On Thu, Jul 9, 2020 at 12:28 PM John Johansen <john.johansen@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On 7/9/20 9:11 AM, Stephen Smalley wrote: > > On Wed, Jul 8, 2020 at 8:23 PM Casey Schaufler <casey@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >> > >> Change the data used in UDS SO_PEERSEC processing from a > >> secid to a more general struct lsmblob. Update the > >> security_socket_getpeersec_dgram() interface to use the > >> lsmblob. There is a small amount of scaffolding code > >> that will come out when the security_secid_to_secctx() > >> code is brought in line with the lsmblob. > >> > >> The secid field of the unix_skb_parms structure has been > >> replaced with a pointer to an lsmblob structure, and the > >> lsmblob is allocated as needed. This is similar to how the > >> list of passed files is managed. While an lsmblob structure > >> will fit in the available space today, there is no guarantee > >> that the addition of other data to the unix_skb_parms or > >> support for additional security modules wouldn't exceed what > >> is available. > >> > >> Reviewed-by: Kees Cook <keescook@xxxxxxxxxxxx> > >> Signed-off-by: Casey Schaufler <casey@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> > >> Cc: netdev@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx > >> --- > > > >> diff --git a/net/unix/af_unix.c b/net/unix/af_unix.c > >> index 3385a7a0b231..d246aefcf4da 100644 > >> --- a/net/unix/af_unix.c > >> +++ b/net/unix/af_unix.c > >> @@ -138,17 +138,23 @@ static struct hlist_head *unix_sockets_unbound(void *addr) > >> #ifdef CONFIG_SECURITY_NETWORK > >> static void unix_get_secdata(struct scm_cookie *scm, struct sk_buff *skb) > >> { > >> - UNIXCB(skb).secid = scm->secid; > >> + UNIXCB(skb).lsmdata = kmemdup(&scm->lsmblob, sizeof(scm->lsmblob), > >> + GFP_KERNEL); > >> } > >> > >> static inline void unix_set_secdata(struct scm_cookie *scm, struct sk_buff *skb) > >> { > >> - scm->secid = UNIXCB(skb).secid; > >> + if (likely(UNIXCB(skb).lsmdata)) > >> + scm->lsmblob = *(UNIXCB(skb).lsmdata); > >> + else > >> + lsmblob_init(&scm->lsmblob, 0); > >> } > >> > >> static inline bool unix_secdata_eq(struct scm_cookie *scm, struct sk_buff *skb) > >> { > >> - return (scm->secid == UNIXCB(skb).secid); > >> + if (likely(UNIXCB(skb).lsmdata)) > >> + return lsmblob_equal(&scm->lsmblob, UNIXCB(skb).lsmdata); > >> + return false; > >> } > > > > I don't think that this provides sensible behavior to userspace. On a > > transient memory allocation failure, instead of returning an error to > > the sender and letting them handle it, this will just proceed with > > sending the message without its associated security information, and > > potentially split messages on arbitrary boundaries because it cannot > > tell whether the sender had the same security information. I think > > you instead need to change unix_get_secdata() to return an error on > > allocation failure and propagate that up to the sender. Not a fan of > > this change in general both due to extra overhead on this code path > > and potential for breakage on allocation failures. I know it was > > motivated by paul's observation that we won't be able to fit many more > > secids into the cb but not sure we have to go there prematurely, > > especially absent its usage by upstream AA (no unix_stream_connect > > hook implementation upstream). Also not sure how the whole bpf local > > I'm not sure how premature it is, I am running late for 5.9 but would > like to land apparmor unix mediation in 5.10 Sorry I think I mischaracterized the condition under which this support needs to be stacked. It seems to only be needed if using SO_PASSSEC and SCM_SECURITY (i.e. datagram labeling), not just for unix mediation or SO_PEERSEC IIUC. So not sure if that applies even for downstream.