Re: overlayfs access checks on underlying layers

[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

 



On 3/4/19 12:01 PM, Mark Salyzyn wrote:
On 11/29/2018 05:49 AM, Vivek Goyal wrote:
So will override_creds=off solve the NFS issue also where all access will
happen with the creds of task now? Though it will stil require more
priviliges in task for other operations in overlay to succeed.

NFS problems seems to have ended the discussion, too many stakeholders? too many outstanding questions?

Do we accept the limitations of the override_creds patch as is, and then have the folks more familiar with the NFS scenario(s) build on it?

[TL;DR]

After looking at all this discussion, it feels like a larger audited rewrite of the security model is in order and override_creds=off may be a disservice (although expediently deals with Android's needs) to a correct general solution. I admit I have little idea where to go from here for a general solution.

As far as I see it, the model of creator && caller credentials is a problem for any non-overlapping (MAC) privilege models. This patch allows one to drop any creator privilege escalation, re-introducing the "caller" to the lower layers.

As such I would expect a better model is to _always_ check the caller credentials again in the lower layers, and only check the creator credentials, some without caller credentials, for some special cases? Change an && to an || for some of the checks? What are those special cases? I must admit _none_ of those special cases need attention in the Android usage models though making it difficult for me to do the fight thing for the associated stakeholders.

As I recall, there were multiple problems with using current process' creds for the operations on the lower/upper/work directories:

- Some overlayfs operations on the lower/upper/work directories required privilege (capabilities) that the current process might lack, e.g. to set ownership and the like on upper or work files, to set special xattrs used internally by overlayfs for whiteouts or similar purposes, to act on files within the work dir which was inaccessible to the current process to prevent accessing files in an incomplete state, etc. Originally that was handled by temporarily elevating the effective capabilities around the privileged operation in the overlayfs code but that didn't help with the SELinux or other LSM capability checking that was triggered upon the capable calls. Without some change there you'd have to allow all client process domains all of the relevant capabilities in policy, greatly increasing their privileges.

- The original logic was checking access to the lower dir/files in the context of the current process when performing some operation that modifies the file content or metadata, thereby triggering a SELinux/LSM write or similar check, even though the actual data or metadata modification occurs to the copied-up file instead and does not affect the lower dir/files. That was preventing making the lower dir/file labels read-only to the client processes in the policy, which was desired for the container use case.

You'd need to solve those problems in some way.

The lower privileged application access to the directory cache inherited by other callers troubles me (not for Android, but in general) and feels troublesome (flush out the directory cache? how to tag the privileges associated with the current instance of the directory cache?). Some operations (eg: delete a file for incoming, create mknod in upperdir) are special cases requiring the checking of caller credentaisl to function (not a problem for Android as the caller that deletes a file just so happens to have the necessary privileges).

Also, mount namespaces (in upper, lower, etc), how will they affect this all, is there a need for more attention to this as well?

-- Mark




[Index of Archives]     [Selinux Refpolicy]     [Linux SGX]     [Fedora Users]     [Fedora Desktop]     [Yosemite Photos]     [Yosemite Camping]     [Yosemite Campsites]     [KDE Users]     [Gnome Users]

  Powered by Linux