On Mon, 10 Oct 2022 17:58:29 -0400 Paul Moore wrote: > Commit 4ff09db1b79b ("bpf: net: Change sk_getsockopt() to take the > sockptr_t argument") made it possible to call sk_getsockopt() > with both user and kernel address space buffers through the use of > the sockptr_t type. Unfortunately at the time of conversion the > security_socket_getpeersec_stream() LSM hook was written to only > accept userspace buffers, and in a desire to avoid having to change > the LSM hook the commit author simply passed the sockptr_t's > userspace buffer pointer. Since the only sk_getsockopt() callers > at the time of conversion which used kernel sockptr_t buffers did > not allow SO_PEERSEC, and hence the > security_socket_getpeersec_stream() hook, this was acceptable but > also very fragile as future changes presented the possibility of > silently passing kernel space pointers to the LSM hook. > > There are several ways to protect against this, including careful > code review of future commits, but since relying on code review to > catch bugs is a recipe for disaster and the upstream eBPF maintainer > is "strongly against defensive programming", this patch updates the > LSM hook, and all of the implementations to support sockptr_t and > safely handle both user and kernel space buffers. Code seems sane, FWIW, but the commit message sounds petty, which is likely why nobody is willing to ack it.