On Fri, Apr 24, 2020 at 4:27 AM Dmitry Vyukov <dvyukov@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > Hi SELinux maintainers, > > We've hit a case where a developer wasn't able to reproduce a kernel > bug, it turned out to be a difference in behavior between SELinux and > non-SELinux kernels. > Condensed version: a program does sendmmsg on netlink socket with 2 > mmsghdr's, first is completely empty/zeros, second contains some > actual payload. Without SELinux the first mmsghdr is treated as no-op > and the kernel processes the second one (triggers bug). However the > SELinux hook does: > > static int selinux_netlink_send(struct sock *sk, struct sk_buff *skb) > { > if (skb->len < NLMSG_HDRLEN) { > err = -EINVAL; > goto out; > } > > and fails processing on the first empty mmsghdr (does not happen > without SELinux). > > Is this difference in behavior intentional/acceptable/should be fixed? >From a practical perspective, SELinux is always going to need to do a length check as it needs to peek into the netlink message header for the message type so it can map that to the associated SELinux permissions. So in that sense, the behavior is intentional and desired; however from a bug-for-bug compatibility perspective ... not so much. Ultimately, my it's-Friday-and-it's-been-a-long-week-ending-in-a-long-day thought is that this was a buggy operation to begin with and the bug was just caught in different parts of the kernel, depending on how it was configured. It may not be ideal, but I can think of worse things (and arguably SELinux is doing the Right Thing). -- paul moore www.paul-moore.com