Thread (44 messages) 44 messages, 4 authors, 2021-03-25

Re: [PATCH v30 07/12] landlock: Support filesystem access-control

From: Jann Horn <jannh@google.com>
Date: 2021-03-23 00:14:53
Also in: linux-api, linux-arch, linux-doc, linux-fsdevel, linux-kselftest, lkml

 On Tue, Mar 16, 2021 at 9:43 PM Mickaël Salaün [off-list ref] wrote:
Using Landlock objects and ruleset, it is possible to tag inodes
according to a process's domain.
[...]
+static void release_inode(struct landlock_object *const object)
+       __releases(object->lock)
+{
+       struct inode *const inode = object->underobj;
+       struct super_block *sb;
+
+       if (!inode) {
+               spin_unlock(&object->lock);
+               return;
+       }
+
+       /*
+        * Protects against concurrent use by hook_sb_delete() of the reference
+        * to the underlying inode.
+        */
+       object->underobj = NULL;
+       /*
+        * Makes sure that if the filesystem is concurrently unmounted,
+        * hook_sb_delete() will wait for us to finish iput().
+        */
+       sb = inode->i_sb;
+       atomic_long_inc(&landlock_superblock(sb)->inode_refs);
+       spin_unlock(&object->lock);
+       /*
+        * Because object->underobj was not NULL, hook_sb_delete() and
+        * get_inode_object() guarantee that it is safe to reset
+        * landlock_inode(inode)->object while it is not NULL.  It is therefore
+        * not necessary to lock inode->i_lock.
+        */
+       rcu_assign_pointer(landlock_inode(inode)->object, NULL);
+       /*
+        * Now, new rules can safely be tied to @inode with get_inode_object().
+        */
+
+       iput(inode);
+       if (atomic_long_dec_and_test(&landlock_superblock(sb)->inode_refs))
+               wake_up_var(&landlock_superblock(sb)->inode_refs);
+}
[...]
+static struct landlock_object *get_inode_object(struct inode *const inode)
+{
+       struct landlock_object *object, *new_object;
+       struct landlock_inode_security *inode_sec = landlock_inode(inode);
+
+       rcu_read_lock();
+retry:
+       object = rcu_dereference(inode_sec->object);
+       if (object) {
+               if (likely(refcount_inc_not_zero(&object->usage))) {
+                       rcu_read_unlock();
+                       return object;
+               }
+               /*
+                * We are racing with release_inode(), the object is going
+                * away.  Wait for release_inode(), then retry.
+                */
+               spin_lock(&object->lock);
+               spin_unlock(&object->lock);
+               goto retry;
+       }
+       rcu_read_unlock();
+
+       /*
+        * If there is no object tied to @inode, then create a new one (without
+        * holding any locks).
+        */
+       new_object = landlock_create_object(&landlock_fs_underops, inode);
+       if (IS_ERR(new_object))
+               return new_object;
+
+       /* Protects against concurrent get_inode_object() calls. */
+       spin_lock(&inode->i_lock);
+       object = rcu_dereference_protected(inode_sec->object,
+                       lockdep_is_held(&inode->i_lock));
rcu_dereference_protected() requires that inode_sec->object is not
concurrently changed, but I think another thread could call
get_inode_object() while we're in landlock_create_object(), and then
we could race with the NULL write in release_inode() here? (It
wouldn't actually be a UAF though because we're not actually accessing
`object` here.) Or am I missing a lock that prevents this?

In v28 this wasn't an issue because release_inode() was holding
inode->i_lock (and object->lock) during the NULL store; but in v29 and
this version the NULL store in release_inode() moved out of the locked
region. I think you could just move the NULL store in release_inode()
back up (and maybe add a comment explaining the locking rules for
landlock_inode(...)->object)?

(Or alternatively you could use rcu_dereference_raw() with a comment
explaining that the read pointer is only used to check for NULL-ness,
and that it is guaranteed that the pointer can't change if it is NULL
and we're holding the lock. But that'd be needlessly complicated, I
think.)

+       if (unlikely(object)) {
+               /* Someone else just created the object, bail out and retry. */
+               spin_unlock(&inode->i_lock);
+               kfree(new_object);
+
+               rcu_read_lock();
+               goto retry;
+       }
+
+       rcu_assign_pointer(inode_sec->object, new_object);
+       /*
+        * @inode will be released by hook_sb_delete() on its superblock
+        * shutdown.
+        */
+       ihold(inode);
+       spin_unlock(&inode->i_lock);
+       return new_object;
+}
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