Re: [PATCH v2] lockdown,selinux: avoid bogus SELinux lockdown permission checks
From: Ondrej Mosnacek <omosnace@redhat.com>
Date: 2021-06-08 11:02:14
Also in:
bpf, linux-fsdevel, linux-security-module, lkml, netdev, selinux
On Thu, Jun 3, 2021 at 7:46 PM Paul Moore [off-list ref] wrote:
On Wed, Jun 2, 2021 at 9:40 AM Ondrej Mosnacek [off-list ref] wrote:quoted
On Fri, May 28, 2021 at 3:37 AM Paul Moore [off-list ref] wrote:
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I know you and Casey went back and forth on this in v1, but I agree with Casey that having two LSM hooks here is a mistake. I know it makes backports hard, but spoiler alert: maintaining complex software over any non-trivial period of time is hard, reeeeally hard sometimes ;)Do you mean having two slots in lsm_hook_defs.h or also having two security_*() functions? (It's not clear to me if you're just reiterating disagreement with v1 or if you dislike the simplified v2 as well.)To be clear I don't think there should be two functions for this, just make whatever changes are necessary to the existing security_locked_down() LSM hook. Yes, the backport is hard. Yes, it will touch a lot of code. Yes, those are lame excuses to not do the right thing.
OK, I guess I'll just go with the bigger patch.
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The callers migrated to the new hook, passing NULL as cred: 1. arch/powerpc/xmon/xmon.c Here the hook seems to be called from non-task context and is only used for redacting some sensitive values from output sent to userspace.This definitely sounds like kernel_t based on the description above.Here I'm a little concerned that the hook might be called from some unusual interrupt, which is not masked by spin_lock_irqsave()... We ran into this with PMI (Platform Management Interrupt) before, see commit 5ae5fbd21079 ("powerpc/perf: Fix handling of privilege level checks in perf interrupt context"). While I can't see anything that would suggest something like this happening here, the whole thing is so foreign to me that I'm wary of making assumptions :) @Michael/PPC devs, can you confirm to us that xmon_is_locked_down() is only called from normal syscall/interrupt context (as opposed to something tricky like PMI)?You did submit the code change so I assumed you weren't concerned about it :) If it is a bad hook placement that is something else entirely.
What I submitted effectively avoided the SELinux hook to be called, so I didn't bother checking deeper in what context those hook calls would occur.
Hopefully we'll get some guidance from the PPC folks.quoted
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4. net/xfrm/xfrm_user.c:copy_to_user_*() Here a cryptographic secret is redacted based on the value returned from the hook. There are two possible actions that may lead here: a) A netlink message XFRM_MSG_GETSA with NLM_F_DUMP set - here the task context is relevant, since the dumped data is sent back to the current task.If the task context is relevant we should use it.Yes, but as I said it would create an asymmetry with case b), which I'll expand on below...quoted
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b) When deleting an SA via XFRM_MSG_DELSA, the dumped SAs are broadcasted to tasks subscribed to XFRM events - here the SELinux check is not meningful as the current task's creds do not represent the tasks that could potentially see the secret.This looks very similar to the BPF hook discussed above, I believe my comments above apply here as well.Using the current task is just logically wrong in this case. The current task here is just simply deleting an SA that happens to have some secret value in it. When deleting an SA, a notification is sent to a group of subscribers (some group of other tasks), which includes a dump of the secret value. The current task isn't doing any attempt to breach lockdown, it's just deleting an SA. It also makes it really awkward to make policy decisions around this. Suppose that domains A, B, and C need to be able to add/delete SAs and domains D, E, and F need to receive notifications about changes in SAs. Then if, say, domain E actually needs to see the secret values in the notifications, you must grant the confidentiality permission to all of A, B, C to keep things working. And now you have opened up the door for A, B, C to do other lockdown-confidentiality stuff, even though these domains themselves actually don't request/need any confidential data from the kernel. That's just not logical and you may actually end up (slightly) worse security-wise than if you just skipped checking for XFRM secrets altogether, because you need to allow confidentiality to domains for which it may be excessive.It sounds an awful lot like the lockdown hook is in the wrong spot. It sounds like it would be a lot better to relocate the hook than remove it.
I don't see how you would solve this by moving the hook. Where do you want to relocate it? The main obstacle is that the message containing the SA dump is sent to consumers via a simple netlink broadcast, which doesn't provide a facility to redact the SA secret on a per-consumer basis. I can't see any way to make the checks meaningful for SELinux without a major overhaul of the broadcast logic. IMO, switching the subject to kernel_t either in both cases or at least in case b) is the best compromise between usability, security, and developers' time / code complexity. I don't think controlling which of the CAP_NET_ADMIN domains can/can't see/leak SA secrets is worth obsessing about. -- Ondrej Mosnacek Software Engineer, Linux Security - SELinux kernel Red Hat, Inc.