Thread (33 messages) 33 messages, 7 authors, 2023-09-26

Re: ANN: new LSM guidelines

From: Mickaël Salaün <mic@digikod.net>
Date: 2023-08-02 18:46:55
Also in: linux-doc

I like this guideline. I guess this is your goal and I think it should
be part of Documentation/security/lsm.rst (and move the introduction
part of lsm-development.rst into lsm.rst) and get a few SoB.

On Tue, Aug 01, 2023 at 06:47:12PM -0400, Paul Moore wrote:
On Fri, Jul 7, 2023 at 6:02 PM Paul Moore [off-list ref] wrote:
quoted
On Thu, Jul 6, 2023 at 8:32 PM Casey Schaufler [off-list ref] wrote:
quoted
On 7/6/2023 1:42 PM, Paul Moore wrote:
quoted
Hello all,

With some renewed interest in submitting new LSMs including in the
upstream Linux Kernel I thought it might be a good idea to document
some of our longstanding guidelines around submitting new LSMs.  I'm
posting this mostly as a FYI for those who are working on new LSM
submissions, but also to solicit feedback from everyone on the list
regarding what we should ask of new LSMs.  If you think I'm missing
something important, or believe I've added an unfair requirement,
please let me know.

I've added the guidelines to the README.md at the top of the LSM tree,
but to make life easier for those reviewing the guidelines I'm
copy-n-pasting them below ...
I've updated the README.md doc based on the feedback, and copied the
two new sections below for easier review.  If anyone has any
additional feedback or concerns, please let me know.

## New LSM Hook Guidelines

While LSM hooks are generally considered outside of the Linux Kernel's stable
Why "generally"?
API promise, due to the nature of the LSM hooks we try to minimize changes to
the hooks.  With that in mind, we have the following requirements for new LSM
hooks:

* Hooks should be designed to be LSM agnostic.  While it is possible that only
one LSM might implement the hook at the time of submission, the hook's behavior
should be generic enough that other LSMs could provide a meaningful
implementation.
We should also avoid falling in the other extreme which is to add
different argument just-in-case. For instance, there is no need to add a
"flags" argument to a kernel API if there is no flag for now, especially
if there are only a few users of this hook.

I would say that we want generic-as-possible hooks (e.g. well
positioned) but not with useless arguments.
* The hook must be documented with a function header block that conforms to
the kernel documentation style.  At a minimum the documentation should explain
the parameters, return values, a brief overall description, any special
considerations for the callers, and any special considerations for the LSM
implementations.

* There must be at least one LSM implementation of the hook included in the
submission to act as a reference for additional LSM implementations.  The
reference implementation must be for one of the upstream, in-kernel LSMs; while
the BPF LSM is an upstream LSM, it's nature precludes it from being eligible as
one of the in-kernel LSMs.
To avoid misunderstanding, I think it would be better and more generic
to focus on the out-of-tree nature of hook implementations.  We might
also want to give some pointers for the reason(s) why out-of-tree LSMs
use cases are not supported.
## New LSM Guidelines

Historically we have had few requirements around new LSM additions, with
Arjan van de Ven being the first to describe a basic protocol for accepting new
LSMs into the Linux Kernel.  In an attempt to document Arjan's basic ideas and
update them for modern Linux Kernel development, here are a list of
requirements for new LSM submissions:
If we go for a kernel documentation patch, it might be better to put
most of this historic paragraph into the patch description.
* The new LSM's author(s) must commit to maintain and support the new LSM for
an extended period of time.  While the authors may be currently employed to
develop and support the LSM, there is an expectation upstream that support will
continue beyond the author's employment with the original company, or the
company's backing of the LSM.

* New LSMs must include documentation providing a clear explanation of the
LSM's requirements, goals, and expected uses.  The documentation does not need
to rise to the level of a formal security model, but it must be considered
"reasonable" by the LSM community as a whole.
I guess defining the threat model would be a good first step (and we
should probably add this kind of description for current LSMs as well).
* Any user visible interfaces provided by the LSM must be well documented.  It
is important to remember the user visible APIs are considered to be "forever
APIs" by the Linux Kernel community; do not add an API that cannot be supported
for the next 20+ years.
I would also add tests! For new kernel developments, especially those
focused on security, the interfaces should be well tested, part of
kselftests, and run at least for each kernel release (if possible with
the KernelCI infrastructure).  A good test coverage should be a minimal
requirement, even if this is not enough.  Additionally, syzkaller should
be able to efficiently fuzz these interfaces, which may require some
tuning.

Extending the kernel documentation should not stop developers to write
man pages as well. ;)

It might also be useful to add some standalone tools in samples/
* The LSM implementation must follow general Linux Kernel coding practices,
faithfully implement the security model and APIs described in the
documentation, and be free of any known defects at the time of submission.

* Any userspace tools or patches created in support of the LSM must be publicly
available, with a public git repository preferable over a tarball snapshot.
-- 
paul-moore.com
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