Hi This is v2 of the socketpair(2) LSM hook introduction. Changes since v1 are: - Added ACKs from previous series. - Moved the hook into generic socketpair(2) handling. The hook is now called security_socket_socketpair(), just like the other hooks on the socket layer. There is no AF_UNIX specific code, anymore. - Added SMACK support. - Still *NO* AppArmor support, since upstream AppArmor lacks SO_PEERSEC support and requires downstream patches (in particular, the apparmor_unix_stream_connect() function is mostly a stub and was never synced with Ubuntu downstream modifications). Old cover letter follows (only trivial changes). Thanks David This series adds a new LSM hook for the socketpair(2) syscall. The idea is to allow SO_PEERSEC to be called on AF_UNIX sockets created via socketpair(2), and return the same information as if you emulated socketpair(2) via a temporary listener socket. Right now SO_PEERSEC will return the unlabeled credentials for a socketpair, rather than the actual credentials of the creating process. A simple call to: socketpair(AF_UNIX, SOCK_STREAM, 0, out); can be emulated via a temporary listener socket bound to a unique, random name in the abstract namespace. By connecting to this listener socket, accept(2) will return the second part of the pair. If SO_PEERSEC is queried on these, the correct credentials of the creating process are returned. A simple comparison between the behavior of SO_PEERSEC on socketpair(2) and an emulated socketpair is included in the dbus-broker test-suite [1]. This patch series tries to close this gap and makes both behave the same. A new LSM-hook is added which allows LSMs to cache the correct peer information on newly created socket-pairs. Apart from fixing this behavioral difference, the dbus-broker project actually needs to query the credentials of socketpairs, and currently must resort to racy procfs(2) queries to get the LSM credentials of its controller socket. Several parts of the dbus-broker project allow you to pass in a socket during execve(2), which will be used by the child process to accept control-commands from its parent. One natural way to create this communication channel is to use socketpair(2). However, right now SO_PEERSEC does not return any useful information, hence, the child-process would need other means to retrieve this information. By avoiding socketpair(2) and using the hacky-emulated version, this is not an issue. There was a previous discussion on this matter [2] roughly a year ago. Back then there was the suspicion that proper SO_PEERSEC would confuse applications. However, we could not find any evidence backing this suspicion. Furthermore, we now actually see the contrary. Lack of SO_PEERSEC makes it a hassle to use socketpairs with LSM credentials. Hence, we propose to implement full SO_PEERSEC for socketpairs. Thanks David [1] https://github.com/bus1/dbus-broker/blob/master/src/util/test-peersec.c [2] https://www.spinics.net/lists/selinux/msg22674.html David Herrmann (3): security: add hook for socketpair() net: hook socketpair() into LSM selinux: provide socketpair callback Tom Gundersen (1): smack: provide socketpair callback include/linux/lsm_hooks.h | 7 +++++++ include/linux/security.h | 7 +++++++ net/socket.c | 7 +++++++ security/security.c | 6 ++++++ security/selinux/hooks.c | 13 +++++++++++++ security/smack/smack_lsm.c | 22 ++++++++++++++++++++++ 6 files changed, 62 insertions(+) -- 2.17.0