Critical data structures of security modules are currently not measured. Therefore an attestation service, for instance, would not be able to attest whether the security modules are always operating with the policies and configuration that the system administrator had setup. The policies and configuration for the security modules could be tampered with by malware by exploiting kernel vulnerabilities or modified through some inadvertent actions on the system. Measuring such critical data would enable an attestation service to better assess the state of the system. IMA subsystem measures system files, command line arguments passed to kexec, boot aggregate, keys, etc. It can be used to measure critical data structures of security modules as well. This change aims to address measuring critical data structures of security modules when they are initialized and when they are updated at runtime. This series is based on commit 3db0d0c276a7 ("integrity: remove redundant initialization of variable ret") in next-integrity Change log: v5: => Append timestamp to "event name" string in the call to the IMA hooks so that LSM data is always measured by IMA. => Removed workqueue patch that was handling periodic checking of the LSM data. This change will be introduced as a separate patch set while keeping this patch set focussed on measuring the LSM data on initialization and on updates at runtime. => Handle early boot measurement of LSM data. v4: => Added LSM_POLICY func and IMA hook to measure LSM policy. => Pass SELinux policy data, instead of the hash of the policy, to the IMA hook to measure. => Include "initialized" flag in SELinux measurement. Also, measure SELinux state even when initialization is not yet completed. But measure SELinux policy only after initialization. v3: => Loop through policy_capabilities to build the state data to measure instead of hardcoding to current set of policy capabilities. => Added error log messages for failure conditions. v2: => Pass selinux_state struct as parameter to the function that measures SELinux data. => Use strings from selinux_policycap_names array for SELinux state measurement. => Refactored security_read_policy() to alloc kernel or user virtual memory and then read the SELinux policy. v1: => Per Stephen Smalley's suggestion added selinux_state booleans and hash of SELinux policy in the measured data for SELinux. => Call IMA hook from the security module directly instead of redirecting through the LSM. Lakshmi Ramasubramanian (4): IMA: Add func to measure LSM state and policy IMA: Define IMA hooks to measure LSM state and policy LSM: Define SELinux function to measure state and policy IMA: Handle early boot data measurement Documentation/ABI/testing/ima_policy | 9 + include/linux/ima.h | 14 ++ security/integrity/ima/Kconfig | 5 +- security/integrity/ima/Makefile | 2 +- security/integrity/ima/ima.h | 45 +++-- security/integrity/ima/ima_api.c | 2 +- security/integrity/ima/ima_asymmetric_keys.c | 6 +- security/integrity/ima/ima_init.c | 2 +- security/integrity/ima/ima_main.c | 64 ++++++- security/integrity/ima/ima_policy.c | 33 +++- security/integrity/ima/ima_queue_data.c | 175 +++++++++++++++++++ security/integrity/ima/ima_queue_keys.c | 174 ------------------ security/selinux/Makefile | 2 + security/selinux/hooks.c | 1 + security/selinux/include/security.h | 15 ++ security/selinux/measure.c | 150 ++++++++++++++++ security/selinux/selinuxfs.c | 3 + security/selinux/ss/services.c | 71 +++++++- 18 files changed, 551 insertions(+), 222 deletions(-) create mode 100644 security/integrity/ima/ima_queue_data.c delete mode 100644 security/integrity/ima/ima_queue_keys.c create mode 100644 security/selinux/measure.c -- 2.27.0