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  1) connect() on client_fd with AF_UNSPEC to disassociate the client FD
  2) listen() on the client_fd

This succeeds and it listens on an ephemeral port.

The code is at [1], if you are interested.

[1] https://github.com/gnoack/landlock-examples/blob/main/tcpserver.c


On Mon, May 13, 2024 at 03:15:50PM +0300, Ivanov Mikhail wrote:
> 4/30/2024 4:36 PM, Mickaël Salaün wrote:
> > On Mon, Apr 08, 2024 at 05:47:46PM +0800, Ivanov Mikhail wrote:
> > > Make hook for socket_listen(). It will check that the socket protocol is
> > > TCP, and if the socket's local port number is 0 (which means,
> > > that listen(2) was called without any previous bind(2) call),
> > > then listen(2) call will be legitimate only if there is a rule for bind(2)
> > > allowing binding to port 0 (or if LANDLOCK_ACCESS_NET_BIND_TCP is not
> > > supported by the sandbox).
> > 
> > Thanks for this patch and sorry for the late full review.  The code is
> > good overall.
> > 
> > We should either consider this patch as a fix or add a new flag/access
> > right to Landlock syscalls for compatibility reason.  I think this
> > should be a fix.  Calling listen(2) without a previous call to bind(2)
> > is a corner case that we should properly handle.  The commit message
> > should make that explicit and highlight the goal of the patch: first
> > explain why, and then how.
> 
> Yeap, this is fix-patch. I have covered motivation and proposed solution
> in cover letter. Do you have any suggestions on how i can improve this?

Without wanting to turn around the direction of this code review now, I am still
slightly concerned about the assymetry of this special case being implemented
for listen() but not for connect().

The reason is this: My colleague Mr. B. recently pointed out to me that you can
also do a bind() on a socket before a connect(!). The steps are:

* create socket with socket()
* bind() to a local port 9090
* connect() to a remote port 8080

This gives you a connection between ports 9090 and 8080.

A regular connect() without an explicit bind() is of course the more usual
scenario.  In that case, we are also using up ("implicitly binding") one of the
ephemeral ports.

It seems that, with respect to the port binding, listen() and connect() work
quite similarly then?  This being considered, maybe it *is* the listen()
operation on a port which we should be restricting, and not bind()?

With some luck, that would then also free us from having to implement the
check_tcp_socket_can_listen() logic, which is seemingly emulating logic from
elsewhere in the kernel?

(I am by far not an expert in Linux networking, so I'll put this out for
consideration and will happily stand corrected if I am misunderstanding
something.  Maybe someone with more networking background can chime in?)


> > > +		/* Socket is alredy binded to some port. */
> > 
> > This kind of spelling issue can be found by scripts/checkpatch.pl
> 
> will be fixed

P.S. there are two typos here, the obvious one in "alredy",
but also the passive of "to bind" is "bound", not "binded".
(That is also mis-spelled in a few more places I think.)

â??Günther





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