On Mon, Mar 13, 2023 at 7:29 PM Andrew Morton <akpm@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On Fri, 17 Feb 2023 17:21:54 +0100 Ondrej Mosnacek <omosnace@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > Linux Security Modules (LSMs) that implement the "capable" hook will > > usually emit an access denial message to the audit log whenever they > > "block" the current task from using the given capability based on their > > security policy. > > > > The occurrence of a denial is used as an indication that the given task > > has attempted an operation that requires the given access permission, so > > the callers of functions that perform LSM permission checks must take > > care to avoid calling them too early (before it is decided if the > > permission is actually needed to perform the requested operation). > > > > The __sys_setres[ug]id() functions violate this convention by first > > calling ns_capable_setid() and only then checking if the operation > > requires the capability or not. It means that any caller that has the > > capability granted by DAC (task's capability set) but not by MAC (LSMs) > > will generate a "denied" audit record, even if is doing an operation for > > which the capability is not required. > > > > Fix this by reordering the checks such that ns_capable_setid() is > > checked last and -EPERM is returned immediately if it returns false. > > > > While there, also do two small optimizations: > > * move the capability check before prepare_creds() and > > * bail out early in case of a no-op. > > > > Fixes: 1da177e4c3f4 ("Linux-2.6.12-rc2") > > Looks and sounds good to me, so I queued it up for some testing. I'd > ask that someone more familiar with this code perform review, please. > > I assume that you believe that a -stable backport is desirable? I'll > add a cc:stable to the patch for now. Yes, it's a minor bug, but we hit it while testing on Fedora and it's better for us to have the fix in stable kernels than adding a workaround elsewhere. Thanks, -- Ondrej Mosnacek Senior Software Engineer, Linux Security - SELinux kernel Red Hat, Inc.