I don't understand how this hardware is deployed. --b. > + > + The sections below provide additional information on this issue. > + > + The NFSRDMA protocol is defined such that a) only the server > + initiates RDMA, and b) only the client's memory is exposed via > + RKEY. This is why the server reads to fetch RPC data from the client > + even though it would be more efficient for the client to write the > + data to the server's memory. This design goal is not entirely > + realized with iWARP, however, because the RKEY (called an STag on > + iWARP) for the data sink of an RDMA_READ is actually placed on the > + wire, and this RKEY has Remote Write permission. This means that the > + server's memory is exposed by virtue of having placed the RKEY for > + its local memory on the wire in order to receive the result of the > + RDMA_READ. > + > + By contrast, IB uses an opaque transaction ID# to associate the > + READ_RPL with the READ_REQ and the data sink of an READ_REQ does not > + require remote access. That said, the byzantine node in question > + could forge a packet with this transaction ID and corrupt the target > + memory, however, the scope of the exploit is bounded to the lifetime > + of this single RDMA_READ request and to the memory mapped by the > + data sink of the READ_REQ. > + > + The newer RDMA adapters (both iWARP and IB) support "Fast Memory > + Registration". This capability allows memory to be quickly > + registered (i.e. made available for remote access) and de-registered > + by submitting WR on the SQ. These capabilities provide a mechanism > + to reduce the exposure discused above by limiting the scope of the > + exploit. The idea is to create an RKEY that only maps the single RPC > + and whose effective lifetime is only the exchange of this single > + RPC. This is the default memory model that is employed by the server > + when supported by the adapter and by the client when the > + rdma_memreg_strategy is set to 6. Note that the client and server > + may use different memory registration strategies, however, > + performance is better when both the client and server use the > + FastReg memory registration strategy. > + > + This approach has two benefits, a) it restricts the domain of the > + exploit to the memory of a single RPC, and b) it limits the duration > + of the exploit to the time it takes to satisfy the RDMA_READ. > + > + It is arguable that a one-shot STag/RKEY is no less secure than RPC > + on the TCP transport. Consider that the exact same byzantine > + application could more easily corrupt TCP RPC payload by simply > + forging a packet with the correct TCP sequence number -- in fact > + it's easier than the RDMA exploit because the RDMA exploit requires > + that you correctly forge both the TCP packet and the RDMA > + payload. In addition the duration of the TCP exploit is the lifetime > + of the connection, not the lifetime of a single WR/RPC data transfer. > + > + RDMA on IB or iWARP using Fast Reg is no less secure than TCP. > + > -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-nfs" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html