On Fri, 2023-11-17 at 15:57 -0500, Paul Moore wrote: > On Nov 7, 2023 Roberto Sassu <roberto.sassu@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > Before the security field of kernel objects could be shared among LSMs with > > the LSM stacking feature, IMA and EVM had to rely on an alternative storage > > of inode metadata. The association between inode metadata and inode is > > maintained through an rbtree. > > > > Because of this alternative storage mechanism, there was no need to use > > disjoint inode metadata, so IMA and EVM today still share them. > > > > With the reservation mechanism offered by the LSM infrastructure, the > > rbtree is no longer necessary, as each LSM could reserve a space in the > > security blob for each inode. However, since IMA and EVM share the > > inode metadata, they cannot directly reserve the space for them. > > > > Instead, request from the 'integrity' LSM a space in the security blob for > > the pointer of inode metadata (integrity_iint_cache structure). The other > > reason for keeping the 'integrity' LSM is to preserve the original ordering > > of IMA and EVM functions as when they were hardcoded. > > > > Prefer reserving space for a pointer to allocating the integrity_iint_cache > > structure directly, as IMA would require it only for a subset of inodes. > > Always allocating it would cause a waste of memory. > > > > Introduce two primitives for getting and setting the pointer of > > integrity_iint_cache in the security blob, respectively > > integrity_inode_get_iint() and integrity_inode_set_iint(). This would make > > the code more understandable, as they directly replace rbtree operations. > > > > Locking is not needed, as access to inode metadata is not shared, it is per > > inode. > > > > Signed-off-by: Roberto Sassu <roberto.sassu@xxxxxxxxxx> > > Reviewed-by: Casey Schaufler <casey@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> > > Reviewed-by: Mimi Zohar <zohar@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> > > --- > > security/integrity/iint.c | 71 +++++----------------------------- > > security/integrity/integrity.h | 20 +++++++++- > > 2 files changed, 29 insertions(+), 62 deletions(-) > > > > diff --git a/security/integrity/iint.c b/security/integrity/iint.c > > index 882fde2a2607..a5edd3c70784 100644 > > --- a/security/integrity/iint.c > > +++ b/security/integrity/iint.c > > @@ -231,6 +175,10 @@ static int __init integrity_lsm_init(void) > > return 0; > > } > > > > +struct lsm_blob_sizes integrity_blob_sizes __ro_after_init = { > > + .lbs_inode = sizeof(struct integrity_iint_cache *), > > +}; > > I'll admit that I'm likely missing an important detail, but is there > a reason why you couldn't stash the integrity_iint_cache struct > directly in the inode's security blob instead of the pointer? For > example: > > struct lsm_blob_sizes ... = { > .lbs_inode = sizeof(struct integrity_iint_cache), > }; > > struct integrity_iint_cache *integrity_inode_get(inode) > { > if (unlikely(!inode->isecurity)) > return NULL; > return inode->i_security + integrity_blob_sizes.lbs_inode; > } It would increase memory occupation. Sometimes the IMA policy encompasses a small subset of the inodes. Allocating the full integrity_iint_cache would be a waste of memory, I guess? On the other hand... (did not think fully about that) if we embed the full structure in the security blob, we already have a mutex available to use, and we don't need to take the inode lock (?). I'm fully convinced that we can improve the implementation significantly. I just was really hoping to go step by step and not accumulating improvements as dependency for moving IMA and EVM to the LSM infrastructure. Thanks Roberto