On Mon, Jun 03, 2019 at 11:01:32AM -0400, Stephen Smalley wrote: > On 5/31/19 7:31 PM, Sean Christopherson wrote: > >The goal of selinux_enclave_load() is to provide a facsimile of the > >existing selinux_file_mprotect() and file_map_prot_check() policies, > >but tailored to the unique properties of SGX. > > > >For example, an enclave page is technically backed by a MAP_SHARED file, > >but the "file" is essentially shared memory that is never persisted > >anywhere and also requires execute permissions (for some pages). > > > >The basic concept is to require appropriate execute permissions on the > >source of the enclave for pages that are requesting PROT_EXEC, e.g. if > >an enclave page is being loaded from a regular file, require > >FILE__EXECUTE and/or FILE__EXECMOND, and if it's coming from an > >anonymous/private mapping, require PROCESS__EXECMEM since the process > >is essentially executing from the mapping, albeit in a roundabout way. > > > >Note, FILE__READ and FILE__WRITE are intentionally not required even if > >the source page is backed by a regular file. Writes to the enclave page > >are contained to the EPC, i.e. never hit the original file, and read > >permissions have already been vetted (or the VMA doesn't have PROT_READ, > >in which case loading the page into the enclave will fail). > > > >Signed-off-by: Sean Christopherson <sean.j.christopherson@xxxxxxxxx> > >--- > > security/selinux/hooks.c | 85 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ > > 1 file changed, 85 insertions(+) > > > >diff --git a/security/selinux/hooks.c b/security/selinux/hooks.c > >index 3ec702cf46ca..f436a055dda7 100644 > >--- a/security/selinux/hooks.c > >+++ b/security/selinux/hooks.c > >@@ -6726,6 +6726,87 @@ static void selinux_bpf_prog_free(struct bpf_prog_aux *aux) > > } > > #endif > >+#ifdef CONFIG_INTEL_SGX > >+int selinux_enclave_load(struct vm_area_struct *vma, unsigned long prot, > >+ unsigned long *allowed_prot) > >+{ > >+ const struct cred *cred = current_cred(); > >+ u32 sid = cred_sid(cred); > >+ int rc; > >+ > >+ /* SGX is supported only in 64-bit kernels. */ > >+ WARN_ON_ONCE(!default_noexec); > >+ > >+ /* > >+ * SGX is responsible for checking @prot vs @allowed_prot, and SELinux > >+ * only cares about execute related permissions for enclaves. > >+ */ > >+ if (!(*allowed_prot & PROT_EXEC)) > >+ return 0; > >+ > >+ /* > >+ * Loading an executable enclave page from a VMA that is not executable > >+ * itself requires EXECUTE permissions on the source file, or if there > >+ * is no regular source file, EXECMEM since the page is being loaded > >+ * from a non-executable anonymous mapping. > >+ */ > >+ if (!(vma->vm_flags & VM_EXEC)) { > >+ if (vma->vm_file && !IS_PRIVATE(file_inode(vma->vm_file))) > >+ rc = file_has_perm(cred, vma->vm_file, FILE__EXECUTE); > > We might need an EXECMOD check here as well if (vma->vm_file && > vma->anon_vma). The scenario would be that the host application mapped the > file with PROT_WRITE, modified it, but haven't mapped it PROT_EXEC. Now the > enclave loader requests PROT_EXEC without PROT_WRITE or allows it. > FILE__EXECUTE is insufficient for this case. Ya, agreed. > >+ else > >+ rc = avc_has_perm(&selinux_state, > >+ sid, sid, SECCLASS_PROCESS, > >+ PROCESS__EXECMEM, NULL); > > These calls will audit FILE__EXECUTE or PROCESS__EXECMEM denials even when > userspace never asked for PROT_EXEC. Possibly we should use > avc_has_perm_noaudit() and only call avc_audit() if (prot & PROT_EXEC)? And > similarly introduce file_has_perm_noaudit() -> inode_has_perm_noaudit() -> > avc_has_perm_noaudit() or inline here and switch to avc_has_perm_noaudit() > throughout? Hmm, I think we want to audit the denials even if userspace technically hasn't requested PROT_EXEC, yet... The idea of @allowed_prot is for userspace to declare its intent, i.e. for all intents and purposes, userspace is asking for PROT_EXEC by declaring PROT_EXEC in @allowed_prot. For SGX1 enclaves, where permissions are fixed at enclave build time, declaring PROT_EXEC but not actually mapping the page as PROT_EXEC is a userspace bug, and a fairly egregious one at that. For SGX2 enclaves, where enclaves can convert RW->RX (among others), not auditing would make it difficult for userspace to debug failures due to the denial. E.g. a properly written application that declared PROT_EXEC on a RW page with the intent of converting it to RX would eventually fail at mprotect() due to PROT_EXEC being cleared. Without the audit, there wouldn't be any indication that mprotect() failed with -EACCES due to LSM restrictions. > >+ > >+ /* > >+ * Reject the load if the enclave *needs* the page to be > >+ * executable, otherwise prevent it from becoming executable. > >+ */ > >+ if (rc) { > >+ if (prot & PROT_EXEC) > >+ return rc; > >+ > >+ *allowed_prot &= ~PROT_EXEC; > >+ } > >+ } > >+ > >+ /* > >+ * An enclave page that may do RW->RX or W+X requires EXECMOD (backed > >+ * by a regular file) or EXECMEM (loaded from an anonymous mapping). > > At present EXECMEM is also triggered for W+X private file mappings, to allow > denying W+X while permitting exceptions for W->X for text relocations. Doh, missed that one. Thanks! > >+ * Note, this hybrid EXECMOD and EXECMEM behavior is intentional and > >+ * reflects the nature of enclaves and the EPC, e.g. EPC is effectively > >+ * a non-persistent shared file, but each enclave is a private domain > >+ * within that shared file, so delegate to the source of the enclave. > >+ */ > >+ if ((*allowed_prot & PROT_EXEC) && (*allowed_prot & PROT_WRITE)) { > >+ if (vma->vm_file && !IS_PRIVATE(file_inode(vma->vm_file))) > >+ rc = file_has_perm(cred, vma->vm_file, FILE__EXECMOD); > >+ else > >+ rc = avc_has_perm(&selinux_state, > >+ sid, sid, SECCLASS_PROCESS, > >+ PROCESS__EXECMEM, NULL); > > Same issue wrt auditing here. Could also potentially skip the EXECMEM check > this time if we performed it above (if so, then we must have passed it > because *allowed_prot still had PROT_EXEC set). Skipping the second EXECMEM check crossed my mind as well. I'll play with the code to see if I can come up with clean way of avoiding multiple EXECMEM (or EXECMOD) checks. > >+ /* > >+ * Clear ALLOW_EXEC instead of ALLOWED_WRITE if permissions are > >+ * lacking and @prot has neither PROT_WRITE or PROT_EXEC. If > >+ * userspace wanted RX they would have requested RX, and due to > >+ * lack of permissions they can never get RW->RX, i.e. the only > >+ * useful transition is R->RW. > >+ */ > >+ if (rc) { > >+ if ((prot & PROT_EXEC) && (prot & PROT_WRITE)) > >+ return rc; > >+ > >+ if (prot & PROT_EXEC) > >+ *allowed_prot &= ~PROT_WRITE; > >+ else > >+ *allowed_prot &= ~PROT_EXEC; > >+ } > >+ } > >+ > >+ return 0; > >+} > >+#endif > >+ > > struct lsm_blob_sizes selinux_blob_sizes __lsm_ro_after_init = { > > .lbs_cred = sizeof(struct task_security_struct), > > .lbs_file = sizeof(struct file_security_struct), > >@@ -6968,6 +7049,10 @@ static struct security_hook_list selinux_hooks[] __lsm_ro_after_init = { > > LSM_HOOK_INIT(bpf_map_free_security, selinux_bpf_map_free), > > LSM_HOOK_INIT(bpf_prog_free_security, selinux_bpf_prog_free), > > #endif > >+ > >+#ifdef CONFIG_INTEL_SGX > >+ LSM_HOOK_INIT(enclave_load, selinux_enclave_load), > >+#endif > > }; > > static __init int selinux_init(void) > > >