On Thu, Jan 16, 2025 at 04:55:39PM -0800, Eyal Birger wrote: > When attaching uretprobes to processes running inside docker, the attached > process is segfaulted when encountering the retprobe. > > The reason is that now that uretprobe is a system call the default seccomp > filters in docker block it as they only allow a specific set of known > syscalls. This is true for other userspace applications which use seccomp > to control their syscall surface. > > Since uretprobe is a "kernel implementation detail" system call which is > not used by userspace application code directly, it is impractical and > there's very little point in forcing all userspace applications to > explicitly allow it in order to avoid crashing tracked processes. > > Pass this systemcall through seccomp without depending on configuration. > > Fixes: ff474a78cef5 ("uprobe: Add uretprobe syscall to speed up return probe") > Reported-by: Rafael Buchbinder <rafi@xxxxxx> > Link: https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/CAHsH6Gs3Eh8DFU0wq58c_LF8A4_+o6z456J7BidmcVY2AqOnHQ@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx/ > Cc: stable@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx > Signed-off-by: Eyal Birger <eyal.birger@xxxxxxxxx> > --- > > The following reproduction script synthetically demonstrates the problem: > > cat > /tmp/x.c << EOF > > char *syscalls[] = { > "write", > "exit_group", > "fstat", > }; > > __attribute__((noinline)) int probed(void) > { > printf("Probed\n"); > return 1; > } > > void apply_seccomp_filter(char **syscalls, int num_syscalls) > { > scmp_filter_ctx ctx; > > ctx = seccomp_init(SCMP_ACT_KILL); > for (int i = 0; i < num_syscalls; i++) { > seccomp_rule_add(ctx, SCMP_ACT_ALLOW, > seccomp_syscall_resolve_name(syscalls[i]), 0); > } > seccomp_load(ctx); > seccomp_release(ctx); > } > > int main(int argc, char *argv[]) > { > int num_syscalls = sizeof(syscalls) / sizeof(syscalls[0]); > > apply_seccomp_filter(syscalls, num_syscalls); > > probed(); > > return 0; > } > EOF > > cat > /tmp/trace.bt << EOF > uretprobe:/tmp/x:probed > { > printf("ret=%d\n", retval); > } > EOF > > gcc -o /tmp/x /tmp/x.c -lseccomp > > /usr/bin/bpftrace /tmp/trace.bt & > > sleep 5 # wait for uretprobe attach > /tmp/x > > pkill bpftrace > > rm /tmp/x /tmp/x.c /tmp/trace.bt > --- > kernel/seccomp.c | 5 +++++ > 1 file changed, 5 insertions(+) > > diff --git a/kernel/seccomp.c b/kernel/seccomp.c > index 385d48293a5f..10a55c9b5c18 100644 > --- a/kernel/seccomp.c > +++ b/kernel/seccomp.c > @@ -1359,6 +1359,11 @@ int __secure_computing(const struct seccomp_data *sd) > this_syscall = sd ? sd->nr : > syscall_get_nr(current, current_pt_regs()); > > +#ifdef CONFIG_X86_64 > + if (unlikely(this_syscall == __NR_uretprobe) && !in_ia32_syscall()) > + return 0; > +#endif > + > switch (mode) { > case SECCOMP_MODE_STRICT: > __secure_computing_strict(this_syscall); /* may call do_exit */ This seems to be a hot fix to bypass some SECCOMP_RET_ERRNO filters. However, this way it bypasses seccomp completely, including SECCOMP_RET_TRACE, making it invisible to strace --seccomp, and I wonder why do you want that. -- ldv