On Wed, 2015-09-02 at 20:46 +0200, Luis R. Rodriguez wrote: > On Tue, Sep 01, 2015 at 11:35:05PM -0400, Mimi Zohar wrote: > > > OK great, I think that instead of passing the actual routine name we should > > > instead pass an enum type for to the LSM, that'd be easier to parse and we'd > > > then have each case well documented. Each LSM then could add its own > > > documetnation for this and can switch on it. If we went with a name we'd have > > > to to use something like __func__ and then parse that, its not clear if we need > > > to get that specific. > > > > Agreed. IMA already defines an enumeration. > > > > /* IMA policy related functions */ > > enum ima_hooks { FILE_CHECK = 1, MMAP_CHECK, BPRM_CHECK, MODULE_CHECK, > > FIRMWARE_CHECK, POLICY_CHECK, POST_SETATTR }; > > > > We want something that is not only useful for IMA but any other LSM, > and FILE_CHECK seems very broad, not sure what BPRM_CHECK is even upon > inspecting kernel code. Likewise for POST_SETATTR. POLICY_CHECK might > be broad, perhaps its best we define then a generic set of enums to > which IMA can map them to then and let it decide. This would ensure > that the kernel defines each use caes for file inspection carefully, > documents and defines them and if an LSM wants to bunch a set together > it can do so easily with a switch statement to map set of generic > file checks in kernel to a group it already handles. The names are based on the calling security hook. For a description of each of these security hooks refer to include/linux/lsm_hooks.h. > For instance at least in the short term we'd try to unify: > > security_kernel_fw_from_file() > security_kernel_module_from_file() > > to perhaps: > > security_kernel_from_file() > > As far, as far as I can tell, the only ones we'd be ready to start > grouping immediately or with small amount of work rather soon: > > /** > * > * enum security_filecheck - known kernel security file checks types > * > * @__SECURITY_FILECHECK_UNSPEC: attribute 0 reserved > * @SECURITY_FILECHECK_MODULE: the file being processed is a Linux kernel module > * @SECURITY_FILECHECK_SYSDATA: the file being processed is either a firmware > * file or a system data file read from /lib/firmware/* by firmware_class > * @SECURITY_FILECHECK_KEXEC_KERNEL: the file being processed is a kernel file > * used by kexec > * @SECURITY_FILECHECK_KEXEC_INITRAMFS: the file being processed is an initramfs > * used by kexec > > * The kernel reads files directly from the filesystem for a series of > * operations. The list of files the kernel reads from the filesystem are > * limited and each type of file consumed may have a different format and > * security vetting procedures. The kernel enables LSMs to vet for these files > * through a shared LSM hook prior to consumption. This list documents the > * different special kernel file types read by the kernel, it enables LSMs > * to vet for each differently if needed. > enum security_filecheck { > SECURITY_FILECHECK_UNSPEC, > SECURITY_FILECHECK_MODULE, > SECURITY_FILECHECK_SYSDATA, > SECURITY_FILECHECK_KEXEC_KERNEL, > SECURITY_FILECHECK_KEXEC_INITRAMFS, > }; > > Provided the MOK thing or alternative gets addressed we could also soon add > something for SELinux policy files but that needs to be discussed further > it seems. If MOK is used would SECURITY_FILECHECK_POLICY_MOK be OK? Again > this would likely need further discussion, its why I didn't list it above. Oh, I'm really confused as to why MOK would be a separate hook. I thought the discussion was about using a key in the UEFI MOK DB for verifying locally signed files. Mimi -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-wireless" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html