Re: [PATCH security-next v4 23/32] selinux: Remove boot parameter
From: Kees Cook <hidden>
Date: 2018-10-02 19:17:19
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linux-doc, linux-security-module, lkml
On Tue, Oct 2, 2018 at 11:57 AM, John Johansen [off-list ref] wrote:
Under the current scheme lsm.enabled=selinux could actually mean selinux,yama,loadpin,something_else are enabled. If we extend this behavior to when full stacking lands lsm.enabled=selinux,yama might mean selinux,yama,apparmor,loadpin,something_else and what that list is will vary from kernel to kernel, which I think is harder for the user than the lsm.enabled list being what is actually enabled at boot
Ah, I think I missed this in your earlier emails. What you don't like here is that "lsm.enable=" is additive. You want it to be explicit. Are you okay with lsm.order= having fallback? The situation we were trying to solve was with new LSMs getting implicitly disabled if someone is booting with an explicit list. For example: lsm.enable=yama,apparmor means when "landlock" gets added to the kernel, it will be implicitly disabled.
If we have to have multiple kernel parameter, I prefer a behvior where if you hav conflicting kernel parameters specified apparmor=0 lsm.enabled=apparmor that the conflict is logged and the lsm is left disabled, as I think it is easier for users to understand than the overrides scheme of v3, and sans logging of the conflict is effectively what we had in the past apparmor=0 security=apparmor or apparmor=1 security=selinux would result in apparmor being disabed
Okay, so for this part you want per-LSM boot param to have priority (which seems to match SELinux's concerns), possibly logging the conflict, but still accepting the apparmor= and selinux= state. security= would still driving initialization ordering (so I think the behavior I have in the series would be correct).
That being said I get we have a mess currently, and there really doesn't seem to be a good way to fix it. I think getting this right for the user is important enough that I am willing to break current apparmor userspace api. While apparmor=0 is documented we have also documented security=X for years and apparmor=0 isn't used too often so I think we can drop it to help clean this mess up abit. I am not going to Nak, or block on v3 behavior if that is considered the best path forward after this discussion/rant.
I could define CONFIG_LSM_ENABLE as being "additive" to SECURITY_APPARMOR_BOOTPARAM_VALUE and SECURITY_SELINUX_BOOTPARAM_VALUE? -Kees -- Kees Cook Pixel Security